“EU Serbia’s only partner” 17 January 2010 | 10:58 | Source: Politika, Tanjug 

 

BELGRADE -- Balkan expert Martin Sletzinger said that Serbia’s key partner for 
the future must be the EU. 

He also said that NATO membership does not have to be a prerequisite for EU 
integration. 

Sletzinger told daily Politika that the U.S. should move out of Kosovo, and 
that separating Kosovo from Serbia sets a bad precedent, but that this was not 
a problem for the official policies of the U.S. 

“The argument was that if 90 percent of the population wants to be separated, 
let them do it. We will see whether this logic will be used in a few decades 
when parts of Texas, Florida or California become populated with a majority of 
Hispanics and they decided that they no longer want to be governed by the state 
capitals,” he said. 

“In any case, the U.S. was part of the problem in Kosovo the entire time, not 
part of the solution. In my opinion, we need to get out of there quickly. We 
need to secure military support, but we should leave everything political to 
the Europeans, because the U.S. dirtied its hands by not treating all of the 
sides in the Kosovo issue equally,” Sletzinger said. 

He said that the biggest problem was that the U.S. was never objective. 

“In the beginning, it was stated that we are not absolutely for independence, 
that we are not pro-Albanian or anti-Serb, but in reality, everything we did in 
the early 1990s and later, including the peace process, shows that the U.S. was 
for Kosovo independence, and that it pressured its allies to recognize Kosovo, 
in my opinion, way too early,” he said. 

He added that America was the first country that sent an ambassador to 
Priština, which he said was funny, because Kosovo is not a country that 
administers itself. 

Sletzinger said that America and Serbia are now making concrete and honest 
moves towards improving relations, which was shown by the visit made to 
Belgrade by Vice President Joe Biden, which is “very important when taking into 
consideration his sometimes very strong positions on Bosnia and Kosovo.” 

“The message of everything is the belief that there is no stability in the 
Balkans without a stable Serbia,” said Sletzinger, who served a ten-year stint 
as the director of Eastern European studies in Washington’s Woodrow Wilson 
Center for International Studies. 

He said that Bosnia-Herzegovina must continue what was begun with the Dayton 
Accords. 

“The essence of the problem is the incorrect belief of many Bosniaks that, 
after everything that happened in the war, all of Bosnia should be their 
country. That is not the right approach. Christianity is older than Islam on 
the Bosnian territory,” he said. 

“Bosnia will never be truly powerful as a state that is administered from the 
center, but is can be stronger and more effective than it is now,” Sletzinger 
said, adding that another Dayton-like meeting is needed, with all great powers 
participating, including the U.S., but with the EU leading the process this 
time. 

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