Major powers warn Serbia to cool down Kosovo rhetoric

ZELJKO PANTELIC

Today @ 08:56 CET

Major western powers have warned Serbian foreign minister Vuk Jeremic to "cool 
down" his rhetoric about Kosovo in the coming months and refrain from 
adventurous actions after the International Court of Justice (ICJ) gives its 
opinion on the legality of its declaration of independence.

This message was contained in a diplomatic note to the Serbian minister sent 
last week by the quintet of countries, the US, UK, Germany, France and Italy, 
which co-ordinate their policies toward Kosovo. 

Kosovo landscape: Serbia may be trying to reopen status talks on the back of 
the ICJ procedure (Photo: fco.gov.uk)

According to this website's sources, the note was addressed exclusively to 
Minister Jeremic and not to President Boris Tadic.

"We have tolerated until now the Serbian aggressive rhetoric regarding Kosovo, 
because we believed that with time passing it could be taken off the agenda. 
Our partners in Belgrade have told us that the statements of Minister Jeremic 
about Kosovo aimed to protect President Tadic from attack by Serbian 
nationalists, and the initiative to ask the ICJ for an advisory opinion on the 
Declaration of the independence was just a manoeuvre to remove Kosovo from the 
political agenda in Serbia. None of this seems to be the case and Kosovo 
continues to be a major political issue in Serbia," the note said.

The US and the top EU foreign policy players are becoming nervous about Mr 
Jeremic's lobbying activities in some countries around the world to get support 
for a plan to convene a special session of the UN General Assembly on the day 
when the ICJ makes its position on Kosovo independence known. 

The aim seems to be to get support from this UN body for Serbia's intention to 
reopen talks on Kosovo's status, which Washington and leading EU capitals, 
except Madrid, consider closed since the Kosovo declaration of independence two 
years ago.

The ICJ is expected to give its legally non-biding opinion on Kosovo in the 
coming months. Kosovo has been recognised by 65 countries, including 22 member 
states.

http://waz.euobserver.com/887/29432

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