CIA 

Kurt Volker

 

Diplomatc. 1962           Principal Depy. Asst. Secy. State, Europe

: 

  _____  


Date: Thursday, April 22, 2010, 4:36 PM

http://www.csmonitor.com/Commentary/Opinion/2010/0422/Tipping-point-in-Bosnia-Serbia-and-Kosovo-EU-and-NATO-must-finish-the-job

 

The Christian Science Monitor

 

Opinion

Tipping point in Bosnia, Serbia, and Kosovo: EU and NATO must finish the job

 

Despite progress, trouble looms in Bosnia, Serbia, and Kosovo. Better 
engagement now by NATO and the EU can prevent backsliding.

By  <http://www.csmonitor.com/layout/set/print/About/Contact-Us-Feedback> Kurt 
Volker 
posted April 22, 2010 at 12:11 pm EDT

Washington —

Remember Bosnia? Kosovo? In the 1990s, we learned a new phrase – ethnic 
cleansing – and we embarked on the first of what have now been many 
interventions in regional crises. Yet 15 years after the Serbian massacre of 
more than 7,000 Muslims at Srebrenica, we have still not finished the job of 
making the Balkans peaceful and safe for all.

This was the subject of a recent hearing held by Sens. Jeanne Shaheen, Jim 
DeMint, and George Voinovich in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. It’s 
also a subject likely to be discussed by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton at 
this week’s NATO meeting in Estonia.

To be sure, the region has seen some success. Slovenia and  
<http://www.csmonitor.com/Commentary/Opinion/2010/0402/Croatia-should-apologize-for-World-War-II-genocide-before-joining-the-EU>
 Croatia are vibrant democracies, increasingly prosperous, and members of NATO. 
Slovenia is also a member of the European Union, and Croatia is well on its 
way. Albania is a member of NATO. And Montenegro is making rapid progress.

But trouble looms. With nationalists pulling at the fabric of Bosnia, with 
Serbia and a handful of EU members refusing to recognize an independent Kosovo, 
with Serbia still not having found its place in the European family, with  
<http://www.csmonitor.com/Commentary/Opinion/2010/0310/NATO-renewal-requires-European-courage-on-Afghanistan>
 NATO and the EU fatigued on further enlargement, with crime and corruption 
rampant, the region risks sliding back into instability and worse.

This can be prevented – at far lower cost than it took to stop ethnic cleansing 
in the 1990s, or what it would cost to intervene again. Compared with 
Afghanistan, we have advantages in the Balkans: no active fighting; a literate 
population and skilled workforce; an advanced economy; and a surrounding region 
made up of EU and NATO members.

What’s more, we know what is needed for success: using the attractive power of 
NATO and the EU to drive through tough but needed reforms.

The challenge in the Balkans is the same challenge Europe has faced for 
centuries – overcoming history. It is no easy task. It takes strong incentives 
and disincentives for nations to let go of irredentism, the memories of 
territories lost, and the grievances of past warfare, and instead to invest in 
the future.

But as we saw in the 1990s, the real, near-term prospect of NATO and EU 
membership provides just that kind of incentive structure. It strengthens the 
hand of reformers in convincing publics that short-term pain and rejecting 
nationalist agendas will deliver greater benefits, and that the contrast – 
wallowing in these agendas – will separate a nation from a growing, integrated 
European family.

Clearly, countries must meet the conditions of membership. They must do the 
hard work of reform. But the EU and NATO can be passive or active. A passive 
stance gives little incentive and empowers those with revanchist agendas. But 
an activist stance, where we stress our willingness to admit new members and 
work with candidate countries on specific reforms, empowers those who are 
prepared to implement the fastest and farthest reaching change.

Now is a time to give new energy to finishing the job in the Balkans – to 
bringing that region fully into the European mainstream before it slides 
backward. Several steps can be taken:

First, the EU and NATO must reiterate, emphatically and credibly, that they are 
prepared to admit as members every country in the Balkans that meets the 
conditions of membership.

Second, to generate this renewed political commitment, Washington will need to 
engage actively not only with the EU and NATO as institutions, but also with 
key member states.

Third, the EU and NATO should aggressively use the tools already at their 
disposal to incentivize necessary reforms – for example, visa-free travel, EU 
association agreements, and NATO’s Membership Action Plan.

Fourth, in Bosnia, we should maintain a robust international presence and 
commitment, including a strong, international “high representative” and an EU 
force, until Bosnia sustainably implements far-reaching reform.

Fifth, we should maintain a robust commitment in Kosovo – both through the 
nearly 10,000 soldiers that make up the NATO-led Kosovo Force and through the 
European Union Rule of Law Mission – while pushing for recognition by all EU 
states and improved governance within (and throughout all) of Kosovo.

Sixth, we need to give a renewed impetus to resolving the Macedonia name issue. 
Because Greece’s own identity is linked to ancient Macedonia, it strongly 
objects to its northern neighbor going by the name “Republic of Macedonia.” The 
Macedonians could begin with modest confidence-building measures – Does the 
airport really have to be named after Alexander the Great? – followed by 
compromises by both sides.

Seventh, NATO and the EU should reward Montenegro’s reform successes by 
accelerating its path toward membership in both institutions – not least 
because this can spur greater momentum in the region.

Eighth, the US and EU should carry out a robust bilateral engagement with 
Serbia, building its sense of belonging within the transatlantic community.

And ninth, we should work aggressively with Albania to strengthen democratic 
institutions, transparency, and anticorruption, in part by leveraging the 
prospect of EU membership.

Resolving these lingering issues is difficult, but doable. And far better to 
invest the energy and effort now, when the region is calm, than to risk greater 
instability in the future. Remember: The worst human-rights atrocities in 
Europe since the Holocaust happened in the Balkans just 15 years ago.

Kurt Volker, a former US ambassador to NATO, is senior fellow and managing 
director of the Center for Transatlantic Relations at Johns Hopkins 
University’s School of Advanced International Studies. He’s also a senior 
adviser at the Atlantic Council of the United States.

 

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