Walk Away from the Balkans

by E. Wayne Merry

07.09.2010 

Messrs. Abramowitz and Hooper have very well reviewed 
<http://www.nationalinterest.org/Article.aspx?id=23676>  the state of play on 
Kosovo for readers who might be forgiven for not having thought about the place 
in years. The upcoming advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice 
will insert the “Kosovo question” into Western newspapers for a day or two, but 
few Americans are likely to consider it of even tertiary importance. As 
Washington turns its back on the Balkans, we might consider some lessons for 
our pursuits in southern Asia and for understanding developments in the 
Caucasus.

In all these conflict areas, fragmentation is the essential threat to any type 
of effective governance (whether pluralist and representative or not). U.S. 
policy has tended to shatter what political and social cohesion existed and 
then bemoan the ensuing fragmentation. The United States waged war against 
Serbia and sponsored an independent Kosovo largely to punish Belgrade for its 
real and perceived sins, not because Kosovo warranted statehood. The Clinton 
administration demonized Slobodan Milosevic (as we later did his Iraqi 
counterpart) and sought to weaken him by fragmenting the state he ruled. Kosovo 
was bad enough (certainly Serb rule of the Kosovar Albanians had lost any 
legitimacy), but what about our short-sighted sponsorship of an independent 
Montenegro? How is the European state system better for partitioning Serbia, 
not once but twice?

Now, we are told, any partition of Kosovo to benefit the largely Serb 
population of the north must meet the maximum demands of the government in 
Pristina, acknowledged to be a sinkhole of corruption. In the past decade it is 
the Serbs who have shown a capacity to reform, despite the views of Washington 
Serbophobes, and are now the regional state best qualified to bring something 
of value to Europe’s common table.

The United States is walking away from the Balkans, and rightly so. Sadly, the 
manifest love for this country among Kosovar Albanians is misplaced, because 
Washington will find very little attention and fewer resources for Kosovo or 
Bosnia or Macedonia with wars in Iraq and Afghanistan on its plate. Give 
priority to Kosovo? Don’t make me laugh.

So, the headache is Europe’s, as it always should have been. Are EU 
institutions up to the job? Perhaps not, but nobody else will step up. The 
tasks are many, but all come down to reversing the fragmentation of the 1990s. 
So far, Brussels has not even been able to allow Macedonia its proper 
nomenclature. This issue brought down one Greek government, so don’t expect 
Athens to bend much.

Might partition of Kosovo incite similar ethnic divisions within Macedonia? No 
doubt, but the question remains why Europe is better off with two Albanian 
states on its map rather than one. Redrawing the political borders of the 
former Yugoslavia is probably not finished, but the policy objective should be 
to make those borders of less and less importance.

Finally, the U.S. official pretense that our sponsorship of an independent 
Kosovo was not a precedent for separatism elsewhere is just bunk. Russian 
recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia after the August 2008 conflict was a 
blunder, but Abkhaz and Ossets are no more likely to return to Georgian rule 
than Kosovar Albanians are to Belgrade’s. The Abkhaz, at least, have as much 
justification for an independent state as does Montenegro or Kosovo. In the 
Caucasus and in the Balkans, wars have consequences, and peace is usually 
provisional. These games never end.

 

E. Wayne Merry is a former State Department and Pentagon official and now a 
Senior Associate at the American Foreign Policy Council in Washington, DC.

http://www.nationalinterest.org/Article.aspx?id=23680

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