Settling the Balkans

by Morton Abramowitz and James Hooper

07.08.2010 

The curtain is about to rise on the next act of Balkan diplomacy: the fallout 
from the advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on the 
legality of Kosovo’s independence in 2008, expected to be announced later this 
summer. The resort to the ICJ was a shrewd diplomatic stroke by Belgrade, 
buying over two years for Serbia to slow international momentum toward 
recognition of Kosovo and put the country’s UN candidacy into deep freeze.

No one knows what the court will do, but:

—If the opinion favors Kosovo, that will bring the new state more recognitions 
to the significant but still underwhelming sixty-nine they have received to 
date. But they will not win recognition from Serbia nor admission to the UN 
because of a Russian veto. Nor will Serbia give up its demand for the northern 
part of Kosovo inhabited mostly by Serbs. Kosovo will have an improved limbo 
status.

—If the opinion is against Kosovo, the fledgling state will keep its 
independence but lose some recognitions and the hope of getting into the UN or 
EU. It will be left in a more dangerous limbo and some serious popular violence 
against Serbs in Kosovo is quite possible.

—If, as many expect, the court, understandingly fearful of the consequences of 
its decision, comes down on neither side, many states that have sat on the 
sidelines of the recognition debate will be more open to recognition, which 
Serbia well understands. Facing declining international leverage from their 
resolute opposition, Belgrade will likely seek to open negotiations with 
Pristina over their future relations. Kosovo, like it or not, will have to 
engage because its Western patrons will insist. This scenario has both risk and 
promise and serious ramifications not only for Kosovo and Serbia but also for 
neighboring Macedonia and Bosnia.

 

A Serbian Initiative to Square the Circle

Anticipating less than resounding support from the court, Serbia has begun 
laying the groundwork for a new diplomatic initiative. While they may initially 
attempt another round of “internationalizing” the problem at the UN, senior 
Belgrade officials have been whispering to Western officials and visitors that 
they want a deal on Kosovo. This in itself is a novelty, after years of 
cloaking their Kosovo demands in inflexible, emotional language.

The West is paying attention. But it is unclear to Western diplomats whether 
Belgrade is willing to compromise on terms that will make a stabilizing outcome 
possible. Serbian intermediaries insist on three things: a territorial 
adjustment returning the Serb inhabited districts of north Kosovo to Serbia, 
special treatment for several Orthodox monasteries in Kosovo, and an implicit 
understanding that the West will not let the Kosovars demand too much in 
return. Some officials indicate Serbia would be prepared to drop the campaign 
against further international recognitions of Kosovo independence and perhaps 
allow Kosovo into the UN but not recognize Kosovo. How firm a position this is 
remains to be tested. Serbian motivation is clear: to settle on borders that 
enable them to advance their EU accession agenda and keep the European 
assistance spigot flowing, while protecting their domestic political flanks

Some in Europe assert that it would be irresponsible to pass up an opportunity 
to explore Serbia’s flexibility on a new relationship with Kosovo. An 
indefinite frozen conflict in the Balkans needs to be avoided; the recent 
flare-up of violence in north Mitrovica shows the instability of the current 
standoff in the north. European officials would prefer to avoid settling for an 
indefinite frozen conflict; the thrust of their diplomacy, politics and 
economic policies for the past several decades has been to overcome national 
and ethnic divides and they believe they have learned important lessons in the 
process that translate into successful diplomatic tactics.

Washington is not uninterested but also fears danger and destabilization not 
simply opportunity. Talk of the North’s partition raises the specter that angry 
Kosovars would retaliate against Serbs living in other areas of Kosovo and 
could well stoke Macedonia’s restive Albanian community to break with Skopje 
and join with Albania and Kosovo to form a united Albanian state.

If a deal might be possible, it would make sense to work out the details and 
lock in an agreement. It is also sensible to recognize that a frozen conflict 
is better than risking renewed violence and the disintegration of Macedonia by 
rushing into negotiations on optimistic assumptions that might not bear fruit. 
The allies need to work out their differences and reach an understanding about 
what would constitute a stabilizing outcome before encouraging substantive 
negotiations between the two parties.

 

The Regional Dimension

Their first step should be to examine the regional situation and the impact of 
negotiations starting with Pristina.

Kosovo is lively and entrepreneurial but politically it is a mess. It aspires 
to be an independent Western oriented state, but its government is riddled with 
corruption and has largely squandered its moral standing among its own people 
and in the West. Continuing foreign rule has mostly failed to develop the 
institutions of a modern democratic state and set low standards in preventing 
corruption. Kosovo needs to be rid of the dependent mentality fostered by more 
than a decade of Western domination but still have access to Western aid and 
advice in many sectors. Kosovo’s leaders, however much at odds on domestic 
spoils, can unite on dealing with Serbia. They are not enthusiastic about 
negotiations but want any negotiations to leave Kosovo an independent state 
with its Serb-populated northern region part of Kosovo. They fear the West in 
its eagerness for a settlement will accept protracted negotiations that would 
ultimately lead to weakened support for Kosovar objectives. They also fear 
popular wrath from any “compromise” on the current de facto partition of the 
Serbian dominated north.

Serbia seeks admission to the EU, but European leaders have conveyed mixed 
messages—at times some seem to say that Serbia could achieve admission without 
resolution of the Kosovo problem. The Tadic government has basically continued 
the rejectionist stance on Kosovo of the previous Kostunica regime but in a 
skillful and nuanced fashion, which has won it friends abroad. Serbia has 
worked hard to maintain control over northern Kosovo, centered on the divided 
city of Mitrovica, which the West has done nothing to prevent since the 1999 
war. While many Serbs are tired of the Kosovo problem and want the government 
to focus on issues central to their lives, the Serbian political class still is 
politically reluctant to risk changing their approach to Kosovo. Senior Serbian 
officials professedly recognize that Kosovo is lost to them but assert they 
cannot leave Kosovo “empty handed.” For similar political concerns Tadic needs 
to conclude any negotiated outcome well before Serbia’s April, 2012 elections.

Neighboring Macedonia is a parlous state and potentially the most directly 
affected by Kosovo negotiations. It remains divided between poor Albanians and 
slightly better off Slavs despite the painfully cobbled together Ohrid 
agreement to bridge the gulf between them and produce a politically viable 
state. Its hope to better preserve internal stability through admission to NATO 
has been held up by Greece’s refusal to allow the country to use its legitimate 
name. The Macedonian Albanians stay in close touch with their brethren in 
Albania and Kosovo and Albanian unification is on many minds. It has long been 
axiomatic among Balkans hands that any partition of Kosovo would lead to the 
breakaway of Albanian dominated western Macedonia.

 

The West and the Management of Any Negotiations

The EU and U.S. remain deeply involved in the area but with diminishing troops, 
money and governance. Their approach over the past two decades has been belated 
and invariably pragmatic—one problem at a time. Dayton ended a war but did it 
on a permanent ethnic divide which has prevented political progress and the 
leader of its Serb entity openly promoting independence. NATO liberated Kosovo 
from Milosevic, but in establishing an independent entity left the territorial 
boundaries of the state uncertain in deference to Serbia. They furiously sought 
to keep Macedonia together through the Ohrid agreement but became distracted 
subsequently without doing enough to help make the state work better.

The EU has replaced the U.S. as the major arbiter in the area with money, 
troops and the hope of EU accession as the principal tool for bringing the 
countries along. Many fear the EU is not up to the task of resolving the Kosovo 
issue if only because of its divisions on Kosovo. The EU formula for progress 
in the area is still to be tested while hopes of accession have actually 
receded. Only in Kosovo has the U.S. remained the dominant player, often to EU 
chagrin, because the people of Kosovo consider the U.S. as their only reliable 
friend.

Right now Western countries are emphasizing negotiations, but meaning 
“technical talks” on passport, customs, and other issues between Serbia and 
Kosovo. These are important practical matters affecting the livelihood of their 
citizens, but do not deal with the broader issues between the countries and 
certainly not the ones that most concern the Serbian and Kosovo governments. 
Most recently the issue of Kosovo’s partition has caught public attention 
throughout the Balkans

One problem that Western negotiators face is that partition of Kosovo in 
exchange for potential UN membership for a rump Kosovo state is not a 
marketable proposition in Pristina. Nor can Serbia expect the West this time to 
pressure the weaker party—Kosovo—to accept terms that fall short of its minimal 
requirements. The challenge will be to determine whether there is sufficient 
flexibility in the Serbian position to make negotiations worth pursuing and 
enough for Serbia in the deal to shield the government from predictably violent 
criticism by opposition hardliners.

This is not to suggest that both parties have nothing to gain from an 
agreement. The Tadic government believes that it has little to fear from 
negotiations that could facilitate Kosovo’s partition, ease its entry into the 
EU, and rid the international community of a burden in northern Kosovo. Nor do 
talks present the Kosovars with solely lose-lose options. Most Kosovars prefer 
that their borders remain as they are, even if they don’t control them, to 
avoid dealing with the implications of changing them. But many would not likely 
mind shedding the 40,000 Serbs living north of the Ibar River, and welcome the 
opportunity to recover some of the ethnic Albanians living in Serbia’s Presevo 
Valley along Kosovo’s eastern border, that is a territorial swap. If done 
voluntarily and packaged as part of a normalization process with Serbia, many 
Kosovars might well see such a swap, whatever Western concerns of its ethnic 
nature, as a strengthening of their independent state rather than a betrayal by 
the West, but it would be controversial. All the main Kosovo Albanian political 
parties are on record opposing a swap. The West would also fear that Serbs in 
the “enclaves” further south would also flee to Serbia. Despite the 
controversy, a territorial swap may be the only circumstance in which loss of 
the north might be palatable to Pristina and thus provide the foundation for an 
agreement. It has often been suggested over the years since 1999, and just as 
often rejected by Belgrade, although there have been from time to time a few 
hints that it might now be conceivable. Belgrade apparently still believes that 
it can recover the North without any territorial swap.

Western governments will have to ask themselves what can be realistically 
achieved in any negotiations. After all, the promise of EU accession seems 
increasingly far off, and the U.S. has a pretty full plate. Political 
miscalculations are more the rule than the exception in the Balkans, and there 
is considerable risk that even sober-minded and experienced diplomats could 
launch a process that blows up in their faces. Even with two unfinished wars 
and troubles with Iran requiring continuing high-level attention, these are 
portentous matters for Washington to consider.

We believe that the essential prerequisite for a Serbia-Kosovo negotiating 
process that does not lead to regional instability is an understanding between 
the U.S. and the allies on a deal that fits within the following parameters:

1.      Acceptance of the Helsinki principle that border changes between states 
cannot be imposed but are acceptable if mutually agreed. This would preempt any 
temptation to impose partition on Kosovo just to pacify Belgrade but leave the 
door open for a territorial swap should both parties conclude it meets their 
needs and helps stabilize relations.
2.      Agreement by Serbia to allow Kosovo into the United Nation and 
willingness by Kosovo to accommodate Serbian insistence that it not be required 
to establish diplomatic relations with Kosovo presently as a reality of Serbian 
politics.
3.      Commitment by NATO to bring Kosovo into the alliance after any 
negotiated settlement with Serbia. This would help authorities there resist 
irredentist tendencies.
4.      Reinforcement of Macedonia’s security as an insurance policy against 
unexpected blowback from talks. This means a total Western effort to broker a 
settlement of the name issue with Greece and moving Macedonia quickly into NATO.
5.      A unified, clear warning to Republik Srpska Prime Minister Milorad 
Dodik that secession from Bosnia is totally unacceptable, lest he escalate his 
efforts to weaken and undermine the Bosnian government into a full-fledged 
initiative to separate from the country and join Serbia.
6.      Maintenance of Western military forces at some level in Kosovo until 
there is a better resolution of relations between Serbia and Kosovo.
7.      An end date for Western political control of Kosovo. Whether talks 
produce anything or not, 2012 should be the end of the agreement for EULEX. 
Provision should be made for extensive technical and economic assistance to the 
Kosovo government.

If informal exploratory talks at an appropriate time with the Serbs and 
Kosovars reveal that a deal is not likely achievable, the West should halt the 
process before launching formal negotiations that raise expectations and do 
potential damage to regional stability.

If the Serbs indicate that they are not in fact interested in a deal the West 
should do what it has never been prepared to do: take control of the 
Serbian-ruled northern region of Kosovo. Belgrade should understand that 
failure to reach a deal means that they will lose whatever chance they may have 
in negotiations to recover the north, with the West then integrating northern 
Kosovo slowly but firmly into Pristina’s governing authority despite likely 
violent Serb resistance. Indeed we believe such a move should take place before 
negotiations begin—by arresting leaders of the Serb politico-criminal gangs 
that control the north—to make clear the West’s concern for partition, but we 
recognize it is highly unlikely that the US and its allies are either inclined 
or able to agree to make such a move now or later. That is unfortunate.

We are not unalloyed admirers of current Western policy toward the Balkans and 
do not take anything for granted about what the West does there. An unsettled 
Kosovo can create problems for the whole area. Resolution may not be at hand 
and the issue may remain a frozen conflict. Indeed there might not be any 
substantive negotiations. But a resolution would help strengthen all four 
troubled states of the former Yugoslavia and the ICJ opinion may offer such an 
opportunity. The West should also use any initiative on the Kosovo issue to 
make Bosnia a more effective state and to help enhance Albanian integration in 
Macedonia and persist in trying to resolve that country’s name issue.

 

Morton Abramowitz is a senior fellow at The Century Foundation. James Hooper is 
a managing director of the Public International Law & Policy Group.

http://www.nationalinterest.org/Article.aspx?id=23676

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