http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/06/15/opinion/edkosov.php

 


Kosovo must be independent 
By Former foreign ministers

Friday, June 15, 2007 
 
Kosovo is back in the headlines. President George W. Bush says that it should 
become independent soon. President Vladimir Putin of Russia opposes 
independence and prefers time for more talks. President Nicolas Sarkozy of 
France has suggested that we move forward, with a six-month delay.

This has a familiar ring to it. Eight years ago, many of us - then foreign 
ministers - put in place an international process to decide who should govern 
Kosovo. We believe that the only viable option is for Kosovo to become 
independent under strict supervision. That is the proposal that is currently 
before the UN Security Council and is part of the process that the Council, 
including Russia, agreed upon and has implemented since 1999.

Kosovo is the last substantial territorial issue remaining from the violent 
collapse of Yugoslavia. In 2005, as called for by decisions of the Security 
Council, the UN secretary general appointed a special envoy - former President 
Martti Ahtisaari of Finland - to achieve a political settlement.

After 14 months of negotiations with the leaderships of Serbia and Kosovo, 
Ahtisaari announced that the irreconcilable positions of the two parties had 
made consensus unattainable and that no amount of additional talks would 
overcome the impasse. In lieu of a negotiated agreement by all sides, Ahtisaari 
proposed that Kosovo receive independence supervised by the international 
community (primarily the European Union and NATO) and provide strong guarantees 
for the Serbs who live in Kosovo.

Now is the time to act. Tensions are likely to rise, and they certainly will 
not cool. Moreover, without a resolution on Kosovo's final status, the future 
of Serbia and Kosovo will remain uncertain.

Some may say that Russia would prefer this limbo to a situation where Serbia 
and Kosovo join the European Union and NATO. Serbs and Kosovars should prefer 
otherwise. They deserve to be in the European Union. And Kosovo cannot develop 
as things stand. It has been unable to gain access to international financial 
institutions, fully integrate into the regional economy, or attract the 
political capital it needs to address its widespread unemployment and poverty.

Russia has complained of not being included in talks. It should participate, 
but constructively and not just to block it. What may be needed is a 
formulation that allows Russia to acquiesce without having to break openly with 
Serbia. Russia can reassure Serbs and emphasize that Kosovo is a unique 
situation, without precedent for other regions.

The Ahtisaari plan has several advantages. It gives rights to Kosovo's 100,000 
Serbs to manage their own affairs within a democratic Kosovo, which will be 
protected and monitored by the international community. It also requires 
protection for Orthodox and Serbian cultural and religious sites. Finally, it 
provides for an international presence that will oversee Kosovo's institutions 
and monitor the settlement's implementation. It also places Kosovo on the road 
toward EU integration.

The European Union has agreed to supervise Kosovo during the transition period 
and deploy a police mission alongside the current NATO peacekeeping force. An 
indefinite delay caused by continued confusion over Kosovo's status could 
jeopardize a smooth transition to European oversight.

Kosovo is a unique situation that has required a creative solution. It should 
not create a precedent for other unresolved conflicts. When the Security 
Council adopted Resolution 1244 in response to Milosevic's actions in Kosovo, 
it laid the groundwork for a political process that would ultimately determine 
Kosovo's future.

We know that all decisions on Kosovo are difficult. Some of us kicked the issue 
down the road eight years ago. Today, the international community faces the 
hardest issue of all. But the decision is necessary, and it is the result of 
eight years of international collaboration.

Serbia must recognize, however, that greater stability in the Balkans promoted 
by the Ahtisaari plan will allow it to use its location, resources and talent 
to become a major regional player and a constructive force in European 
politics. The Serb people deserve a legitimate place in Europe and Serbia could 
also begin to move towards possible EU membership.

Our goal remains a Europe whole and free, with all the people of the western 
Balkans participating fully as EU members. The benefits of a concerted EU 
effort in Kosovo, backed by the UN and NATO, are enormous. As such, Russia and 
the other UN Security Council members should follow through on the promise that 
the Council made in 1999 and agree to complete the process of self-governance 
in Kosovo. This is the best option at this stage of a very difficult history of 
the whole region. Viable alternatives do not exist.

Madeleine Albright, United States

Lloyd Axworthy, Canada

Jan Eliasson, Sweden

Gareth Evans, Australia

Joschka Fischer, Germany

Bronislaw Geremek, Poland

Niels Helveg Petersen, Denmark

Lydie Polfer, Luxembourg

Jozias van Artsen, Netherlands

Hubert Vedrine, France


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