euobserver.com <https://euobserver.com/opinion/147510>  


[Opinion] Why Miroslav Lajčák is the wrong choice for EU envoy


Toby Vogel and Bodo Weber

7-9 minutes

  _____  

The European Union could commit a major strategic blunder in its immediate 
neighbourhood with the appointment, expected in March, of Slovak foreign 
minister Miroslav Lajčák to lead the negotiations between Serbia and Kosovo on 
a final normalisation agreement. 

His precise capacity – whether as a special envoy in charge of the negotiations 
only or for the whole Western Balkans, or as a kind of all-Western Balkans EU 
special representative – remains unclear. 

What is clear is that this is a terrible choice.

The staffing and organisational decision is part of a reset of talks that 
collapsed under the EU's previous foreign policy chief, Frederica Mogherini; 
her team had championed a dangerous land-swap that would have threatened 
regional and European stability. 

Those ill-designed negotiations were less aspirational than grounded in an 
anti-policy of "any deal is a good deal" 'transactionalism', defying core 
European values and the one lesson learned from the Balkan wars – that any 
talks focused on maps, ethno-territorial demarcations, and leadership interests 
are everything but a solution.

Mogherini's successor, Josep Borrell <https://euobserver.com/political/146106> 
, seems to have understood that in order to resume the negotiations under 
credible EU leadership, he needs to delegate the lead negotiator role to an 
envoy – as this tough and demanding task is a full-time job.

On the surface, Lajčák may seem to have the requisite qualifications for that 
job. 

He speaks Serbian and served twice in the Balkans: first, as EU envoy to 
supervise Montenegro's referendum on independence from the state union with 
Serbia, in 2006, and then as the EU's special representative in Bosnia and 
Herzegovina, in 2007-09, simultaneously serving as the international 
community's high representative. 

Moreover, he knows how to navigate the Brussels bureaucracy, having served as 
managing director for Europe and central Asia in the European External Action 
Service in 2010-12, just as the EEAS was being built up as an institution. 

In addition, he is likely to be available for the job: polls in Slovakia 
predict that the social democrats with which he's affiliated will be booted 
from power in elections at the end of this month.

Despite these apparent qualifications, however, Lajčák is the wrong man for a 
number of reasons.

First, Slovakia is one of just five EU member states that do not recognise 
Kosovo's independence from Serbia, for entirely domestic reasons. 

Spain, whose former foreign minister, Josep Borrell, became EU foreign policy 
chief in December, is another. 


Non-recognition duo


Should Lajčák indeed be appointed, the two senior EU diplomats dealing with 
Kosovo would both come from the small minority of member states that do not 
recognise Kosovo – and oversee talks whose declared end point should be 
Serbia's recognition of Kosovo's independence. 

This would send a strong signal that the EU is taking sides. It would also prop 
up Serbia's increasingly authoritarian president, Aleksandar Vučić, ahead of 
early elections in April.

Second, Lajčák carries serious political baggage: a history of political 
failure in the Balkans. 

As the EU's special representative (and the international community's high 
representative) in BiH, he got embroiled in a serious political confrontation 
with Bosnian Serb strongman Milorad Dodik. 

Demonstrating serious miscalculations and limited political skills, the 
conflict ended in Lajčák's humiliating retreat. 

The episode earned him a reputation as being weak on Dodik and having a 
pro-Serb bias. Lajčák's tenure deepened the EU's de facto policy of letting 
illiberal actors in BiH determine the EU's own agenda.

Third, Lajčák has a track record of putting personal and professional ambitions 
above the mission. 

He abruptly abandoned his post in Sarajevo after a year and a half in the job – 
explaining that he could not decline an offer made by Robert Fico, then 
Slovakia's prime minister, to head his country's diplomacy – only to undercut 
his successor in Sarajevo in subsequent years. 

According to multiple sources, Lajčák himself requested a much broader 
portfolio than just the Kosovo-Serbia negotiations, despite knowing very well 
that this in itself is a full-time job. 

This self-seeking approach to the job is exactly what drove Mogherini and her 
team.

Finally, the illiberalism of the governments which Lajčák served in Bratislava 
should be anything but a selling point. He remained in post as prime minister 
Fico had to resign in the fallout from the murder of investigative journalist 
Jan Kuciak <https://euobserver.com/beyond-brussels/141169> . 

In a region struggling with attacks on the media by powerful officials, not 
least in Serbia, Lajčák's appointment would send exactly the wrong message, 
providing another illustration of what Balkan citizens see as a pattern of EU 
officials 'failing up.' 

His being on the job market at all is a result of a presumed electoral 
manifestation of the civic backlash against corruption under the government he 
served – twice. 

Western Balkan citizens deserve better than discredited leftovers, no matter 
how much elites have become accustomed to this pattern.

Appointing Lajčák to lead the Kosovo-Serbia talks – in any capacity – would 
signal the EU's deepening lack of seriousness to leaders and citizens in 
Serbia, Kosovo and the wider region and alienate Pristina, thus dooming the 
reset of negotiations to failure. It would also seriously hamper the Union's 
recently announced revitalisation of its enlargement policy. 

EU member states thus need to prevent this appointment.


Other candidates


Rather than choosing Lajčák to give the appearance of commitment to the issue, 
the EU should instead first define the parameters of a future envoy's mission 
and profile, and define the political terms of the reset of negotiations. 

Only then should it even consider a list of potential candidates. A number of 
conditions should apply. 

First, a future envoy, unlike Borrell, must come from a member state which 
recognises Kosovo. 

Second, they must be tasked only with the Serbia-Kosovo negotiations. Any 
portfolio that included the wider Western Balkans, and especially Bosnia and 
Herzegovina, would not only be an overstretch. It would imply linkage between a 
Kosovo-Serbia agreement and Bosnia, which is precisely was secessionist Bosnian 
Serb leader Milorad Dodik has been promoting. 

This is a particularly dangerous signal as Dodik again is openly mooting a 
secession referendum, which carries with it the spectre of renewed violence. 

The EU's weak posture in Bosnia since before Lajčák's tenure (but further 
reduced by him) has empowered Dodik to behave without restraint.

Third, she or he must be a political heavyweight and experienced negotiator. 
The selected individual would not necessarily need to have Balkan experience – 
indeed, given the fact that most European politicians with deep Balkan 
experience come with baggage, be it an ethnic bias or a history of political 
failure, not having a Balkan background might even be an asset. 

But the future envoy must have demonstrated sound judgment and fortitude, a 
clear mandate, and be supported by a broad team that includes experts both on 
the Balkans and on relevant topics that will be part of a future comprehensive 
agreement (international and constitutional law, minority rights, local 
self-governance, economic and property issues).

 

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