euobserver.com <https://euobserver.com/foreign/147706>  


EU or US: Who's in charge of Kosovo-Serbia talks?


Andrew Rettman and Ekrem Krasniqi

5-6 minutes

  _____  

The US is pushing Kosovo and Serbia to make a peace deal, over a year after the 
last EU-led talks took place.

In a new gambit, senior American personalities threatened to pull out American 
troops from Kosovo unless it made concessions. 

*       EU foreign service chief Josep Borrell was in Pristina and Belgrade in 
January (Photo: consilium.europa.eu) 

"Now, with historic progress in sight, Kosovo must do its part and abolish all 
duties imposed on Serbia. If Kosovo is not fully committed to peace, then the 
US should reconsider its presence there," David Perdue, a Republican US 
senator, tweeted on Tuesday (10 March).

Rand Paul, another Republican senator, also tweeted: "I encourage Kosovo to 
turn a page and work with Serbia for a lasting peace. Time to bring our troops 
home".

Perdue's comments were retweeted by Richard Grenell, a US special envoy on the 
Western Balkans, causing alarm in Kosovo. 

The US president's son, 42-year old businessman Donald Trump Jr., also 
retweeted Perdue, adding: "There are 650 US troops in Kosovo. Time to get them 
home". 

Perdue's reference to "abolishing duties" comes after Kosovo imposed a steep 
tax on Serbian imports in 2018 because Serbia blocked its recognition by 
international bodies. 

The 650 US troops are the largest contingent out of 3,526 soldiers in a Nato 
peacekeeping force in Kosovo. 

"Nato remains fully committed to our Kfor [Kosovo Force] mission, which ... 
continues to provide a safe and secure environment and freedom of movement for 
all communities in Kosovo," a Nato official told EUobserver in reaction to the 
US tweets.

The US pressure comes after EU-led Kosovo-Serbia talks on "normalising 
relations" stalled in November 2018.

Kosovo president Hashim Thaçi and Serbian president Aleksandar Vučić sometimes 
rubbed shoulders at international events, such as the Munich Security 
Conference.

But the formal EU-led negotiations never resumed even though EU foreign 
relations chief Josep Borrell called for it in Pristina and Belgrade in January.

At the same time, Grenell managed to organise talks between Thaçi and Vučić at 
the White House on 3 March. 

"America has finally taken over the dialogue between Kosovo and Serbia [from 
the EU]", Thaçi said in Washington. 

Grenell, who is also the US ambassador to Germany and acting director of US 
national intelligence, declined to comment on whether Thaçi was right when 
contacted by EUobserver. 

His own retweet of Perdue should not be seen as a threat to pull out US troops 
from Kosovo, Grenell told this website. And recent reports by Kosovo newspaper 
Bota Sot that a draft US deal included the option of a territorial swap between 
Kosovo and Serbia were untrue, he added. 

"Of course not," an EU foreign service spokesman said when also asked about 
Thaçi's remarks on the US taking over the peace process.

The EU "welcomed" the US "engagement", the spokesman said.

But "the EU is the only internationally tasked facilitator of the 
Belgrade-Pristina dialogue ... No one else is organising it," the spokesman 
added, citing a UN mandate for the EU's diplomacy.

"The talks the leaders from Serbia and Kosovo might have had in the US were not 
part of the EU-facilitated dialogue," the EU spokesman said.

"Nato also fully supports the continuation of the EU-facilitated dialogue 
between Belgrade and Pristina," the Nato official said.

Some EU sources believed the White House was pushing for a quick deal between 
Kosovo and Serbia even if it came at the cost of UN mandates.

But whoever was in charge, the EU foreign service voiced a gentler approach 
than the US. 

"We cannot force them [Thaçi and Vučić] to sit down behind one table if they do 
not want to," the EU spokesman said. 


Land swap


Talk of a land swap between Kosovo and Serbia has in the past attracted fierce 
criticism from Germany, which warned that border changes just 20 years after 
the Western Balkan wars could destabilise the region. 

And German chancellor Angela Merkel has also tried to seize the initiative by 
inviting Kosovar and Serbian leaders to Berlin next week.

Meanwhile, the US diplomatic formula is that it is up to the two parties, 
Belgrade and Pristina, to decide on territories, leaving the door open for the 
land-swap option. 

But whether the US or the EU foreign service was in charge, that option 
appeared to be on the table either way. 

When asked if the EU foreign service backed the idea, the EU spokesman said: 
"The objective here is full normalisation of relations through a 
legally-binding agreement".

"The content, extent, nature, and scope of such an agreement is to be 
determined by the two main actors (Belgrade and Pristina)", he said.

 

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"SERBIAN NEWS NETWORK" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/senet/030c01d5f851%2402fbe640%2408f3b2c0%24%40gmail.com.

Reply via email to