thehill.com 
<https://thehill.com/opinion/international/490730-washington-is-stoking-a-new-balkan-crisis>
  


Washington is stoking a new Balkan crisis


6-7 minutes

  _____  

While the coronavirus pandemic preoccupies Washington, the Trump administration 
is inadvertantly stoking a new conflict in the Balkans. In a hastened effort to 
forge a settlement 
<https://foreignpolicy.com/2020/03/20/us-kosovo-strategy-balkans-melting-down/> 
 between Serbia and Kosovo that would enable U.S. forces to leave the region, 
the White House could unravel many Western achievements since ending the 
Yugoslav wars in the 1990s by inciting new regional rivalries.

Kosovo is in the midst of a political crisis 
<https://balkaninsight.com/2020/03/27/kosovos-ousted-government-secret-deals-and-war-crimes-charges/>
  as the coalition government fell apart on March 25 because of disagreements 
over responses to the pandemic. But the real battle has pitted President Hashim 
Thaci, who has reportedly 
<https://www.rferl.org/a/quick-border-deal-between-kosovo-serbia-could-quickly-ignite-balkans/29437775.html>
  discussed Kosovo’s partition with Serbia’s President Aleksandar Vucic, 
against Prime Minister Albin Kurti, who is adamantly opposed to any border 
changes. Washington has evidently sided with Thaci in the forlorn hope that it 
can quickly settle the Serbia-Kosovo dispute.

The core of this Balkan standoff is Belgrade’s refusal to recognize Kosovo as 
an independent state. This inter-state paralysis hinders Serbia’s ambitions to 
enter the European Union and freezes Kosovo’s entrance into international 
institutions. Instead of agreeing on implementable steps toward bilateral 
recognition, Thaci and Vucic seem to believe that an exchange of territory will 
be a magic wand in normalizing relations.

The fall of the Kurti government and the resulting political turmoil provides 
an opportunity for Thaci to bypass government and parliament in making deals 
with Belgrade. The swirling rumors in Pristina about U.S. supported land swaps 
has even forced the State Department to issue a statement 
<https://www.state.gov/joint-statement-of-special-presidential-envoy-richard-grenell-ambassador-philip-kosnett-and-special-representative-for-the-western-balkans-matthew-palmer-on-kosovo/>
  denying that there is any secret plan. But the wording 
<https://www.peacefare.net/2020/03/27/what-they-dont-say-counts/>  of the 
statement did little to assuage growing fears that Thaci and Vucic are 
negotiating with Washington’s blessing.

If a land swap is considered by some officials to be such a great deal, then 
one wonders why it has only been discussed secretly and is regularly denied. If 
Washington supports territorial changes, it should be clear how exactly this 
will occur with full democratic legitimacy. A credible land exchange would 
require several preconditions: Serbia and Kosovo recognizing each other as 
independent countries; popular approval through a parliamentary vote or public 
referendum; necessary constitutional amendments; and assistance to citizens 
affected by the land swaps during their voluntary relocation.

Without such a comprehensive package, three immediate threats will surface: 
Domestic, regional and international. Half-baked border alterations are likely 
to create even more domestic conflicts in both Serbia and Kosovo. Without 
plebiscites and parliamentary approval, deals struck behind closed door will 
not be widely accepted and can accelerate feelings of grievance. In Kosovo this 
will intensify political conflicts especially if the country does not benefit 
from UN membership as a result of the deal. And in Serbia, the loss of any more 
territory could inflame nationalism if the deal does not culminate in EU entry. 
Such disputes are more likely to turn violent during times of economic 
disruption, fear and uncertainty that the pandemic has unleashed. 

Regionally, border changes approved by the U.S. will encourage separatists 
<http://ba.n1info.com/English/NEWS/a388467/Dodik-Republika-Srpska-and-Kosovo-want-the-same-thing-independence.html>
  and irredentists to interpret them as legitimizing national homogenization. 
With the principle of multi-ethnicity evidently jettisoned, demands for 
mono-ethnicity would escalate and potentially unravel several countries. 
Western institutions and NATO forces may find themselves woefully unprepared 
for the wave of instability that could engulf the region. Calls 
<https://balkaninsight.com/2020/03/10/donald-trump-junior-urges-us-troop-withdrawal-from-kosovo/>
  for several hundred American troops to be withdrawn from the vital NATO 
mission in Kosovo will add fuel to the flames.

Territorial revisions in Kosovo could raise support for unification with 
Albania. Such momentum could spread to North Macedonia, where at least a 
quarter of the population is Albanian. Threats to North Macedonia’s territorial 
integrity would intensify ethno-nationalism and potentially bring both Bulgaria 
and Albania into an expanding conflict. The Serb entity in Bosnia-Herzegovina 
can demand the application of the Kosovo precedent in splitting from Bosnia, 
likewise with the Croat population in western Herzegovina and the Bosniak 
population in Serbia’s Sandjak region.

Internationally, the prospect of land swaps adds another dimension to Moscow’s 
divisive plans <https://www.cepa.org/moscows-balkan-partition-strategy>  in the 
Western Balkans and establishes usable precedents elsewhere. The most effective 
way to close doors to NATO and EU membership is to exploit inter-state 
conflicts so the disputants are viewed as unfit for accession. Moscow is well 
aware that various Balkan nationalists will pounce on the prospect of 
territorial acquisitions and can be encouraged to pursue even more ambitious 
irredentist claims. Russian officials can simultaneously offer regional 
settlements and inject themselves as mediators.

Kremlin support for Balkan land exchanges also establishes valuable precedents, 
particularly for its own partition of Ukraine, Georgia, Moldova and other 
targeted states. Moscow’s coerced border changes can be depicted as legitimate 
moves that mirror Western support for ethnic homogenization in the Balkans. 
This could reduce calls for economic sanctions against Russia for carving up 
its neighbors’ territories. Instead of pushing back on Moscow’s subversion and 
destabilization of the Balkans, U.S. supported border changes could turn out to 
be a gift for President Putin <https://thehill.com/people/vladimir-putin> 

Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin <https://thehill.com/people/vladimir-putin> 
Russian lawmakers approve fines, prison terms for spreading false coronavirus 
information 
<https://thehill.com/policy/international/russia/490535-russian-lawmakers-approve-fines-prison-terms-for-spreading-false>
  The Hill's Morning Report - Presented by Facebook - Trump: Next couple of 
weeks are going to be rough 
<https://thehill.com/homenews/morning-report/490526-the-hills-morning-report>  
The Hill's Morning Report - Presented by Facebook - Trump blends upbeat virus 
info and high US death forecast  
<https://thehill.com/homenews/morning-report/490305-the-hills-morning-report> 
MORE <https://thehill.com/people/vladimir-putin> .

Janusz Bugajski is a senior fellow at the Center for European Policy Analysis 
(CEPA) in Washington, D.C. His recent book, co-authored with Margarita 
Assenova, is entitled “Eurasian Disunion: Russia’s Vulnerable Flanks,” 
Jamestown Foundation, Washington, D.C.

 

-- 
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/00fc01d608d1%24afa7b8c0%240ef72a40%24%40gmail.com.

Reply via email to