emerging-europe.com 
<https://emerging-europe.com/news/kosovos-pm-directly-accuses-us-of-bringing-down-his-government/>
  


Kosovo's PM directly accuses US of bringing down his government - Emerging 
Europe | Intelligence, Community, News


Craig Turp @bucharestlife

5-6 minutes

  _____  

Kosovo’s acting prime minister Albin Kurti (pictured above) has accused a 
United States envoy of being “directly involved” in toppling his government 
last month, calling it part of a plan to achieve a major diplomatic victory in 
a US election year.

After less than two months in office, Mr Kurti’s coalition government collapsed 
in March, losing a no-confidence vote initiated by the junior coalition 
partner, the Democratic League of Kosoovo (LDK). Mr Kurti, who continues as a 
caretaker prime minister, now claims that the LDK acted under pressure from 
Richard Grenell, US President Donald Trump’s envoy to Kosovo and Serbia.

 

“My government wasn’t overthrown for anything else except the fact that 
Ambassador Grenell is in a rush to sign a deal with Serbia which I strongly 
believe is harmful, since it includes territorial exchange,” said Mr Kurti 
during an online press conference.

Mr Kurti said Grenell had “hijacked” the Kosovo-Serbia dialogue process and 
“cares very much about the signature at the bottom of the paper not about the 
text on the paper.”

“What he needs is a quick deal to show that they can fix crises in the world, 
perhaps in contrast to Clintons, Bushes and Obama, without any military 
intervention, and this can be presented as a success in this electoral year,” 
he added.

Writing in the American Conservative last week, Ted Galen Carpenter, a senior 
fellow for defence and foreign policy studies at the Cato Institute, appeared 
to preempt 
<https://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/trumps-meddling-in-the-balkans-has-led-to-super-kosovo-fail/>
  Mr Kurti’s words.

“Some analysts speculate that Trump seeks a foreign policy coup by brokering a 
settlement between Serbia and Kosovo,” he wrote. “With the prospect of a major 
peace accord involving North Korea fading by the week, so the theory goes, the 
president desperately needs a blockbuster achievement on the international 
front, and a breakthrough in the Balkans appears to present the best 
opportunity.”

Last week, the European Union appointed its own special representative to 
Serbia and Kosovo, Miroslav Lajčák, a former Slovak foreign minister. “Let’s 
give him the the time he needs to see how he can help both parties resume 
dialogue,” said EU foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, who added that there 
can be no sustainable future for the Western Balkans without a clear EU 
perspective.

The EU and the US currently have very different perspectives regarding the 
resolution of the Serbia-Kosovo dispute. The US is believed to favour a land 
swap deal that would see the Presevo Valley in southern Serbia, where the 
population is mostly ethnic Albanian, join Kosovo, while in return, Serbia 
would re-establish full control over the majority ethnic-Serb area of Kosovo to 
the north of the River Ibar, including the town of Mitrovica. The EU is 
steadfastly opposed to the proposal, which is said to have been discussed 
behind the scenes for years by Kosovar President Hashim Thaçi and his Serb 
counterpart, Aleksandar Vučić. The EU believes that such a deal would reopen 
other border disputes across the Western Balkans.

Mr Kurti also opposes any deal involving a land swap. “I am ready to discuss 
the needs of communities, the rights of citizens but not a territorial 
exchange,” he said, adding that Thaçi and Vučić had also discussed giving 
Serbian religious sites in Kosovo a special status, similar to the Vatican or 
Mount Athos in Greece.

The US ambassador immediately denied Mr Kurti’s accusations. “There has been 
absolutely no talk of land swaps from me – and it’s never been discussed by 
anyone else in my presence. We have said this many times,” he said.

In March, Mr Kurti lifted tariffs on Serb goods which had been imposed by his 
predecessor Ramush Haradinaj in November 2018 in a bid to put pressure on 
Serbia, which is blocking Kosovo’s international recognition and preventing it 
from joining international organisations, including Interpol. He has vowed to 
restore the tariffs in June if there are no “signs of good faith” from Serbia 
in the meantime.

Serbia continues to refuse to recognise Kosovo’s independence, declared in 2008.

Meanwhile, Mr Kurti’s political future remains unclear.

President Thaçi has said he would start the process to form a new government 
this week, while the acting prime minister has called for fresh elections 
instead.

In a side issue, Mr Kurti has also had to fend off opposition criticism for 
accepting 1,000 Covid-19 testing kits from Serbia.

“The test kits were a gesture from Serbia which should not be politicised,” he 
said. “Had Kosovo refused the test kits we would have been accused of 
irrational behaviour.”

 

 

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