foreignpolicy.com 
<https://foreignpolicy.com/2020/09/03/trump-has-a-fix-for-kosovo-hes-ignoring-it/>
  


Trump Has a Fix for Kosovo. He’s Ignoring It.


Edward P. Joseph

13-16 minutes

  _____  

The White House is hosting the leaders of Serbia and Kosovo this week for what 
is billed as a major negotiation. The outcome, however, is likely to be 
underwhelming. Even if the Trump administration manages to broker a deal on 
mutual investment and economic cooperation, the heavy burden of convincing 
Serbia to normalize relations with its bitterly departed former province is 
left to the EU. The current negotiation is essentially posturing: Serbia 
pretends to engage in earnest and Kosovo pretends to have an avenue toward 
recognition.  Much-needed economic growth, if it comes, will not alter that.

Without a course correction, the talks will ultimately devolve to the same 
question of “compensating” Belgrade for the loss of Kosovo that led to the 
destabilizing land swap the administration backed until last year. Fortunately, 
a completely new approach is available, inspired by the recent UAE-Israel 
breakthrough.

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In both situations, a common threat—Iran in the Middle East, and Russia, China, 
and Turkey in Europe —can convert an intractable problem into a unifying 
solution. Moscow’s violations 
<https://www.politico.eu/article/5-ways-to-fix-americas-broken-ties-with-europe/>
  of sovereignty from the Baltics to the Balkans, from Ukraine to the United 
Kingdom, have turned the Kosovo case into a catalyst. The alarming prospect of 
pro-Russian forces sharing power in a NATO ally, Montenegro, after this week’s 
stunning elections 
<https://eeas.europa.eu/headquarters/headquarters-homepage/84608/montenegro-statement-high-representativevice-president-josep-borrell-and-commissioner-oliv%C3%A9r_en>
  reinforces the urgency of finally breaking Moscow’s chokehold over Kosovo and 
the region. A standing US-EU-NATO dialogue on sovereignty, territorial 
integrity, and human rights would strengthen international norms against 
secession, creating space for full recognition of Kosovo by all EU and NATO 
members. This would open the door for Pristina’s accession to NATO, 
circumventing the Russo-Chinese UN Security Council veto and closing the Kosovo 
question.

Rather than grasp reality and create a pathway for Kosovo’s recognition, the 
Trump administration clings to the same religious belief 
<https://www.gazetaexpress.com/interviste-ekskluzive-me-richard-grenell-ne-uashington-do-te-flasim-vetem-per-ekonomi-beja-ti-heqe-vizat-per-kosoven-gexpr/amp/?__twitter_impression=true>
  in “economic normalization” that undergirded its failed so-called deal of the 
century. No matter the scope of the administration’s economic deal unveiled 
this week, it will not transform relations between Serbia and Kosovo. Unlike 
the UAE’s and Israel’s matched economies, Kosovo’s economy is simply too small 
<https://www.ft.com/content/e1e13f20-9c13-11ea-871b-edeb99a20c6e>  to matter to 
its larger neighbor. Increased trade without increased competitiveness could 
actually make things worse for Kosovo, which runs the biggest trade deficit in 
the region. While the administration’s infrastructure projects could create 
jobs in a region that desperately needs them, a massive infusion of funds could 
exacerbate the endemic corruption in the region. In the end, the negotiating 
theatrics will continue as Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic happily 
participates in economic projects while continuing to prolong the talks.

The proven method for attracting investment is completing the rigorous 
accession process for NATO and EU membership. Serbia cannot enter the EU until 
it normalizes relations with Kosovo. And Kosovo can neither begin the NATO or 
EU process, or fully enter the international system, until Serbia lifts its 
diplomatic blockade. In other words, the political obstacle that the 
administration skirts – mutual recognition—is also the primary obstacle to 
economic growth.

Nor will the far-off promise of EU membership bring Serbia around to 
recognition anytime soon. Belgrade has closed only two of 35 required reform 
chapters, making a planned 2025 accession date even more implausible. Under 
autocratic Vucic, trends are in the wrong direction. For the first time since 
it opened EU negotiations in 2013, Serbia has gone a full six months 
<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/2020/06/26/montenegro-to-open-chapter-8-on-30-june-serbia-not-opening-new-chapters-this-month/>
  without opening a new chapter.  Besides, Vucic has declared 
<https://www.reuters.com/article/us-serbia-russia-kosovo/serbia-ready-to-sacrifice-eu-membership-over-kosovo-deal-idUSKBN23P2G0>
  that EU membership alone – the West’s biggest carrot — is not enough to 
convince Serbia to recognize Kosovo, a reminder of the persistent appeal of 
partition.

China and Russia are proving more congenial partners for Vucic than the West. 
Serbia is now the “strategic anchor” 
<https://csis-website-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/s3fs-public/publication/200427_ChinaStrategy.pdf>
  for Beijing’s wider regional and European ambitions. The relationship spans 
the economic, defense 
<https://www.reuters.com/article/us-serbia-arms-china/serbian-purchase-of-missile-defence-system-shows-ties-deepening-with-china-idUSKBN24Z171>
 , and security 
<https://foreignpolicy.com/2019/06/18/big-brother-comes-to-belgrade-huawei-china-facial-recognition-vucic/>
  sectors, effected mainly through Chinese loans. And contrary to speculation 
in Belgrade about a supposed break with Moscow, the two capitals remain in 
close alignment on Kosovo. In June, Vucic and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei 
Lavrov each stated 
<https://www.rferl.org/a/russia-serbia-kosovo-lavrov-grenell/30679106.html>  
that any deal over Kosovo would have the consent of both Russia and Serbia. In 
fact, the longstanding stalemate over Kosovo endures for only one reason: the 
diplomatic backing that Serbia receives from Russia and China. By staunchly 
blocking Kosovo’s UN membership, these two Security Council members sustain 
Belgrade’s rejectionism, ensuring that negotiations proceed on Serbian terms 
and revolve around seeking Belgrade’s assent.

The US and EU must create a completely new framework whereby Serbia can no 
longer deny Kosovo access to the international system. The aim is not to punish 
Belgrade, but to finally enable the parties to negotiate on a level playing 
field. In this new context, Serbia would have the ability and incentive, with 
US and EU assistance, to negotiate protections of its permanent, legitimate 
interests in a sovereign, integral and equal Kosovo—not dictate its division. 
Relieving Belgrade of the ability—and need—to deny Kosovo its ambitions would 
allow Pristina to make concessions, symbolic and practical, that would honor 
Serbia’s permanent connection to its former province.

The UAE shift—putting aside a futile negotiation in favor of third-party 
diplomatic recognition—achieves that aim. Taking the UAE role are the four EU 
countries that do not yet recognize Kosovo: Spain, Slovakia, Romania, and 
Greece. Cyprus, which also doesn’t recognize Kosovo, is unnecessary at this 
point. Cyprus is not a member of NATO and, as Kosovo expert and ambassador 
Lulzim Peci has observed, the republic’s NATO accession is all that matters now.

NATO membership would provide Kosovo with what it needs most: security, 
stability, and international legitimacy, attained through a Euro-Atlantic 
perspective. UN membership, as shown by three precedents, is not required to 
join NATO. Accession to the alliance has long been the steppingstone to 
fulfillment of the lengthier process of joining the EU, which also poses no UN 
membership requirement. Even beginning the NATO track would be a signal of 
stability to foreign investors, more potent than anything the Trump 
administration is proposing.

Opening Kosovo’s pathway to NATO would infuriate Putin, but his options would 
be limited. Moscow shrinks from direct military confrontation with NATO, 
particularly so far from the Russian border. Instead, Moscow would likely boost 
its military relationship with Belgrade, supplying more weapons and deploying 
more Russian troops. Beijing, too, would likely step up military cooperation 
with Belgrade.

All this would leave Vucic with a dilemma. Russian and Chinese armaments would 
do nothing to stop Kosovo’s growing international legitimacy, precisely what 
Belgrade fears most. Any bid to spark anti- unrest by Kosovo Serbs against 
KFOR, the NATO peacekeeping force, would violate Belgrade’s commitments under 
the 1999 Kumanovo agreement <https://www.nato.int/kosovo/docu/a990609a.htm> , 
which ended NATO’s hostilities with Serbia.

On the other hand, freed from political dependence on Moscow and Beijing, 
Belgrade could reconsider its strategic orientation. The US conducts more joint 
military operations with Serbia than Russia does. The US, EU, and NATO could 
assist Serbia in managing its concerns about the Presevo Valley, where Serbia 
has established its biggest military base and where about 50,000 ethnic 
Albanians live across the border from Kosovo. Serbia’s arms industry would 
benefit from adopting NATO standards.

Relieved of the need to divide Kosovo, Belgrade could focus on a shared Western 
agenda to secure the standing of Kosovo Serbs and promote their return. Local 
Albanian and Serb experts have produced detailed, off-the-shelf plans 
<http://www.kipred.org/repository/docs/LOOKING_BEYOND_MITROVICA_BRIDGE_AN_AHTISAARI_PLUS_PACKAGE_PROPOSAL_47220.pdf>
 , endorsed by EU officials, awaiting only the sides’ agreement.

In other words, the most intractable, unsettling conflict in the Balkans could 
be resolved if four EU-NATO countries recognize Kosovo. Geopolitical forces 
increasingly put Washington and Brussels into convergence with those 
non-recognizers. Anxiety over separatism is what drives fears of a Kosovo 
parallel in Spain <https://doi.org/10.1080/23745118.2020.1762958> , Slovakia, 
and Romania. Washington has no wish to see Catalan secede from Spain, or watch 
ethnic Hungarians in Slovakia and Romania (or Serbia, for that matter)—backed 
by Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, the revanchist and Moscow ally—mount 
secessionist campaigns. Nor does Washington want to witness other European 
countries fracture in Kremlin-supported divisiveness. In the case of Scotland’s 
potential secession from the United Kingdom—a step that President Vladimir 
Putin promotes 
<https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/why-putin-wants-scottish-independence>  
after supporting Brexit—there is a strong possibility that the U.K.’s nuclear 
deterrent could be lost.

The United States now has a strategic interest in keeping Europe—and individual 
European states—whole and free. It’s time for Washington to go beyond its 
unilateral opposition to individual cases and lead a trans-Atlantic effort to 
refine state sovereignty in a way that discourages secession while maintaining 
commitment to human rights. The standing U.S.-EU-NATO Dialogue on Sovereignty, 
Territorial Integrity and Human Rights would produce a formal document setting 
out core principles and practical steps to define and promote the shared 
commitment to state order, and to the expression of self-determination within 
it, leaving secession for extreme cases.

This is entirely consistent with Kosovo’s independence. The U.N. Charter favors 
territorial integrity and international law frowns on secession, creating very 
narrow space for exceptions—which Kosovo easily fills. Following Serbia’s 
request <https://www.un.org/press/en/2008/ga10764.doc.htm> , the International 
Court of Justice ruled 
<https://www.icj-cij.org/files/case-related/141/16012.pdf>  in 2010 that 
Kosovo’s declaration of independence violated neither international law nor the 
governing U.N. Security Council Resolution 1244. The Court said that its 
decision did not address the question of self-determination and remedial 
secession, clearly signaling that the case was not a precedent. Ironically, it 
was Serbian Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic who conceded this point in the U.N. 
General Assembly, insisting <https://www.un.org/press/en/2008/ga10764.doc.htm>  
that the court’s decision “would prevent the Kosovo crisis from serving as a 
deeply problematic precedent in any part of the globe where secessionist 
ambitions are harbored.”

There are at least a dozen elements in the drive for Kosovo’s independence that 
are glaringly absent from any current European secessionist movement, including 
years of state-sponsored repression and denial of political rights. Unlike 
Catalonia, which this year played the key 
<https://www.reuters.com/article/us-spain-politics-catalonia/catalan-separatists-to-break-spains-political-deadlock-idUSKBN1Z11CC>
  parliamentary role in forming Spain’s government, Kosovo has never been 
offered commensurate political representation in Serbia’s parliament. While 
Belgrade did not consent to Kosovo’s declaration of independence, it was hardly 
unilateral. The United States and the majority of the EU strongly backed it, 
insisting on a constitution with strong protections for Kosovo’s Serbs. No 
remotely similar experience exists in Europe to include Crimea, site of another 
specious parallel repeatedly 
<https://www.rt.com/news/putin-address-parliament-crimea-562/>  drawn 
<https://www.b92.net/eng/news/world.php?yyyy=2016&mm=01&dd=11&nav_id=96651>  by 
Putin.

As the EU’s Foreign Minister Josep Borrell once stated 
<https://elpais.com/politica/2017/10/08/actualidad/1507473716_120646.html>  
when he fulfilled the same role for Spain, “Catalonia is not a colony, it is 
not occupied, it is not a state like Kosovo. It is not an occupied state.” 
Borrell could chair the Territorial Integrity and Human Rights Dialogue, 
sending a strong signal to Moscow, Madrid, and Barcelona that the 
trans-Atlantic community is firmly opposed to dismemberment of Spain or other 
European countries.

This powerful international alignment against ethno-territorial demands would 
be supplemented by diplomatic gestures. Washington could help Athens obtain 
final agreement from Albania on maritime rights. The United States and the EU 
could help Bucharest check illegal ethnic Hungarian paramilitary efforts, 
including the financing and planning of minor terrorist attacks, reportedly 
supported by Moscow and Budapest. Pushing back on Orban’s revanchist tactics 
could build confidence in both Bratislava and Bucharest.

In sum, the way for the EU-NATO four to isolate the Kosovo case is to accept 
it—underscoring its many convincing distinctions—while working with allies to 
strengthen and embrace the norm of sovereignty and territorial integrity. Doing 
so would relieve the EU of the complication of having both its Foreign 
Minister, Borrell, and its Special Envoy for Serbia and Kosovo, Miroslav Lajcak 
of Slovakia, hail from non-recognizing states.

Like most governments, Madrid, Bratislava, Bucharest, and Athens may flinch at 
taking political risk. But unlike Abu Dhabi, they face no reprisals from Iran 
or Turkey, or potentially from jihadists. Working with the United States and 
fellow EU and NATO members, these governments could rid themselves of a burden 
while liberating a country, stabilizing a region, and unifying a continent.

 

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