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Serbia, Kosovo normalize economic ties, gesture to Israel


By DEB RIECHMANN

6-7 minutes

  _____  

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump announced Friday that Serbia and 
Kosovo have agreed to normalize economic ties as part of U.S.-brokered talks 
that include Belgrade moving its Israeli embassy to Jerusalem, and mutual 
recognition between Israel and Kosovo.

After two days of meetings with Trump administration officials, Serbian 
President Aleksandar Vucic and Kosovo’s Prime Minister Avdullah Hoti agreed to 
cooperate on a range of economic fronts to attract investment and create jobs. 
The announcement provided Trump with a diplomatic win ahead of the November 
presidential election and furthers his administration’s push to improve 
Israel’s international standing. 

“I’m pleased to announce a truly historic commitment,” Trump said in the Oval 
Office, standing alongside the two leaders. “Serbia and Kosovo have each 
committed to economic normalization.” 

“After a violent and tragic history and years of failed negotiations, my 
administration proposed a new way of bridging the divide. By focusing on job 
creation and economic growth, the two countries were able to reach a major 
breakthrough,” the president said.

Trump said Serbia has committed to open a commercial office in Jerusalem this 
month and move its embassy there in July. 

Serbia’s decision to move its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem is a nod to 
both Israel and the United States. The Trump administration recognized 
Jerusalem as Israel’s capital in late 2017 and moved the U.S. embassy there in 
May 2018. 



 

The administration has encouraged other countries to do the same but has been 
widely criticized by the Palestinians and many in Europe because the 
Israeli-Palestinian conflict remains unresolved. Until now, Kosovo, a 
predominantly Muslim country, has never before recognized Israel nor has Israel 
recognized Kosovo. 

In a rare statement issued after the start of the Jewish sabbath, Israel Prime 
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu thanked the president of Serbia for moving the 
embassy to Jerusalem. He confirmed that Israel and Kosovo will establish 
diplomatic relations and said Pristina also will open its embassy in Jerusalem. 

“Kosovo will be the first majority-Muslim country to open an embassy in 
Jerusalem,” Netanyahu said. “As I’ve said in recent days, the circle of peace 
and recognition of Israeli is widening and is expected to add additional 
countries.”

In all, a total of four countries now recognize contested Jerusalem as Israel’s 
capital, including the U.S. and Guatemala. The Palestinians claim east 
Jerusalem, occupied by Israel in the 1967 Mideast war, as their would-be 
capital. 

The gestures to Israel are part of the Trump administration’s push to support 
the Jewish state, which has included forceful denunciations of criticism of 
Israel at the United Nations and in other international venues. 

Most recently, the administration brokered a deal for Israel and the United 
Arab Emirates to normalize relations. That was followed by the first commercial 
flight between Israel and the UAE, with neighboring Saudi Arabia and Bahrain to 
allow such flights to pass through their airspace. Additional Arab states, 
including Sudan, Bahrain and Oman, have been identified as countries that might 
also normalize relations with Israel. 

Kosovo’s Parliament declared independence from Serbia in 2008, nine years after 
NATO conducted a 78-day airstrike campaign against Serbia to stop a bloody 
crackdown against ethnic Albanians in Kosovo.

Most Western nations have recognized Kosovo’s independence, but Serbia and its 
allies Russia and China have not. The ongoing deadlock and Serbia’s 
unwillingness to recognize Kosovo have kept tensions simmering and prevented 
full stabilization of the Balkan region after the bloody wars in the 1990s.

“These were difficult talks for us, but I’m truly satisfied,” Vucic told 
Serbian reporters in Washington. 

He stressed that the economic agreement does not include “mutual recognition” 
between Serbia and Kosovo. But he hailed the talks as a big victory for Serbia 
and a step toward closer ties with the U.S. Despite officially seeking 
membership in the European Union, Serbia has been forging close political, 
economic and military ties with Russia and China.

Hoti said moving ahead with economic normalization was a “huge step forward.” 
He said rail links and various other major infrastructure projects discussed 
will bring an estimated $1.18 billion ($1 billion euros) in major economic 
changes to Kosovo in the next three to five years. 

Kosovo also agreed to a one-year pause in efforts seeking new membership in 
international organizations. And Serbia agreed to a one-year pause of any 
campaign against Kosovo’s efforts for membership into international 
organizations and new recognition from other countries. 

Serbia and Kosovo earlier OK’d air, rail and transit agreements, including one 
that would clear the way for the first flight between Pristina and Belgrade in 
21 years. Trump envoy Richard Grenell said U.S. companies also could benefit 
from normalizing commerce. 

“American companies were telling us they were pulling out — like rental car 
companies. Because if you rented a car in Kosovo, you couldn’t drive over the 
border. You couldn’t leave,” Grenell said. “So we had American businesses 
beginning to pull back, saying it just doesn’t make sense. And the Europeans 
were complaining just as much.” 

On Monday, Vucic and Hoti are scheduled to go to Brussels to hold talks under 
the auspices of the EU’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell and special envoy 
for the Belgrade-Pristina dialogue Miroslav Lajcak.

The EU has mediated the talks between the two former wartime foes for more than 
a decade, and the parallel U.S. effort, although focused on economic 
development, has not been fully embraced by some EU officials.

___

Associated Press writers Matthew Lee in Washington, Josef Federman in 
Jerusalem, Llazar Semini in Tirana, Albania, and Dusan Stojanovic in Belgrade, 
Serbia, contributed to this report.

 

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