greekcitytimes.com <https://greekcitytimes.com/2020/10/30/us-eu-kosovo-greece/> 
 


Washington Could Force Kosovo Recognition Onto Greece And Other EU States - 
Greek City Times


Paul Antonopoulos

5-6 minutes

  _____  

The U.S. intends to force Serbia not to oppose Kosovo’s entry into 
international institutions, thus imposing Belgrade to indirectly recognize the 
breakaway province’s independence. In this way, the five EU members that have 
not yet recognized Kosovo’s independence would be discouraged from continuing 
this policy.

It is in the hope of U.S. Ambassador to Kosovo, Philip S. Kosnett, that Greece, 
Cyprus, Spain, Romania and Slovakia will change their position on Kosovo’s 
independence if relations between Belgrade and Pristina improve. Kosnett then 
compared the Kosovo issue to other disputes in the Balkans and the wider region 
that the U.S. has mediated in.

Kosovo recognition. 

“Who would have thought that North Macedonia and Greece would reach an 
agreement on the name, but it did happen. People thought the United Arab 
Emirates, Bahrain or Sudan couldn’t have relations with Israel, but it did 
happen,” he said.

However, these are not good examples given by the American ambassador. The 
sovereignty of North Macedonian territory was not disputed by Greece, but 
rather the name of the state was. The name dispute cannot be equated with a 
situation where the U.S. is backing an entity trying to secede 15% of Serbian 
territory. Also, the three Arab states do not have their sovereignty questioned 
by Israel. No matter how historical the issues over Israel and the Macedonian 
question may be, they cannot be put on the same level as Kosovo 
<https://greekcitytimes.com/2020/10/03/massive-cross-raised-in-kosovo-video/> .

Kosnett’s statement, given to Dukagjin Television, was addressed to Albanians 
who are accustomed to unconditional American support and is characteristic of 
Washington’s policy towards Serbia. Since the Brussels Agreement in 2013, 
Pristina expected the U.S. would make the five EU countries recognize Kosovo’s 
unilateral declaration of independence.

The 2013 Brussel Agreement, negotiated between former Serbian Prime Minister 
Ivica Dačić and his Kosovo Albanian counterpart Hashim Thaçi, and mediated by 
former EU High Representative Catherine Ashton, effectively opened a path for 
Belgrade and Pristina to normalize their relations since the provinces illegal 
declaration of independence in 2008.

However, the ambassador expresses a position that is consistent with 
Washington’s anti-Serb policy. This shows that the ultimate goal is to force 
Serbia to indirectly recognize the breakaway province through a comprehensive 
agreement and allowing it to become a member of international organizations. 
European countries that do not recognize Kosovo’s independence would be 
discouraged to continue this policy. The position of the five EU member states 
that do not recognize its independence becomes irrelevant if Belgrade continues 
to allow incentives that further legitimize the Pristina government.

It is unsurprising that this attitude is being actualized on the eve of the 
2020 American presidential elections. This indicates that the State Department 
hopes that it will become official American policy again. Although we cannot 
know with absolute certainty of this notion, it is indicative that Kosnett is 
speaking in that direction. It shows that there are strong impulses within the 
State Department which believes that the entire dispute and the relations 
between Belgrade and Pristina can be resolved by forcing Serbia to accept 
Kosovo’s independence.

Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić meeting with Donald Trump in the White House 
earlier this year. 

There is a disproportion in Kosnett’s statement between what the American 
ambassador would like to happen and the actual reality. Some of the EU 
countries would not recognize Kosovo even if Serbia reached an agreement to 
implicitly recognize the existence of an independent state in its own 
territory. But countries that do not have an immediate problem with their own 
territorial integrity would find themselves in an awkward position to defend 
their non-recognition if Belgrade is opening up to it.

Greece and Cyprus would probably not recognize Kosovo’s independence so long as 
Turkey continues occupying northern Cyprus. Spain too is dealing with several 
separatist movements, including in Catalonia, Basque and Galicia, and will also 
unlikely change their position on Kosovo. However, if Belgrade allows the 
breakaway province to be admitted into international organizations, there is a 
possibility that Romania and Slovakia could be open to recognizing the 
separatist province’s independence.

It all depends on the position of Belgrade, its strength to resist pressure and 
to find a long-term solution in negotiations with Pristina with the help of 
international mediators and within the bounds of international law. The 
possibly of Belgrade recognizing Kosovo would undo three years of diplomatic 
manoeuvring that has resulted in 20 countries withdrawing their recognition for 
the separatist province. As of today, 98 out of 193 countries recognize 
Kosovo’s independence after the withdrawal of the 20 countries. None-the-less, 
pressure is beginning to mount against Belgrade, and if it capitulates, the 
very few remaining EU countries that do not recognize Kosovo may begin doing so.

 

-- 
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/06e301d6aebe%24f098bfd0%24d1ca3f70%24%40gmail.com.

Reply via email to