foreignpolicy.com <https://foreignpolicy.com/2020/11/18/biden-in-the-balkans/>  


For Biden, fixing Trump’s mistakes in the Balkans will be easy. Avoiding 
Obama’s will be much harder.


Majda Ruge

10-12 minutes

  _____  

 <https://foreignpolicy.com/category/analysis/argument/> 


 <https://foreignpolicy.com/category/analysis/argument/> Argument


Fixing Trump’s mistakes in the region will be easy. Avoiding Obama’s will be 
much harder.

 

Shkumbin Gashi hangs a poster reading 'Congratulations Mr. President' at his 
bar in Rahovec, Kosovo on Nov. 6. Armend Nimani/AFP/Getty Images 

In winter 2001, President-elect Joe Biden, then a senator, visited Visoki 
Decani, a Serb Orthodox Monastery in Kosovo, during a post-war trip to what was 
then a U.N. protectorate.

While there (according 
<https://mhaltzel.medium.com/biden-and-the-kosovo-serbs-c6d8496fdaab>  to Mike 
Haltzel, Biden’s long-time foreign policy advisor), Biden briefly met Ramush 
Haradinaj, who had until recently been a guerilla fighter in Visoki Decani 
during the Kosovo war and who would later become prime minister of the country. 
Biden, eager to ensure the protection of Orthodox culture, asked Haradinaj for 
his personal assurances that he would give special care to the monastery. When 
violence again erupted in Kosovo three years later, dozens of Serbian Orthodox 
churches were demolished, but the monastery remained untouched. Years later, 
Haradinaj reportedly 
<https://mhaltzel.medium.com/biden-and-the-kosovo-serbs-c6d8496fdaab>  asked 
Haltzel to tell Biden that he had kept his promise.

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