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Inbox: Getting Serbia-Kosovo Normalization Right


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5-6 minutes

  _____  


The ongoing dialogue is in disarray, with the latest US-brokered agreement 
between the two sides a mishmash of commitments. The Biden administration needs 
to coordinate efforts with European allies to present a common agenda if it’s 
to get Belgrade and Pristina to “yes.”


Inbox is a CEPA series on priorities for the next administration – and its 
allies.

There are currently two tracks of diplomacy for the Serbia-Kosovo dispute: the 
EU’s Belgrade-Pristina dialogue led by Special Representative (EUSR) Miroslav 
Lajčák, and the US Serbia-Kosovo dialogue led by White House Special Envoy, 
Richard Grenell. Given the outcome of the US election, Grenell will soon be out 
of the picture. This presents an opportunity for the incoming Biden 
administration to harmonize efforts with European allies and move the process 
along.

Shortly before outgoing President Donald Trump brokered the so-called September 
Agreement 
<https://neweasterneurope.eu/2020/09/15/diplomacy-is-not-the-apprentice-serbia-kosovo-issue-requires-a-long-term-commitment/>
 , I discussed the Serbia-Kosovo dialogue with one of president-elect Joe 
Biden’s chief advisors, Ambassador Nicholas Burns.

To Burns, the Balkans should remain a top priority for the United States in the 
coming years. “The Balkans are part of Europe,” he said, “But they are the weak 
link in Europe right now, and they require a lot of economic aid, political 
assistance, and from time to time, intervention when violence breaks out.” He 
stressed the importance of the transatlantic relationship and argued that “most 
Americans of both parties who have been involved with the Balkans in the past 
20 to 30 years understand that diplomacy works best when the United States and 
EU member states work together.” Europeans should lead, he said, but America 
should have their back.

According to Burns, US alignment with the EU is natural because “we want the 
same outcome” and ultimately “we have the same values and interests.” Asked 
about how he would deal with the Serbia-Kosovo dispute differently from the 
Trump Administration, Burns pointedly answered, “We are going to be much 
stronger and a much more positive force in the Balkans if the United States and 
EU integrate our efforts.”

American and European officials admit that there was no formal coordination 
between the EU and U.S. dialogues. Grenell maintained he was in charge of 
“economic normalization 
<https://neweasterneurope.eu/2020/07/09/what-twiplomacy-reveals-about-the-serbia-kosovo-dialogue/>
 ” while the EU should be responsible for mediating on political matters. In 
reality, no one was in charge of anything. Vetëvendosje’s secretary of external 
and international relations, Kreshnik Ahmeti, characterized Trump’s September 
Agreement as çorbë — an eleventh-hour soup cooked with limited ingredients: you 
throw into the broth whatever you can find in the fridge, leaving you with what 
is sometimes a strange dinner. And indeed, Grennell’s deal was a mishmash, from 
committing the parties to join a Balkan mini-Schengen zone to stating that 
Belgrade would move its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

Indeed, the reference in the September Agreement to moving Serbia’s Embassy to 
Jerusalem is emblematic of the fact that Western powers were working at 
cross-purposes. Following the Agreement, the EU expressed “serious concern and 
regret 
<https://www.euractiv.com/section/enlargement/news/eu-warns-serbia-over-jerusalem-embassy-move/>
 ” as the Embassy’s move could create problems for Belgrade’s eventual EU 
accession — an epic own-goal, given that Serbian EU membership is the endpoint 
all sides are driving towards.

So how best, then, to start harmonizing the transatlantic approach to the 
dialogue? The EU’s greatest weakness is that its member states are divided over 
Kosovo’s recognition. While the majority of EU members recognize Kosovo’s 
sovereignty, five continue to oppose it. The EU High Representative Josep 
Borrell, as well as EUSR Lajčák, come from two states – Spain and Slovakia 
respectively – that do not recognize Kosovo’s independence. Divisions 
negatively impact the EU’s ability to mediate the dialogue because the end goal 
of the dialogue is vaguely defined as “normalization” rather than explicitly 
stating that it is the recognition of Kosovo’s sovereignty.

If a Biden Administration is going to promote a joint EU-U.S. dialogue in line 
with Burns’ vision, a common goal needs to be clearly articulated. “We haven’t 
defined what normalization means”, David L. Phillips, director of the program 
on peace-building and human rights at Columbia University, told me. And in his 
view, “normalization should mean sovereignty for Kosovo and recognition of its 
independence by Serbia within Kosovo's current borders.”

To that end, the United States could play a constructive role by pushing the 
EU’s non-recognizing members to recognize Kosovo’s sovereignty. Unanimous 
recognition in the West will in turn make it easier for Serbia’s president 
Aleksandar Vučić to sell recognition back home if his public understands that 
there is no daylight between Washington D.C. and Brussels on this matter. A 
little effort early on to get everyone aligned will prevent cooking up another 
çorbë as negotiations get tense.

Dr. Leon Hartwell is a Title VIII Transatlantic Leadership Fellow at the Center 
for European Policy Analysis (CEPA) in Washington D.C. Twitter:  
<https://twitter.com/LeonHartwell> @LeonHartwell

 

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