transconflict.com <http://www.transconflict.com/2023/04/what-agreement/>  


What agreement?


TransConflict

10–12 minutes

  _____  

Once again the West struggles to enforce a deal of questionable value on 
unwilling Balkan participants.

By David B. Kanin

The old saying that a deal satisfying neither side involved in it must be a 
good deal does not apply to the text Western diplomacy (finally) published and 
forced on Serbia’s Aleksandar Vucic and Kosovo’s Alvin Kurti on February 27.  
It is not an agreement but rather an agreement to negotiate an agreement.  Its 
statement of principles regarding Kosovo’s status, Pristina’s longstanding 
commitment to create an Association of Serbian Municipalities in Kosovo (ASM), 
and whatever amounts to a “normalization” of relations did not settle any piece 
of the dispute.  Neither side signed anything.  Each side interpreted every 
outstanding issue as it wished.  Once the text was made public it was clear it 
would have no life unless and until the sides negotiate an implementation 
annex. 

Kurti did win one negotiating point. By subsuming attention to the necessity of 
adhering to commitments already agreed to by the sides in the new text’s 
language regarding status and sovereignty issues Kurti reasonably could claim 
he does not have to create the Association in advance of reaching agreement on 
how to implement everything else in the deal. 

In his press conference on February 27 EU external action chief Josep Borrell 
said the sides were going out of crisis management and “are looking for a 
structured solution to the normalization”  (whatever that means).  A meeting on 
implementation was set for March 18 at which Borrell said the EU expected the 
sides to engage constructively.

So that meeting took place.  If the version of the implementation annex read 
out by Vucic after it was over is accurate it does not implement anything but 
rather just adds another layer of verbiage leaving everything still up for 
grabs – status, ASM, missing persons, “normalization.”  It speaks of 
implementation in the future tense and says each article will be implemented 
independently of each other – so the sides can continue to squabble over what 
gets done first.  As in February neither side signed anything and both sides 
blamed the other for not doing so.  On April 4 a working level meeting produced 
a text on missing persons and another agreement to forge an agreement on ASM.

In short, the much anticipated normalization agreement so far is just another 
damp squid.  Borrell seemed to recognize this when he issued his by now ritual 
expectation that the two sides would implement what they had agreed to and 
ritual warning that they would incur consequences if they did not.  Diplomatic 
back and forth no doubt is going on behind the scenes but neither Belgrade nor 
Pristina seem in any hurry to do anything. 

As is often the case no Balkan protagonist is as interested in an agreement as 
are the Westerners eager to claim credit for it.  Kurti knows that if Kosovo 
forms an ASM it will be creating an institution in danger of being controlled 
from Belgrade no matter how tight is its formal integration in Kosovo’s 
constitution and institutions.   For his part, Vucic knows he would put the 
political domination he has so carefully constructed at great risk if he agrees 
to anything nodding toward an independent Kosovo—even though the conditions 
laid out in the February 27 text would leave the lost province short of  the 
universally recognized sovereignty it craves. 

Kurti continues to hold a weaker hand than Vucic even given the former’s 
success on February 27.  Pristina is saddled with its 2013 commitment to 
forming what would amount to a fifth column no matter its legal details.  The 
West long ago lost patience with him and may force his replacement by someone 
more docile.  For his part Vucic has Kosovo’s ASM commitment in his pocket and 
will continue to insist Pristina must live up to it before it can be trusted to 
fulfill an agreement to implement whatever process is formed to give life to 
the February 27 text.

No lasting settlement is likely unless the two parties disgorge the outsiders’ 
self-serving demands and find a way to work together.  Their task would be to 
resolve the stunted status forced on Kosovo by American diplomatic failures to 
pass a UN Security Council resolution in 2006 meant to replace UNSC 1244 and 
then to force through universal recognition of a unilaterally declared Kosovar 
state in 2008.  The West’s howls of protest in 2018 when Vucic and Hashim Thaci 
considered a land swap as part of a settlement demonstrated that these 
outsiders  are not open to any deal conceived of by the locals rather than in 
Washington or a West European capital.  It is in the interests of both Belgrade 
and Pristina to use this or another approach they mutually agree on as the 
basis of a bilateral agreement.

It would be good if Serbia and Kosovo put domestic development and regional 
security before their disputes over identity and sovereignty.  It also would be 
good if the US and EU (and Russia) would learn from their decades of 
frustration, drop their pretensions to expertise and leadership and involve 
themselves in mediation only if Pristina and Belgrade decide to develop their 
own path to “normalization” as they define it.    

Of course, none of  this is likely to happen.  What is likely is that the 
current crop of US and European diplomats, like their many predecessors, will 
complete their mandate, and move on in their careers.  They likely will be 
replaced by another crop of people armed with a sense of diplomatic entitlement 
and committed to the same paradigm of rhetoric and Olympian perspectives that 
have marked the West’s post-Cold War engagement in the Balkans.

Ukraine is the wildcard here.   NATO and the West are fully committed to a 
Russian failure, which gives Moscow an opportunity to come out of the war with 
a strategic victory no matter how miserably the Russian military and its 
mercenary auxiliaries have performed.  Russia does not have to achieve 
battlefield success in 2023.  It just has to keep the current stalemate in 
place long enough for Western unity to fray, enabling a peace as bad for 
Ukraine as was the Minsk Agreement in 2014.  Moscow’s disinformation warriors 
might plant the seeds of a rationale enabling the West to swallow such a 
defeat.  Such a narrative might claim Russia has been chastened by its 
casualties and material losses and will be left too weak to renew its effort to 
swallow whatever remains of Ukraine after a new deal leaves the Russians in 
control of more territory than it held before it invaded last year. 

There is no question that the accession of Finland and perhaps Sweden to NATO 
would be tangible Russian setbacks even in the context of a post-war situation 
otherwise acceptable to Moscow.  Perhaps those gains would convince the West to 
reassure Moscow formally that the rump Ukraine will not get into NATO or the 
EU.   This would reinforce a Russian success.

Ukraine’s spectacular military victories in 2022 set a high bar for 2023.  Kyiv 
needs successes in the field of the magnitude of those last year to maintain 
Western patience for a war increasing percentages in Europe and the US are 
ready to end no matter the consequences.   Breathless press commentary 
regarding Ukrainian heroism has inflated an expectations balloon Kyiv must keep 
inflated.  If its military is indeed able to reprise last year’s performance 
then Russia might experience something like the aftermath in the US of the 1968 
Tet Offensive in Vietnam – a realization that it cannot win the war on the 
battlefield and must find a way out of the quagmire it created for itself.  If 
such a palpable success does not materialize Western resolve will face 
existential questions.

Either way the Balkans will face tectonic shifts in its security context just 
as it has repeatedly since 1878.   Successful Ukrainian counteroffensives would 
further weaken Putin’s brand and the interests of still-considerable 
pro-Russian elements throughout the Balkans.  A re-burnished sense of Western 
power and cohesiveness would build on the performance of US and European 
weapons systems in Ukraine.  Kurti would come under even greater pressure to 
create ASM, assuming the West does not simply engineer his removal.  There 
would remain the problem of declining US power in east Asia but Taiwan and the 
South China Sea is a long way from the Balkans.

On the other hand, if Russia is able to keep the Ukrainian stalemate in place 
or make military gains of its own Western triumphalism regarding Ukraine and 
the so-called “rules based international order” will evaporate.  Russian 
influence in the Balkans would increase along with its ability to conduct cyber 
and other aspects of hybrid warfare against its weakening Western adversaries.  
The US and EU likely would redouble efforts to force creation of ASM in Kosovo, 
to finally remove Milorad Dodik from his birth in the Republika Srpska and 
otherwise draw from what Charles Tilly called performance repertoires to act as 
if they retain hegemony in the region. Whatever happens the Balkans can expect 
little useful to come their way from the outside powers.  Local leaders and 
publics should stop sloughing off responsibility for their own problems of 
identity, sovereignty, economy and society.   With luck, they will dust off 
proposals previously shot down by the outsiders, wrestle with the very real 
problems such proposals contain and decide whether it is possible to pursue 
them no matter predictable outside disapproval.  For a start, Vucic and other 
decisionmakers should flesh out the “Open Balkans” initiative so it is a 
concrete program rather than just a slogan useful to Belgrade’s effort to 
present an image of regional leadership.

David B. Kanin is an adjunct professor of international relations at Johns 
Hopkins University and a former senior intelligence analyst for the Central 
Intelligence Agency (CIA).

The views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of 
TransConflict.

 

 

 

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