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<https://www.npr.org/2023/07/22/1189580707/24-years-after-kosovo-the-u-s-is-asking-serbias-president-not-to-side-with-putin>
  


24 years after Kosovo, the U.S. is asking Serbia's president not to side with 
Putin


Eleanor Beardsley

5–7 minutes

  _____  

The U.S. is appealing to Serbia's president while Russia would like nothing 
better than renewed conflict in Kosovo, where tensions are at their highest in 
two decades.

SCOTT SIMON, HOST: 

It's been more than two decades since Western forces intervened in Kosovo to 
try to stop Serbian forces from slaughtering ethnic Albanians there. As NPR's 
Eleanor Beardsley reports, Kosovo remains a Balkan flashpoint, and you will 
hear that a couple of minutes into this report.

ELEANOR BEARDSLEY, BYLINE: When Yugoslavia began to splinter in the early '90s, 
Kosovo was a province of Serbia with a majority-ethnic Albanian population.

IGOR MARKOVIC: So after the Declaration of Independence in 2008, Kosovo became 
an Albanian majority country.

BEARDSLEY: Political analyst Igor Markovic says that means in Kosovo today, 
Serbs make up only around 4% of the population.

MARKOVIC: So basically, the places have switched.

BEARDSLEY: Serbia firmly rejects Kosovo's independence, which means the 
governments of Kosovo and Serbia have diametrically opposed visions of Kosovo's 
future. Srdjan Simonovic is a lawyer for NGO The Human Centre in Northern 
Kosovo, where most ethnic Serbs live. He says Kosovo Serbs feel like pawns in a 
game between Belgrade and Pristina.

SRDJAN SIMONOVIC: Should they belong to Kosovo? Or should they belong to 
Serbia? At the end, they're deceived from both sides. I mean, Pristina is not 
transparent enough. Belgrade is not transparent at all. So the losers are 
ordinary people.

BEARDSLEY: Kosovo Serbs are politically controlled by Belgrade, says Simonovic. 
And because of disagreements with Pristina, Serbian Prime Minister (ph) 
Aleksandar Vucic instructed them to boycott Kosovo's recent municipal 
elections. That's how four ethnic Albanians got elected mayor in ethnic 
Serb-majority towns in Northern Kosovo at the end of May.

ISMIR ZEQIRI: (Non-English language spoken).

BEARDSLEY: Ismir Zeqiri is one of them. He remembers trying to enter the town 
hall in Zubin Potok to begin his term.

ZEQIRI: (Through interpreter) Of course, I was surprised when I arrived and 
about 50 people were blocking the entrance. All the while, more and more people 
were coming out as they sounded the city alarm.

UNIDENTIFIED PEOPLE: (Non-English language spoken, chanting).

BEARDSLEY: Hundreds of Serbs gathered demanding the newly elected mayors leave. 
Civilians and scores of NATO soldiers, which are still in Kosovo two decades 
later to help keep the peace, were injured in clashes. It was the worst 
violence in nearly 20 years.

(SOUNDBITE OF TEAR GAS GRENADE EXPLODING)

BEARDSLEY: Ivana Stradner is a Balkans expert with the Foundation for Defense 
of Democracies. She says part of the problem stems from Serbian Prime Minister 
Vucic, who is in trouble at home.

IVANA STRADNER: So in order to remain in power, he always needs to escalate the 
crisis in Kosovo and then to position himself in the center and as someone, you 
know, who can solve the problems.

BEARDSLEY: Kosovo's Prime Minister Albin Kurti has also been fanning the flames 
of nationalism.

[CROSSTALK]

BEARDSLEY: Last week, there was a brawl in Kosovo's parliament. Kurti got a 
glass of water thrown in his face. His critics say he's strained relations with 
Kosovo's main backers, the U.S. and EU. Kurti blames Kosovo's problems on what 
he calls the lawlessness in Northern Kosovo. He spoke to NPR.

ALBIN KURTI: The key problem we have is these violent extremists and criminal 
gangs financially supported and politically ordered from Belgrade to 
destabilize Kosovo.

BEARDSLEY: The U.S. has poured more than $2 billion into Kosovo over the last 
two decades and built a massive new embassy in Pristina. But the Biden 
administration has taken an unusually hard line with Kurti. Stradner says 
that's because America fears two things - renewed conflict and Serbian Prime 
Minister Vucic and his close ties with Russia.

STRADNER: They are really afraid of escalating. They are very afraid of Vucic 
going towards - pivoting to Russia. And they will do anything possible just to 
appease him.

BEARDSLEY: Stradner says many naively believe Vucic is moving toward the West. 
But she says Serbia is a historic ally of Russia, and Vucic will continue to 
play both sides.

[CROSSTALK]

BEARDSLEY: Two months after the violence, Serb citizens are still gathering in 
front of the town hall of Zvecan in Northern Kosovo - this time, a peaceful, 
around-the-clock sit-in until the ethnic Albanian mayor resigns. Not far from 
where they're gathered, there are Z's scrawled on a wall in support of Russia's 
invasion of Ukraine. Stradner says Russia would love to see chaos erupt in the 
Balkans.

STRADNER: For several reasons - to humiliate the United States, to show that 
NATO is nothing more than a paper tiger, and, of course, to distract the West 
from the war in Ukraine.

BEARDSLEY: Kurti has said he will allow new mayoral elections, and most Kosovo 
Serbs say they will participate if Belgrade gives the green light. But Stradner 
is pessimistic. She says the Balkans are once again a tinder box as nationalism 
flares in both Serbia and Kosovo.

Eleanor Beardsley, NPR News, Kosovo.

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