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Three years since the Washington Agreement: What has been implemented?


Jelena Babsek

14–17 minutes

  _____  

On Monday, 4 September, it will be three years since the Washington Agreement 
between Serbia and Kosovo, which Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic and then 
Kosovo Prime Minister Avdullah Hoti signed in the White House in the presence 
of US President Donald Trump. The Serbian and Kosovo leaders signed two 
documents, which differ only slightly – in the last provision. Although, 
according to the interpretations of most lawyers, it is a question of legally 
non-binding declarations of intentions, the implementation of the agreement, 
negotiated with the mediation of the USA, was assumed as a political 
obligation. 

The European Western Balkans (EWB 
<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/2023/09/04/three-years-since-the-washington-agreement-between-serbia-and-kosovo-what-has-been-implemented/>
 ) portal reported that, as in the case of numerous other agreements concluded 
between Belgrade and Pristina in the past 12 years, there is an obvious gap 
between what was signed and what was implemented. Three years later, it is 
clear that the implementation of the Washington Agreement has “fallen into 
oblivion.” Most of the provisions, out of a total of 16 in the Serbian and 
Kosovo declaration of intent, have not been fully fulfilled to this day.


What has been (partially) implemented?


In the agreement officially named “economic normalization of relations”, only 8 
of the 16 provisions referred to economic cooperation between Serbia and 
Kosovo. Half of the agreed provisions concerned other (political) issues, and 
it was there that the most concrete results were achieved in the first year of 
implementation.

Provision 15 of the Washington Agreement, which at the time was considered 
essential for easing tensions between Belgrade and Pristina, provided for a 
one-year moratorium on Kosovo’s application for membership in international 
organizations and on the Serbian campaign to withdraw recognition of Kosovo. It 
was fully implemented, thanks to American engagement. Even after the formal 
expiration of the moratorium, the two sides indeed continued in the following 
months to adhere to the gist of the provisions.

However, in May 2022, the Kosovo government applied for membership in the 
Council of Europe, which provoked a negative reaction from the Serbian 
leadership and an explicit reference to the then-somewhat forgotten Washington 
Agreement. Aleksandar Vucic pointed out that in case of Kosovo’s violation of 
the agreement, Serbia will also return to the campaign of withdrawing 
recognition. Although no new recognitions of Kosovo’s independence were 
announced in the previous year, Serbian officials have repeatedly claimed that 
they have notes on the withdrawal of recognition by several countries.

On the other hand, the European proposal on the path to the normalization of 
relations accepted by Aleksandar Vucic and Albin Kurti in February this year, 
in Article 4, contains Serbia’s obligation not to prevent Kosovo’s membership 
in international organizations. Given the confusing statements about the 
implementation of the European proposal, it remains unclear to what extent the 
two sides will adhere to the provisions in this domain.

The final provision of the Washington Agreement – the only one that differs in 
the documents signed by the Serbian president and the Kosovo prime minister – 
has also been largely fulfilled. Serbia agreed to open a representative office 
of the Chamber of Commerce in Jerusalem, which was already done in November 
2020, but still did not move its embassy to Jerusalem (as foreseen by the 
second part of the given article) by the deadline of 1 July, 2021, nor was it 
done in the following period. The mutual recognition of Kosovo and Israel, 
defined in provision 16 of the document signed by Avdullah Hoti, followed in 
February 2021, and Pristina opened an embassy in Jerusalem before 1 July of the 
same year.

At the beginning of October 2020, the joint Merdare crossing was integrated and 
operationalized, as stipulated by the Washington Agreement. Although two 
agreements on integrated management of crossings were concluded under the 
auspices of the EU-mediated dialogue, it is indicative that only after the 
inclusion of this issue in the Washington documents, integration took place 
within a month. Additionally, as of March 2022, the Merdare crossing is fully 
operational, after the Serbian side opened both sides of the joint crossing, 
the portal recalled.

Another issue that was addressed by the Washington Agreement, as well as 
numerous other agreements within the dialogue between Belgrade and Pristina, 
since it represents one of the main open disputes, concerns the finding and 
identification of the remains of missing persons. The two sides promised to 
step up efforts and appoint liaison officers to handle these activities. 
Already during September 2020, more remains of Serbs and Albanians were 
returned. After the partial stagnation that followed, there were certain 
developments in the previous period as well, but under the auspices of the EU 
dialogue. On 2 May, 2023, Aleksandar Vucic and Albin Kurti agreed on a 
declaration of joint cooperation in discovering mass graves and identifying 
other missing persons, using satellite data, laser mapping and other advanced 
technologies.

Among the elements of the Washington Agreement that do not directly concern the 
relations between Belgrade and Pristina and which were included at the 
insistence of the Trump administration, due to the wider geopolitical interests 
of the US, as well as the campaign before the presidential elections, are the 
announced diversification of energy sources in Serbia and Kosovo and the ban on 
the use of 5G equipment procured from “unverified suppliers”.

Both sides have begun implementing measures and are working to diversify energy 
sources with American support. Regarding 5G equipment, Kosovo and the USA 
signed a joint memorandum on the “clean network” of the fifth generation as 
early as 2020, while Serbia, on the other hand, did not officially ban 
equipment from unverified suppliers, but did not buy it in the past period, so 
it can be stated that this provision has been partially implemented.


Insufficient results and implementation


The central part of the agreement from the White House was the economic aspects 
of the relationship between Belgrade and Pristina. This reflected the Trump 
administration’s approach to mediating the dialogue, where economic 
normalization was put at the forefront.

Provisions 1 and 2 relate to the implementation of the agreement on the 
Belgrade-Pristina highway and the Belgrade-Pristina railway. The two parties 
are expected to cooperate with the Export-Import Bank of the United States 
(EXIM) and the US International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) and sign 
a memorandum of understanding to agree on the operationalization of the 
Belgrade-Pristina road and rail connection, as well as additional financial 
support of DFC for loans granted to small and medium enterprises.

DFC signed joint declarations on cooperation with the governments of Serbia and 
Kosovo in September 2020 and established an international presence in Belgrade, 
opening a (first overseas) regional office. The agreement on encouraging 
investments in January 2021, with the next Biden administration, which in 
principle supported the implementation of the Washington Agreement, made it 
possible for the DFC regional representative office to start activities.

In 2022, DFC, in cooperation with the United States Agency for International 
Development (USAID), provided banks in Serbia with three loan guarantees in a 
total value of 120 million dollars to help micro, small and medium enterprises. 
In December 2022, a new guarantee scheme worth up to 400 million dollars was 
agreed with the Government of Serbia to support the Serbian economy. The 
management of DFC visited Kosovo several times and according to the available 
data, loans were approved to support investments in renewable energy.

However, on the other hand, when it comes to the “Peace Highway” from Belgrade 
to Pristina, there has been no progress since DFC and EXIM signed letters of 
intent with Serbia and Kosovo in September 2020. The financing of the 
construction of the highway was provided by the Serbian side, independently of 
the Washington Agreement, from other means, primarily through the help of the 
European Union under the auspices of the Western Balkans Investment Framework, 
as well as from the European Investment Bank.

The construction of the section of the “Peace Highway” from Nis to Merdare has 
begun and the first part of the new highway, only 5 kilometres long, was 
recently opened. Regarding the Belgrade-Pristina railway connection, although 
initially, both parties expressed interest, there are no concrete steps towards 
the realization of the plans. Also, independently of the Washington Agreement, 
the EU finances the reconstruction of the railway from Belgrade to Nis, but the 
construction of a potential branch towards Pristina is still uncertain.

The matter of mutual recognition of diplomas and professional certificates was 
also important for the economic normalization of relations. It repeated the 
content of the Brussels agreements from 2011 and 2016. However, technical and 
political problems, as before, blocked implementation. In November 2022, under 
the auspices of the Berlin process, three agreements of the Western Balkan six 
were signed, which, among other things, include the recognition of diplomas and 
professional qualifications for certain professions, and more tangible progress 
was achieved there, since Kosovo ratified the agreements, and they entered, 
after Government approval, in the parliamentary procedure in Serbia.

One of the more serious issues between Belgrade and Pristina, with 
repercussions on economic relations, concerned the use of Lake Gazivode. With 
the Washington agreement, both parties agreed to work with the US Department of 
Energy on a feasibility study with the goal of jointly using Lake Gazivode, 
avoiding further security and economic risks. In June 2021, the Secretariat of 
Energy actually sent a feasibility study to Serbia and Kosovo, which they did 
with the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, proposing a joint management 
model based on the Columbia River located on the US-Canada border.

However, after the first step of the agreement was taken, the two parties did 
not publicly declare their acceptance of the proposal and the implementation 
stopped there. The current Kosovo government of Albin Kurti takes a 
particularly hard-line position on this issue, on whose initiative the Kosovo 
Assembly rejected the resolution on the implementation of the Washington 
Agreement in August 2021, considering numerous provisions, including the model 
for Lake Gazivode, to be extremely unfavorable for Kosovo.


What was not implemented at all?


Three years after the Washington Agreement, whose long-term scope proved to be 
modest, it can be seen that efforts to implement certain things were never 
undertaken, nor was the public aware of possible implementation plans.

Such is provision 5 of the Washington Agreement, which can also be brought 
under the framework of economic normalization of relations. It states that 
Serbia and Kosovo will access and fully use the Mini-Schengen initiative, which 
was launched at the end of 2019. While Serbia is one of the founders and 
leaders of the initiative which, from 2021, has been renamed the Open Balkans, 
Kosovo to this day resolutely refuses to join this form of economic connection 
in the Western Balkans, marking it as a project behind which “Greater Serbian” 
intentions lie and as “eternal waiting room” for membership in the European 
Union.

Several atypical articles of the Washington Agreement, which are not directly 
related to the relations between Serbia and Kosovo, but were potentially 
important for the Trump campaign and the interests of American officials, were 
also not implemented by the Serbian and Kosovo sides, or data on activities in 
this direction are not available.

One point concerned the increased control of passengers in air traffic, the 
mutual sharing of information and the operationalization of the system for 
verification and information from the US. Also, both sides initially pledged to 
work on the decriminalization of homosexuality in 69 countries.

Although the contribution that Serbia and Kosovo could make in this field is 
debatable, no activities were visible in the past three years. Moreover, the 
public learned that in 2021, Serbia withdrew its ambassador from Poland, 
immediately after he signed a letter of support for the LGBT community. Also, 
the president of Uganda was recently on an official visit to Serbia, Uganda 
being one of the countries that adopted the strictest laws regarding the 
criminalization of homosexuality.

The next element was the categorization of Hezbollah, in its entirety – both 
its military and political wings, as a terrorist organization. Pristina, even 
before the signing of the Washington documents, designated Hezbollah as a 
terrorist organization, which is why the inclusion of this provision for the 
Kosovo side was unclear, while the Government of Serbia did not officially 
adopt a decision that would categorize Hezbollah as a terrorist organization.

Finally, the central element of provision 11 of the Washington Agreement, which 
refers to religious freedom, including the protection of religious buildings 
and the restitution of property, has not been fulfilled to date. At that time, 
the importance of implementing court decisions concerning the Serbian Orthodox 
Church was emphasized – it is about Kosovo’s obligation to implement the 
decision of the Constitutional Court of Kosovo from 19 May, 2016 according to 
which 24 hectares of land is to be returned to the Visoki Decani monastery. 
However, the Pristina authorities refuse, even in this three-year period, to 
implement the decision.

In addition, the formalization of the status of the Serbian Orthodox Church and 
the protection of cultural and religious heritage is incorporated into the new 
Brussels-Ohrid agreement of Serbia and Kosovo from 2023, which, according to 
experts, will again imply the priority of executing the court decision 
regarding Visoki Decani.

Overall, despite greater expectations and bombastic announcements from the 
White House that the agreement between Serbia and Kosovo marks a turning point 
for the Western Balkans, it is obvious, three years later, that only a small 
part of the provisions of the Washington Agreement have been fully implemented, 
and that many issues, then included, are still open as points of contention in 
increasingly tense relations on between Belgrade and Pristina.

 

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