euractiv.com 
<https://www.euractiv.com/section/enlargement-neighbourhood/opinion/time-for-the-eu-to-take-ownership-of-the-serbia-kosovo-process/>
  


Time for the EU to take ownership of the Serbia-Kosovo process


Michael Keating, Senad Šabović

5–6 minutes

  _____  

In the Western Balkans, good things happen when the West is resolute, and the 
opposite is true when there is drift or apathy sets in. EU leaders would do 
well to bear this in mind when they meet for the EU-Western Balkans summit this 
week, write Michael Keating and Senad Šabović.

Michael Keating is the executive director and Senad Šabović is a senior advisor 
of the European Institute of Peace (EIP).

The EU now has the opportunity to confound its critics and fully grip the 
Kosovo-Serbia Dialogue. With the Banjska incident showing the potential for 
violence, an international plan has been crafted and the parties have signalled 
in-principle acceptance. This needs to be followed up.

Failure to seize this moment creates space for further negative dynamics on the 
ground. It will also impact Western and EU credibility in its own backyard – in 
a region that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky referred to as potentially 
the next venue for Russia to cause another headache.

It is crucial to stem the current downward spiral, and ideally to harvest the 
positive dividends from investment.

A high point in the normalization process was the 2013 agreement, which 
provided for the integration of the northern – Serb-majority – region into 
Kosovo’s institutions.

Then followed a period of stagnation with each year worse than the last. In 
2022, the situation came to a head with protests and stand-offs between local 
Serbs and the police in northern Kosovo.

Without decisive action, it was clear the situation would worsen.

This triggered a plan by French and German diplomats, presumably in close 
coordination with EU Dialogue facilitator Miroslav Lajčak.  It was backed by 
the United States, adopted by the EU, and ultimately accepted by Kosovo Prime 
Minister Albin Kurti and Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić.

Western arm-twisting worked and a milestone was achieved. It was supposed to 
end the cycle of crises in northern Kosovo and make for next-level 
normalization. That, however, did not happen.

Implementation remains blocked and a range of problems loom.  These include 
ambiguity over the parties’ acceptance of the agreement, followed by breaches 
of commitments and an escalation with a Kosovo police intervention in the north 
and a major clash between local Serbs and NATO peacekeepers that left close to 
a hundred soldiers wounded.

Then came the Serb paramilitary attack at Banjska in September which was 
considered the worst escalation in a decade, resulting in the death of a Kosovo 
policeman and three deaths among the attackers.

So, what can be done? Some will say ‘nothing’. Why bother if the parties refuse 
to see value in the process?

But where does that get us?  Most likely facing stagnation, freer play for 
undesirable influences, and possibly even an armed confrontation and more 
bloodshed.

Beyond the obvious loss of life and damage to infrastructure, what would such a 
scenario do to the EU’s and Euro-Atlantic credibility? The Western Balkans has 
been a region of strong Western intervention. A failure here is also a failure 
for the West.

Western attention is the only thing that makes the Kosovo-Serbia Dialogue work. 
 It needs to be stepped up. The Dialogue has to be rebooted.  This is the best 
way to express Western resolve.  It must include a mechanism for robust 
follow-up.

The EU and its key Western partners need to formulate a set of interrelated 
measures in this process and insist on their full acceptance by the Dialogue 
parties. They would work in unison to inject fresh momentum into the process.

How can that be done?

The first step is to empower the EU’s role by vesting the EU facilitator with 
the authority to call non-compliance by either party and make corresponding 
declarations.

Faced with growing insecurity, the EU needs to put its foot on the accelerator 
and not the brakes. This will be crucial to securing full agreement by the 
parties to the plan that has been on the table since October for sequencing. 
This needs to become a central benchmark for measuring compliance.

Another core element will be to approve a set of measures to sanction 
non-compliance and reward compliance and place them at the disposal of the EU 
Dialogue facilitators. There need to be both carrots and sticks.

This would ensure an immediate check on breaches and would become the key 
deterrence.

This would be more credible if the plan also had a security element.  In line 
with what NATO started after Banjska, this would involve a commitment to 
reinforcing Kosovo’s sense of security and enhancing mutual stabilisation 
commitments for northern Kosovo.

An independent civil society monitoring and implementation support mechanism 
will also be needed to ensure sustainability.

This approach may seem like a tall order under the present circumstances, 
though the alternative is far worse. The Western Balkans risks boiling over.

The region has generally been a positive example of international peacebuilding 
– with the EU at the centre – and success in overcoming the current problems 
could give a much-needed boost of confidence at a time of growing insecurity.

 

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