nationalinterest.org 
<https://nationalinterest.org/feature/kosovo-united-states-risks-snatching-defeat-jaws-victory-208813>
  


In Kosovo, the United States Risks Snatching Defeat From the Jaws of Victory


by Petrit Selimi

9–12 minutes

  _____  

New developments in the Western Balkans are threatening the precarious peace 
achieved under American leadership since the end of the 1999 Kosovo war.

A terrorist attack in northern Kosovo 
<https://www.politico.eu/article/kosovo-serbia-police-attack-albin-kurti-banjska-vjosa-osmani/>
  last September by a group of over forty well-armed Serb militants operating 
from inside a Serbian Orthodox Monastery left a Kosovan policeman killed. The 
subsequent reaction from the Kosovan police, aided by the Western security 
forces, eliminated three armed militants, while dozens fled to Serbia after 
surrendering all their weaponry, including armored vehicles. Milan Radoicic, a 
millionaire kingpin leading a Wagner-like paramilitary band and a close ally of 
the Serbian president Aleksandar Vucic, took public responsibility for this 
attack 
<https://balkaninsight.com/2023/09/29/kosovo-serb-kingpin-radoicic-takes-responsibility-for-weekend-shootout/>
 . Radoicic was detained shortly in Belgrade, but to the dismay of 
international observers, he was released 
<https://balkaninsight.com/2023/10/04/belgrade-court-rejects-detention-for-kosovo-serb-kingpin-radoicic/>
  after less than twelve hours in detention. This further reinforced the 
suspicions of links between him and the Serbian state.

Despite Serbia’s rejection of blame for this act of aggression, Western 
intelligence institutions who provided material for a confidential briefing 
<https://x.com/Petrit/status/1734852176936058910?s=20>  to the North Atlantic 
Treaty Organization (NATO) Council signaled strong evidence for a direct link 
between the Serbian state and the terrorist group. Most recently, British 
foreign secretary David Cameron also pointedly named and shamed Serbia 
<https://euronews.al/en/cameron-we-must-show-disappointment-with-serbian-governments-behavior/>
  as a “Russian proxy” destabilizing the region.

The U.S. State Department also followed up in early 2024, approving the sale of 
Javelin rocket systems 
<https://www.defensenews.com/global/europe/2024/01/12/us-approves-possible-javelin-sale-to-kosovo-amid-tensions-with-serbia/#:~:text=US%20approves%20possible%20Javelin%20sale%20to%20Kosovo%20amid%20tensions%20with%20Serbia,-By%20Elisabeth%20Gosselin&text=MILAN%20%E2%80%94%20The%20U.S.%20government%20approved,a%20bitter%20taste%20for%20Serbia.>
  to Kosovo’s fledgling defense force. According to the statement 
<https://x.com/Petrit/status/1734852176936058910?s=20>  from the State 
Department, “The proposed sale will improve Kosovo’s long-term defense capacity 
to defend its sovereignty and territorial integrity to meet its national 
defense requirements.”

The move did provoke some opposition in Congress. Representative Claudia Tenney 
(R-NY) <https://tenney.house.gov/>  has vehemently disagreed with selling 
Javelin systems to America’s closest ally in the Western Balkans. In a 
statement published in her X account, Rep. Tenney, who also chairs the Serbian 
Caucus in the U.S. House of Representatives, has pledged to introduce 
<https://x.com/RepTenney/status/1745522212415922346?s=20>  a “joint disapproval 
resolution” to prevent Kosovo from receiving the defense weaponry.

In early February, the Kosovo government banned the use of Serbian currency in 
the Serbian areas, citing the Constitution of Kosovo, which allows only the 
Euro. While Western governments agreed the issue of currency is a sovereign 
right of Kosovo, the Kosovan government was nevertheless slammed 
<https://www.bnnbloomberg.ca/us-slams-kosovo-for-unnecessarily-raising-ethnic-tensions-1.2030489>
  for not coordinating such moves with its allies and “unnecessarily raising 
ethnic tension.”

Why are the Balkans yet again on the verge of new conflict? Some background 
notes may be necessary to remind us that this crisis is a new undercurrent to 
the relatively peaceful few decades since the end of the Balkan wars.

Following the wars of the 1990s, the region had some notable years of progress: 
the Dayton Accords helped usher in an extended period of peace in 
Bosnia-Herzegovina, while Kosovo became a sovereign and independent nation in 
2008 with the support of the United States and its allies, based on a plan 
proposed by the UN envoy, former Finnish president Marti Ahtisaari 
<https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/16/world/europe/martti-ahtisaari-dead.html> . 

Croatia joined NATO and the European Union (EU), while Albania, Montenegro, and 
North Macedonia joined NATO, cementing the Euro-Atlantic security architecture 
in the region.

Kosovo and Serbia reached an important agreement in a dialogue facilitated by 
the EU envoy already in 2013, following the opinion of the International Court 
of Justice <https://www.icj-cij.org/case/141>  that Kosovo’s Declaration of 
Independence did not breach international law. In the following years, Kosovo 
was recognized by various international bodies, from the International Olympic 
Committee and the International Soccer Federation to the regional bodies. 
Serbia, on the other hand, entered a period of improved relations with the 
West, which brought major investments in its economy. During the 2010s, Serbia, 
on the back of a more relaxed political landscape in the region, became the 
focal point for attracting direct foreign investments, including American 
investment.

As late as 2019, hopes were high for a final, legally binding settlement of the 
key bilateral issue of relations between Kosovo and Serbia. Both President 
Trump in 2019 
<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/2019/02/15/trump-supports-mutual-recognition-new-letter-vucic-thaci/>
  and President Biden in 2021 
<https://dc.medill.northwestern.edu/blog/2021/02/19/joe-bidens-letters-show-new-approach-in-kosovo-serbia/#sthash.X5ZsOhyW.dpbs>
  have insisted that Serbia and Kosovo must mutually recognize each other. 
Additionally, Kosovo agreed to provide for extended legal arrangements for 
Serbian municipalities inside Kosovo 
<https://portal.cor.europa.eu/divisionpowers/Pages/Kosovo.aspx#:~:text=In%202015%2C%20through%20an%20EU%20facilitated%20dialogue%2C%20Prime,postponed%20over%20conflicts%20about%20the%20extension%20of%20powers.>
  to connect through an Association of Serbian Majority Municipalities. It was 
meant to be a tool for enhanced protection of minority rights.

Another important step aiming for economic normalization between the two former 
foes was reached in 2020 after the  
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/trump-kosovo-serbia-agreement/2020/09/04/b1283f8c-eec0-11ea-99a1-71343d03bc29_story.html>
 signing of the trilateral “Washington Agreement 
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/trump-kosovo-serbia-agreement/2020/09/04/b1283f8c-eec0-11ea-99a1-71343d03bc29_story.html>
 ” between U.S. president Donald Trump, Kosovan prime minister Abdullah Hoti, 
and Serbian president Aleksandar Vucic. The deal was negotiated by the U.S. 
envoy and former acting Director of National Intelligence (DNI) Richard 
Grenell. It was focused on improving bilateral cooperation in road and air 
transport, energy, and natural resources. Initially, it was supposed to be 
signed by the former Kosovan President Hashim Thaçi. However, a prosecutor at 
Specialist Chambers at the Hague, Jack Smith, published a controversial 
indictment 
<https://www.hrw.org/news/2020/06/25/kosovo-war-crimes-indictment-advances-justice#:~:text=(Brussels)%20%E2%80%93%20The%20indictment%20made,Human%20Rights%20Watch%20said%20today.>
  on alleged war crimes by President Thaçi three days before Trump was supposed 
to host the peace summit in Washington, DC. 

Nevertheless, the agreement 
<https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2021/2/1/kosovo-establishes-israel-ties-to-open-embassy-in-jerusalem>
  was signed months later between Kosovo’s PM Hoti and Serbian President Vucic, 
which ensured Kosovo was recognized as an independent nation by the State of 
Israel. At the same time, Kosovo agreed to open an Embassy in Jerusalem, making 
this agreement compatible with the Abraham Accords. The Heritage Foundation 
also welcomed this recognition 
<https://www.heritage.org/international-economies/commentary/welcome-new-chapter-the-israel-and-kosovo-relationship>
 , calling it “historic.”

Why, then, are the Balkans entering a new period of crisis?

The answer is two-fold: war in Ukraine opened the path for Russia to influence 
the Balkans and to diversify and increase the different stress points for the 
already strained Atlantic consensus. As the Council on Foreign Relations noted 
<https://www.cfr.org/backgrounder/russias-influence-balkans>  last year: 
“Russia resents the region’s push for integration with the EU and NATO and it 
seeks to leverage persistent ethnic and religious fault lines to undermine 
those efforts.” 

There are strong reasons to believe that irredentist actions by Serb 
nationalist elements in Serbia, Bosnia, Montenegro, and Kosovo can be sourced 
to the same deep state circles operating under the auspices of the Serbian 
intelligence service in Belgrade. Following the Banjska attack,  
<https://apnews.com/article/serbia-intelligence-chief-resigns-aleksandar-vulin-russia-9d3ebdffdb75ee17bd452b45ed69dc55>
 Aleksandar Vulin, the pro-Russian head of Serbia’s Security and Information 
Agency (BIA), resigned 
<https://apnews.com/article/serbia-intelligence-chief-resigns-aleksandar-vulin-russia-9d3ebdffdb75ee17bd452b45ed69dc55>
 . The United States Government also sanctioned 
<https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy1606>  Vulin in July.

One consequence of the Ukraine war was President Biden’s conciliatory policy 
toward Serbia, aiming to prevent it from becoming a fully-fledged Russian 
proxy. As the Washington Post noted recently in an opinion signed 
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2024/01/03/serbia-elections-violence-russia-biden/>
  by the Editorial Board, “Biden’s policy was to embrace Serbia’s authoritarian 
president, Aleksandar Vucic, in a bid to peel his country away from Russia. 
That policy increasingly looks like a failure.”

The remaining challenge for the U.S. government is the unwillingness of its 
traditional partner, Kosovo, to coordinate the steps.

As Politico noted in June 2023 
<https://www.politico.eu/article/how-kosovos-prime-minister-became-americas-ardent-frenemy/>
 , Kosovo’s intransigent Prime minister Albin Kurti, “has achieved the 
impossible in American politics: consensus among Democrats and Republicans,” 
further explaining that “unfortunately for Kurti (and his country), the point 
of agreement is that Kosovo’s leader is a stubborn, and at times, reckless 
politician who has undermined the joint U.S.-European effort to achieve a 
lasting solution for peace between Kosovo and Serbia.”

Some still blame Kurti for the outbreak of violence in Banjska, despite Kosovo 
otherwise delivering to the United States on other issues, such as housing 
Afghan refugees 
<https://balkaninsight.com/2021/08/16/balkan-countries-offer-refuge-to-afghans-after-taliban-takeover/>
  after the fall of Kabul and joining the EU and U.S. sanctions 
<https://euronews.al/en/kosovo-government-approves-another-package-of-sanctions-against-russia/#:~:text=Kosovo%20Government%20approves%20another%20package%20of%20sanctions%20against%20Russia,-COMMENTS&text=Kosovo's%20Government%20has%20given%20its,the%20ongoing%20conflict%20in%20Ukraine.>
  against Putin’s regime.

The terrorist attack in Banjska, however, has created a completely new 
landscape. 

Appeasement has failed with Serbia. Thus, there is now a need for a combination 
of incentives for Kosovo, such as opening the path towards NATO membership and 
putting pressure on Vucic to achieve the final legally binding agreement 
centered on mutual recognition. 

The strategic approach taken by the previous Trump administration was correct 
in focusing on economic relations between the two countries. However, better 
economic ties without settling the dangerous underlying political conflict will 
not, in themselves, close the painful chapters of Kosovo-Serbia violence. As  
<https://www.ft.com/content/c2b5ab2a-6634-4620-93f9-cec83170ce67> Adam Tooze 
noted <https://www.ft.com/content/c2b5ab2a-6634-4620-93f9-cec83170ce67>  in the 
Financial Times recently, “It’s not a mistake to believe that economic 
interconnection produces real social, economic and political change…The mistake 
was to imagine that this transformation was a one-way process that would 
automatically secure order.”

Kosovo is one of the staunchest supporters of the United States anywhere in the 
world. Even during the Trump presidency, Kosovo’s enthusiasm for America did 
not dampen. On the contrary.  
<https://time.com/kosovo-independence-america-obsession/> Time magazine has 
reported <https://time.com/kosovo-independence-america-obsession/> : “In a 
January 2018 Gallup survey asking how other countries view U.S. leadership, 
Kosovo ranked first in the world, with 75 percent approval of the Trump 
administration.” Kosovan cities have boulevards named after both President Bush 
and President Clinton. Even the late Secretary of State Madeline Albright 
<https://apnews.com/article/madeleine-albright-diplomacy-belgrade-serbia-europe-0f3d82c0417f061f48b092812a1bc609>
  and Senator Bob Dole <https://xk.usembassy.gov/bob_dole/>  (R-KS) have their 
own statues adorning Kosovo squares.

Delivering a NATO membership path to Kosovo is the right thing to do both as an 
act of partnership with a reliable partner and as a relatively easy strategic 
investment bringing outsize peace dividends. It will also finally close any 
venue for Russia to use Serbia as a wedge against Balkan peace.

 

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