atlanticcouncil.org 
<https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/new-atlanticist/why-did-the-us-suspend-its-strategic-dialogue-with-kosovo-and-whats-next/>
  


Why did the US suspend its strategic dialogue with Kosovo? And what’s next?


jcookson

6–8 minutes

  _____  

On September 12, the Trump administration suspended its strategic dialogue with 
Kosovo, citing unspecified actions and statements from caretaker Prime Minister 
Albin Kurti. The suspension comes seven months into a political crisis in 
Kosovo, with the country being unable to inaugurate a new parliament since 
February’s elections.  

What will this suspension mean for US-Kosovo relations? And what does the 
timing of recent US-Serbia talks say about the Trump administration’s approach 
to the Balkans? For answers, we initiated a dialogue with our experts below.  


1. What is a strategic dialogue and why does it matter?


A strategic dialogue is a diplomatic tool used by the United States to advance 
bilateral relations with various countries. It involves high-level discussions 
on an agreed, broad agenda. The United States has engaged in strategic 
dialogues with several countries in southeast Europe, including Bulgaria, 
Romania, Greece, Croatia, and North Macedonia. It has used these dialogues to 
strengthen partnerships on issues such as defense, energy security, trade, 
investment, cybersecurity, and people-to-people ties. The overall goal of these 
dialogues is to promote stability, prosperity, and enhanced participation or 
integration into Euro-Atlantic institutions for the countries involved. They 
also serve US strategic interests by helping to counter the influence of other 
global powers and secure a more stable and secure Europe. 

— <https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/expert/jeffrey-hovenier/> Jeffrey Hovenier 
is a nonresident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Europe Center and a 
former US ambassador to Kosovo. 


2. Why did the United States suspend the strategic dialogue? 


The US announcement <https://xk.usembassy.gov/st_9122025/>  did not point to a 
specific cause prompting the suspension. Rather, it cited “concerns about 
caretaker government actions that have increased tensions and instability.” 
Although the suspension closely follows Kurti’s comments on September 7 
criticizing 
<https://reporteri.net/en/NEWS/Kurti%27s-attacks-on-the-constitution--Beja-calls-for-no-interference-in-the-work-of-the-court/>
  Kosovo’s Constitutional Court, it could be that this was simply the final 
straw in a series of frustrations with Kurti’s government. 

Over the past two years, Kurti has faced sharp rebukes 
<https://www.kosovo-online.com/en/news/analysis/two-years-eu-sanctions-kosovo-who-has-suffered-and-were-they-effective-27-6-2025>
  from the European Union, United States, and NATO allies for unilaterally 
installing ethnic Albanian mayors 
<https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/kosovos-kurti-says-mayors-must-work-offices-will-not-back-down-2023-06-01/>
  in Serb-majority municipalities after boycotted local elections, for defying 
Western calls to de-escalate 
<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/2023/06/15/borrell-to-kurti-take-necessary-steps-to-de-escalate-situation-in-the-north-of-kosovo/>
 , and for deploying armed police 
<https://www.ft.com/content/38d5d36a-7d2f-4163-95e3-2a15c6d4a36f>  units in the 
north despite warnings that these moves could provoke instability. The US 
decision to suspend talks could, therefore, be a calculated move to pressure 
Kurti to be a more constructive partner with Washington and transatlantic 
allies. 

— <https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/expert/lisa-homel/> Lisa Homel is an 
associate director at the Atlantic Council’s Europe Center. 


3. What are the implications for Kosovo? 


The US decision to suspend the strategic dialogue with Kosovo carries immediate 
and troubling implications for Kosovo and its minority communities, 
particularly ethnic Serbs in the north. Strategic dialogues are not merely 
symbolic exercises; they provide a structured framework for advancing 
stability, fostering institutional accountability, and promoting inclusive 
governance in a multiethnic country. 

With Washington stepping back, Kosovo’s minorities risk being left more exposed 
to unilateral policies from local authorities and illegal activities that could 
deepen marginalization, heighten local tensions, and constrain their already 
limited avenues for meaningful political participation. 

The timing of the suspension is unfortunate and will have negative implications 
for Kosovo. The suspension comes at a juncture of heightened political 
volatility, with Kurti’s government under sustained international criticism for 
actions to shut down or impede support provided by Serbia to the ethnic Serb 
community in Kosovo. The United States and Europe have characterized these 
actions as unilateral, uncoordinated with US and international partners, and 
unnecessarily adding to tensions. At a time when international cooperation and 
reassurance could significantly advance Kosovo’s trajectory and standing, the 
government of Kosovo instead now confronts the consequences of a loss of 
confidence from its most significant partner.  

— <https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/expert/ilva-tare/> Ilva Tare is a senior 
fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Europe Center and the host of the Center’s 
Balkans Debrief video series. 


4. How does Serbia play in to this? 


US administrations have always rejected the zero-sum dynamic that Pristina and 
Belgrade prefer, making clear that policy toward one is distinct from the 
other. That being said, this decision comes just five weeks after US Secretary 
of State Marco Rubio and Serbian Foreign Minister Marko Đurić met in Washington 
and agreed to hold a bilateral strategic dialogue between Serbia and the United 
States this year. 

While the forthcoming US-Serbia strategic dialogue should be considered 
separately from the developments with Kosovo, it does merit some consideration 
whether the United States should be deepening its ties with Serbia, even 
symbolically, at least for the time being. 

The past few months have seen widespread anti-government protests throughout 
Serbia, which have been met with increasingly brutal 
<https://www.rferl.org/a/serbia-protest-belgrade-novi-sad-vucic/33525034.html>  
police responses with the approval 
<https://www.dw.com/en/serbia-president-vucic-riot-police-breaks-up-peaceful-novi-sad-protest-v2/a-73927818>
  of Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić. The violence has become so significant 
that European Commissioner for Enlargement Marta Kos publicly questioned 
<https://balkaninsight.com/2025/09/09/european-commission-meps-criticise-serbia-over-protest-crackdown/>
  the “sincerity of Serbia’s commitment to the EU path” and said 
<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/2025/09/08/we-have-a-problem-in-belgrade/>  
that the European Union has a “problem in Belgrade.” Moreover, there are 
concerns that the Serbian government may opt to divert attention from its 
domestic crisis by manufacturing a flare-up in ethnic tensions with the 
Serb-majority areas in the north of Kosovo. 

Strategic dialogues are as much about signaling as tangible results, so it is 
incumbent upon Washington to evaluate if this is the right time to send the 
signal that it wishes to promote the relationship with Belgrade. 

—Lisa Homel


Further reading


Image: Albin Kurti, Kosovo's prime minister and leader of the 
Self-Determination party speaks during the closing electoral rally for the 
upcoming parliamentary elections, in Pristina, Kosovo February 7, 2025. 
REUTERS/Valdrin Xhemaj

 

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