http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/bcr3/bcr3_200211_391_2_eng.txt

Institute for War & Peace Reporting

Balkan Crisis Report (BCR)

Kosovo: Final Status Back on the Agenda

Everyone, except the Albanians, has tried to avoid it, but now Kosovo's
long-term future is at last being discussed.

By Tim Judah in London (BCR 391, 16-Dec-02)

Ever since the end of the war in Kosovo, the question of the final
status of the territory has been the great woolly mammoth of Balkan
politics. That's to say it's been deep-frozen. However, a sudden flurry
of activity in and around Kosovo indicates that a thaw has begun.

In the last few days and weeks, Pristina and Belgrade have played host
to both UN Secretary General Kofi Annan and the Security Council
ambassadors. Michael Steiner, the head of UNMIK, has been to discuss
Kosovo in Washington with the US administration and in New York at the
UN.

Steiner also recently caused a stir when he unveiled his proposal for
the European Union to take over the UNMIK - but only after the final
status of the protectorate had been decided.

In Pristina, Albanian politicians have been sputtering with rage as
Serbia and Montenegro agreed on December 7 to a constitution for their
new forthcoming union. The preamble states unequivocally that Kosovo is
part of Serbia.

So what is going on? The first reason for the thaw is the warm wind of
Iraq. The US wants to concentrate on the war on terror and the looming
war with Saddam Hussein. So powerful voices in Washington want to reduce
the American commitment in the Balkans to free up resources for points
east.

One way to do this is to prompt Serbs and Albanians into thinking, and
talking, about their future. But they also want the Europeans to do the
same. At a recent high-level conference at the influential Washington
think-tank the US Institute of Peace, American voices made clear that
one way Europe could help the US in Iraq would be to shoulder more of
the Balkan burden.

Interestingly, the USIP (www.usip.org) has done more thinking about
options for Kosovo's future than any organisation in Belgrade or
Pristina.

A second reason why Kosovo's final status is moving up the political
agenda is that, as far as UNMIK is concerned, it is simply the next
issue on its order of business - as laid out by its mandate, Security
Council Resolution 1244. Now that the Provisional Institutions for
Self-Government are up and running, UNMIK's duty is to facilitate "a
political process designed to determine Kosovo's future status". A third
reason why politicians and analysts are beginning to look at Kosovo
relates to the EU. The whole region desperately wants to begin moving
towards membership but the organisation is a club for states, not
territories with an undefined status.

Until now, Serbia and Montenegro could not even begin to think about
opening discussions on a Stabilisation and Association Agreement, SAA,
with Brussels since they did not know if they were even part of one
country or not.

An SAA is the first major step towards EU membership and outlines the
processes that a country needs to make to bring its legislation into
line with it.

The forthcoming union of Serbia and Montenegro means that this question
has been resolved, at least for now.

But what about Kosovo? The SAA question has set alarm bells ringing in
the Yugoslav foreign ministry. It now believes that the issue of Kosovo
needs to be clarified so that Serbia and Montenegro can begin the SAA
process.

Luckily for all concerned, the EU, in the words of one official, is
"endlessly inventive". On November 6, many of the members of the
government of Kosovo were flown to Brussels for a meeting with the
European Commission. This would appear to herald the birth of a
twin-track policy for Serbia and Kosovo.

The idea is that Serbia and Montenegro begin the SAA process, which
would be officially "suspended" for Kosovo pending a resolution of its
final status. At the same time, Kosovo would still begin the process by
itself, even if not quite officially.

The USIP meeting, meanwhile, revealed several other things. Firstly,
that US officials and analysts are far more likely to favour an
independent Kosovo than their European counterparts, and that they are
far more impatient to get the talks process going. However, both sides
are keen to get Serbs and Albanians talking about concrete issues such
as trade, transport and power as soon as possible. UNMIK officials say
that early next year they will invite leaders from Pristina and Belgrade
to do just this.

The whole question of proposed talks has resulted in quite some alarm
amongst Kosovo Albanian politicians, who fear an attempt to eventually
force them to accept something less than independence, for example some
form of formal relationship with the new union of Serbia and Montenegro.

In Belgrade, where the issue of Kosovo has been absolutely taboo since
June 1999, very few people are beginning to discuss the question again.
Officially, the policy is "no partition, no independence". However,
Serbian strategists have a problem. If they won't countenance either of
these options then what can they propose short of eventually
reintegrating 1.8 million Albanians who hate them and who would then
have to be represented in the governments and parliaments of Serbia and
the union?

In the last few months, Nebojsa Covic, the president of the Coordination
Centre for Kosovo-Metohija, the body which deals with Kosovo, has been
talking of regionalisation. This is code for giving Serbian areas de
jure autonomy. But, it's not a long-term plan.

On November 22, however, he wrote an article for the Belgrade daily
Politika, which looks suspiciously like an opening gambit. He appears to
suggest (his argument is a little unclear) that Kosovo remain within
Serbia although it, or perhaps just Albanian areas, have the same status
as Republika Srpska in Bosnia-Hercegovina. Covic's mentor is the writer
on Kosovo, Prof Branislav Krstic, his deputy at the coordination centre.
Krstic admits to being an admirer of Lord Owen - who has suggested
redrawing the borders of the Balkans. Covic could be laying down an
early marker. That is to say that he is putting forth a maximalist
position, which he knows will be unacceptable to Albanians, while
signalling his last minimum position - some form of eventual partition
of Kosovo. Between now and final status however, there are bound to be a
good many years. Talks on the issue, as opposed to more mundane
questions, are unlikely to start next year but those who like to gamble
might well like to lay bets for 2004.

Tim Judah is the author of Kosovo: War and Revenge and The Serbs:
History, Myth and the Destruction of Yugoslavia.


                                       Serbian News Network - SNN
                                           [EMAIL PROTECTED]
                                        http://www.antic.org/

Reply via email to