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.... "No longer would Russia cooperate with Washington and Brussels in the 
search for a peaceful compromise, as it had in 1995 when Bill Clinton and Boris 
Yeltsin sat on the hillside at Hyde Park and reached a historic agreement to 
put Russian troops under NATO command...."
=====
 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/11/23/AR2007112301237.html
Back to the Brink In the Balkans
By Richard Holbrooke
Sunday, November 25, 2007; Page B07 
 
At a most inopportune time, the Balkans are back. On Dec. 10, the 
U.S.-E.U.-Russian negotiating team tasked with getting the Serbs and Albanians 
to agree on Kosovo's future status will report to the United Nations that it 
has failed. A few weeks later Kosovo's government will proclaim that Kosovo is 
an independent nation -- a long overdue event. 
The United States and most of the European Union (led by Britain, France and 
Germany) will recognize Kosovo quickly. Russia and its allies will not. 
Kosovo's eight-year run as the biggest-ever U.N. project will end with great 
tension and a threat of violence that could spread to Bosnia. 
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Because security in Kosovo is NATO's responsibility, there is an urgent need to 
beef up the NATO presence before this diplomatic train wreck. Just the thought 
of sending additional American troops into the region must horrify the Bush 
administration. Yet its hesitations and neglect helped create this dilemma -- 
which Russia has exploited. 
There is more bad news, virtually unnoticed, from nearby Bosnia. Exactly 12 
years after the Dayton peace agreement ended the war in Bosnia, Serb 
politicians, egged on by Moscow and Belgrade, are threatening that if Kosovo 
declares its independence from Serbia, then the Serb portion of Bosnia will 
declare its independence. Such unilateral secession, strictly forbidden under 
Dayton, would endanger the more than 150,000 Muslims who have returned there. 
Recent American diplomacy led by Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns and 
special envoy Frank Wisner, working closely with E.U. negotiator Wolfgang 
Ischinger, has largely succeeded in persuading most of our European allies to 
recognize Kosovo rapidly. But NATO has not yet faced the need to reinforce its 
presence in Kosovo. Nor has serious transatlantic discussion begun on Bosnia, 
even though Charles English, the American ambassador in Sarajevo, and Raffi 
Gregorian, the deputy high representative in Bosnia, have warned of the danger. 
"Bosnia's very survival could be determined in the next few months if not the 
next few weeks," Gregorian told Congress this month. Virtually no one paid any 
attention. 
The icing on the cake? Russia has threatened to link the Kosovo issue to the 
claims of two rebellious areas of far-away Georgia, Abkhazia and South Ossetia. 
These issues had seemed largely resolved in the late 1990s. For such extensive 
backsliding to occur took a poisonous combination of bad American decisions, 
European neglect and Russian aggressiveness. 
When Serbian dictator Slobodan Milosevic was ousted in September 2000 and a 
reformist government took over, the road seemed open to a reasonably rapid 
resolution of Kosovo's final status. But the new Bush team hated anything it 
had inherited from Bill Clinton -- even (perhaps especially) his greatest 
successes -- and made no effort to advance policy in Kosovo until 2005 and 
ignored Bosnia. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld even sought to pull American 
troops out of the NATO command in Kosovo, which Secretary of State Colin Powell 
prevented. (However, the State Department did not prevent Rumsfeld from 
prematurely turning the NATO command in Bosnia over to a weak E.U. Force, a 
terrible mistake.) 
By the time meaningful diplomatic efforts started in 2006, the reformist prime 
minister in Belgrade had been assassinated by ultranationalists. And Vladimir 
Putin decided to reenter the Balkans with a dramatic policy shift: No longer 
would Russia cooperate with Washington and Brussels in the search for a 
peaceful compromise, as it had in 1995 when Bill Clinton and Boris Yeltsin sat 
on the hillside at Hyde Park and reached a historic agreement to put Russian 
troops under NATO command. Today, Putin seeks to reassert Russia's role as a 
regional hegemon. He is not trying to start another Cold War, but he craves 
international respect, and the Balkans, neglected by a Bush administration 
retreating from its European security responsibilities, are a tempting target. 
Putin was hardly quiet about this; I watched him bluntly warn German Chancellor 
Angela Merkel, Defense Secretary Robert Gates and delegates to the Munich 
security conference in February that Russia would not agree to any Kosovo 
settlement that Belgrade opposed. There was a vague feeling in Washington and 
Brussels that Putin was bluffing -- and no real planning in case Putin meant 
it. 
Not only did he mean it, Putin upped the ante by extending his reach into the 
Serb portion of Bosnia. Using some of his petrodollars, Putin turned its mildly 
pro-Western leader, Milorad Dodik, into a nasty nationalist who began 
threatening secession. The vaunted Atlantic alliance has yet to address this 
problem at a serious policy level-- even though, as Gregorian warned, it could 
explode soon after Kosovo declares independence. 
The window of opportunity for a soft landing in Kosovo closed in 2004. Still, 
Bush should make one last, personal effort with Putin. His efforts must be 
backed by temporary additional troop deployments in the region. It is not too 
late to prevent violence, but it will take American-led action and time is 
running out. 
Richard Holbrooke was the chief architect of the Dayton peace agreement, which 
ended the war in Bosnia. He writes a monthly column for The Post.


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