Kosovo, between Camp David and the Kremlin (Cord Magazine, B92)
Whether or not Serbia will free itself in 2019 of the shackles of the Kosovo problem - the alpha and omega of its foreign and domestic policies - depends largely on the diplomatic capabilities of its president.
The unresolved conflict with Kosovo’s Albanians places Serbia on a cross between East and West, while on the domestic front the fact that the country is a candidate for EU membership is used as an excuse: how can a country reform while its national sovereignty and integrity are endangered?
The monotony that is interrupted by occasional incidents between Belgrade and Priština was recently shaken by a letter of U.S. President Donald Trump addressed jointly to Aleksandar Vučić and Hashim Thaçi. The short letter is seen as confirmation of the arrival of increased American engagement during times when the EU is failing to bring to life the postulates of the Brussels dialogue and is turning attention increasingly towards the upcoming May elections for the European Parliament.
Federica Mogherini, the outgoing High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs, will have to reconcile herself with the fact that she won’t be sharing a Nobel Peace Prize with Vučić and Thaçi. The new candidate is Trump, who has announced that he will organize a peace accords ceremony on the lawn of the White House or Camp David like the one arranged by President Jimmy Carter in 1978 for the Prime Minister of Israel and the President of Egypt.
It is certain that the Americans are picking up the pace in the Western Balkans primarily in an effort to block the growing influence of Russia, which gives the Kosovo conflict a global dimension during this time of intensified East-West relations.
Serbian politicians could feel untroubled because of Moscow’s reassurances that it will accept every solution that’s agreed upon by Belgrade and Priština, but nothing’s quite that simple in diplomacy. The conflict has enabled Russia to present itself as a protector of Serbia, thus opening a channel of influence that Kremlin strategists wouldn’t want to close.
Russia most favours the status of a “frozen conflict”, which is an idea that’s supported by the majority of the Serbian public, but not President Vučić, who says that he is ready to face internal resistance that’s backed by right-wing clerical nationalists. Does this analogously mean that he’s ready to resist Moscow’s desires?
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