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  • U.N. mediator to issue opinion on break with Serbia

    Wasington Times
    Jan 26 2007


    U.N. mediator to issue opinion on break with Serbia
    By David R. Sands
    THE WASHINGTON TIMES
    January 26, 2007


    Russia and the United States may be heading for another clash of
    wills as a United Nations mediator prepares to issue his
    recommendation today in Brussels over whether the province of Kosovo
    should break free from Serbia, a close ally of Moscow.
    U.S. and NATO peacekeepers are on heightened alert in Kosovo as
    U.N. Special Envoy Martti Ahtisaari gives a closed-door briefing on
    Kosovo in Vienna, Austria, to the six-nation "Contact Group" trying
    to broker a diplomatic deal.
    Serbia has vowed to keep control of the province, whose
    overwhelmingly ethnic Albanian majority is demanding independence.
    Kosovo has been in political limbo since 1999, when a U.S.-led
    bombing campaign drove out Serbian troops under President Slobodan
    Milosevic.
    Western diplomats fear Kosovo's impatient Albanian leadership
    could resort to violence if their statehood hopes are blocked. About
    16,000 NATO-led peacekeepers remain in the province eight years after
    the end of that war.
    Mr. Ahtisaari, a former president of Finland, spent much of the
    past year in a fruitless bid to find a formula for Kosovo acceptable
    to both Belgrade and the Albanian leadership in Pristina.
    The United States and the European Union support what are widely
    expected to be the main outlines of Mr. Ahtisaari's plan: a
    "supervised independence" for Kosovo with strong protections for the
    province's Serbian minority, allowing Kosovo to set its own foreign
    policy and join international institutions.
    But Russia, a member of the Contact Group, has given virtual veto
    power over the deal to Serbia, threatening to block any plan not
    acceptable to Belgrade.
    "Russia believes that it is unacceptable that a decision on the
    status of Kosovo be imposed from the outside," President Vladimir
    Putin said earlier this week in a press conference in Sochi, Russia,
    with visiting German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
    Mr. Putin and other top Russian officials also warn that giving
    Kosovo independence without Serbia's consent would set a "precedent"
    for other territorial disputes in states of the former Soviet Union,
    including separatist movements friendly to Moscow in Georgia.
    Vladimir Socor, an analyst with the Washington-based Jamestown
    Foundation, said Russia could abstain on a U.N. Security Council vote
    on Kosovo "in exchange for a Western quid pro quo in some other
    theater."
    U.S. officials have rejected the idea that Kosovo could be a
    model for other territorial disputes, such as in Georgia, Moldova or
    the Armenia-Azerbaijan clash over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.
    Mr. Ahtisaari will not make his recommendations public before
    briefing Serbian and Kosovar officials Feb. 2. A spokeswoman for the
    U.N. envoy said yesterday that he plans more negotiations after
    releasing his plan in hopes of getting both sides to agree.
    But Russia's strong backing in recent days has only emboldened
    Serbia's leadership on the Kosovo issue. Prime Minister Vojislav
    Kostunica said that Serbia's leadership is unanimous in rejecting
    independence for Kosovo and that it is "irrelevant" what formula Mr.
    Ahtisaari proposes.
    EU and U.S. diplomats had hoped that Serbia's parliamentary
    elections last weekend would produce a more moderate, pro-Western
    government that could push through a compromise on Kosovo.
    But the ultranationalist Serbian Radical Party was the biggest
    vote-getter, with 81 seats in the 250-seat parliament, according to
    official results released in Belgrade yesterday.
    Hard bargaining over a new ruling coalition is expected, and
    could complicate Mr. Ahtisaari's hopes to sell the new Kosovo
    proposal.
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