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Europe's Next Trouble Spot

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  • Europe's Next Trouble Spot

    EUROPE'S NEXT TROUBLE SPOT
    By Patrick O'Brien

    Washington Post
    Nov 3 2008

    Imagine it's February, 2008. Kosovo's declaration of independence
    from Serbia is imminent. International analysts are warning about
    reactionary moves by other breakaway regions. They say that South
    Ossetia and Abkhazia would become more daring in making official
    their already de facto independence from Georgia. They also say that
    after the successes of these regions-turned-states, we shouldn't
    be surprised by the appearance on the map of independent republics
    called either Transnistria (in Moldova), Nagorno-Karabakh (Azerbaijan)
    or Republika Srpska (Bosnia-Herzegovina).

    Eight months on, those predictions are still prescient. The "who
    started it" question in Georgia is, in a way, irrelevant. All
    the players played their roles quite well, and foreordained
    result was Russia's recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia as
    independent states. It's important to remember that Russia gave a
    very clear warning in February, just before Kosovo's declaration. But
    neither is any major power supporting self-determination across the
    board. Without a common framework agreed upon by the major powers
    (the U.S. and Russia, of course, but also China and a united EU),
    traditional alliances and strategic concerns will determine who
    recognizes whom. The result could be a map of Eastern Europe with a
    lot more dotted lines where there were once solid lines.

    So what's the next trouble spot? Bosnia is a good
    bet. Bosnia-Herzegovina has a federal system uniting two autonomous
    entities: half of the country is made up of Bosnians and Croats, the
    other half by Serbs. The latter, called Republika Srpska, has recently
    been moving toward more autonomy within the federal system. For 13
    years the Dayton Peace Accord has embodied the spirit of power-sharing
    between these groups, and it has been enforced by a western military
    presence (NATO until 2004, when it was succeeded by the EU).

    But recent strains between Haris Silajdzic, the senior President of
    Bosnia-Herzegovina, and Milorad Dodik, prime minister of Republika
    Srpska, can only work to strain the confederacy. Local elections
    held nationwide this month gave a boost to ethnic parties of all
    stripes. Now recall that in February, some politicians in Republika
    Srpska said that Kosovo's cessation would be the green light for their
    immediate cessation from Bosnia-Herzegovina. Of course, "immediately"
    in diplomatic language may mean years, but eight months without such
    a declaration is no reason to feel complacent. The English-language
    media has been largely mute on Bosnia lately, except for a warning
    in The Guardian by Richard Holbrooke, the architect of Dayton, to
    wake up and smell the Turkish coffee. If Holbrooke is right and the
    Bosnian Serbs are positioning themselves to declare independence,
    America's and Europe's reaction isn't clear.

    Unlike in the 1990s, when America was at the height of its relative
    power and thus able to extend security over the region, America is
    now fighting two wars in the Middle East and is preoccupied with the
    financial crisis. Europe is still divided on its interpretation of
    Kosovo and is severely dependant on Russia for energy. The question of
    the day in the 1990s -- "Why should I be a minority in your country
    when you could be a minority in mine?" - is surfacing again. And
    to ethnic separatists, post-Kosovo, there is no longer a satisfying
    answer.
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