Ghosts of Kosovo

Friday, Feb. 29, 2008 By  <javascript:void(0)> SAMANTHA POWER 

 

 <javascript:void(0)> Enlarge Photo

Kosovars hold flags as they celebrate the independence of Kosovo in the
capital Pristina on February 17, 2008

 

Dimitar Dilko / AFP / Getty

 

On Feb. 17, after almost a decade of legal limbo and two years of
unsuccessful international mediation, Kosovo declared its independence from
Serbia. The U.S. moved swiftly to recognize the new country, and nearly 2
million ethnic Albanians celebrated their long-awaited freedom, dancing in
city streets, releasing fireworks and waving flags. Having bristled under
Serbian rule and then U.N. administration, Kosovars were elated by the
prospect of at last controlling their own affairs.

The Serbs weren't quite so thrilled. On Feb. 21, some 200,000 protested in
Belgrade, chanting "Kosovo is Serbia" and holding placards that read,
RUSSIA, HELP. Rioters set the U.S. embassy on fire; Russian President
Vladimir Putin vowed never to recognize Kosovo and threatened to support
secessionist movements in Georgia and Moldova.

Not so long ago, the scenes of unrest would have inspired fears of the kind
of ethnic violence that devastated the Balkans in the '90s. But these are
different times. Kosovo's ethnic-Albanian leaders have belatedly tried to
extend an olive branch to the province's aggrieved 120,000 Serbs. In
addition to allowing Serbs in northern Kosovo to have their own police,
schools and hospitals, Kosovo's new Prime Minister, Hashim Thaci, did the
unthinkable: he delivered part of his inauguration speech in the hated
Serbian language. Even in Serbia, whose citizens feel genuine humiliation
over losing Kosovo (which Serb nationalists call their "Jerusalem"), the
protests should abate. Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica has threatened to
retaliate against Kosovo's becoming independent by suspending talks with the
European Union, but Kostunica can't afford to cut ties with the West. The
E.U. supplies 49% of Serbia's imports and buys 56% of its exports--a far
more valuable trade relationship than Serbia's with Russia.

But Kosovo matters to our future because it underscores three alarming
features of the current international system. First, it exposes the chill in
relations between the U.S. and Russia, which is making it difficult for the
U.N. Security Council to meet 21st century collective-security challenges.
Putin has used the Kosovo standoff as yet another excuse to flaunt his
petro-powered invincibility, sending his likely successor, Deputy Prime
Minister Dmitri Medvedev, to Belgrade to sign a gas agreement. If a firm
international response is to be mobilized toward Iran, Sudan or other
trouble spots in the coming years, the U.S. will have to find a way to
persuade Russia to become a partner rather than a rival in improving
collective security.

Second, the 27-country E.U., which is bitterly divided over Kosovo, lacks an
overarching defense or security vision. After Kosovo declared independence,
Britain, France and other countries offered recognition, while Spain,
Romania, Greece, Cyprus, Bulgaria and Slovakia refused to do so. Keeping
peace in Kosovo will require European nations to put their citizens at risk.
Unfortunately, the stated desire of many European countries to reduce their
commitments to the nato effort in Afghanistan does little to bolster
confidence in Europe's eagerness to maintain international security.

Finally, the disagreements over Kosovo expose the world's fickleness in
determining which secessionist movements deserve international recognition.
If Kosovo's supporters were more transparent about the factors that made
Kosovo worthy of recognition, they could help shape new guidelines. A
claimant has a far stronger claim if, like Kosovo, it is relatively
homogeneous and not yet self-governing, if it has been abused by the
sovereign government and if its quest for independence does not incite its
kin in a neighboring country to make comparable demands. Not all
secessionists can clear that bar. Iraq's Kurds, for instance, are clamoring
for independence. But the Kurds are already exercising self-government, and
their independence could have the destabilizing effect of causing the
Kurdish population in Turkey to try to secede.

Western countries will have to work hard in the coming months to ensure that
Kosovo and Serbia do not descend into violence. The larger problems
highlighted by the impasse aren't going away anytime soon. Unless they're
resolved, a U.S. embassy may not be all that goes up in flames during the
next crisis.

TIME columnist and Harvard professor Power also advises Senator Barack Obama
on foreign-policy issues

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