http://waz.euobserver.com/887/30334
 
EU confuses Serbian leaders who confuse Serbian people

ZELJKO PANTELIC
Today @ 09:33 CET


Serbian politicians often get contradictory messages from EU member states as 
well as officials and ambassadors in Belgrade about Serbia's European 
integration and the possibility of reopening discussions on Kosovo's status. 
Consequently, Serbia's public is baffled.
Top Serbian officials and some government-friendly NGO representatives often 
release information in the Serbian media on these subjects, asking journalists 
to quote them as sources from the EU, Brussels or international diplomatic 
circles.
The average Serbian news consumer can easily become confused by the divergence 
of messages in a single week.
One day he is told that Serbia is winning the diplomatic battle for Kosovo and 
progressing very well towards EU accession. The next day's headlines read that 
Kosovo independence is irreversible and that Serbia cannot enter the EU without 
recognising Kosovo's statehood. A day later the news may be that Serbia is far 
from EU integration because the EU is tired of enlargement, and that Serbia is 
learning lessons from Cyprus on how to join the Union without recognising 
Kosovo.
On day four the story could be that the diplomatic fight for Kosovo is very 
difficult because Pristina is backed by the most powerful countries in the 
world, and that Serbia is well prepared for EU integration, but its bid is 
being blocked by Germany and the Netherlands, for no clear reasons.
A day later again headlines foresee an imminent reopening of Kosovo status 
negotiations after the advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice, 
and that Serbia's EU application will be passed to the European Commission at 
the next meeting of EU foreign ministers. On day six the news is that 
Belgrade-Pristina negotiations may only concern technical issues, not the 
status of Kosovo, and that the EU has adopted a gradual approach towards 
European integration, meaning no big steps on Serbia's European agenda in the 
near future.
After the last foreign ministers meeting in Luxembourg, Italian minister Franco 
Frattini said the Serbian application for membership had not been passed to the 
Commission because his German colleague first needed an opinion from parliament.
A German diplomat, meanwhile, said it was not just Germany but that a big 
majority of EU members opposed the passing of Serbia's application "because 
most EU member states apply the step-by-step approach in their enlargement 
policy."
Ambassadors to Belgrade from some member states also release confusing 
statements. Unlike in EU countries, where few people know the names of 
ambassadors from other member states, or from Russia and the US, foreign 
diplomats in Serbia are like pop stars. They are interviewed by newspapers or 
appear on national television on a daily basis. Some of them insist there is no 
link between the Kosovo issue and Serbia's European integration. Others assert 
the opposite. Some EU ambassadors even contradict themselves, saying completely 
different things in the course of just a few days.
"If Spanish foreign minister Miguel Angel Moratinos says, as he did at the last 
Council of ministers, that Serbia is very constructive on the Kosovo issue and 
the participation of Kosovo in regional co-operation, we can just imagine what 
he said to his Serbian colleague," a participant in the last meeting of EU 
foreign ministers told WAZ.EUobserver on the condition of anonymity.
"It is quite understandable that Serbia's top officials are more eager to 
believe what Moratinos tells them, than to listen to the warnings of [French 
foreign minister] Kouchner, [German foreign minister] Westerwelle or [British 
foreign minister] Hague. We are not able to speak with one voice to Belgrade 
and that is why Kosovo is becoming a frozen issue and Serbia is going to be 
very slow on the European path," the contact continued.
An EU diplomat said there is a high risk the Union blocks both Serbia and 
Kosovo's European integration.
"I am afraid leaders in Belgrade and Pristina do not understand that if they 
want to move ahead on the European path, it is not important how many countries 
support you, but whether there is consensus in the EU or not. In other words, 
you need all EU countries on your side. To stop you or to slow you down, just 
one member state is sufficient," the diplomat noted.
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