Kosovo – is the United States inciting violence in the North?

Tacit and explicit US support for Pristina’s unilateral approach to the north 
of Kosovo has fueled an already volatile situation, contributing to an increase 
in tensions and acts of provocation that threaten further violent 
confrontations similar to that of July 2nd.

By Gerard Gallucci

Za tekst na srpskom jeziku, pogledajte ovde 
<http://www.transconflict.com/2010/07/kosovo-is-the-united-states-inciting-violence-in-the-north-127/#Kosovo%20-%20da%20li%20Sjedinjene%20Dr%C5%BEave%20podsti%C4%8Du%20nasilje%20na%20severu?>
 

Recent statements by senior US officials concerning north Kosovo and Albanian 
efforts to subdue the northern Serbs suggest a willingness by Washington to 
accept a violent outcome. The Obama Administration – while seeking UN consensus 
on other important foreign policy issues – seems to be following with Kosovo 
the unilateral approach more characteristic of President Bush.

The recent violence in Mitrovica shows the situation there remains volatile. 
The northern Serbs remain opposed to Kosovo independence and the imposition of 
any institutions of the Pristina administration in the north. Despite pressures 
upon them from Belgrade to accept the presence of the EU in the north and to 
refrain from provocative actions – and despite vigorous partisan differences 
among them – few northern Serbs see the EU and its police as anything other 
than the leading edge of an Albanian occupation. Even fewer are ready to accept 
any link to the Pristina institutions which they see as part of a strategy to 
eventually force them from their homes. The July 2nd demonstration against 
Pristina’s planned opening of an office of its Interior and Local Government 
ministries in north Mitrovica brought around 2,000 local Serbs to the street. 
The fatal grenade attack and subsequent incidents have increased tensions along 
what is already a fault line that could still shake the whole region.

A few days before the July 2nd attack, the US Ambassador to Pristina went to 
Mitrovica and apparently made a quite surprising suggestion, that the most 
likely source of any terrorist threat in Kosovo was from the northern 
Serb-majority area. (If the Albanian-language press reporting these comments 
got them wrong, the US Embassy has not sought to correct the record.) Such 
comments coming from a senior US official could only be heard along the Ibar 
River as either a provocative challenge to the Serbs or as implicit 
encouragement to anyone wishing to strike at Serb “terrorists.” Did the 
Ambassador’s comments play a role in setting up a more volatile confrontation 
on July 2?

During the July 6th session of the UN Security Council, the US comments appear 
to make clear that the American government is indeed quite willing to see a 
“resolution” of the Kosovo issue through a collapse of the peacekeeping effort 
and any chance for a negotiated compromise agreement. The Deputy US Permanent 
Representative began by denigrating Serbia’s call for a special session. He 
suggested the attack was a simple criminal matter and said the decision by the 
Kosovo government to open its office in the north was “the right one and one 
that is within its prerogative as an independent and sovereign state.” He added 
that the opening was “part of a larger strategy endorsed by all of Kosovo’s 
communities and by members of the international community to extend the 
benefits of good, accountable, legitimate government to all of Kosovo’s 
citizens – including its citizens in the north.” He concluded by condemning 
“any violence and provocative actions by demonstrators” and by repeating the 
standard US and EU call to resolve the situation in the north by 
“strengthen[ing] the rule of law and protections for all communities there.”

The US statements may not appear problematic on the surface; who could be 
against good government services, law and order and peace? But in the context 
of the continuing fundamental differences over which government and legal 
system is the legitimate one in Kosovo, they can only encourage the Albanians 
to continue provoking the Serbs. Indeed, the Kosovo Interior Minister followed 
these comments by reportedly adding to his list of coming actions for taking 
Pristina’s “rule of law” into the north, measures to be taken against Kosovo 
Serb police officers (KPS) who may still receive “salaries and orders” from 
Belgrade. Unilateral actions from the Pristina side, especially as encouraged 
or supported by its international backers, threaten further violence and 
further partitioning of the north from the south. Trying to impose complete 
Pristina control on the northern KPS would be such a step.

Why does the US support a dangerous unilateral approach in Kosovo while working 
to develop international consensus on issues such as Iran and North Korea? 
Probably for a mixed bag of reasons:

*       To avoid having to take on a leadership role in another troublesome 
conflict area, it is easier to simply be a “cheerleader” for the EU effort to 
manage the crisis. That the EU effort itself seems to have not resolved 
anything still leaves the EU on the hook and not the US.
*       The Kosovo Albanians have the potential to produce a great many 
problems – mostly for Europe but also for the US – including becoming a haven 
for Moslem fundamentalists and for international organized crime and for 
destabilizing the region in the quest for a “Greater Albania.” Easier to try to 
appease them by giving them support for grabbing the north.
*       The quicker the Kosovo problem is “resolved” – even at the cost of 
Kosovo Serbs – the sooner the US military commitment to the Kosovo NATO force 
can be scaled back and even ended.
*       The people in the European Bureau of the State Department (EUR) are the 
same people that sought to pre-empt a negotiated settlement in 2008 and are 
vested in making their unilateral approach work.

The US is the “800 pound gorilla” on the Albanian side of the dispute over 
Kosovo status. If the US cynically supports Pristina’s effort to pre-empt the 
upcoming decision of the International Court of Justice through actions 
provoking conflict and violence in the north, the Albanians will not listen to 
or be constrained by anyone else. The US has supported every move the Pristina 
authorities have made to bully the southern Kosovo Serbs into accepting their 
place in the new order, including electricity and telephone cutoffs and 
outright intimidation. They seem to be now ready to do the same with the north. 
But this remains a case of playing with fire. Maybe the Americans don’t really 
care as long as this time it is not them that gets burned? But that would be 
mere wishful thinking on their part.

Gerard M. Gallucci is a retired US diplomat and UN peacekeeper. He worked as 
part of US efforts to resolve the conflicts in Angola, South Africa and Sudan 
and as Director for Inter-American Affairs at the National Security Council. He 
served as UN Regional Representative in Mitrovica, Kosovo from July 2005 until 
October 2008. The views expressed in this piece are his own and do not 
represent the position of any organization. You can read more of Mr. Gallucci’s 
analysis of current developments in Kosovo and elsewhere by clicking here 
<http://outsidewalls.blogspot.com/> .

If you are interested in supporting the work of TransConflict, please click 
here <http://transconflict.com/2010/contact/support/donate/> .

To keep up-to-date with the work of TransConflict, please click here 
<http://www.transconflict.com/contact/follow-tc/> . 

http://www.transconflict.com/2010/07/kosovo-is-the-united-states-inciting-violence-in-the-north-127/

_______________________________________________
News mailing list
News@antic.org
http://lists.antic.org/mailman/listinfo/news

Reply via email to