Next Steps for Kosovar–Serbian Relations: Time for a Concerted American Push

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Next Steps for Kosovar–Serbian Relations: Time for a Concerted American Push

April 5, 2019 9 min read Download Report
Daniel Kochis
Daniel Kochis
Research Fellow, Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom
Daniel was a Research Fellow for European affairs in the Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom.

Summary

Relations between Kosovo and Serbia have declined to a critically contentious level. Kosovo’s failed bid in November 2018 to join Interpol reignited Kosovo’s frustration over Serbian efforts to stymie its inclusion in international organizations. In response, Kosovo imposed a 100 percent tariff against goods from Serbia. The ongoing stalemate between the two countries has derailed normalization talks and threatens to pull the region back into a descending spiral of conflict, opening new rifts for nefarious actors, such as Russia, to exploit, and could feed regional instability. This Issue Brief explains how U.S. policy can put the two countries back on a path to normalization and further progress.

Key Takeaways

After years of progress, relations between Kosovo and Serbia—two small but important countries in the Balkans—have reverted to a critically bad level.

If Kosovo and Serbia are to find a way forward, U.S. engagement will be critical.

Now is not the time to squander the decades of investment and sacrifice the U.S. has made in the western Balkans since the end of the Cold War.

Relations between Kosovo and Serbia, two small countries in the western Balkans, have recently seen a precipitous decline. Kosovo’s failed bid in November 2018 to join Interpol, the international organization of police and law enforcement organizations, reignited Kosovo’s frustration over Serbian efforts to stymie its inclusion in international organizations. In response, Kosovo imposed a 100 percent tariff against goods from Serbia, as well as from Bosnia and Herzegovina, both of whom voted against Kosovo’s Interpol membership.REF The ongoing stalemate between the two countries has derailed normalization talks and threatens to pull the region back into a descending spiral of conflict, opening new rifts for nefarious actors, such as Russia, to exploit, and could feed regional instability.

If Kosovo and Serbia are to find a pathway forward, U.S. engagement will be critical. The U.S. has invested heavily in the Balkans since the end of the Cold War. Tens of thousands of U.S. service members have served in the Balkans, and the U.S. has spent billions of dollars in aid there—all in the hope of creating a secure and prosperous region that will someday be part of the transatlantic community. The Trump Administration has prioritized re-engagement with the region in its European strategy. Thus far, this fruitful approach has resulted in important policy outcomes including expansion of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) in the region, support for the Three Seas initiative, and re-evaluation of harmful aid-distribution policies.

Kosovar–Serbian relations are often still a matter of one step forward, two steps back. A new concerted push of U.S. engagement seems essential for dislodging the current ongoing crisis.

Origins of the Current Crisis

Following the sectarian wars of the 1990s, Kosovo was placed under United Nations administration in June 1999. On February 17, 2008, Kosovo declared independence from Serbia and has been recognized by 114 countries, including the United States and all of its neighbors in the Balkans except Serbia, as an independent, sovereign nation.REF

While overall relations between the two nations had improved over the past decade, a baseline tension remains a stubborn reality. Recent proposals for a land-swap agreement would have undermined U.S. interests in the region while serving to catalyze greater regional instability.REF Ultimately, these proposals failed to gain significant support in either Kosovo or Serbia.

In early November 2018, Kosovo had initially imposed a 10 percent tariff on products made in Bosnia and Herzegovina and in Serbia (exempting international brands).REF Kosovo imposed the tariffs on Serbia over Serbia’s opposition to Kosovo’s recognition as an independent country. According to Kosovo’s Minister of Trade and Industry Endrit Shala, Kosovo imposed tariffs on Bosnia due to “barriers for Kosovo products” inside Bosnia.REF

On November 20, Kosovo’s third bid to join Interpol failed to reach the two-thirds vote required for membership.REF Following the vote, the government in Pristina issued a statement blaming Serbia for the failed bid saying, “Serbia’s wild campaign shows once again its stand against Kosovo and against the idea of normalizing ties.”REF

On November 21, Kosovo raised tariffs on products from Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia from 10 percent to 100 percent due to their opposition to Kosovo joining international organizations, including Interpol. Kosovo’s deputy prime minister, Enver Hoxhaj, framed the tariffs as a defensive measure because of Serbia’s “aggressive campaign against Kosovo in the int’l stage.”REF Serbia has argued that the tariffs are a violation of the Central European Free Trade Agreement (CEFTA), of which all three nations are parties. European Union officials have confirmed that the tariffs are a “clear violation” of CEFTA.REF The Serbian economy lost $52.3 million between November 21 and December 31 because of the tariffs.REF

Serbia in response has refused to take part in EU-facilitated normalization talks until the tariffs are removed.REF Both the U.S. and EU have urged Kosovo to remove the tariffs; in January 2019, the American embassy in Kosovo issued a statement, which read:

We call on Kosovo and other regional stakeholders to demonstrate commitment to normalization; regional peace and stability; and movement on the path to European integration. We reiterate our view that an immediate suspension of the tariff on imports from Serbia and Bosnia is one necessary measure to restore momentum to the Dialogue process. We expect other stakeholders to take constructive measures of their own.REF

Also in January, Ramush Haradinaj, prime minister of Kosovo, published a letter laying out terms for suspending the tariffs. These include the U.S. and EU disavowing support for land swaps, visa-free travel to the EU for Kosovar citizens, implementation of the Kosovo–Serbia energy agreement, and removal of all non-tariff barriers to Kosovar goods in Serbia.REF In addition, Haradinaj called for the Serbian president, prime minister, or foreign minister to publicly state “that all policies and actions of any nature directed against the aspirations of Kosovo as a sovereign state whether applying locally, regionally or internationally have ceased permanently.”REF

In February, a visit by the commander of Iowa’s National Guard was cancelled due to U.S. concern over the tariffs.REF Kosovo has conducted joint training with the Iowa National Guard through the State Partnership Program (SPP) since 2011.REF In the future, the U.S. should avoid linking cooperation with Kosovo in the SPP, a valuable vehicle for further cementing ties, with disagreements over tariffs.

Steps for Moving Forward

Heritage Foundation analysts have previously recommended a “five P’s” framework for engagement in the western Balkans:

U.S. engagement should be to ensure that the Western Balkans are peaceful, making progress toward the West, and increasingly prosperous. In addition, U.S. policy should seek to make the most of the region’s significant potential. U.S. policy toward the Western Balkans should be pragmatic, and the U.S. should encourage the nations of the region to be pragmatic toward each other.REF (Emphases added.)

Adapting this framework to the current crisis, the U.S. should:

1. Peace

  • Stay committed to NATO’s Kosovo Force (KFOR) mission. Ethnic tensions are increasing in Kosovo, especially in the ethnic Serb areas north of the Ibar River, often stoked by Russia. The U.S. needs to ensure that the KFOR mission, which ensures stability in Kosovo, continues with robust U.S. participation.
  • Continue to support the Kosovo Security Force (KSF) through training. The U.S. should continue to exercise with the KSF—including through the SPP. The U.S. should avoid linking cooperation with Kosovo in the SPP, a valuable vehicle for further cementing ties, to disagreements over tariffs. The benefits of regular exercises far outweigh any temporary political messages communicated by their postponement.

2. Progress

  • Support Kosovo’s inclusion in international organizations. Despite recent tensions, the U.S.–Kosovar relationship remains strong. The U.S. has invested much in ensuring the viability of Kosovo and its increasing worldwide recognition as a sovereign, independent state. During tempestuous times, it is important for the U.S. to stand by its allies. The U.S. should continue to use its diplomatic and political leverage to support Kosovo’s recognition as an independent country, and inclusion in relevant international organizations.
  • Pressure Serbia to recognize Kosovo as an independent sovereign nation. Serbia’s continued failure to recognize Kosovo and its actions blocking Kosovo from international organizations impede progress in the western Balkans, including in Serbia itself. While China and Russia provide support for Serbian non-recognition of Kosovo, the U.S. should employ the tools at its disposal to dissuade Serbia from continuing on this path. Recognizing Kosovo will be a significant step for Serbia toward the West and toward a brighter future.

3. Prosperity

  • Urge Kosovo to remove onerous tariffs. While the tariffs have caused pain to the Serbian economy, Kosovo’s economy is sure to face a negative impact as well. In 2017, Kosovo imported more goods from Serbia than from any other nation,REF and Serbia was the third-largest export market for Kosovar goods.REF Friendship often requires having difficult conversations, and the U.S. should encourage Kosovo to remove onerous tariffs. Economic freedom is the key to the region’s prosperity, and ensuring policies that further this prosperity should remain a centerpiece of U.S. engagement.

4. Potential

  • Urge both sides to return to the negotiating table. The U.S. and the EU share a mutual interest in continuing to push the Kosovar–Serbian relationship toward normalization. The Trump Administration should encourage both nations to return to the EU-facilitated normalization talks. The U.S. should tell Belgrade that the road to integration into the transatlantic community runs through normalizing relations with Kosovo.

5. Pragmatism

  • Encourage western Balkan nations to be pragmatic toward one another. The U.S. should encourage the nations of the western Balkans to put aside historical, cultural, or religious complaints and work constructively to increase trade relations, settle border disputes, and forego inflammatory rhetoric for the sake of stability. The U.S. should encourage all parties to be realistic in their negotiations and to view even partial progress as important steps toward normalization.

Conclusion

Now is not the time to squander the decades of investment and sacrifice the U.S. has made in the western Balkans. U.S. policy in the western Balkans that follows the “five P’s” can help place Kosovo and Serbia back on the path toward normalization, overcoming the current crisis, while helping to counteract retrograde influences that seek to exploit the crisis to sow more distrust and division.

—Daniel Kochis is Senior Policy Analyst in European Affairs in the Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom, of the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for National Security and Foreign Policy, at The Heritage Foundation.

Authors

Daniel Kochis
Daniel Kochis

Research Fellow, Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom