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Kosovo And The Post-Soviet Conflicts: No Analogy Means No "Precedent

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  • Kosovo And The Post-Soviet Conflicts: No Analogy Means No "Precedent

    KOSOVO AND THE POST-SOVIET CONFLICTS: NO ANALOGY MEANS NO "PRECEDENT"
    By Vladimir Socor

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    April 13 2006

    Part one of two.

    Lavrov puts brakes on Kosovo recognition Russian Minister of Foreign
    Affairs Sergei Lavrov and other officials have shifted their tactics
    regarding the negotiations on the status of Kosovo. The new theme
    of their statements and tactical approach to the negotiations is:
    "No Haste." In their view, the negotiations must prepare a settlement
    "acceptable to all parties" -- translation: hand Serbia blocking
    rights -- even if it means delaying the final outcome. Lavrov and
    his spokesman, Mikhail Kamynin, somberly intimate that recognition
    of Kosovo's independence could set a "precedent" with "dangerous
    consequences in Europe," i.e., encourage movements in parts of certain
    countries to press for separate statehood and international recognition
    (Interfax, April 10). Meanwhile, the United States is the main promoter
    of Kosovo's independence, contingent on proper standards of governance
    and human rights. The EU position is similar.

    Moscow's new arguments seek to dissuade some European governments
    from supporting recognition and, through this tactic, to complicate
    and prolong the negotiations.

    The shift seems due at least in part to the prospect that the Serbian
    government might officially consent to independence and international
    recognition of Kosovo, albeit subject to international (i.e., Western)
    certification that Kosovo has achieved democratic standards.

    Serbian Minister of Foreign Affairs Vuk Draskovic recently declared
    that Serbia could agree to international recognition of Kosovo's
    independence, including membership in all international organizations
    save the United Nations (a reservation that seems destined to be
    abandoned in due course). Draskovic's statement has triggered a
    reassessment of policy in Moscow.

    The Kremlin had initially calculated that international recognition
    of Kosovo's independence could become a "model" or "precedent"
    enabling Russia to call for recognition of Transnistria, Abkhazia,
    South Ossetia, or Karabakh. However, Serbian consent to international
    recognition of Kosovo would make it impossible for Moscow to apply
    a "Kosovo model" to the post-Soviet conflicts. In that case, the
    "model" would stipulate that international recognition of a new state
    depends on the prior consent of the country from which that entity
    secedes. Such a model would be useless to Russia and the post-Soviet
    secessionist territories because Georgia, Moldova, and Azerbaijan
    would not grant such consent in any foreseeable circumstances.

    Moreover, rapid progress toward resolving the Kosovo issue with
    minimal Serbian resistance would deprive Russia of opportunities to
    play spoiler in the negotiations within the Kosovo Contact Group and
    UN Security Council. Moscow wants a dragged-out negotiating process
    with opportunities for tradeoffs, whether at Serbia's expense or the
    expense of Moscow's proteges in the post-Soviet secessionist enclaves,
    depending on tactical developments down the road.

    Moscow is responding in three ways to the situation created by the
    Draskovic statement. First, it tries to embolden hard-line nationalists
    in the Serbian government to oppose Kosovo's independence in principle
    and to raise insuperable obstacles in the negotiations. Second,
    it tries to outflank the United States by raising the prospect of
    destabilization in Europe with some West European participants in
    the Contact Group and with some Central-East European governments
    in bilateral channels. And, third, it cries, "No Haste," so as to
    frustrate the U.S. and, largely, Western goal of achieving a resolution
    this year.

    The authorities in Tiraspol, Transnistria; Sukhumi, Abkhazia;
    Tskhinvali, South Ossetia; and Stepanakert, Karabakh (and Yerevan as
    well) never based their hopes for international or at least Russian
    official recognition upon a possible Kosovo "model" or "precedent."

    When Russian President Vladimir Putin raised this idea earlier this
    year and turned it into a staple of Russia's discourse on post-Soviet
    conflict resolution, the secessionist authorities reacted with caution
    and skepticism. While putting a few of their eggs in the Kosovo basket,
    they are clearly loath to stake their case on Kosovo or Russian
    actions related to Kosovo. They continually stress other arguments,
    "precedents" or "models" in their quest for recognition (see EDM,
    February 2, 6, 8).
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