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Likely New U.S. Diplomat For Eurasia 'Gets Things Done'

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  • Likely New U.S. Diplomat For Eurasia 'Gets Things Done'

    Likely New U.S. Diplomat For Eurasia 'Gets Things Done'

    RFE/RL
    August 13, 2009

    by Andrew F. Tully

    WASHINGTON -- The United States will soon have a new deputy assistant
    secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs.

    The man who is vacating the post after four years, Matthew Bryza, has
    announced he will be replaced by Tina Kaidanow, a longtime diplomat
    with more than 10 years of experience in the Balkans, who most
    recently served as the first U.S. ambassador to Kosovo.

    The U.S. State Department has yet to formally announce Kaidanow's
    appointment, however..

    Bryza, who has held the post since June 2005, is now rumored to be
    moving on to serve as the U.S. ambassador to Azerbaijan.

    Kaidanow, who holds a master's degree in political science from
    Columbia University in New York, is a career diplomat who until now
    has specialized in the Balkans.

    Most notably, she served as the chief U.S. envoy to Kosovo from July
    2006-July 2009, during its historic transition from a breakaway
    territory of Serbia to a self-declared independent state.

    'She Gets Things Done'

    Arbana Vidishiqi, the head of RFE/RL's Pristina bureau, said Kaidanow
    impressed many in Kosovo as a quiet but effective official..

    "This is how everybody remembers Ambassador Kaidanow: She does get
    things done, and she was here during a very critical period for
    Kosovo," Vidishiqi says. "She came prior to the independence
    declaration, and she stayed a year after the independence
    declaration. So she does get things done here, but she prefers to do
    those things beyond the public eye."

    In fact, Vidishiqi says, many reporters were a bit frustrated because
    Kaidanow seemed so averse to publicity that she seldom gave
    interviews. Vidishiqi says Kaidanow didn't restrict herself to
    diplomatic functions while in Pristina, but used her influence to help
    everyone she could, including ethnic Serbs in Kosovo.

    "Ordinary citizens in Kosovo will probably remember her as a person
    who stood by the leadership here at the most critical time, and that
    was the id a lot about the Serbian minority. She opened a lot of
    health-care institutions here in Serbian enclaves; she promoted
    freedom of the media in Serbian enclaves. In this regard, people will
    probably remember her as a person who did help a lot."

    Focused On Kosovo

    Kaidanow's first major position in government began under President
    Bill Clinton, where she served as director for Southeast European
    Affairs at the White House's National Security Council. Subsequently
    she had assignments in Belgrade and Sarajevo.

    Next, Kaidanow served as the special assistant to Christopher Hill
    when he was ambassador to Macedonia from 1998 to 1999, also during the
    Clinton presidency. Her duties at that time were centered on the
    crisis in Kosovo.

    After that, she was special assistant for European affairs for Deputy
    Secretary of State Richard Armitage during President George W.. Bush's
    time in office.

    In July 2006, Kaidanow was the chief of mission and charge d'affaires
    at the U.S. Office in Pristina, which was to become the U.S. Embassy
    to Kosovo. Two years later, following the independence declaration,
    she became the first U.S. ambassador to Kosovo.

    Kaidanow's appointment to the European and Eurasian post will see her
    focusing on issues of U.S. interest in the Caucasus, Central Asia, and
    Southeast Europe. Energy issues and Georgia-Russia tensions can be
    expected to figure prominently in her work.

    Kaidanow's responsibilities may reportedly not extend to serving as
    the U.S. co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group, the three-party body tasked
    with facilitating negotiations on the Armenian-Azerbaijani dispute
    over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave.

    Bryza had served as Minsk Group co-chair during his time as the
    European and Eurasian deputy assistant secretary. In initial remarks,
    Bryza suggested Kaidanow would do the same.

    But RFE/RL's Azerbaijani Service and other news sites in Azerbaijan
    have since cited U.S. officials as saying she will not be filling the
    post. An alternative replacement for Bryza's co-chair position has n
    Kaidanow's experience in Kosovo would translate into support for
    Nagorno-Karabakh independence -- an outcome that is hotly opposed by
    Baku.


    http://www.rferl.org/content/Likely_New _US_Diplomat_For_Eurasia_Gets_Things_Done/1798877. html
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