Month: June 2012

Is Iraq coming apart?

No, in a word.  Not yet.  While the press waxes alarmist, what is happening resembles nothing more than the usual government “crisis” in a parliamentary system:  once the government loses its majority, it is supposed to fall. I’ve been through dozens of these in Italy.  There is no reason to get too excited about it in a country that has a parliamentary tradition.

Of course Iraq is not such a country.  This makes everyone–Iraqis and foreigners alike–a good deal more nervous about a government crisis than would be justified elsewhere.  We all fear that in Iraq crisis will mean violence, which does not yet seem to have been triggered, and autocracy, which Maliki’s opponents were warning of even before the latest events.

What has certainly happened already is that Maliki has turned to Iran to help shore up his hold on power.  This bodes ill, as it exacerbates sectarian tensions in Iraq by underlining Maliki’s Shia base and pitting it against Kurdish and Sunni forces.  We can only guess what Maliki now owes Tehran for its timely effort to unite Shia political forces in his favor.

There is an additional problem in Iraq:  constructing a new majority.  Prime Minister Maliki has long governed with changing majorities, depending on the issue.  This makes it very difficult for his opponents to construct a stable alternative. Maliki is not likely to want to leave office until they do so.  In the event of a successful vote of no confidence, this could lead to lengthy caretaker status, with his opponents claiming of course that he is no better than a dictator who doesn’t leave office when he is supposed to.

Early elections are another possibility.  Maliki’s opponents are not likely to want them.  Maliki might do well–polls show him gaining approval everywhere but in Kurdistan.  His opponents could end up losing cushy jobs and perqs.  It may just be bravado, but Maliki is behaving with the confidence of a prime minister who doesn’t fear a new election.

Some Americans may claim that Maliki’s turn towards Iran would never have happened if Washington had only left troops in Iraq.  The trouble with this idea is that Iraq’s democratically elected government did not want them.  Insisting would have strengthened the Iranians and deprived the U.S. of its current stance, which is that of an interested but not involved outside power.  That ultimately is a much better posture than the one the Iranians have got, which is deep involvement in Iraqi internal politics that is bound to cause resentment.

No, Iraq isn’t coming apart yet.  But it could.  We should be doing everything possible to prevent that outcome.  Most important in my view over the long term is working with Baghdad to make sure that a substantial portion of its increased oil and gas production is exported to the north (to Turkey) and west (to Jordan  and some day Syria) rather than through the Gulf and the strait of Hormuz.  It was a mistake not to have made this happen during the eight years of American military presence in Iraq.  But clever diplomats should be able to make it happen even now.

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Intervene now or later?

Joshua Landis, who knows the Syrian regime as well as any American, warns vigorously against military intervention:  we’ve failed at nation-building elsewhere, the effort would be difficult and expensive, our  military is overstretched, the Syrians are fractious.  He argues further:

In all likelihood, the Syrian revolution will be less bloody if Syrians carry it out for themselves. A new generation of national leaders will emerge from the struggle. They will not emerge with any legitimacy if America hands them Syria as a gift. How will they claim that they won the struggle for dignity, freedom and democracy? America cannot give these things. Syrians must take them. America can play a role with aid, arms and intelligence, but it cannot and should not try to decide Syria’s future, determine winners, and take charge of Syria. If Syrians want to own Syria in the future, they must own the revolution and find their own way to winning it. It is better for Syria and it is better for America.

Convinced of the strategic significance of depriving Iran of its Syrian ally, Jamie Rubin takes the opposite view.

The rebellion in Syria has now lasted more than a year. The opposition is not going away, and it is abundantly clear that neither diplomatic pressure nor economic sanctions will force Assad to accept a negotiated solution to the crisis. With his life, his family, and his clan’s future at stake, only the threat or use of force will change the Syrian dictator’s stance. Absent foreign intervention, then, the civil war in Syria will only get worse as radicals rush in to exploit the chaos there and the spillover into Jordan, Lebanon, and Turkey intensifies…

Arming the Syrian opposition and creating a coalition air force to support them is a low-cost, high-payoff approach. Whether an air operation should just create a no-fly zone that grounds the regimes’ aircraft and helicopters or actually conduct air to ground attacks on Syrian tanks and artillery should be the subject of immediate military planning. And as Barak, the Israeli defense minister, also noted, Syria’s air defenses may be better than Libya’s but they are no match for a modern air force.

The larger point is that as long as Washington stays firm that no U.S. ground troops will be deployed, à la Kosovo and Libya, the cost to the United States will be limited. Victory may not come quickly or easily, but it will come. And the payoff will be substantial. Iran would be strategically isolated, unable to exert its influence in the Middle East. The resulting regime in Syria will likely regard the United States as more friend than enemy. Washington would gain substantial recognition as fighting for the people in the Arab world, not the corrupt regimes.

Both Landis and Rubin try to make the choice sound easy.  It is not.  What could go wrong with American intervention ?  Remember Iraq and Afghanistan.  What could go wrong if we don’t intervene, or if we delay?  Remember Bosnia and Rwanda.

Rubin has conveniently forgotten that the Kosovo intervention that he cites as the right way to do things did eventually involve American boots on the ground.  Units of the National Guard are still there 13 years later.  But he is right that a successful intervention resulting in a pro-Western Syria would reduce Iran’s influence.  If you don’t count firefights among militias at the international airport, you can count Libya as the kind of success Rubin would like in Syria.

The trouble is that an intervention without Russian concurrence, which as Rubin notes will not be forthcoming, would end the P5+1 talks with Iran and wreck any possibility of a united Security Council to deal with its nuclear program.  If your primary strategic objective is not limiting Iran’s influence but rather preventing Iran from getting nuclear weapons, preferably by diplomatic means, that would be a big loss.  Intervention in Syria could even hasten Iran’s pursuit of nuclear capability.

Whatever the merits, I don’t think the intervention is going to happen any time soon.  Neither does Bashar al Assad, whose speech to Syria’s puppet parliament yesterday gave no indication that he expects to face international intervention.  He seems to have not even mentioned the Annan plan or the international observers (but I confess I am still trying to get hold of a full English translation).  Bashar remains confident he can weather the storm.

I’m not certain he is wrong.  Many people are saying that he will never be able to regain control of Syria because he is now illegitimate.  But was he ever really legit?  The difference is that the state he presided over, which once more or less functioned to preserve his hold on power, is now broken, perhaps even failed.

There is little chance that Syria after the civil war in which it is currently engaged will be able to pick itself up, dust off and proceed peacefully to democratic rule, or stable rule of any sort.  Those who hope for a “managed transition” are likely to be disappointed.  Even a coup will not be clean and easy.  Bashar could even stay for years.

But the day is likely to come when the battered Syrian state fails utterly.  The international community may then want to intervene to prevent the civil war and refugees from overflowing into Lebanon, Turkey and Iraq.  It may also want to prevent the slaughter of the Alawite sect that provides the foundation of the Assad regime, along with Christians and others who have supported Bashar and his father.  If so, it will require boots on the ground.

The question is whether to intervene now, or later.

 

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Serbia and Europe, at risk

Sonja Biserko, President of the Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia and the Eric Lane Fellow at Clare College, University of Cambridge, and Josip Glaurdic, the Junior Research Fellow at Clare College, write:

In an expression of the real spirit of Serbia, Tomislav Nikolić won the presidential election on a wave of popular discontent thanks to a series of blunders by former President Tadić’s Democratic Party.  The conservative segment of Serbia’s society and a consolidated populist right are the beneficiaries.  The result presents a potentially momentous challenge for Serbia, its neighbors, and the whole of Europe.  With Nikolić at its helm, Serbia is now an unreliable partner, save perhaps for Putin’s Russia.

Nikolić’s victory and the strong showing of his Serbian Progressive Party in earlier parliamentary elections have brought the decade-long efforts to keep Serbia on a Euroatlantic course into question.  Serbia’s contemporary political climate and its political culture have demonstrated the low achievement of its democratic transition.  Since the fall of Slobodan Milošević in October 2000, Serbia has not achieved political consensus regarding its future or its strategic orientation.

In spite of efforts in Brussels to spin Serbia’s electoral results into a “victory of pro-European forces,” these electoral results have exposed as perilously fragile the political engineering that has tried to bind Serbia into European integration.  What Serbs term the “grey zone” of their politics – the security apparatus, the current and former military brass, the nationalist intelligentsia – abandoned Tadić because it wanted to slow down Serbia’s European integration and halt the process of coming to terms with Serbia’s recent past.  The grey zone will now seek to slow democratic reforms and normalization of relations with the rest of the region.  Serbia’s dialogue with Kosovo, its  judicial, military, and police reforms, its cooperation with NATO and integration with the EU–already sluggish–will grind to a halt.

The president-elect rushed to announce that his foreign policy will be “both Russia and the EU,” that he will never recognize Kosovo, that he recognizes Montenegro but not the Montenegrins as a nation, and that Serbia does not want NATO membership. His recent statements to Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung recalling Serb ambitions he supported  to take Croatian territory serve as a potent reminder of the tragic policies of the 1990s, which could revive under his leadership.

Tadić’s loss jeopardizes the Democratic Party, which faces an identity and leadership crisis similar to the one it faced after the assassination of its leader and Serbia’s Prime Minister Zoran Đinđić in 2003. The Democratic Party could be irreparably damaged as an organizational foundation for reform.  The further slowdown, or even reversal, of Serbia’s democratic transformation could frustrate consolidation and democratization in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, and Montenegro and even cause regional instability.

A great deal depends on the stance of the EU and the Unites States.  The electoral results were an indirect consequence of a subtle, but noticeable, policy shift in Brussels and Washington. The appeal of Tomislav Nikolić among centrist voters (which, at the very least, led to their decision to abstain from voting) arguably had a lot to do with Western signals of approval of his possible victory and of his supposed transformation from a nationalist radical into a pro-European conservative.

Those in Western capitals who crafted such a policy shift seem not to have learned much from recent history. They are bound to be disappointed by Nikolić, just as they were let down by their two other notable “projects” – Serbia’s former Prime Minister Vojislav Koštunica and President of Republika Srpska Milorad Dodik.  Serbia and Europe will have to live with Nikolić as president for at least the next five years. If its relationship with Tadić was difficult because of his inability to shed nationalist ballast, Brussels is in for an even more frustrating ride with Nikolić.

European leaders will still have to rise to the challenge and offer a real path to EU integration for all the countries of the Western Balkans, and especially for Serbia’s neighbors. Only a strategy which continuously supports the accession process can ensure that the region, no matter how slowly, moves forward and that the EU maintains its position of influence.

Any sign of a decline in commitment to enlargement by the EU capitals lowers the Union’s influence and, thus also the influence of the truly pro-European forces in politics and society.  This could have even more devastating consequences for the democratization and stabilization of the whole region than the election of Tomislav Nikolić.

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This week’s peace picks

A relatively slow week with most interesting things concentrated in the first couple of days:

1. Disentangling Smart Power:  Interests, Tools, Strategies, SAIS, 9-5 June 4

Kenney Auditorium

1740 Massachusetts Avenue, NW

Washington DC, 20036

9.00 AM – 5.00 PM

9:00 Registration

9.30 Welcome, Amb. András Simonyi, Managing Director CTR, Aude Jehan, French Embassy Fellow

9.40 Public Diplomacy in the 21st Century: New Approaches in a Changing World

A discussion with: Bruce Wharton, Deputy Assistant Secretary, Public Diplomacy, Bureau of African Affairs

Amb. Philip Reeker, Deputy Assistant Secretary, Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs

Spencer P. Boyer, Senior Fellow, Center for Transatlantic Relations (Moderator)

10.15 Setting the Stage: Battleships, Diplomats, and Rock & Roll

Amb. András Simonyi, Managing Director, Center for Transatlantic Relations

11.00 The New Face of Public Diplomacy

Walter Douglas, Senior Visiting Fellow, CSIS (Moderator)

Tom Wang, Executive Editor, Science and Diplomacy, Deputy Director, AAAS Center for Science Diplomacy

Emilienne Baneth-Nouailhetas, Attaché for University Cooperation, French Embassy in the United States

Sharon Memis, Director British Council USA

12.30 Lunch Break

13.15 Smart Power 2.0Suzanne Nossel, Executive Director of Amnesty International USA

14.15 Combining Hard and Soft Power: Dilemmas and Opportunities

Mark R. Jacobson, Senior Transatlantic Fellow, German Marshall Fund of the United States (Moderator)

The Hon. Annemie Neyts-Uyttebroeck, Member of European Parliament, Belgian Minister of State

Amb. Kurt Volker, Executive Director,  McCain Institute for International Leadership

Stacia George, Council on Foreign Relations International Affairs Fellow

Douglas A. Ollivant, Senior National Security Fellow, New America Foundation

16.00 Smart Power in Action: A View from the Obama Administration, Assistant Secretary Esther Brimmer, Bureau of International Organization Affairs

16:45 Closing Remarks: Daniel Hamilton, Director, Center for Transatlantic Relations

17.00 Reception

2. Gains in Afghan Health: Too Good to Be True? Center for Global Development, 12-1:30 pm June 4

Brownbag Seminar

**Please bring your lunch–beverages provided**

Featuring
Kenneth Hill
Professor of Global Health and Population
Harvard School of Public Health

With discussants
Pav Govindasamy
Regional Coordinator for Anglophone Africa and Asia
ICF International

Mohammad Hafiz Rasooly
Technical Advisor, Afghan Public Health Institute
Ministry of Public Health Afghanistan

Hosted by
Victoria Fan
Research Fellow
Center for Global Development

The results of the 2010 Afghanistan Mortality Survey were hailed as showing dramatic declines in child and maternal mortality when they first became available last year. Afghan surveyors in all 34 provinces brought back data suggesting that life expectancy at birth is now 62 years. Child mortality under age 5 dropped to 10 percent. Of 100,000 live births, the maternal mortality number was down to 327. However, more detailed examination of the results has raised questions about their accuracy. In this presentation, Kenneth Hill examines data quality indicators and issues of plausibility to try to establish what can, and what can’t, be believed from the survey.

3. Inside the Iranian Nuclear Crisis, Carnegie Endowment, 9-10 am June 5

Seyed Hossein Mousavian, George Perkovich

Register to attend

Seyed Hossein Mousavian, who served as Iran’s nuclear spokesman and a member of the Iranian nuclear negotiating team from 2003 to 2005, will discuss his new book providing an insider account of Tehran’s nuclear policy and negotiations with the international community. Mousavian will analyze the West’s current options for dealing with Iran as well as outline what a nuclear agreement needs to include for it to be acceptable to both the West and Tehran.

For over four years, Mousavian operated at the heart of Iran’s power structures before political tables turned and he was arrested and tried for espionage by the government of President Ahmadinejad. The Iranian Nuclear Crisis: A Memoir is a first-of-its kind book that describes the history of the Iranian nuclear crisis and explains how to bring it to a peaceful resolution.

Copies of The Iranian Nuclear Crisis: A Memoir will be available for purchase.

Ambassador Seyed Hossein Mousavian is an associate research scholar at Princeton University. He previously served as the Iranian ambassador to Germany (1990–1997), the head of the Foreign Relations Committee of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council (1997–2005), the spokesman for Iran’s nuclear negotiation team (2003–2005), and foreign policy adviser to the secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council (2005–2007).

4.  Sudan in Conflict, Carnegie Endowment, 12:15-1:45 pm June 5

Amb. Princeton Lyman, Amb. Alan Goulty, Marina Ottaway, Frederic Wehrey

Register to attend

Less than one year after the formal split between Sudan and South Sudan, the two countries are wrapped in conflict again over border demarcation, oil, and other issues. Both nations are also contending with serious internal turmoil in the form of tribal conflict, weak institutions, and mounting popular dissatisfaction.

Ambassador Princeton Lyman, the U.S. special envoy for Sudan, will join Ambassador Alan Goulty of the Woodrow Wilson Center and Carnegie’s Marina Ottaway to discuss the issues at stake in the conflict between and within Sudan and South Sudan and the role of the international community. Carnegie’s Fred Wehrey will moderate
5.  Africa: The Hopeful Continent
Registration Information
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June 6, 2012 | 6 – 8 pm
Johns Hopkins University School for Advanced International Studies (SAIS) Kenney Auditorium
1740 Massachusetts Ave. NW
Can Sustained GDP Growth in Africa Lead to a New Future? The United Nations Association-National Capital Area Chapter (UNA-NCA) and the Africa Society invites you to a panel discussion on economic growth in Sub-Saharan Africa.

The World Bank recently reported that in eight of the last ten years Sub-Saharan growth has been faster than East Asia.  With an average of 5% GDP growth, amid a global financial crisis, “Africa could be on the brink of an economic take-off, much like China was 30 years ago and India 20 years ago.”  Can this record GDP growth provide substantial poverty reduction and positive change in the lives of everyday Africans?

Anthony Carroll, Vice President, has 20 years of experience as a corporate lawyer and business advisor in the areas of international trade and investment, with a particular focus on the countries of sub-Saharan Africa. He possesses an extensive background in intellectual property law, first as an in-house lawyer with a venture capital firm specializing in high tech investment, and more recently as an adviser to the international pharmaceutical industry and sovereign and regional governments on TRIPs and WTO accession.

Panelists:

Volker Treichel has been a Lead Economist in the Office of the Chief Economist and Senior Vice President of the World Bank since December 2010. From 2007, he was the Lead Economist for Nigeria. He also led the first subnational Development Policy Operation in sub-Saharan Africa in Lagos State as well as the initial engagement with the Niger Delta. Prior to 2007, Volker was at the IMF, including as mission chief for Togo and resident representative in Albania.

Dr. Susan Lund is the director of research and a Washington, D.C. partner at the McKinsey Global Institute (MGI), McKinsey’s business and economics research arm. Her research focuses on global financial markets, labor markets, and on economic growth. Recent reports have looked at shifting pools of global wealth and the rise of emerging market investors, prospects for US job creation and the future of work, and the long-term growth prospects for African economies.

Dr. Ezra Suruma is a Senior Adviser to the President of Uganda on Finance and Economic Planning. Dr. Suruma is a former visiting fellow with the Africa Growth Initiative at the Brookings Institution. While at Brookings, his work focused on governmental and financial institutions and its impact on stability and economic growth.

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Why partition of Kosovo is bad for Serbs

Today I spent a couple of hours at the Serbian orthodox monastery in Dečani, a 14th century beauty of enormous historical and religious significance to the Serbian Church.  There is only one Serb living in the town, which lies in a cradle of the Kosovo Liberation Army.  The monastery currently houses 24 monks and is building a guest house to handle an increased flow of visitors.

I heard no flag-waving Serb nationalism at the monastery.  The mood there is contemplative and reflective.  No one there wanted Kosovo independence, but political frameworks are transitory.  The Church needs to ensure its own permanence.

Its primary concerns are two:  the welfare of its flock and the protection of its churches, monasteries and other property.  Most of these are south of the Ibar river, which is often proposed as the dividing line for a partition between the Serb-majority population of the north and the Albanian-majority population of the south.  The Church opposes partition.  It would lead to the loss of the Serb population south of the Ibar and most of the precious churches, monasteries and property.

But that view does not carry much weight in Belgrade, where the politicians simply want to hold onto something in Kosovo so that they can claim they have not lost everything.  Nor is the Church particularly influential in northern Kosovo, where it has nevertheless tried to convince Serbs not to use violence.

It hasn’t been entirely successful at that either.  Serbs in the north have erected barricades–including a large cross–on an important road.  KFOR, the NATO-led force that is entrusted by the UN Security Council with ensuring a safe and secure environment in Kosovo, tried to remove them yesterday morning, leading to a clash in which two German soldiers and one American were reportedly injured.  The Church is unhappy when such clashes occur, since they increase ethnic tension throughout Kosovo and raise doubts about whether the majority of Serbs who live south of the Ibar can continue to do so.

Kosovo’s government is currently completing the process of adopting constitutional amendments and laws to implement all aspects of the Ahtisaari plan, a proposal for settlement of the Kosovo dispute that was rejected by Belgrade because it entailed Kosovo independence.  It provides extensive protection for Serbs and Church property.  But the Church worries that constitutional amendments and laws are not sufficient.  It wants international guarantees, since there are Albanian political parties that would seek to reverse anything done now to offer protection, should they come to power in the future.

The Western-educated elite that runs many Kosovo institutions today has good intentions.  But this elite has little to do with the more traditional clan structures that hold power at the local level.  The Church wants the international community to ensure that guarantees will last, no matter who comes to power in Pristina.

All of this sounds to me well grounded and rational.  Unfortunately, it is not what we are hearing out of President-elect Tomislav Nikolić in Belgrade.  He is still attached to partition ideas that would destabilize a large part of the Balkans.

It is high time Europe as a whole minced no words about this.  I doubt Angela Merkel will:  her message on a visit last summer to Belgrade was unequivocally against partition.  She presumably won’t hesitate to reiterate that message now that two more Germans have been injured.  But more is needed:  Greece and Cyprus in particular need to recognize that their refusal to recognize Kosovo is encouraging partition proposals that, if adopted, would end with the partition of their favorite island.

Not to mention the loss of this spectacular monastery:

 

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Pristina is looking up

Things are looking better in Kosovo's not so pretty capital

That’s Mother Teresa Street below, the grinning prime minister on the building that houses his party headquarters, and the city beyond.  It never was one of Yugoslavia’s prettier spots:  exotic Sarajevo, Mitteleuropa Zagreb, cheerful Ljubljana, cosmopolitan Belgrade and even hodge-podge Skopje have always seemed to me to have the advantage.  But a few days here in a chilly but mostly dry springtime week suggest that Pristina is gaining gradually on its better known competitors and becoming more than a dowdy provincial capital.

Pristina’s week began in Cannes, where the paparazzi enjoyed Arta Dobroshin’s “Marilyn Monroe” moment.  But if the Daily Mail was scandalized by Kosovo’s movie star exposing the wrong cheeks, people here–including Arta, whom I met at an avantgarde art show opening at the National Gallery on Wednesday–were not.  They seem to be enjoying Kosovo’s racier image. We too, they seem to be saying, like kooky art works, spectacular legs, and a good glass of raki.  There must be some grumbling imams in this nominally Muslim republic, but they are not much in evidence.

Of course the daily grind here is a good deal less glamorous, but the main downtown drag, Mother Teresa Street, has been jammed all week with young people.  Last night it was mostly children enjoying mimes, clowns, pop music and cotton candy.  My friends here all seem to favor Komiteti, an unpretentious but good bistro just around the corner from the former Communist Party headquarters, after whose central committee it is named (with tongue in cheek of course).  But tonight I plan to visit Crème de la Crème, a well-known hangout of the city’s more cosmopolitan youth.

The city is unquestionably lacking in many amenities.  There are no parks downtown, though the two nearby are more than adequately verdant this time of year.  I refused yesterday to leave the tarmac in the larger one, where NATO cluster bombs are still occasionally found.  I run on the oval street around the soccer stadium, where traffic is light in the early morning except for those seeking to park on the sidewalks. Ten times around is a pretty good 35-minute workout.

The stadium is not far from the glorious new Swiss Diamond hotel, which is a match for most first-class establishments in the U.S. or Western Europe.  Its competition, the also newly opened Sirius, is likewise a big step up from the old Yugoslav Grand Hotel, whose renovation is still not complete.  The smaller, “boutique” establishments in which I’ve stayed on recent visits are adequate–and I hope they’ll respond with upgrades to the newer and more glorious competition.

Are there any Serbs in town?  Perhaps a few hundred, well-informed people answer.  With a few more thousand in surrounding areas.  I met one at a cocktail party after the art show opening.  She works at the American embassy and speaks Albanian, which seems to be the principal requirement for a Serb living here.  She feels comfortable in Pristina, she said readily, sipping wine.  No doubt many other Serbs would tell me something quite different, some with good reason.  There are still a lot of unreconciled people on both sides of the ethnic divide.

When I ask people in conflict zones what they most want, the answer more often than not is “a normal life.”  I want, they say, my kids to go to school without being afraid, I want to go to work without hearing machine gun fire or other detonations, I want to travel to other countries and not worry too much about what is going on in my own.  While for the poor life in Pristina and Kosovo generally is still very difficult, increasingly there is a middle class enjoying a normal life.  Things in Pristina are really looking up.

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