What difference does it make?

Presidents Nikolic of Serbia and Jahjaga of Kosovo will meet in Brussels Wednesday.  This is a first since Kosovo’s 2008 declaration of independence.  But the prime ministers have met several times in Brussels since last fall.  Official talks have been ongoing since 2011.  What difference does a meeting of the presidents make?

Likely not much on the substantive side, though we’ll see soon if enough progress has been made on resolving issues in Serb-controlled northern Kosovo to warrant sealing a deal.  As my friends over at Transconflict have been anxious to note, the main issues there are between the local Serbs and Belgrade.  Once those are resolved in a way that meets German concerns about parallel institutions, a deal with Pristina should not be difficult, provided Serbia forgets about the ludicrous platform it put forward recently still claiming sovereignty over all of Kosovo.  An announcement on exchanging liaison officers, to work out of EU missions in the respective capitals, is another possibility.

But even without specific outcomes, the presidents’ meeting is significant symbolically.  Serbia has been careful in its dealings with Kosovo to try to preserve its own symbols of sovereignty and deny any to the Pristina authorities.  That’s what silly quarrels about Kosovo license plates (whether they can have an “R” on them for “Republic”) and Kosovo* (that’s how Serbia wants Kosovo identified at regional meetings) are really about.

I am not privy to the preparations for Wednesday’s meeting, but I imagine that the Kosovo authorities will be exigent in insisting on reciprocity and symmetry in every aspect of the meeting.  I don’t really think symbolism is all that important, but the Serbs do.  Atifete Jahjaga is the living symbol of Kosovo statehood, independence and sovereignty.  She should insist on nothing less than full respect for those hard-won attributes from Tomislav Nikolic, who is himself the living symbol of Serbia’s statehood, independence and sovereignty.  Yes, also independence:  ridding itself of Kosovo is vital to Serbia’s future as a European state.

Tim Judah, surely one of the most experienced analysts of Serbia, Kosovo and the Balkans in general, sees the current avowedly nationalist Serbian leadership as continuing to normalize relations with Kosovo, like its allegedly liberal predecessor.  Surely there has been progress in the EU-sponsored talks under Nikolic, but let’s be clear about why:  it is the German insistence on settling the issues in northern Kosovo that is driving Belgrade in the direction of rapprochement with Pristina.  Serbia wants a date for EU accession negotiations to begin, in part because the date will bring money intended to fund the adjustments required as Belgrade makes its way through the 35 chapters of the acquis communitaire, to which it must conform its laws and practice before becoming an EU member.

Serbia, whose economy is in doldrums linked to the European financial crisis, needs that money.  Kosovo, while less developed economically than Serbia, is in better financial shape:  it has borrowed little and invested heavily in infrastructure, while keeping overall government expenditure relatively tight.  Its population is much younger than Serbia’s, which makes its pension burden far lighter.

There is another big difference:  Kosovo’s population is 90% committed to NATO and EU membership.  Serbia’s is negative on NATO and not much better than that on the EU (plurality, not majority, support).  The irony of course is that NATO and the EU are much more interested in Serbia than in Kosovo.  That’s another reason the meeting of the two presidents is important.  Jahjaga, a former deputy chief of the much-respected Kosovo police, is the picture of propriety and rule of law.  She polishes Kosovo’s image in Europe, the United States and beyond.  Symbolism does sometimes count.

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2 thoughts on “What difference does it make?”

  1. “Serbia’s is negative on NATO and not much better than that on the EU”.

    Unfortunately so. The last official survey, conducted in November by the Serbian Government’s office for European integration, has shown that public support to Serbia’s prospective EU membership has dropped since the previous survey (conducted just 6 months earlier) by 7 percent (from 48 to 41 percent), which signifies that the negative trend continues.

    Fortunately, the government appears, for now at least, to have remained unaffected by such a result. We’ll see if the situation regarding public opinion on the EU might improve once Serbia, hopefully, gets the date.

  2. “Jahjaga, a former deputy chief of the much-respected Kosovo police, is the picture of propriety and rule of law. She polishes Kosovo’s image in Europe, the United States and beyond. Symbolism does sometimes count.”

    The Opposition is doing its best to resurrect the image of sleaze fairly or unfairly associated with former governments by refusing to accept Jahjaga’s presidency as legitimate. She was selected after deal among the heads of the major parties that new elections would be held soon, giving the trouble-maker mayor of Prishtina and his party a shot at the spoils of office. (There don’t seem to be any major political or theoretical differences.) Jahjaga, for the reasons you state, is highly popular with Kosovo’s international friends, who apparently encouraged her not to resign when called upon to do so by the opposition (with boycotts of attendance at Parliament, thereby holding up the passage of agreed-to legislation). The Supreme Court ruled parliament could not over-ride the Constitution and cut short the 5-year term – making her resignation necessary, but the opposition keeps yammering on about the sacredness of a political deal. So far, it seems to be merely a way to lower country’s image in one easy step.

    When Sejdiu was president, the Court ruled that he could not continue to be even titular head of this same party and president at the same time, and he stepped down from the presidency immediately, only to be shoved aside within the party – of which he was I believe a founding member – by this mayor, who obviously has his eyes on the higher office, and as soon as possible.

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