“It’s about a bilateral solution which should not serve as a blueprint for other issues,” Neighbourhood Commissioner Johannes Hahn said at a press conference in Austria with the presidents of Kosovo and Serbia, Hashim Thaci and Aleksandar Vucic.
Both Balkan states need to normalise relations to qualify for EU membership and “once there is an agreement, it should be respected” by all members of the world’s biggest trading bloc, Hahn said, as quoted by Bloomberg.
Thaci and Vucic spoke at an international forum in Alpbach, Austria, during the weekend and will resume EU-mediated talks on 7 September in Brussels to reach a deal that Hahn described as a “geopolitical necessity”.
Kosovo’s 2008 declaration of independence, backed by the United States, is recognised by 23 of 28 EU countries. Serbia rejects the secession, and is supported by Russia and China.
The five EU members that do not recognise Kosovo, Spain, Greece, Cyprus, Slovakia and Romania, fear the precedent border changes, created by the Kosovo case, might set.
“It’s our task, our responsibility to care about European countries and not to leave it to other parties, third parties somewhere in the world,” Hahn said.
“It is time for us to make new history,” Thaci said in Alpbach, according to Balkan Insight.
BETA news agency reported that Vucic too expressed dissatisfaction over the desire of “other countries” to influence the content of a possible agreement between Belgrade and Pristina.
Russia is opposed to settling the Kosovo issue, which plays into its hands as a frozen conflict, designed to prevent the region from rapprochement with the West.
“Now we are trying to do something that is of great importance to our future, something that is very important for the Albanians also. We must live together, we are the two most numerous people in the Balkans. If we cannot solve it, who will?” Vucic said.
“We have just witnessed a very historic moment,” Hahn said after Thaci and Vucic had spoken.
If Kosovo and Serbia settle their relations, Serbia would be very close to EU accession, as it is seen as one of the two front-runners (with Montenegro), among the six Western Balkans EU hopefuls.
The EU future for Kosovo is less clear, given its non-recognition by the five EU members.
Kosovo split from Serbia in 2008, almost a decade after NATO air strikes ousted Serbian forces and halted a crackdown on ethnic Albanians during a brutal two-year counter-insurgency.
The unilateral declaration of independence was strongly backed by the US, led at that time by President George W. Bush.
The border created in 2008 left some 120,000 Serbs as a minority among Kosovo’s 1.8 million people, with about 50,000 ethnic Albanians on the other side of the frontier, in the so-called Presevo Valley of Serbia’s south. The Pristina government hardly has any sovereignty in Serbian-populated Northern Kosovo.
Donald Trump’s national security adviser, John Bolton, said on 24 August that Washington would not weigh in on an idea to swap territory between Serbia and Kosovo.
The idea of a territorial swap contrasts with the position expressed by German Chancellor Angela Merkel earlier this month.
Territorial changes in the Balkans are seen by many as opening a Pandora’s Box. They could be particularly dangerous with respect to Macedonia, which has a large ethnic Albanian population.
‘Greater Albania’ is a political project which still has many backers.