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Kosovo talks "no triumph" for Swiss
diplomacy
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swissinfo |
August 2, 2005 11:40 PM
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Calmy-Rey toured Kosovo at the weekend
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Micheline Calmy-Rey’s trip to
Kosovo will not go down as a "great moment in
Swiss diplomacy", according to a Geneva-based
professor of international politics.
In an interview with swissinfo,
Andre Liebich said the Swiss foreign minister
was jeopardising Switzerland’s neutral role by
pushing for a form of independence for the
province. | | |
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He was speaking as Calmy-Rey
wrapped up a four-day tour of Kosovo, during which
she held talks with President Ibrahim Rugova and
Prime Minister Bajram Kosumi.
Her trip
comes on the heels of a recent visit to Serbia and
Montenegro, which was marked by a terse and
unambiguous message from the authorities in
Belgrade: Serbian President Boris Tadic told
Calmy-Rey he was not open to discussion about
independence for Kosovo.
The province
officially remains part of Serbia and Montenegro,
the union that replaced Yugoslavia.
But it
has been under United Nations and Nato
administration since a 78-day Nato-led air war
halted a Serb crackdown on ethnic Albanians in
1999.
Liebich, of the Graduate Institute of
International Studies in Geneva, said Switzerland
should keep its options open if it is to win the
trust of all sides during any talks about the
future status of Kosovo.
swissinfo: Micheline Calmy-Rey has
said that the reintegration of Kosovo into Serbia
and Montenegro is neither desirable nor realistic.
Do you agree?
Andre Liebich: Yes. There needs to
be a new formula. After all, the country [that
existed] before the war in Kosovo is not the
country we have today.
Serbia and
Montenegro is on the verge of splitting and there
is no trace of the old Yugoslav federation. So
there is no going back to how things were before,
and that is something that I think is accepted
even in Belgrade.
swissinfo: Would you agree with the
Swiss foreign minister that the time is right to
push for a decision about the future status of
Kosovo?
A.L.: A valid case can be made for
the idea that we need to jump-start the
discussion. It was, after all, a real shock last
year when there were riots in Kosovo and several
Serbs were killed after a run-in between a Serb
and an Albanian.
But a case could also be
made for saying that we should let sleeping dogs
lie and let the process of reconciliation take
place. So you could also plausibly argue that we
should let time take its course.
Having
said all that, I would stress that nobody should
pre-empt how this is all going to end. It is
counterproductive to suggest that the outcome
should be independence for Kosovo... because the
point is not to close off any options but to
create a situation where both sides are willing to
make concessions.
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This is not going to go down as a
great moment for Swiss
diplomacy. |
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swissinfo: Are you suggesting that
Calmy-Rey has jumped the gun by referring to the
possibility of a form of independence for
Kosovo?
A.L.: That is possible. From what I
have read, it seems that Calmy-Rey was keen to get
a discussion [on the status question] on the
table. But the discussion is already on the table
and it didn’t need any particular new impetus. The
other possibility is that what she has said has
been manipulated and used by her hosts [in
Kosovo].
The nuance of what she may have
meant by "independence" seems to have been lost on
the authorities in Kosovo, who appear to have
presented Calmy-Rey’s message in such a way that
it has become Swiss endorsement for a sovereign
Kosovo state. All in all this is not going to go
down as a great moment for Swiss diplomacy.
swissinfo: How much of a dangerous
diplomatic game is Calmy-Rey playing?
A.L.: Fortunately Switzerland
doesn’t have all that much weight. But I don’t
think it reflects well on the reflective nature of
Swiss diplomacy.
Take the neutrality card
which Switzerland still holds. Of course
neutrality doesn’t mean indifference to what
happens and it doesn’t mean disengagement, but it
does mean keeping options open. And that is what
hasn’t happened during this visit, and that’s why
I’m disappointed.
Of course [Calmy-Rey's
reference to independence] may simply be an
unfortunate turn of phrase which has been
exploited by people on the spot... but I haven’t
seen a retraction on her part.
swissinfo: But Calmy-Rey does
appear to have toned down talk of independence by
reportedly referring, for example, to the idea of
a confederation between Kosovo and Serbia and
Montenegro...
A.L.: That is the sort of direction
in which I think we should be heading. But it’s a
question of sequence. Do you first promise Kosovo
independence, give it and then try to create some
kind of regional set-up? That doesn’t seem
promising at all.
Or do you first go about
setting up a confederation with its own rules and
then work [within this framework] towards
sovereignty? That’s a good direction to go in, but
it doesn’t seem to be the thrust of what Calmy-Rey
has been saying.
swissinfo-interview:
Ramsey
Zarifeh