American Professor: Here are signals giving Vucinqi to President Beden about Kosovo

Timothy Les of Cambridge University has said that the collapse of the third government in Kosovo in just 17 months is seen primarily as “a consequence of the impossible position currently found by Kosovo leaders, caught between a public and a political class that does not “want to submit to Serbia and external factors”. Professor [...]
Timothy Les of Cambridge University has said that the collapse of the third government in Kosovo in just 17 months is seen primarily as “a consequence of the impossible position currently found by Kosovo leaders, caught between a public and a political class that does not “want to submit to Serbia and external factors”.
American professor for the Serbian portal Kosovo Online with external factors refers to the United States of America and the EU, which according to him “are pressing Pristina to do so “.
This gives leaders a choice between two things. Either to pressure foreigners and then find themselves politically isolated at home and vulnerable by the vote of no confidence in parliament, or to refuse to make concessions, as Kurt did, and to be found isolated by Americans”, the Kosovo Clan broadcasts.
This model will end if the Benden administration decides that Kosovo is a resolved issue and that Serbia should recognise it unconditionally, thus releasing Albanians from their current strategic dilemmas, but we should wait to see what the Biden administration,” said.
Whether former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright will have a role in the upcoming dialogue between Pristina and Belgrade, Les said Albright is playing a role, but it is unclear whether this will be an official position, as an envoy to the region, or simply an informal government adviser.
“In any case, its participation suggests that the policy of the Biden administration will have some impact on the assumptions that shaped American policy towards the Balkans in the 1990s”.
Commenting on Serbian President Aleksandar Vuciq's statement about whether he can influence the Kosovo-Serbia dialogue, that while he is president, Serbia will not recognise Kosovo. He said comments by Serbian head of state should be interpreted literally
Instead, they are trying to strengthen Serbia's position in the face of possible Washington pressure to recognise Kosovo unconditionally. Vuciq is certainly ready for Serbia to recognise Kosovo at some point, so he participated in international negotiations aimed at eventual recognition. However, Vuciq wants reasonable compensation for recognising Kosovo and signals to the Beden administration that if he insists that Serbia unconditionally recognises Kosovo, then there will be no deal”.
Vuciqi's “Llogar is that, if Serbia can stay in its position, the Biden administration will have to rely on Albanians to make concessions in order to secure an agreement, as did the Trump” administration, the Bank Kosova broadcasts.












