President Foreign Policy writes about the Haradinaj-Biden meeting and the promise AAK leader held

The prestigious American magazine Foreign Policy, in a writing about the Biden presidency, writes about Ramush Haradinaj, saying he kept his word to Joe Biden when he was a senator. This is about 2001 when Joe Biden had visited the Decani Monastery and had also had a meeting with Ramush Haradinaj, whose [...]
The prestigious American magazine Foreign Policy, in a writing about the Biden presidency, writes about Ramush Haradinaj, saying he kept his word to Joe Biden when he was a senator.
This is about 2001 when Joe Biden had visited the Decani Monastery and at the same time had met Ramush Haradinaj, who had asked him for his promise to pay special attention The monasteries. As a result of this request, FP, writes that when violence broke out again in Kosovo three years later, dozens of Serbian Orthodox churches collapsed, but the monastery remained intact.
Years later, Haradinaj reportedly asked Haltzel to show Biden that he had kept his promise.
The newspaper says Administration Trump braved complex political issues between Kosovo and Serbia and tried to seek quick credit for resolving old hostilities in time for a campaign speech on North Carolina. Meanwhile, it plunged the allies and sent confusing signals, often violating the very democratic principles that Washington had spent more than two decades promoting the region.
It will be easy for Biden to avoid President Donald Trump's mistakes. But it will be far less to avoid repeating mistakes made under President Barack Obama's observation when the United States broke out of the region, leaving it for the European Union to handle and not offering any clear signal of willingness to the United States The United States to protect its two-party heritage of institution building in the region.
Given all the foreign policy challenges facing the new US administration. A.e., the Western Balkans will not be ranked the top priority, the FP writes.
In any case, Biden discussed him in his first call as president elected with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
Along with Berlin, Brussels and Paris eager to regulate relations with the United States after the past four years, the Western Balkans represent an opportunity for both sides to show soon that a new era of transatlantic co-operation can produce results.












