“Biden raised the Kosovo issue in the first conversation with Merkel, is to be surprised”

Professor at the Faculty of Political Sciences in Belgrade Ivo Viskovic has said it is surprising that US President Joseph Biden has raised the Kosovo issue in the first conversation with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, reports H1. Viskovovic believes raising the Kosovo issue in Biden's first conversation with Merkel shows [...]
Viskovic believes that raising the Kosovo issue in Beden's first conversation with Merkel shows Beden's position that a mandatory solution to the Kosovo-Serbia problem should be reached.
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He believes that in resolving this issue, the international community will have more understanding for Kosovo than for Serbian interests.
“There will be no one in Serbia for a long time who will be willing to accept such an act with which Serbia would accept Kosovo's independence, although, I am afraid, the practice will be that the actual situation should be accepted so that life can continue normally”, Viskovic said.

The example of Great Britain and Spain in the Gibraltar dispute, which has lasted for four centuries, should also be taken into account.
“The Spanish never accepted it as British territory, but they did not even control it for 400 years, and many Spaniards from the surrounding area go there to work and live by it”, Viskovic said.
Last weekend, the president of the United States of America, Joe Biden, decided to write a letter of congratulations to Serbian President Aleksandar Vucinqi, on the 15th, Serbian citizenship day. This letter arriving at the Serbian Presidency, although it had within it heartfelt congratulations of the president of the most powerful state in the world, contained a sentence that marred the day of Serbia's head.
In a rather unusual way in diplomacy, through a letter of congratulations -- his first president to Serbia -- Joe Biden asked Serbian President Aleksandar Vuciq to recognise Kosovo as an independent state.











