Janjiq: Serbia to recognise Kosovo, but Belgrade refuses to lose war

Serbian analyst Dusan Janjic said Serbia would recognise Kosovo, but added that Belgrade is still refusing that war was lost in 1999. He said this stance stems from the ethno-nationalist character of Serbian President Aleksandar Vuciq, who has been minister of information at the time of Slobodan Milosevic. Janjik said [...]
He said this stance stems from the ethno-nationalist character of Serbian President Aleksandar Vuciq, who has been minister of information at the time of Slobodan Milosevic.
Janjaq said that the disappointment of President Vucic for losing the war in 1999 is a personal attitude and should not involve it in state politics.
The problem is that it's completely contrary to reality. The reality has started before the Vuchy. The reality began to be built by Milosevic and ethno-nationalist movements, including, first of all, the oppression of military police towards Albanians. So began the Yugoslav crisis of the 1980s. After that, the war was essentially taking place in Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and eventually went to Kosovo. In Kosovo, in the war, not only were guerrillas involved, but ordinary people as well as NATO. That's the idea”, Janjic said in an interview for Euronews Albana.
The Serbian analyst asks that “s can speak after 25 years of war, 25 years of the Kumanovo Agreement for Technical Co-operation with NATO, which was a kind of a gentlemen movement of the international community, especially in America, because the Yugoslav Army and police... were completely destroyed”.
“... In essence, NATO had to accept this gentlemen's agreement, which essentially has the platform for the new Security Council resolution on Kosovo. Resolution 1244. Serbia will recognise him, but does not recognise the reality that lost the war. That's the problem. Vuchchiki is part of that generation that was ethno-nationalist, really active in the Milosevic era. He was a minister of intelligence. I can understand his personal disappointment, the ethno-nationalist disappointment, but the personal issue is personal. If you are unable to overcome it, you cannot imagine the Serbian nation in this war. Also, you can't be a partner in the normalization process...”, Janjiq said.












