Maliqi: US's letter to Kosovo Independence anniversary, in general language, was why

International Relations Secretary Agon Maliqi has clarified that “the general regime” used in a letter of congratulations for Kosovo's 17th anniversary, as well as a letter sent days ago to Serbia's president, Vuciq, where no mention of the report between Kosovo and Serbia, concerns that the Trump Administration, [...]
International Relations Secretary Agon Maliqi has clarified that “the general regime” used in a letter of congratulations for Kosovo's 17th anniversary of Independence, as well as a letter sent days ago to Serbia's president, Vuciq, where there is no mention of the report between Kosovo and Serbia, has to do with that the Trump Administration has not yet carried out all the names, and there is no specific position on issues like these.
Total:
US Presidents' letters to parties are protocol, but they have some political weight as the form of communication of key issues in the agenda with the respective state. They are written by lower levels (Ambada, level DAS and AS in the State Department. From the content of the letters to Kosovo (and Serbia days ago) it is seen that the administration is in the first month, it has not yet made the main appointments for Europe, nor is there any clarity on the agenda, so the language is very general, to suggest that this is a certain interpretation of bureaucratics within the system of what can be said at this moment while there is still no clear political course. That is why the common mention of normalisation of relations and dialogue in letters addressed to both Serbia and Kosovo is missing because anyone who wrote it does not know how the administration will approach the issue. But what it sees is a continuation of language that separates the people of Kosovo from the government, which has been frequent in the Beden administration. However, at this point this letter should not be read or interpreted much. The lack of signing in the letters to Kosovo and Serbia (the usual practice) shows that these letters have probably not even reached Trump, but have been sent simply not to create diplomatic confusion.












