Security expert Gurakuç Kuçi assesses that Serbia is continuing its diplomatic strategy against Kosovo by deepening coordination with countries that do not recognize its independence.
He says this course of action is costing Belgrade politically, as the blockage of the integration process into the European Union shows that member states are viewing Serbian policy with greater hesitation.
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According to Kuçi, efforts to block Kosovo could produce the opposite effect for Serbia, pushing it toward political isolation and slowing its path toward the EU.
Full text:
Serbia organizes a diplomatic lunch against Kosovo, but from Brussels eight countries block European integration for Belgrade
Belgrade is trying to keep alive its policy of non-recognitions toward Kosovo. Prime Minister Macut’s lunch with representatives of countries that have not recognized Kosovo is not merely a protocol move. It represents a continuation of Serbia’s strategy of using non-recognition as a diplomatic tool against Kosovo’s statehood.
However, for Serbia this approach does not come without political consequences.
In the same period when Belgrade is trying to harm Kosovo on the international stage, Serbia is encountering a blockage in the European integration process. The fact that the recommendation to open new chapters with the EU did not pass shows that some member states are no longer inclined to treat Serbia as a candidate country that can be rewarded solely for rhetoric.
This is also where the main contradiction of Serbian policy lies: it seeks benefits from the EU, but does not act like a state that has made the European choice; it speaks of dialogue, but invests in obstruction; in its statements it calls for regional stability, while in practice it uses Kosovo as an instrument of internal and international pressure.
For this reason, what Serbia presents as a diplomatic achievement against Kosovo is in fact turning into a political burden for itself.
Serbian citizens aiming for a European future should understand this clearly: Vučić’s policy is not strengthening Serbia, but keeping it blocked. Diplomatic photo opportunities, meetings with non-recognizing states, and displays of military force may serve domestic propaganda, but they do not bring development, integration, or a European perspective.
In the end, the damage Belgrade is trying to inflict on Kosovo may return to Serbia in the form of political isolation.
And, it seems, this is being read ever more clearly in Brussels.
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