Now, the Serbs, supported by Belgrade, have taken control over the rail lines and much else besides in the north. Pristina has no control over the northern border, and has established customs checkpoints south of the Ibar River. Belgrade and its proxies control the north, and that domination will be further cemented following the 11 May local and parliamentary elections in Serbia, which are to be held in the north as well.
As for the EU's mission, it relied on the closure of the UN operation to establish itself. But with the UN Secretary-General not authorized to close down UNMIK, the EU is having to delay the arrival of its staff and procure kit on the open market. Months of delays can now be expected.
More fundamentally, the EU is unable to establish itself in the north and NATO appears unwilling to aggressively support the establishment of the mission, as well as the structures proposed in the UN plan.
In the run-up to NATO's Bucharest summit, experts said the Alliance would be done for if its Afghan mission failed. But the same can be said for the EU. For what kind of ESDP can be expected if the EU cannot hack Kosovo? Europe therefore has to make a decision - either to accept partition (with potential consequences elsewhere, for example in Bosnia-Herzegovina) or deal with the situation. Waiting for things to get better - as the international community prefers to do in the Balkans - is unlikely to expand the number of options or solve the problem.
Controlling in Mitrovica
If the international community, led by Europe, decides to do the latter then the EU and NATO need to take a collective in-take of breath and go for broke. First, they need to regain control over the north and pave the way for EU mission to move in. To do so, NATO will need to shut the northern border with Serbia, use KFOR to impose the Pristina government's customs and border controls on the northern border, and take-over day-to-day policing north of the Ibar River in the short-term.
But this will not be enough. NATO will need to protect EU offices around the clock - like in Iraq - and use KFOR to take back the telecoms, power grid and other infrastructure elements not under the control of the relevant authorities. Any violence against NATO has to be met firmly, but also intelligently. Civilians have to be protected and ethnic entrepreneurs singled out. The clumsy handling of the occupation of the Kosovska Mitrovica court on 16th 2008 March must be avoided at all costs.
The Mitrovica Condominium
Once control has been re-established, then the international community needs to develop a new plan for the north. This may include even further decentralization that what the UN plan envisaged or perhaps even some kind of a "condominium" of Kosovo and Serbia.
Condominiums, while rare, are not without precedent. Chandigarh is the joint undivided capital of two neighboring Indian states. Before 1956, Sudan was a condominium of Britain and Egypt. For more than 70 years, Vanuatu was under the joint undivided sovereignty of Britain and France. And for more than 700 years, Andorra was under the joint undivided sovereignty of French and Spanish "co-princes". In 1999, an international arbitrator, appointed by the International Court of Justice ruled that the Bosnian municipality of Brcko would be a condominium of Bosnia's Serb Republic and Muslim-Croat Federation, with its own local administration.
A Mitrovica Condominium should allow for a local administration with ties to the Kosovo state, but perhaps with Condominium Guarantee Powers - e.g. Kosovo, Serbia, Russia, the US, the UN and the EU - appointing a representative each to meet regularly and oversee progress.
The four U's
But to set up a condominium, the international community must insist on four conditions: the four U's. First, that NATO remains unique source of military authority throughout Kosovo, until a follow-on mission can be agreed by all parties. Second, that there must be unity of policing. That means no parallel police structures answering to Belgrade. If necessary, a Police Authority in North Mitrovica could be created to include Kosovar Serbs, EU, UN and KFOR, plus Kosovo Police representatives.
Third, there must be unity of border control with an emphasis on free trade. That means no internal customs points and an all-Kosovo border service, including the border with Serbia proper. But a premium must be on free trade between throughout Kosovo and Serbia. Finally, there must be budgetary unity. Belgrade must be transparent about the funds it sends to the Kosovo Serbs. EU will provide financial aid too, but conditioned on transparency to avoid duplication.
The international presence
Parallel with a process to agree on the north's status - perhaps led by a new UN negotiator - should be preparations for a long-term international presence north of the Ibar under an international envoy, similar to the role of Pieter Feith, the EU Special Envoy based in Pristina.
This means solving the UN's status and sorting out the UN-EU relationship. One idea is for UNMIK to maintain its role in the north and for the UN SRSG to act as a constitutional monarch under Resolution 1244 with the EU playing the active, day-to-day role. If the next SRSG was non-resident, perhaps situated in New York (much like Roberts Owen, the Brcko Arbitrator mentioned above) then all the better.
What remains clear is that unless Europe wakes up, decides what it wants and takes decisive action, more will be lost than a sliver of territory in Europe's newest state.
Daniel Korski is a Senior Fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations. A former British official, he was a Senior Advisor in the US State Department, and then led the Basra Reconstruction Team.
Richard Gowan is Associate Director for Policy at the Center on International Cooperation at New York University, and a Policy Fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations. He was formerly Director of the Europe Programme at the Foreign Policy Centre, London.
This article was originally written for the European Council on Foreign Relations and published here under the title "Solving Kosovo's Kosovo."
Related materials from the Atlantic Community:
- Ruby Gropas: The Western Balkans and the EU: Attitude is Key
- Memo 4: Kosovo: Avoid US Unilateralism, Encourage EU Leaders
- Elizabeth Pond: Kosovo: It's Not as Bad as You Think



April 23, 2008
Nikolas Kirrill Gvosdev, U.S. Naval War College, Platinum Contributor (327)
Of course, "someone else" will have to do that. And this runs up against the problem I have been talking about in other posts to the Atlantic Community--the real divergence in NATO countries between NATO forces being there to keep the peace (e.g. no fighting) versus NATO forces there to enforce the sovereignty of a central government.