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The first High Representative in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Carl Bildt, says that Belgrade will “one day” have to recognize Kosovo’s self-proclaimed independence.
Source: Tanjug
Illustration: EPA-EFE / STRINGER
It is as if the President of Serbia Aleksandar Vui knows that this is the key to Serbia’s European path.
The former head of Swedish diplomacy added that it is necessary to implement what has been agreed for a long time and, as he says, it has never really been carried out.
He adds that much of that was repeated in the documents that were created after the meeting in the United States.
When asked what the actual outcome is and whether Belgrade and Pristina want a deal, Bildt said he believes the idea of exchanging territories was, as he puts it, “a dangerous diversion that has been rolling for years and years and progress. in negotiations. ”
But now, he adds, especially this EU track must gain momentum and start moving forward.
Concluding that the dialogue for the Serbian member of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina Milorad Dodik is a platform to demand the independence of the Republika Srpska, Bildt says:
“Kosovo is an independent state. There is no going back on that issue. Dodik knows there is nothing of RS independence. In every possible way. Well, Serbia would not recognize that either,” Bildt said.
Bildt, who is now co-chair of the European Council on Foreign Relations, an influential foreign policy NGO, says that the EU and the United States appear to be finally working together, but that the European perspective of the Western Balkans has never been further away.
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