Official Discrepancies: Kosovo´s Independence and Western Europe´s Rhetoric

  • Branislav Radeljić School of Social Sciences, University of East London
Keywords: Kosovo independence, Serbs, Kosovo Albanians, European Union.

Abstract

This article examines approaches and official discrepancies characterising Western European rhetoric with regard to the Kosovo status question. Since the early 1980s, Kosovo has been increasingly present in European debates, culminating with the 1999 international intervention in the region and subsequent talks about its final status. Although the Kosovo Albanians proclaimed independence in February 2008 and the majority of EU Member States decided to recognise Kosovo as an independent state, Western European rhetoric has been rather divided. This article shows that in addition to five EU members who have decided not to recognise Kosovo from the very beginning, and thus are powerful enough to affect its further progress, both locally and internationally, some of the recognisers, although having abandoned the policy of “standards before status”, have also struggled to develop full support for the province – a discrepancy that surely questions the overall Western support for Kosovo’s independence.

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Published
2015-03-02
How to Cite
Radeljić B. (2015). Official Discrepancies: Kosovo´s Independence and Western Europe´s Rhetoric. UNISCI Discussion Papers, 36, 51-65. https://doi.org/10.5209/rev_UNIS.2014.n36.48502
Section
Articles