U.S. to present draft resolution on Kosovo to UNSC
PanARMENIAN.Net
28.04.2007 14:02 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Following an April 23-24 visit by the UN Security
Council to Brussels, Belgium; Belgrade, Serbia; and Kosovo’s capital,
Pristina, the United States plans to co-sponsor a UN resolution that
would allow Kosovo’s provisional government to declare independence,
U.S. Under Secretary of State R. Nicholas Burns says.
"We must now act quickly in the next weeks and months to finish the
job by helping to lead Kosovo to independence," Burns said April 17
in testimony to the House Foreign Affairs Committee. Burns is under
secretary of state for political affairs, the third-ranking official
at the State Department.
Following 18 months of negotiations, UN Special Envoy Martti Ahtisaari
on April 3 formally proposed to the Security Council that Kosovo be
granted independence while temporarily remaining under international
supervision.
Kosovo, a province of Serbia, is administered by the United Nations
under U.N. Resolution 1244, passed in June 1999 when a NATO campaign
drove Yugoslav Serbs out of Kosovo, halting years of violence and
human rights abuses.
Under the Ahtisaari plan, "Kosovo will become independent but will
continue a period of international tutelage for a number of years,"
Burns told lawmakers. "NATO, for example, will continue to police
Kosovo’s borders and maintain internal peace until Kosovo is ready
to form its own armed forces. The European Union will lead the major
international civilian effort to ensure that the settlement of the
Ahtisaari plan is fully implemented."
Several lawmakers expressed concerns that granting independence
to Kosovo would set a dangerous precedent for other breakaway
regions. Independence is strongly opposed by Serbia and by Kosovo
Serbs. Russia, which holds veto power on the Security Council, has
expressed concerns.
"A solution that’s imposed from the outside, unless the parties both
agree, is going to lead to a real military problem, in my opinion,
down the road," Representative Howard Berman, a California Democrat,
warned Burns.
Burns stressed that the United States and its European allies consider
Kosovo’s history of oppression under now-deceased Yugoslav President
Slobodan Milosevic to be a unique situation that does not set a
precedent for other separatist movements. (See related article.)
Burns also said Ahtisaari spent 18 months trying to achieve a
compromise, but the government in Belgrade "made a political decision
not to participate" meaningfully in the negotiation. Belgrade also
pressured Kosovo Serbs to stay away from negotiations, he said.
The UN Security Council has five permanent members and 10 elected
members. A Security Council decision requires approval by nine
of the 15 members. However, the five permanent members — China,
France, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States — can veto
a decision. U.S. and European diplomatic efforts in the weeks ahead
are focused on persuading Russia not to veto a Kosovo resolution,
USINFO reports.