White House warns of ‘unprecedented’ Serbian troop buildup on Kosovo border

Authored by theguardian.com and submitted by sadisticsword

Serbia has pulled some of its troops back from the Kosovo border after US warnings that it could face punitive measures for what the White House called an “unprecedented” buildup of Serbian troops and armour.

The Serbian president, Aleksandar Vučić, announced he had ordered troops to be pulled back. In a statement to the Financial Times, he said any military action would be counterproductive, adding “Serbia does not want war”.

A Kosovan government official confirmed a partial Serbian withdrawal on Saturday, with the removal of troops and equipment that had been moved into positions around the border in the past five days, leaving behind a still significant force that is permanently based in the area.

The withdrawal followed a public declaration of concern by the White House, a stern call to Vučić from the US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, and the reinforcement of the Nato peacekeeping force in Kosovo, Kfor, with hundreds of British troops.

In his conversation with Vučić, Blinken called for “​​immediate de-escalation” and a return to his previous agreement to normalise relations with Kosovo.

According to Vučić, Blinken said there could be US measures against Serbia if he did not comply.

“I said you’re a superpower and you can do or say what you want, but I am completely against that. I think it would be very bad,” the Serbian president told the Tanjug press agency.

On Saturday evening, Germany’s ambassador to the US, Andreas Michaelis, described the situation as “another powder keg in Europe” and a danger that should be taken seriously.

Michaelis said on social media there had been “very close cooperation between Germany and the US in the last days and hours” which had been “absolutely key to avoiding further escalation”.

“Serbia needs to act now,” Michaelis said.

The US warnings came at the end of a week of high tension, beginning with an ambush by well-armed Serb paramilitaries on a Kosovan police patrol, in which a policeman was killed. Three Serb gunmen were killed in the ensuing battle, near the village of Banjska.

The armed group was led by Milan Radoičić, the deputy leader of Serb List, a Belgrade-backed party representing the Serb minority in northern Kosovo. Through a lawyer, Radoičić said he was responsible for the shootout with Kosovan police, but did not explain the source of the modern weapons Serb paramilitaries had been carrying.

The Kosovan government produced a document purporting to show that a grenade launcher the group had been carrying had been given to them by the Serbian army, and officials in Pristina expressed concern Sunday’s gunfight was intended to provide a pretext for a Serbian military intervention in northern Kosovo.

skip past newsletter promotion Sign up to First Thing Free daily newsletter Our US morning briefing breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what’s happening and why it matters Privacy Notice: Newsletters may contain info about charities, online ads, and content funded by outside parties. For more information see our Newsletters may contain info about charities, online ads, and content funded by outside parties. For more information see our Privacy Policy . We use Google reCaptcha to protect our website and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. after newsletter promotion

Serbia declared a day of mourning for the three dead Kosovo Serbs, and Vučić falsely claimed Kosovo forces were conducting a campaign of “brutal ethnic cleansing” against ethnic Serbs.

“This reaction by the White House seems similar to the warnings we saw before Russian troops entered Ukraine,” Donika Emini, the executive director of the Kosovan NGO alliance CiviKos Platform, said, adding that it indicated “conflict is inevitable”.

Emini said one possible Serbian objective was to force a withdrawal of Kosovan police from northern Kosovo, and oblige Kfor to take back full security control in the flashpoint region, further eroding the independence and sovereignty of the former Serbian province.

The UK Ministry of Defence announced on Friday it was transferring to Kfor command a battalion of the Royal Princess of Wales regiment, which is in the region for a training exercise, to provide support if required.

QuietRainyDay on September 30th, 2023 at 20:39 UTC »

Yes, this is what Robert Kagan warned about for years

He may be an overzealous neocon, but he isnt totally wrong either. If countries feel like territorial annexations, grey zone operations, and military intimidation are no longer taboo, we will see a lot more of it all.

There are dozens of territorial disputes around the world that some countries will want to settle with force.

There are also a lot of power imbalances that will incentivize countries to capitalize on their military advantages.

And there are a lot of countries that stand to benefit from revisionist efforts to push back the Western-led order and the US's ability to pick and choose which wars are and are not allowed. If youre a regional power with weak neighbors, there are a lot of benefits to a loosening of rules around territorial expansionism and military interventionism. These are all geopolitical forces that had been dammed up for the last 25 years, when the US mostly chose which geopolitical disputes could be settled with force.

But the jungle does indeed grow back.

BigCharlie16 on September 30th, 2023 at 13:33 UTC »

Surely Serbia would have seen the recent and very quick result of the Nagorno-Karabakh (Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict/war) ? Russia’s ally (former ally 🤷‍♂️), Armenia lost again in the recent war.

sadisticsword on September 30th, 2023 at 13:03 UTC »

I find this a bit concerning regarding the increase of tensions in the Balkans, is this just Serbian posture to appease their nationalistic supporters or it's different? Is Russia playing around the Balkans in order to distract Europe from it's conflict with Ukraine?