Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06PRISTINA921
2006-11-03 07:11:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Pristina
Cable title:  

KOSOVO: AMB. WISNER REAFFIRMS U.S. RESOLVE ON

Tags:  PGOV KJUS KCRM EAID KDEM UNMIK YI 
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RUFOANA/USNIC PRISTINA SR
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 PRISTINA 000921 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR DRL, INL, AND EUR/SCE, NSC FOR BRAUN, USUN FOR
DREW SCHUFLETOWSKI, USOSCE FOR STEVE STEGER

E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/26/2016
TAGS: PGOV KJUS KCRM EAID KDEM UNMIK YI
SUBJECT: KOSOVO: AMB. WISNER REAFFIRMS U.S. RESOLVE ON
FINAL STATUS, REACHES OUT TO KOSOVO SERBS


Classified By: COM TINA KAIDANOW FOR REASONS 1.4 (B) AND (D).

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 PRISTINA 000921

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR DRL, INL, AND EUR/SCE, NSC FOR BRAUN, USUN FOR
DREW SCHUFLETOWSKI, USOSCE FOR STEVE STEGER

E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/26/2016
TAGS: PGOV KJUS KCRM EAID KDEM UNMIK YI
SUBJECT: KOSOVO: AMB. WISNER REAFFIRMS U.S. RESOLVE ON
FINAL STATUS, REACHES OUT TO KOSOVO SERBS


Classified By: COM TINA KAIDANOW FOR REASONS 1.4 (B) AND (D).


1. (C) SUMMARY: In Kosovo October 24-26, U.S. Special Envoy
Ambassador Frank Wisner delivered a three-part message to the
top political leadership: maintain unity through and beyond
final status; let the Kosovar people know now what lies
ahead; and make certain the machinery of government is in
place to accept the transfer of responsibility from UNMIK and
implement the Ahtisaari settlement. Wisner told his
interlocutors not to obsess about the timing of final status,
including speculation about a possible delay caused by
Serbian elections, but to focus on the governing capabilities
of post-status Kosovo. This message resonated, even with
opposition leader Hashim Thaci, who promised Wisner that he
would continue to remain a part of the Unity Team. Wisner
urged key mayors and Kosovo Assembly members to sell the
benefits of decentralization to their constituencies and to
engage responsibly in preparations for the post-UNMIK
transition. They agreed, although the mayor of Gjilan
claimed that "ethnic-based" decentralization would hurt
integration of Serbs in his municipality. Wisner's Albanian
interlocutors were all encouraged by his strong reiteration
of U.S. support for the status process, and all expressed
their faith and trust in the United States.


2. (C) SUMMARY (cont'd): At a dinner, SRSG Ruecker and
COMKFOR LTG Kather listed a final status delay as their
number one security concern, although Kather assured Wisner
that KFOR could deal with security contingencies arising from
this, including in the north. Both saw no indications of
serious violence for the October 28-29 referendum in Kosovo
on the new Serbian constitution. Wisner breakfasted with
Slobodan Petrovic, moderate leader of a small Kosovo Serb
party, who said that most Serbs in the southern enclaves

would not leave Kosovo, but would take a wait and see
attitude after status. In Klina, accompanied by COM and
moderate Serb Orthodox leaders Bishop Teodosije and Father
Sava, Wisner visited Kosovo Serb returnees who were victims
of a recent grenade attack, and urged the mayor to bring the
perpetrators to justice. Amb. Wisner's visit demonstrated to
the Kosovo Albanian leadership our determination to resolve
final status, and to Kosovo Serb leaders our strong support
for a continued Serb presence in Kosovo. END SUMMARY.

Message to Kosovar Leadership: Maintain Unity, Educate
Public, Get Ready to Govern


3. (C) USG Special Envoy for Kosovo Ambassador Frank
Wisner, in Kosovo October 24-26, met separately with
President Sejdiu, PM Ceku, the Unity Team, Assembly leaders,
opposition leader Thaci, key mayors, newspaper editors, and
intellectuals to deliver a three-part message: maintain unity
through and beyond final status; act now to explain the
provisions of the settlement to the Kosovar public; and ready
the machinery of government to take over administration from
UNMIK and implement the provisions of the settlement.
President Sejdiu assured Wisner that unity would be
maintained and that he had begun to engage with the
citizenry, but agreed that more could be done. PM Ceku noted
that he had created a transition team within his office to
liaise with UNMIK and the planning team of the International
Civilian Office in preparation for the post-status period.
Assembly President Berisha detailed the recent passing of
Standards-related legislation on religion, language and
cultural heritage, and said the Assembly would be ready to
take on legislation implementing a final status settlement.
All expressed their thanks to and trust in the U.S. in
helping to conclude the status process as rapidly as possible.


4. (C) Opposition PDK leader Thaci, joined by his three
vice presidents, promised Wisner that his party would remain
committed to the Unity Team and continue to "invest in the
state-forming unity of politics." That said, he accused the
government of "misusing" this cooperation by dismissing
opposition-oriented public servants on political grounds and
trying to control the public media. Thaci also asserted the
need for there to be a two-thirds Assembly majority on

PRISTINA 00000921 002 OF 003


passage of a new constitution, and for consensus among
parties on the timing of elections and the electoral system.
Wisner responded that Special Envoy Ahtisaari's proposals on
these matters would take a number of these concerns into
account. While Wisner expressed sympathy for the difficulty
of putting normal opposition concerns on hold, he made clear
that the current period was too critical for there to be
politics as usual in Kosovo. Wisner encouraged Thaci to be
patient until final status had been resolved and Kosovar
institutions were able to stand on their own.


5. (C) Wisner told six key mayors, including those of the
two largest cities of Pristina and Prizren, that they play a
crucial role in getting the word out on the status
settlement. He urged them not to wait until the final
document was presented, but to sell the benefits of
decentralization to their constituencies. Wisner said the
creation of Serb municipalities, where they are viable, would
only make Kosovo stronger. The mayors responded positively
to this message, although the mayor of Gjilan argued that
ethnic-based decentralization would damage the multi-ethnic
character of his municipality.

Look to Your Own Responsibilities


6. (C) Most interlocutors and the press with whom Wisner
met remained preoccupied with a possible final status delay
and the details of the settlement. Thaci specifically asked
if Wisner could state publicly that the U.S. remains
committed to ending the status process in 2006, while ORA
party chairman Veton Surroi wanted the U.S. openly to support
an "unambiguous" resolution of final status. Newspaper
editors angled for Wisner to use the word "independence," and
intellectuals asked about Russia's position, the notion of
"conditional" independence, and the mechanics of recognition.



7. (C) Wisner responded by underscoring that the U.S. and
the Contact Group will continue their efforts to resolve
status by the end of the year, as articulated in the CG
Ministerial statement of September 20. He urged Kosovar
political and media leaders not to obsess over the status
timeline, including speculation about a delay due to Serbian
elections, or to get bogged down in settlement details. All
needed to look at the larger picture and ensure that they
were prepared to assume the responsibilities that would
inevitably come with the final status settlement, whatever
its outcome.

Status Delay Number One Security Concern for Key
Internationals


8. (C) SRSG Ruecker and COMKFOR LTG Kather, at a dinner
with Amb. Wisner, noted that their number one security
concern was a final status delay. But Kather, as he has with
us before, said that KFOR was well positioned to deal with
contingencies. Asked what KFOR would do if the
bridgewatchers blocked the main Mitrovica bridge, Kather
responded that they would have it open "in ten minutes,"
since this was a freedom of movement issue. Kather added
that KFOR had a more active presence in the north now and
that he was more concerned with security for the southern
Serb enclaves, particularly around Gjilan, than the north.
He also mentioned security gaps, saying there was little
confidence in the Kosovo Police Service (KPS) to secure
borders and maintain law and order, especially given the
smaller post-UNMIK international civpol presence now
envisioned. Both Ruecker and Kather said there were no
indications of any serious problems with the holding of the
October 28-29 referendum on a new Serbian constitution in the
265 polling station throughout Kosovo.

Support For Kosovo's Serbs


9. (C) Wisner found PM Ceku focused on how to create
conditions to keep Serbs in Kosovo. Ceku claimed that his
goal was to separate Kosovo Serbs from Belgrade, similar to

PRISTINA 00000921 003 OF 003


the process Croatian Serbs had gone through, so that they
could speak for themselves and create their own identity. To
do this, Ceku, who said he did not want his role to be made
public, had engaged a Croatian Serb adviser to organize a
congress in December of Kosovo's Serbs, mainly those in the
south, but perhaps with participation of those in the north
as well. This "congress," he said, would elect its own
representatives and have as its main task defining the
conditions that would help maintain the Serb presence in
Kosovo.


10. (C) As part of his outreach to Kosovar Serbs, Wisner
assured Slobodan Petrovic, head of the small, Kosovo-based
Serb Autonomous Liberal Party, of strong U.S. support for the
Kosovo Serb community. Petrovic noted that a good number of
Kosovo Serbs are aware the likeliest outcome of the status
process is independence, and that they give great weight to
U.S. assurances that Serb interests will be protected in the
settlement.


11. (C) Amb. and Mrs. Wisner, accompanied by COM and
moderate Serbian Orthodox Church leaders Bishop Teodosije and
Father Sava, spent October 26 visiting the Kosovo-Albanian
majority municipality of Kline/Klina in central Kosovo.
Wisner met first with a family of elderly Kosovo Serb
returnees who were injured in a September 19 grenade attack
that severely damaged their apartment in Klina town. Wisner
applauded their courage for returning to their home, which
the Kosovo government's Ministry for Returns and Communities
had repaired and re-furnished. During a meeting with Klina
municipal officials, Wisner praised them for their work in
facilitating Serb returns to the municipality, but strongly
urged the mayor to bring the perpetrators of recent attacks
to justice. The party then visited a Serb-owned shop in the
ethnically mixed village of Vidanje, where Serb returnees
described the difficult economic conditions faced by all
residents, regardless of ethnicity. Amb. Wisner wrapped up
his visit to Kosovo with an interview with the Kosovo Serb
radio station Radio KiM, in which he stressed that the
settlement provisions would make it possible for Serbs to
remain in Kosovo, with detailed guarantees for the rights and
authorities of their community.


12. (U) Amb. Wisner has cleared this message.


13. (SBU) U.S. Office Pristina clears this cable in its
entirety for release to U.N. Special Envoy Martti Ahtisaari.
KAIDANOW