Tuesday, May 31, 2011 - 2:14 PM

Boris Tadic makes it clear that with Ratko Mladic now heading to the Hague, it's time for Brussels to live up to its side of the implicit deal and put Serbia on the path to EU membership:
“I simply ask the EU to fulfill its part. We fulfilled our part and we will continue to do so,'' said the Serbian President.
“No one has the right any more to place Serbia on the pillar of shame,'' Tadi? emphasized, adding that “no one has the right to say that this country is without the rule of law, and no one can say that we are a nation which is unable to face its past.''
Tadi? said that Serbia “should be given the same path to EU membership accorded to another former Yugoslav republic, Croatia.“
“We are demanding that Serbia, just like Croatia, simultaneously be given the date for the start of the entry talks and not just the candidate status. When I say we demand I mean we deserve it,'' Tadi? underscored.
“There are no obstacles left,'' Tadi? noted, adding that “stopping Serbia would be purely political.“
It's not quite true that there are no obstacles left. There's still the nagging issues of Kosovo: it's hard to imagine that Serbia could ge admitted while still claiming a territory that's recognized as a sovereign state by the rest of the EU. The relatively tame backlash from Serbian nationalists to the Mladic arrest is probably nothing compared to what Tadic would face if he gave up Serbia's historial claim to Kosovo.
Then there are factors completely beyond Serbia's control:
Neighbouring Croatia is in the closing stages of its six-year negotiation to join the EU. Just as it reaches closure the goalposts are being moved by EU governments and new conditions are being introduced. France, Germany, the Netherlands and several others are suffering from a chronic case of "enlargement fatigue" – fed up with an ever-growing EU.
After the past two years, it shouldn't be surprising if the Western European public starts to view new members -- however, unfairly -- less as potential new economic partners and more as future bailouts. If Mladic had been arrested along with Radovan Karadzic back in 2008, the calculus might be very different now.
Tadic is right about one thing, the ball is now in the EU's court. If the Mladic arrest doesn't produce tangible results for Serbia, it will be a blow to the often-heard argument that membership is an effective carrot that can be used to prod reluctant governments into progress on human rights and economic reform. As Bronwyn Lo writes in the Australian, they're likely paying close attention in Ankara.
ANDREJ ISAKOVIC/AFP/Getty Images
LIE = "a territory that's recognized as a sovereign state by the
"a territory that's recognized as a sovereign state by the rest of the EU."
that remark is a LIE, there are countries inseide and outside EU who DON`T recognize Kosovo as a state but maybe the US propaganda doesn`t know that
or maybe Spain, Slovakia and Romania as full EU members don`t matter to you
Spain pulled out of Kosovo because 1, they didn't want to create a precedent for the Basques pulling out of Spain, or 2, they wanted to stop spending money on Kosovo, or 3, a beautiful synergy of the first two. Slovakia still had a contingent in KFOR when I left towards the end of 2009. Romania? What?
5 EU Member States Do Not Recognize Kosovo
In addition to Spain, Slovakia, and Romania, there's Greece and Cyprus.
The highly responsible EU members who don't recognize Kosovo
Are no doubt causing much pain, by their disagreement, to the others, who I think will manage to bear their anguish.
Why so nervous my friend? Life and the screw ups in it cannot be always explained by american/zionist/new world order conspiracies.
Yes there are EU countries which do not recognize Kosovo - mainly because of their own inner political situation.
But this does not change the fact that Kosovo has the right of self determination - and as it is obvious other EU countries which do not face the problems of Cyprus, Greece, Spain or Romania, has acknowledged the fact.
Why was it possible for Crna Gora to peacefully declare independence from Serbia, and why should not the same be possible for Kosovo?
the problem is the americans SUPPORT europe`s division
the americans live tens of thousands of miles away so they don`t give a f***
It has been too late for a long time
The powers that be within the European Union do not want Serbia to join, and despite all the lip service, Mladic's arrest does not bring Serbia closer to entry, but may in fact push them further from the West:
http://www.newclearvision.com/2011/05/30/the-war-criminal-next-door/
One arrest shouldn't change things
Tadic's perception of some deal with Brussels is very revealing, essentially admitting that the Serbian govt knew where Mladic was and was using this as a chip to further the cause of EU membership. But giving Mladic up doesn't mean that attitudes have changed. In Serbia last year the one thing I was unfortunately surprised by was that among the people I talked to, contempt for Kosovo and Bosnia remains high. Not only from an economic point of view, but also from the point of view of maintaining European harmony, allowing Serbia to join the EU could very well compromise the unity of the EU.
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