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  • OP/ED

    Cyber Attribution, Corruption, and the False-Flag Question in Albania’s 2022 Alleged Iranian Cyberattack

    Between Russia, Iran and Europe: Azerbaijan as a balancing power in the South Caucasus

    The Zero-Tariff Gate: Sovereignty as a Service in the Sino-African Corridor

    Albania vs. the Sea/ Marginal Notes on A. Leka’s Novel The Hidden Side of the Albanian Socialist Garden

    May 9 and the long shadow of a Letter: Is Europe still Schuman’s Project?

    The Arbnesh of Zadar: A living memory of Albanian identity on the Adriatic coast

    Science Diplomacy and Academic Freedom: A strategic nexus for contemporary diplomacy

    Serbia and Kosovo between new regional alliances and old geopolitical patterns

    Hungarian Writers and the European Spirit: Between Central Europe, Auschwitz, and Inner Exile

  • Interview

    Exclusive Interview with Oleksandr Tyshchenko: A 40-Year Legacy of Chernobyl, Nuclear Risks, and Global Responsibility

    INTERVIEW: ZLATKO KRAMARIĆ – THOUGHTS ON THE OLD CONTINENT

    EXCLUSIVE / Ukrainian Ambassador to Albania, Volodymyr Shkurov: “Ukraine wants peace, but not at the expense of its freedom and independence”

    EXCLUSIVE| Ambassador Tayyar Kagan Atay: Türkiye and Albania, a Strategic Partnership Rooted in Shared Heritage and a Common Vision for the Future

    “Diplomacy, Not War”: Palestinian Ambassador to Albania Calls for Justice, Peace, and Global Action for Gaza

    Exclusive: “Even After Tito – Tito”/ Ambassador Zlatko Kramarić on Authoritarian Legacies and Democracy’s Future in the Balkans

    The Conclusion of the Diplomatic Mission / Ambassador Dancho Markovski: Strengthening Albania-North Macedonia Relations for a Shared European Future

    A Century of Diplomatic Relations Between Albania and Russia: Exclusive Interview with the Russian Ambassador to Albania, H.E. Alexey Zaytsev

    Exclusive/ The chairman of the Freedom Party, Ilir Meta: “The will of the citizens will triumph in Albania, as it did in North Macedonia”

  • Realpolitik

    IBAR? ”Sufficiently! Much ado about nothing! Shart contrasts in Beijing! Where is the exit?!

    Neither peace nor war! Peace with bombs?! IBAR in autumn?! Not another Hormuz in Taivan! 

    IBAR – a springing board or an obstacle? Can we catch the EU Negotiation train 2027? When the dress makes the news!  EU electoral April  ends in a draw 1:1!  

    The European Parliament building in Strasbourg, France with flags waving calmly celebrating peace of the Europe. July 12, 2020.

    EU 2027 or 2037! Even half membership failed! No exit strategy!     

    What next?

    “With diplomatic velvet“! Major question marks! In Washington yes, but  in the White House NO! A strange dinner in Brussels!

    From a great ‘apple of disaccord’ to a  point of  cooperation! A bad start! The strange absence in Davos!

    5 lessons from the American 3 January! Don’t count the chicken before they are hatched! Will NATO freeze in Greenland? Wrong diplomatic messages!

    German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, son-in-law of U.S. President Donald Trump line up for a family photo opportunity at the Chancellery in Berlin, Germany, December 15, 2025.    REUTERS/Lisi Niesner/Pool

    A Strategy that could change the world! Europe in Berlin! Why an historic compromise? Only charm diplomacy in Athens!

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    The Digital Protectorate: How the EU AI Act Codified Silicon Valley’s Monopoly

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    Serbia at the Crossroads of EU Integration and Geopolitical Balancing: IFIMES Analysis

    Tirana – €20 Million EU–Banking Agreement Boosts Albanian SMEs

    The Myth of Independence: How Chinese Efficiency is Rewriting the Constitution of Modern Geopolitics!

    Europe Yesterday and Today: Why 9 May Still Matters

    “EU4Municipalities II” Project, a Strategic Investment for Strengthening Municipalities and Accelerating Albania’s Path towards the EU

    Eight Years in the Service of Identity: The Journey of the Montenegrin Community in Albania

  • Top News

    No End in Sight: Trump, Netanyahu and the Expanding Middle East War

    Tirana – €20 Million EU–Banking Agreement Boosts Albanian SMEs

    “EU4Municipalities II” Project, a Strategic Investment for Strengthening Municipalities and Accelerating Albania’s Path towards the EU

    Albania, Italy deepen defence ties with naval shipbuilding deal

    U.S. Embassy: Iran-Linked Groups May Target Americans and Iranian Opposition in Albania

    The Council of Albanian Ambassadors disappointed with the voting of the draft law on the foreign service in the parliamentary committees.

    Prime Minister Edi Rama Addresses Israel’s Knesset in Historic Special Session

    Kazakhstan’s Strategic Reform Agenda: Stability, Modern Governance, and Responsible Diplomacy

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Non-Papers and the elephant in the room: Rule of law in the Western Balkans

23 July, 2021
in ENGLISH, English Top News, In Focus
A A
Ursula von der Leyen

Ursula von der Leyen

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While the European Union has initiated a yearlong Conference on the Future of Europe that gives the floor to its citizens to debate contemporary challenges and prospects, another dialogue is in parallel held about the future of the Western Balkans. However, the latter is neither public, nor participatory. It has been launched through the release of non-papers.

The most radical ones were unsigned and undated. The first (in order of appearance) and most notorious presented as panacea to the region’s problems is based on the terrible idea of multiple changes of borders to create Greater Albania, Greater Croatia and Greater Serbia.

The second (admittedly, much more conventional) non-paper proposed the establishment of an Autonomous District in North Kosovo as part of a deal to resolve the ongoing conflict between Belgrade and Pristina.

While such a structure might assuage some of the fears of Serbs residing in North Kosovo, its creation would be very challenging given that the Belgrade-Pristina dialogue has already stalled over the establishment of the Association/Community of Serb majority Municipalities in Kosovo.

The disclosed authorship and ownership of these non-papers raise obvious questions of accountability and legitimacy. Yet, this is not their main deficiency. Arguably, the very logic of releasing a non-paper is to test the merits of a fresh idea or proposal.

And no-one claims that the Western Balkans are not in desperate need of more attention and out-of-the-box approaches to their long-lasting problems.

Indeed, those non-papers’ release coincides with a widespread acknowledgement that the policy of EU enlargement is deadlocked, largely due to the lack of interest and energy by both the European Union and the leaderships of most Western Balkan countries.

On the one hand, in recent years, the European Commission has issued several documents to revitalize the integration process, from the so-called strategy for a credible enlargement perspective of the Western Balkans of 2018 to the new enlargement methodology of 2020.

In practice, though, these policy revisions are little more than an additional complication to the enlargement process to the extent that new instruments are not accompanied by an increased political engagement of the EU on the ground.

In addition, EU policy “revitalizations” have not helped to overcome the primacy of political decision-making over a merit-based assessment of progress. Individual EU member-states are still able to hijack the process in order to promote their national preferences.

Enlargement policy revisions also do not seek to provide any concrete benefits to Western Balkan citizens that could stem from the EU integration of their countries such as the diminution of the GDP per capita gap between the EU average and the Western Balkan countries.

On the other hand, some Western Balkan leaders see the EU reluctance to provide a clear membership perspective as a permission to maintain autocratic practices. In essence, for them, strengthening the rule of law is a means to achieve a certain goal not a goal in itself.

Therefore, they are delivering only the bare minimum of reforms, opting for procedural rather than genuine compliance with EU prescriptions.

Failing to demonstrate its true transformative power, the EU is no longer perceived as an integrative factor, while various plans “calling” for the disintegration of the region are emerging before its eyes, and probably even in its own backyard. In that sense, it could be said that the invasion of new “solutions” for the Western Balkans is a consequence of the EU´s inability to help the region transform itself, in fostering the rule of law and resolving bilateral disputes.

Irrespectively of who hides behind these non-papers, they generate concern because they contain ideas linked to identifiable political trends with supporters in both the Western Balkans and the EU. In other words, they should not be treated as science fiction.

They indeed build on well-known demands by decision-makers, who have become increasingly outspoken during the last years. Even if the propositions contained in the first non-paper are too radical to succeed, they carry the danger of presenting a great evil that might relativize the ramifications of a milder scenario of limited territorial adjustments in Bosnia and Herzegovina or in Kosovo.

These ideas are actually the very opposite of what European integration stands for which is to overcome boundaries and nationalism.

Overall, the main deficiency of these non-papers is that they fall within the wrong, failed paradigm that accounts for the current stagnation in the reform process. They are underpinned by an overwhelming concern about the region’s stability, overlooking the backsliding in democracy and the rule of law.

They seem to treat the impasse in conflict resolution as an obstacle to those countries’ reform efforts, while the exact opposite is the case: semi-authoritarian leaderships nurture ethnic disputes (and capitalize on those disputes’ protraction) to divert attention from their own grip to power.

Both non-papers also take the policy of EU enlargement out of the equation, whose transformative power (when conditionality is employed consistently) should not be altogether neglected. Very importantly, the idea of stabilizing the region without exploiting the promise of EU membership is tempting for member-states who have lost appetite for any new rounds of enlargement.

The EU has long put stability ahead of integration in the Western Balkans, pushing in the background reforms that would improve the well-being of citizens and consolidate democracy. To some extent, the non-papers that have been lately receiving a lot of public attention paradoxically fall within the same (mainstream) approach that has contributed to the reign of stabilitocracy.

Very worryingly, they carry the additional risk of triggering new conflicts and causing an even greater slowdown to the region’s EU accession process. However, what the Western Balkans need is the exact opposite: a more active EU engagement to enlargement and the Union’s reaffirmation of its strong commitment to spread its own values and democracy in the region./EWB

 

Tags: EUwestern balkan

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