Albania-Kosovo-Croatia/ Is a military alliance being formed in the Balkans?

2025-03-20 17:49:42Fokus SHKRUAR NGA REDAKSIA VOX
Members of the Kosovo Security Force during a parade in Pristina in 2024.

A declaration of defense cooperation between Kosovo, Albania, and Croatia has angered Serbia, which sees it as a threat to itself. What does NATO say about the new Balkan initiative, and how do security experts in Pristina and Belgrade view it?

Kosovo and two countries in the Western Balkans region that are part of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), Albania and Croatia, signed a declaration this week to deepen cooperation in the field of defense and security.

Without providing concrete details, the defense ministers of the three countries said they will increase the interoperability of their armies through education, training and joint exercises, as well as engage in combating hybrid threats, but will also coordinate policies for Euro-Atlantic integration.

Serbia saw this as a step that "undermines regional stability" and as a threat to its "territorial integrity," while Kosovo said the initiative should not be seen as a threat to anyone, but should also be accepted as a message that the three states will be united in the face of any challenge or threat.

Security experts in Pristina and Belgrade do not see the declaration as a step towards forming a formal defense alliance, such as NATO.

What unites the three countries?

For Ramadan Ilazi, head of research at the Kosovo Center for Security Studies (KCSS), the importance of the statement lies in the fact that it came at a time when the unpredictability of existing security alliances in the world has increased.

He sees the initiative as a step towards strengthening alternatives or strategic alliances, so that Kosovo can advance in terms of defense, as it still does not have a clear path to NATO membership.

"I am not optimistic that this alliance marks the beginning of the creation of a formal defense bloc, but more of a new group of states in Europe that share the same concern or the same reading of the security situation in Southeast Europe," Ilazi told Radio Free Europe.

Ilazi believes that NATO's peacekeeping mission in Kosovo, KFOR, and the alliance itself, will be the umbrella for these collaborations, as he does not think that Albania and Croatia would act contrary to NATO's interests in the region.

A NATO official told Radio Free Europe that Albania and Croatia are long-standing contributors to regional stability, including through the KFOR framework. Asked about the new initiative, the official said the alliance “ is aware” of it , but that it is up to the signatories of the declaration to say more.

Despite not having the form of an international agreement, the initiative, with the political will of the parties, could lead to "soft political actions," according to security expert at the Belgrade Center for Security Policy, Vuk Vuksanovic.

He told Radio Free Europe that Balkan cooperation has been spurred in part by warnings of a possible reduction in " the United States' commitment to NATO if Europeans do not invest more in their defense."

According to Vuksanovic, in an environment where NATO does not leave, but "where it weakens, it may happen that certain states form informal groupings to cooperate."

Kosovo, Albania and Croatia have warned that the initiative could be expanded to include new members, although they have not mentioned any names. However, Serbia has hinted that one of these countries could be Bulgaria.

Even if other countries are added, Ilazi does not think this group is moving towards creating a military alliance that embodies NATO principles, such as collective defense.

Why is Serbia opposing the initiative?

Belgrade demanded an explanation from Tirana and Zagreb regarding the goals of the initiative, saying that it " will not allow unilateral actions that could endanger our territorial integrity, the security of citizens and peace in the region."

Kosovo's Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Diaspora responded, saying that such behavior by Serbia represents a new violation of the Brussels Agreement, "which clearly stipulates that Serbia will not hinder Kosovo's international relations."

Meanwhile, Croatia said that the time has passed when Zagreb asked Belgrade for permission on how to act and with whom to cooperate.

For Vuksanovic, Serbia most likely sees this initiative as a "political provocation on the part of Zagreb . "

According to him, the authorities in Belgrade could use this development to shift attention from the political situation in Serbia and the protests that have been taking place there for several months now.

Ilazi also thinks that Serbia's harsh reaction is simply due to the involvement of Croatia, which in the 1990s waged a war for independence from the former Yugoslavia.

However, he considers that the trilateral cooperation is driven by the same view that Russia exerts a malign influence in the region, and that autocratic regimes in the region pose a threat to the stability of the Balkans – accusations that have also been repeatedly made by the Kosovo authorities.

While he believes that Kosovo would benefit greatly from the experiences of the two NATO states, but also from various trainings, Ilazi expresses skepticism about the implementation of the initiative, recalling the low level of implementation of previous agreements between Pristina and Tirana. / Radio Free Europe

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