“Our position is as follows: currently we have the negotiations under the aegis of Brussels … But if the United States joins these talks, Serbia believes that Russia has to join these negotiations too. So far the format has not changed, if it does change and the US takes part in it, Serbia thinks that Russia must take part in it too,” the ambassador said at a press conference in Moscow.
Terzic added that Belgrade valued Russia’s stance on Serbian territorial integrity and warned Kosovo against making any provocations, such creating an independent army.
“This is a very dangerous precedent. It threatens the stability of Serbia and the whole Balkan region. Some big countries are playing with fire in the Balkans, supporting their ambitions … The Balkans is a very difficult region, where many geopolitical, religious and cultural interests cross and NATO has to be very careful in solving the problem,” he added.
The same month, the parliament of Kosovo passed a set of bills providing for the change of the Kosovo Security Force's mandate and its transformation into the republic's national army, which could reportedly comprise a total of 8,000 troops — 5,000 active duty soldiers and 3,000 reservists.
READ MORE: EU-Kosovo Rapprochement Depends on Pristina-Belgrade De-Escalation — Berlin
During his visit to the Serbian capital earlier in January, Russian President Vladimir Putin said that Moscow shared Belgrade’s concern over Kosovo's provocative actions, adding that Russia was “interested in ensuring that the situation in the Balkans remains stable and secure.”
In 2011, Belgrade and Pristina engaged in EU-facilitated talks with the aim of normalizing relations between the partially recognized state and Serbia. The 2013 Brussels Agreement on normalizing relations and the 2015 accord on forming the Community of Serb Municipalities, a self-governing association of the Serb-dominated regions of Kosovo, have been the consultations' main results so far.