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US Sending Javelin Anti-Tank Missiles to Kosovo in Attempt to Set Balkans on Fire

The latest round of tensions between Belgrade and breakaway authorities in Kosovo began rising after Pristina riled up ethnic Serbs living in the region’s north by banning Serbia-issued license plates, followed by a push to install unelected ethnic Albanian mayors in Serb-majority settlements.
Sputnik
The State Department has approved the delivery of $75 million-worth of Javelin anti-tank missiles to the breakaway Serbian region of Kosovo, with the move coming amid rising regional tensions and an ongoing US push to destabilize the Balkan nation.
“All these systems are acquired to establish sufficient capacity for Kosovo to defend itself in the event of an invasion – or any other threat,” Kosovo defense minister Ejup Maqedonci told Bloomberg on Wednesday.
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Kosovar separatist authorities expect to receive some 24 Javelin launchers and 246 missiles in total. Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic called the planned transfer a “great disappointment for Serbia” but said Belgrade will still try to “work on preserving Serbian-American relations.”
The breakaway is also home to Camp Bondsteel, the US and NATO’s largest military base in the Balkans, and the alliance maintains a 4,500+ troop-strong ‘peacekeeping force’ in the territory known as Kosovo Force, which took part in street clashes with local ethnic Serb residents last year.
Kosovo fighters parade during a ceremony marking the 15th anniversary of Kosovo's unilateral 'declaration of independence' in Pristina, on February 17, 2023.
Javelins are expected to help transform the ‘Kosovo Security Force’ into a full-fledged military, with the breakaway’s self-proclaimed president, Vjosa Osmani, announcing last week that Kosovo is looking to “bring [its] security forces into line with NATO standards,” and acquire other, unspecified weapons from the alliance in the future.
Serbia has pointed to the illegality of attempts to create a Kosovar army under UN Security Council Resolution 1244 of June 10, 1999, which also required NATO and its allies to safeguard the “sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia” – a commitment broken with Kosovo’s 2008 NATO-backed declaration of independence.
Tensions in Kosovo began to escalate in mid-2022 after Pristina tried to force Serbs living in the region to get Kosovo-issued license plate as a pretext for a series of discriminatory measures against the minority. Last May, clashes erupted after Pristina forcibly installed new ethnic Albanian mayors in several northern cities after municipal elections boycotted by Serbs. Over 50 Serb protests and 30 NATO troops were injured.
In September 2023, armed clashes were reported between Serbs and Kosovar police, with three Serbs killed and six others detained. Moscow called the incident a “direct and immediate consequence” of the Kosovo government’s efforts to “incite the conflict and clear the territory of the region from the Serbs.”
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Direct Threat of Resumption of Ethnic Cleansing in Kosovo Exists - Russian Foreign Ministry
Kosovo today is mostly populated by ethnic Albanians, who make up over 90 percent of the breakaway's population, with Serbs residing in areas of the region's north close to the rest of Serbia. The territory's ethnic Serb population was cut in half over the past three decades in a series of ethnic cleansing campaigns and pogroms by Kosovar Albanian militants backed by NATO, with a population of about 194,000 Serbs in 1991 dropping to about 100,000 today.
Kosovo has a special significance to Serbs, with the 1389 Battle of Kosovo, where Serb Prince Lazar managed to hold off against a numerically superior Ottoman army, helping to crystalize Serbian national identity. The region also once contained many of Serbia's oldest Orthodox Churches (over 150 of which were destroyed between 1999 and 2004).
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