Kosovo Vows To Break With Serbia By May
Contested Province Has Support Of U.S., Most Of EU; Russia And Others Fear Precedent
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Soldiers serving in a NATO-led peacekeeping mission in Kosovo patrol at the Graqanica monastery, Dec. 9, 2007. Kosovan officials declared Monday, Dec. 10, 2007 that they would become a country independent of Serbia by Spring 2008. (Ermal Meta/AFP/Getty Images)
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Kosovo's Albanian Democratic Party leader Hashim Thaci, left, and President Fatmir Sejdiu, during a news conference in Baden near Vienna, Wednesday, Nov. 28, 2007. (AP)
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Serbia's Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica, left, and President Boris Tadic in Baden near Vienna, Tuesday, Nov. 27, 2007. (AP)
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U.S. envoy Frank Wisner, EU envoy Wolfgang Ischinger and Russia's representative Alexander Botsan-Kharchenko, from left, at a news conference after the talks on the future of Kosovo in Vienna, Wednesday, Nov. 28, 2007. (AP)
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Fast Facts Serbia Learn about the people, economy and history.
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Interactive The Kosovo War In-depth coverage of the NATO bombing campaign to oust Serb forces from the Kosovo province.
"It's not an issue of if, but when," spokesman Skender Hyseni told The Associated Press after a meeting of Kosovo's ethnic Albanian leadership. "Kosovo will look at its own agenda, but it will certainly be much earlier than May."
Kosovo is widely expected to announce early in 2008 that it will formally break away from Serbia, but has vowed not to do so without European Union and U.S. approval.
On Friday, a "troika" of envoys from the EU, U.S. and Russia reported back to U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon that four months of internationally mediated talks had ended in a stalemate.
The U.N. chief had given the troika until Monday to agree on a follow-up administration for Kosovo, but the key issue of independece from Serbia proved too great an obstacle for negotiators.
EU foreign ministers were meeting Monday on the Kosovo crisis, and the U.N. Security Council is set to take up the issue on Dec. 19.
Although the province formally remains part of Serbia, it has been run by the U.N. and NATO since 1999, when NATO air strikes ended a Serbian crackdown on ethnic Albanian separatists.
Serbia has offered Kosovo broad autonomy but insists it remain part of Serbian territory, and Russia has threatened to block its independence drive at the U.N. Security Council.
Earlier Monday, Kosovo's outgoing prime minister urged the EU to swiftly sign off on the breakaway province's quest for independence, and a senior Serbian official prepared to open a government office in Kosovo's tense north in a gesture of defiance.
The EU must "recognize the need for immediate and permanent conclusion of this process," Agim Ceku told The Associated Press in an interview.
Ceku sought to reassure Europe of what he called "our commitment to multi-ethnicity, our commitment to democracy, our commitment to international supervision of independence, our commitment to international partnership and our commitment to a European future."
I think that Serbia has a choice: Going into the future together with us, or going back to the past alone.
Agim Ceku,Outgoing Prime Minister of Kosovo
Later Monday, Serbia's minister for Kosovo, Slobodan Samardzic, planned to open a branch office on the Serb side of the ethnically divided northern city of Kosovska Mitrovica - long a flashpoint for violence between the province's ethnic Albanian majority and its minority Serbs.
Samardzic also was to tour Serb villages and meet with U.N. officials. But the opening of a Serbian government office inside Kosovo was seen as a clear territorial claim by Belgrade, which sees Kosovo as the heart of its ancient homeland and refuses to let it go.
Kosovo media reported Monday that the outlawed Czar Lazar Guard - a group of Serb hard-liners - distributed leaflets in the province's Serb-dominated north, pledging to fight if Kosovo declares independence.
"We are not afraid of a primitive Albanian tribe," the leaflets reportedly read.
The U.S. and most EU countries have signaled they will recognize an independent Kosovo, but five European countries - Cyprus, Greece, Slovakia, Spain and Romania - have expressed misgivings, fearing it would set a bad precedent by encouraging separatist movements elsewhere in Europe and worldwide.
On Sunday, Kosovo's leadership issued a statement pledging to refrain from violence and "do the utmost to ensure Kosovo remains calm" as NATO beefs up its presence in the volatile province, fearing revived hostility between the rival sides.
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





Dozens of churches have been defiled...the Albanians have ethnicly cleansed the province...not only of Serbs, but of Jews, Turks, Gypsies and other minorities...but they can do no wrong...they supported the Nazis...they are supported by the Americans..and there is nary a word about this travesty from the Zionists of Israel whose bleats are heard all over the world if a synagogue is defiled in Podunk, Ohio.
We might have had a moral right to intervene in Bosnia. There was absolutely NONE in Kosovo, save the machinations of an Impeached Pervert Draft Dodger and his ''ho and Pig wanting to shift attention away from Lewinsky.
The coward Clinton would have demonstrated more leadership and common sense by sending the B-52s to Afghanistan. Coward that he was, he sent them to bomb pro-American innocent civilians in Belgrade instead.
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