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New Serbia-Kosovo conflict may be beneficial for US, says Russian ambassador

The situation in Kosovo and Metohija deteriorated dramatically in the evening on July 31 after Kosovo’s police closed the checkpoint on the administrative line with Serbia, intending to impose a ban on Serbian documents as of Monday

MOSCOW, August 26. /TASS/. A new conflict between Serbia and the unrecognized republic of Kosovo would be "of service" for the United States to weaken Belgrade and force it join the anti-Russian sanctions, Russian Ambassador to Serbia Alexander Botsan-Kharchenko said on Friday.

"As for the Europeans, we understand that they are not independent, they are doing what they are told. And a new conflict might be of service for the Americans to make Serbia still weaker, so that it joined the sanction and, probably, they expect Russia to help Serbia in any event, which may be too much of a burden for it," he said in an interview with the Rossiya-24 television channel.

According to the Russian diplomat, "nothing is too much of a burden for Russia when it comes to assistance to friends, brothers, friendly nations."

Serbian Interior Minister Aleksandar Vulin told the Rossiya-24 television channel that the United Kingdom and many other countries are either training the so-called Kosovo army or supply weapons to Kosovo. "Let me remind that under [United Nations Security Council] resolution 1244 there should be no other armed units in Kosovo but KFOR. Regrettably, it is not observed," he said. "There are many former terrorists in Pristina, many have built a carrier killing Serbs. Supplying weapons to terrorists and hoping for peace is like bringing a fierce dog to a child’s bed and hoping they would play along."

The situation in Kosovo and Metohija deteriorated dramatically in the evening on July 31 after Kosovo’s police closed the checkpoint on the administrative line with Serbia, intending to impose a ban on Serbian documents as of Monday. In response, Serbs in the north of Kosovo took to the streets and blocked key highways. Sirens were heard in several cities in the north of the region. Police and the Kosovo Force (KFOR), a NATO-led international peacekeeping force in Kosovo, were pulled to the bridge across the Ibar River, which links Kosovska Mitrovica’s northern and southern parts.

As a result of international efforts, Pristina postponed the procedure of enforcing the ban on Serbian documents till 1 September.