Solana: Recognition of Kosovo and NATO membership are not EU entry requirements
Recognition of Kosovo independence and NATO membership were not conditions for Serbia to become an EU member, EU foreign affairs chief Javier Solana affirmed in Belgrade.
(KosovoCompromise Staff) Tuesday, July 14, 2009
He said that the same was true of NATO:
"That's not a pre-condition. Austria's in the EU-it's not a member of NATO. Sweden's in the EU-it's not a member of NATO. So that's no condition, nor any obligation to join NATO in order to enter the EU. The majority of Union states are in NATO, but that doesn't mean they all have to be in NATO," said Solana.
"In any case, it depends on the will of the Serbian people. No-one wants to order anyone to become members of an organization, or an alliance that they don't want to enter. That won't happen," the EU high representative underlined.
After ten years in the job, Solana is due to quit the post of EU foreign and security policies chief at the end of 2009. Previously, he was secretary-general of NATO, a post from which, on March 23, 1999, he ordered the beginning of the NATO air strikes on the former Yugoslavia.
"It was all very different then to what it is today. I'm talking about ten years ago. But, as you can imagine, those weren't the happiest moments in my life, back then, ten years ago," he said.
"I'd rather the conflict could have been settled some other way, but I didn't take that decision. At that time the leaders of the international community made that decision. But to prevent that from ever happening again, we must work seriously, to finish the EU, to augment the EU with your countries," Solana said.