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Kosovo needs $2 billion in near-term aid, US says, Reuters

March 5, 2008 on 6:37 am | In Kosovo & Metohija, News in English |

By Susan Cornwell

WASHINGTON, March 4 (Reuters) - The newly independent state of Kosovo will need an estimated $2 billion dollars in foreign aid over the next few years, about half of which should be provided by Europe, a senior U.S. official said on Tuesday.

The rest of the money could come from the United States and such institutions as the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, Assistant Secretary of State Dan Fried said. He was testifying before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

Helping the fledgling state, which declared independence from Serbia on Feb. 17 with strong backing from Washington, will require top-level attention into the next U.S. administration, Fried said. U.S. President George W. Bush leaves office in January.

“We cannot simply assume that Kosovo is on autopilot and walk away. This is going to take high-level sustained attention through the end of this administration and into the next” said Fried, who is also acting undersecretary of state for political affairs, the State Department’s third-ranking position.

Fried stressed the $2 billion was a “crude estimate.” To help make Kosovo economically viable, the United States will participate in a major donors’ conference on Kosovo in June, he said. He said Congress had already appropriated $350 million in aid for Kosovo.

Backed by Russia, Serbia rejects Kosovo’s secession and is instructing the new country’s 120,000 remaining Serbs to do the same, worsening the ethnic divide and raising fears Kosovo is heading for de facto partition.

But Fried said there was no evidence Russia was contemplating a military intervention in Kosovo.

“I find that unlikely” given the presence of thousands of NATO troops there, he told Indiana Republican Sen. Richard Lugar, who asked about sabre-rattling comments from the Kremlin.

Kosovo, which has a majority ethnic Albanian population, has been under United Nations administration for nearly nine years following NATO’s air war to evict Serb forces and protect Albanians. NATO has over 16,000 troops there, and a European Union law enforcement mission is preparing to go in.

Fried warned leaders in Bosnia not to push for further partition of their country now that Kosovo has seceded. Bosnia’s Serb Republic shares Bosnia with a Muslim-Croat federation, but Serb leaders want closer links with Serbia.

(Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

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  1. ” $2 billion was a “crude estimate.” is correct.
    It will probably be $10 billion per year for the next 100 years. I bet Thaci will take the lion’s share with very little actually going to the people.
    Why don’t they get the money from the Arabs? They got plenty!
    Another foreign country on the US dole. How much more can the American public take. We are already financially brokeand we are digging a hole that we will never be able to climb out.
    Fried is an idiot who lies like a serpent. This man is totally incompetent to represent the American people.

    Comment by Dushko — March 5, 2008 #

  2. We can stop this if we take charge of that. Kostunica and Nikolic can give tham that money.

    Comment by Luka — March 5, 2008 #

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