Nato pledges tough force for Kosovo

Nato nations pledged today to provide enough troops to put down any violence as Kosovo heads towards a declaration of independence…

Nato nations pledged today to provide enough troops to put down any violence as Kosovo heads towards a declaration of independence from Serbia, expected within weeks.

Britain, France, Germany and Italy urged fellow EU states in a letter to accept that negotiations on Kosovo's future had been exhausted and that the time had come to settle its status - without United Nations backing, if necessary.

In a separate move that drew immediate fire from Russia, Nato countries agreed that their 16,000 KFOR peacekeepers could stay in Kosovo on the basis of their existing UN mandate, even after independence.

"KFOR shall remain in Kosovo on the basis of UN Security Council resolution 1244, unless the Security Council decides otherwise," Nato ministers said in a final communique.

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"We renew our commitment to maintain KFOR's national force, contributions, including reserves, at current levels and with no new caveats," they added, using the military term for limits that nations sometimes impose on what their troops can do.

Such caveats meant NATO was caught badly off guard during rioting in north Kosovo in 2004, which it struggled to control. The alliance has up to four reserve battalions - each with several hundred troops - on standby for trouble. Washington and most EU states are likely to recognise a declaration of independence by Kosovo and are confident its leaders will wait until around late January to enable NATO and the European Union to prepare for it.

"There is still a lot of work to do to make sure we have full commitment to the principles embodied in the Ahtisaari plan," US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said of a UN blueprint for independence by special envoy Martti Ahtisaari, which has security provisions for Kosovo's Serbs.

The vast majority of EU member states are now seen as ready to accept Kosovo's independence but Belgian Foreign Minister Karel De Gucht, who hosted a dinner for EU and NATO counterparts on the eve of the meeting, said full consensus was elusive. "If we do not get consensus, we are not in the driving seat," he told reporters.

A "troika" of US, Russian and European mediators failed to secure agreement between Pristina and Belgrade over Kosovo. A Western diplomat said they would deliver their report to the United Nations on Friday, before a December 10th deadline for a deal.