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EU determined to resolve standoff over Bosnia envoy, Kallas says

By Thomson Reuters Jul 2, 2026 | 8:23 AM

SARAJEVO, July 2 (Reuters) – The EU is determined to find a strong candidate for the post of international peace envoy for Bosnia and Herzegovina, EU foreign chief Kaja Kallas said on Thursday, to replace a German ​diplomat who resigned in May under what he described as U.S. pressure.

Last ‌month, countries failed to reach a consensus on a successor for Christian Schmidt as high representative for Bosnia and Herzegovina, a post with wide powers in the country since the 1990s under international agreements that ended war there. The role has always been held by a European, with a U.S. ‌deputy.

“We ​are determined to find the European candidate who can ⁠help move Bosnia and Herzegovina ⁠forward,” Kallas said during a visit to Bosnia.

“While the negotiations on a successor continue, ultimately the success of the Office of the High Representative will be measured by the day it is no longer needed,” Kallas said. “Until then, it remains ​an important pillar of stability.”

The U.S., which had announced that the “U.S.-led nation-building era has passed”, has made clear that it wants a new envoy with a more ⁠limited mandate. It supported Italian diplomat Antonio Zanardi ⁠Landi for the job, while most European countries supported French diplomat Rene ​Troccaz.

The United States has said it would reconsider its role in Bosnia and Herzegovina ​unless its preferred candidate is approved.

Earlier this week, Schmidt’s deputy Louis Crishock ‌was named as the acting high representative until a new envoy is appointed by July 14 at the latest.

Bosnia is at the bottom of a queue of the Western Balkan hopefuls aspiring to join the EU, as it has stalled its reform progress ⁠due to political blockades over the past two years.

“Sustained reforms are the fastest and most effective way to advance the accession process,” Kallas said, adding: “This window of opportunity for accession ⁠may not be open ‌forever.”

She said Bosnia had already lost €108 million in EU funding ⁠from the bloc’s €6 billion growth plan for the region, and was ​facing ‌the risk of losing an additional €370 million unless it proceeds ​with necessary reforms.

Bosnia ⁠is divided into two political entities, one controlled by ethnic Serbs and one controlled by Bosniaks and Croats, with a weak central government supervised by the international envoy.

The Bosnian Serb representatives in state institutions have been consistently blocking EU-related reforms, with their nationalist pro-Russian leadership dismissing EU accession and turning to the U.S. administration for support.

(Reporting by Daria ​Sito-SucicEditing by Peter Graff)