Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 November 2018
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34. Which is not to say that the new borders were the most accurate possible or uniformly successful in uniting all ethnic groups. Discontinuous concentrations of Poles (in Ukraine), Romanians (in Transylvania), Serbs (in Bosnia and Croatia), and Turks (in Bulgaria) were only the most obvious examples of the impossibility of erecting ethnically precise nation states.Google Scholar
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38. Thus the lament of one senior U.S. State Department official that his European colleagues consider him “crazy” for his advocacy of multiethnic solutions.Google Scholar
39. Lewis, Anthony, ”Winking at Karadžić “ The New York Times , 28 October 1996, p. A19.Google Scholar
40. Fragmentary contemporary accounts of the battle suggest that it was a draw or perhaps even a Pyrrhic victory for the Serbs. Timothy Judah, The Serbs (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1996).Google Scholar
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45. In a conversation in March 1995, the current U.S. ambassador to one major western European capital went so far as to recount oft-repeated expressions of regret by NATO and EU officials about having Greece as a member state.Google Scholar
46. Nor has the utility of a “special relationship” among Albania, Macedonia, and Bulgaria escaped officials at the U.S. State Department, whether during the tenure of Ambassador Robert Frowick in Skopje or, more recently, as officials have grappled with the need to preserve Macedonia's integrity in the event that the ongoing Kosovo conflict spreads.Google Scholar
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