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Kosovo Is Still Pushing for Recognition — Now It’s Building an Army

Bloomberg
Bloomberg

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Kosovo Is Still Pushing for Recognition — Now It’s Building an Army

Ejup Maqedonci has worn three uniforms over the past 27 years: first as a young rebel fighting for Kosovar independence, then as a member of an interim humanitarian body, and now as defense minister shaping the nation’s military.

Politics Facebook X LinkedIn Email Link Gift Expand A member of the Kosovo Security Force walks past a NATO peacekeeping mission helicopter during the military exercise "Wolf Arrow" in the village of Babaj Bokes, south-western Kosovo in October.

Photographer: Armend Nimani/AFP/Getty Images Facebook X LinkedIn Email Link Gift Gift this article Contact us: Provide news feedback or report an error Confidential tip?

Send a tip to our reporters Site feedback: Take our Survey New Window Facebook X LinkedIn Email Link Gift By Gresa Kraja and Andrea Dudik May 16, 2026 at 7:00 AM UTC Bookmark Save Ejup Maqedonci has worn three uniforms over the past 27 years: first as a young rebel fighting for Kosovar independence, then as a member of an interim humanitarian body, and now as defense minister shaping the nation’s military.

All three sets of fatigues, each framed in gold, hang in his office in the ministry’s sprawling complex in the capital, Pristina. They represent the complexities of building an armed service in a country with limited international recognition, where NATO-led peacekeepers remain deployed to help maintain stability.

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