Key facts
- The US warned it would reconsider its role in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
- The Peace Implementation Council (PIC) failed to agree on a new envoy.
- The US supported Italian diplomat Antonio Zanardi Landi for the position.
- European countries reportedly favored French diplomat Rene Troccaz.
- Christian Schmidt resigned as envoy last month.
The United States has indicated it will reassess its involvement in Bosnia and Herzegovina following the failure of the international body overseeing the country's peace process to select a new envoy. The Peace Implementation Council (PIC), responsible for implementing the Dayton peace accords, could not reach a consensus on a successor to Christian Schmidt, who resigned last month. A U.S. State Department spokesperson stated that European indecisiveness and the PIC's 'abdication of its own duty' are compelling the US to reconsider its role in the international presence in Bosnia. The US had backed Italian diplomat Antonio Zanardi Landi, while unconfirmed reports suggest most European countries supported French diplomat Rene Troccaz. This division occurs at a critical juncture for Bosnia, which remains ethnically divided. The US has signaled a policy shift towards more transactional, 'mutually beneficial partnerships' in the Western Balkans, moving away from its previous 'nation-building era' approach.