The EU sidestepped differences over recognising Kosovo's independence yesterday to pledge that the whole Western Balkans would one day join the bloc and vowed to guarantee stability in the region.

The four major EU powers - France, Germany, Britain and Italy - announced their intention to recognise the new state that seceded from Serbia on Sunday, but Spain and several other countries said they would not do so.

The 27 EU foreign ministers united behind a statement that left each member free to decide on recognition but authorised the European Commission to use EU funds and personnel "to promote economic and political development".

German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier told reporters Berlin would decide to recognise Kosovo tomorrow and altogether 17 EU states had vowed to respond quickly.

"The (EU) Council notes that member states will decide, in accordance with national practice and international law, on their relations with Kosovo," the joint statement said.

The ministers said Kosovo was a unique case because of the bloody Yugoslav wars of the 1990s and did not set a precedent for other breakaway regions around the world or call into question international legal principles.

Within an hour of the EU statement, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said the United States, which had pushed the Europeans for an early settlement, was recognising Kosovo.

Spain, grappling with its own Basque and Catalan separatist movements, vowed not to recognise the new state, but helped clinch a compromise in the EU by reaffirming the principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity.

Neighbouring Montenegro, which has a sizeable Serb minority, would recognise Kosovo "at the moment when we assess it will not jeopardise our national security", its Foreign Minister Milan Rocen, who was in Brussels for separate talks, told reporters.

The EU already took a key decision to help secure Kosovo's future at the weekend by launching a 2,000-strong police, justice and civil administration mission.

The EU mission, to be headed by a high representative, will be fully deployed by June and will oversee training and institution-building, with limited rights to intervene to fight organised crime and corruption or hunt war criminals.

French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner, a former UN administrator in Kosovo, said President Nicolas Sarkozy had written a letter of recognition which would be sent to the President of the new state immediately.

Announcing British recognition, Foreign Secretary David Miliband called Kosovo "the last piece of the Yugoslav jigsaw" and said stability in the Western Balkans could not be assured without respecting the aspirations of the Kosovan people.

Apart from Spain, Cyprus, Slovakia and Romania - which all have concerns about the legal precedent or minority rights - also said they would not recognise the secession.

Nato said in a statement its 17,000-strong KFOR stabilisation force would "respond resolutely to any attempts to disrupt the safety and security of the population of Kosovo".

Turkey has decided to recognise Kosovo as an independent state, Foreign Minister Ali Babacan said yesterday, a day after the breakaway majority Albanian province declared its independence from Serbia.

Turkey's recognition is symbolically important because Ottoman Turks ruled the Balkans, including Serbia and Kosovo, for centuries. Orthodox Christian Serbs still mourn their military defeat in Kosovo in 1389 at Muslim Turkish hands.

"The Republic of Turkey... has decided to recognise the independence of the Republic of Kosovo," Mr Babacan said in a statement faxed to Reuters.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.