 A new war may start in Europe. The current escalation of tensions in the partially-recognized Kosovo may be resolved peacefully if the West puts pressure on Pristina while Kosovo fulfills two conditions, creating Serbian municipalities in accordance with the 2013 Brussels Agreement and releasing an illegally-detained policeman Dijon Panty. Serbian politicians and experts told Russian Izvestia. This time, the situation began to escalate after Kosovo's special forces occupied the Republic's Serbian-populated region and barricades went up in Kosovo's northern zone. Given the flare-up, Belgrade is planning to deploy its own troops there in accordance with the UN Security Council's resolution. However, NATO is unlikely to approve this decision. We will try to send our military and police to Kosovo, but we know that NATO will never approve of this. Head of the Serbian Permanent Mission to NATO's Parliamentary Assembly, Vladimir Dukanovic told Izvestia. Program coordinator at the Russian International Affairs Council, Lazovic, concurs. In his opinion, this move won't be in the West's interest since it supports Pristina and simultaneously serves as a guarantor of a peaceful resolution to the Serbia-Kosovo conflict. If Belgrade continues to bring its troops to the region, this will be a direct confrontation and an armed conflict. This Kosovo Albanians won't cease their incitement, he explained. Additionally, this will be a failure of Western policy. That said, the West, particularly Washington, is confident that the conflict can be settled if Serbia recognizes Kosovo's independence. Belgrade is under a lot of pressure over this issue. Jovan Palalic, head of the Committee on Constitutional and Legislative Issues at the National Assembly of Serbia, told the newspaper. However, the Serbian authorities will never agree to this. Meanwhile, pauses between the rounds of escalation in the region are becoming shorter while tensions only accumulate. There is a high probability that such provocations in the end will morph into a local armed conflict. Lazovic concluded.