Serbia makes another u-turn on Europe

ZELJKO PANTELIC

Today @ 10:49 CET

Serbs are said to have a long memory which might help the Serbian leadership 
sell its latest sharp turn over European policy to its citizens. 

After the Council of ministers finally forwarded Serbia's application for EU 
membership to the European Commission, the official position in Belgrade has 
swung back to euphoric pro-European rhetoric, new unrealistic promises and an 
understatement of conditions set by the EU for further progress on the road to 
membership.

Even foreign minister Vuk Jeremic has stopped talking about Kosovo 
<http://waz.euobserver.com/onm/media/file3/94txVY.png>  (Photo: United Nations)

Description: 
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 one year ago, Serbian officialdom celebrated the 55th anniversary of the 
communist takeover with plenty of pomp. Back then, Belgrade was visited by 
Russian president Dmitry Medvedev, the biggest ally in defending Serbia's 
sovereignty over Kosovo. It also dropped its previous political motto, 'There 
is no alternative to the EU', and launched the 'Four pillars policy' calling 
for close ties with Russia, China, the US and the EU.

Vuk Jeremic and Bozidar Djelic, the Serbian ministers for foreign affairs and 
for European integration, repeatedly stated that if Belgrade were forced to 
choose between the EU and Kosovo it would pick the latter.

This year, in less than two months, from July to September, Serbia's foreign 
policy has completely changed once again. 

There are several reasons for this. The first is the opinion of the 
International Court of Justice which found no violation of international law in 
Kosovo's declaration of independence. The second is the global financial crisis 
which showed that the Serbian economy would collapse without good relations 
with the EU.

Thirdly, the 'Kosovo is more important than Europe' policy failed to lift the 
popularity of president Boris Tadic's party. On the contrary, the former 
radical Tomislav Nikolic has taken a lead in the polls with his new Progress 
party.

Even Mr Jeremic has stopped speaking about Kosovo, after more then 150 lobby 
trips around the world in one year, to lobby for Serbia's position on its 
former province. Two of the four pillars (China and Russia) have collapsed and, 
again, Serbia has found there is no alternative to the EU. 

In 2008, after the coalition led by president Tadic won the elections, the 
Serbian government produced an action plan for EU integration of Serbia. It 
predicted that the country would be an official EU candidate before the end of 
2008, would start negotiations for membership in 2009 and would enter the EU in 
2012. 

The plan was dropped after a few weeks but Serbian top officials continued to 
say that the country would be technically ready for EU membership in 2012. 

Until a few months ago, official optimism liked to recall the old idea, dusted 
off by Greece, that in 2014, one century after the start of the First World 
War, the EU could complete its enlargement by admitting all of the western 
Balkan countries among its ranks.

Now, Serbian media keep referring to the forwarding of the EU application to 
the commission in such enthusiastic terms that the uninitiated would be 
forgiven in assuming that the country had already achieved candidate status. 
Nobody reported that Serbia had been waiting a record ten months to see its bid 
take at least the first step; Iceland waited less than one week and it took 
just four months for Montenegro. 

The new proclaimed target date for entry in EU is 2016, which implies that 
Serbia would be ready in 2014.

Croatia got candidate status in 2004, started to negotiate with the EU in 2005, 
and is still negotiating today. Just few days ago Jose Manuel Barroso, 
president of the European Commission, refused to name a date for Croatian 
accession.

The Serbian government has, however, managed to overcome Dutch resistance on 
the issue of war crimes. "Full cooperation" with the war crimes tribunal in The 
Hague is a key condition for European integration, but the Netherlands had 
strongly insisted for the arrest of Ratko Mladic, the former Bosnian Serb 
military commander suspected of war crimes and genocide, to be a precondition 
of any further steps on Serbia's EU track.

http://waz.euobserver.com/887/31146

http://waz.euobserver.com/887/31146

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