New Balkans Wars on the Horizon

Part II

 

To read part I of this essay click here   
<http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=17386> Part 1

 

 

by Dr. Pyotr Iskenderov





Global Research <http://www.globalresearch.ca> , February 11, 2010

Strategic Culture Foundation <http://en.fondsk.ru/>  - 2010-02-09

 

                        
 

 

The situation in Bosnia and Herzegovina will get strained soon as Bosnian Serbs 
are going to hold a referendum on their constitutional status. Its aim is not 
to let the leaders of Sarajevo, US and EU put an end to Republika Srpska. The 
outgoing Croatian President, Stjepan Mesic, promised that in case the 
referendum takes place, the regular army of Croatia will enter the territory of 
Bosnia and Herzegovina to cut off the 15-km Posavina corridor, which connects 
the western and the eastern parts of Republika Srpska in the area of Brcko, 
close to the Croatian border. 

 

“If Milorad Dodik (Prime Minister of Republika Srpska) decides to hold a 
referendum on separation, I will send the troops to divide the region inhabited 
by the Bosnian Serbs”,- the Croatian President said, adding that in case of 
success, a sovereign state of Bosnian Serbs will 'seize to exist'. He made the 
announcement during an informal press-conference in Zagreb on January 18. 

 

A military campaign against Banjaluka may be held simultaneously with an armed 
action by Kosovo`s Albanian authorities against the city of Kosovska Mitrovica 
and Serbian communities in Northern Kosovo. In this case the US, NATO and the 
EU will manage to complete separation of the Serbian territories. The Serbian 
Republic will be surrounded by hostile states and thus will be no longer able 
to carry out independent foreign policy. The defeat of the Kosovan and Bosnian 
Serbs will become Russia`s biggest loss in the Balkans over the past two 
decades and will harm Moscow's attempts to play an active role in other 
strategically important regions in Eurasia. 

 

The first reaction of Serbia and Russia to such rude interference of the 
Croatian leader into affairs of the neighboring state was surprisingly 
reserved. Serbia's President Boris Tadic made an attempt to respond to the 
remarks made by his Croatian counterpart at the UN Security Council meeting on 
Kosovo on January 22. But he commented on the issue not during his main speech 
(though parallels between what was going on then in Bosnia and Herzegovina and 
in Kosovo were more than obvious). He spoke during the debates because he found 
such kind of issues could not be discussed during official reports. Mr. Tadic 
also met the UN Chief Ban Ki-moon to tell him that Mesic`s 'dangerous words 
were unwelcome in political discourse' but immediately noted that Serbia did 
not want to worsen relations with Croatia. 

 

Such peace-loving rhetoric was accepted in Zagreb. Croatia's Prime Minister 
Jadranka Kosor told journalists that Serbia and Croatia should abandon debates 
and work together to develop neighborly relations. However, the Prime Minister 
did not disavow the President's announcement. 

 

Russia's reaction is still too vague. Summing up the results of 2009 at the 
press-conference on January 22 in Moscow, Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei 
Lavrov commented on Mr. Mesic`s announcement: “We insist that all the sides 
involved respect the Dayton Agreement and avoid the use of force”. (1) 

 

Meanwhile, the way the situation is developing in the region in recent months 
proves quite the contrary: the West and the leaders of Sarajevo are definitely 
going to undermine the Dayton agreement. Two rounds of talks held by the heads 
of the Bosnian political parties in October 2009 at a NATO base in Butmir 
outside Sarajevo, revealed the the western strategy toward Bosnia and 
Herzegovina. The Bosnian Serbs are demanded to abdicate their authorities 
settled in the Dayton Peace Agreement. Though formally Russia is a member of 
the Dayton Agreement Peace Implementation Council, it did not take part in the 
discussions in Butmir. So, it would be a fatal mistake to expect the US, EU and 
NATO to abandon their new political course. It would also mean to be 
inexcusably weak in regard to Russia's interests in Bosnia and Herzegovina and 
in the Balkans in general. 

 

It was not accidentally that the International Crisis Group, which 
traditionally deals with promoting the western political propaganda in conflict 
regions, in every detail commented on the future of the Balkans a few months 
before the recent events. Experts in the Group believe that Moscow and Belgrade 
remain the West`s major rivals in the region because “an international approach 
to the Balkans is dominated by concern over Serbia`s reaction to the 
independence of Kosovo”. In their opinion, Russia “has become stronger to 
oppose to the Western policy it sees hostile to its interests”. (2) 

 

Under these circumstances, Moscow should better revise its policy in the 
Balkans. Russian diplomats should no longer view the Dayton agreements as too 
weak to withstand political attacks. This all will make it logical to put in 
question political status of Bosnia and Herzegovina. This approach will help 
Moscow no longer be an outsider in Bosnia and launch a series of international 
talks on territorial, political and ethnocultural problems in the Balkans, 
where peoples and their interests are in jeopardy. Taking into consideration 
intentions of the West to put an end to the Serbian Orthodox community in the 
Balkans, revision of the existing borders in the conflict regions may become 
the only way for Russia to defend its interests. As of today, there are at 
least three self-proclaimed states which statuses are being doubted: Bosnia and 
Herzegovina, Kosovo and Macedonia. Their territorial and administrative 
revision could become the least painful way to avoid new wars in the Balkans. 

 

It is remarkable that recently the authorities of Sarajevo have been urging 
Russia to contribute to the 'implementation of the Dayton Peace Agreement', the 
Bosniak Muslim member of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Haris 
Silajdzic, said at the meeting with the Russian special envoy for Kosovo, 
Alexander Botsan-Kharchenko. And this is a very disturbing sign because 
Silajdzic has long been known for his extremist views about Republika Srpska. 
The majority of people in Western Europe cannot but be aware that the Bosnian 
Serbs remain the only counterbalance to radical pan-Islamic tendencies in 
Bosnia and Herzegovina. And this it what gives Russia the right to boost its 
activities in the Balkans.

 



Dr. Petr A. Iskenderov is a historian, senior researcher at the Institute for 
Slavic Studies of the Russian Academy of Science, and the Vremya Novostey and 
the Voice of Russia radio station international politics commentator. 


Notes

(1) http://www.mid.ru/brp_4.nsf    

 

(2) Bosnia`s Incomplete Transition: Between Dayton and Europe. 
Sarajevo-Brussels, 2009. P.14 


Pyotr Iskenderov is a frequent contributor to Global Research.   
<http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=listByAuthor&authorFirst=Pyotr&authorName=Iskenderov>
 Global Research Articles by Pyotr Iskenderov

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