News / Europe         
 In Balkans, Threat of Islamic Radicalization, Russian Influence Converge 

  
  Keida Kostreci March 20, 2015 1:03 PM The White House says violent extremism 
and Russian aggression in Ukraine are two of the greatest challenges to U.S. 
national security. And one place those threats converge is the Balkan region, 
where political instability, outstanding ethnic tensions and economic fragility 
make the countries of the area particularly vulnerable.Large Muslim populations 
and historical and religious ties with Russia make the Western Balkan countries 
susceptible to these outside forces. Frank Wisner, a former U.S. ambassador and 
a former special envoy for Kosovo’s final status talks with Serbia, says that 
even though the Balkans is not a primary sphere of contest, it is affected.“I 
think it’s enormously important the Balkans be shielded from the rivalries of 
the major powers and second, that the issues in the Middle East not infect the 
Balkans,” he told VOA in an interview. “With regard to the latter, that’s the 
job of the intelligence services of Western Europe and the United States and 
those in the Balkans, to make certain that we track very carefully subversive 
elements flowing to and from the travel areas of the Levant and the Middle 
East.”Countries such as Albania, Bosnia and Kosovo have approved legislation to 
prevent their citizens from becoming foreign fighters in conflicts elswhere and 
have made arrests among radical factions. But Ian Brzezinski, former U.S. 
deputy assistant secretary of defense and a senior fellow with the Atlantic 
Council, says long-terms security measures require more than mere 
legislations.“It’s going to be [a] continuous, long-term undertaking, where 
deepening that kind of interpolice, international intelligence cooperation, 
it’s going to only probably become more and more pressing, more and more 
demanding as time goes on," he said.Balkan fighters in SyriaSince the conflict 
in Syria began in 2011, more than 20,000 foreign fighters — at least 3,400 of 
whom are Westerners — have gone to Syria from more than 90 countries, according 
to the Worldwide Threat Assessment of the U.S. Intelligence Community. Official 
figures from the Balkans and other sources say the number from these countries 
alone is at least 1,000. And compared to Western Europe, the Balkans have added 
vulnerabilities, says Brzezinski.“The structures of governance and law 
enforcement are probably a bit weaker in the Balkan countries compared to their 
northern counterparts,” he said. “Some of them have fairly significant Muslim 
populations. Not to say that having a Muslim population is a bad thing, but 
it’s a reality that is being exploited by organizations like ISIS. These are 
countries that are in the poorer spectrum of the European economic landscape 
and whenever you have a situation of economic inequity, you have societies that 
will be more vulnerable to extremism.”Former Ambassador Wisner says the United 
States has aimed to act as a stabilizing force and to help these countries 
agree to outcomes that are mutually acceptable.But, he says, “there remains an 
unresolved political agenda in Bosnia, in Macedonia and, of course, between 
Kosovo and Serbia.”Russia trying to extend its influenceAnother risk factor in 
this region is the influence that Russia is trying to exert. Recently Secretary 
of State John Kerry was asked about this issue at a hearing before a U.S. 
Senate subcommittee.“Whether it’s Serbia, Kosovo, Montenegro, Macedonia, other 
places — they are all in the firing line,” he said.Russia has tried to use its 
traditional ties with Serbia to maintain its clout and has actively sought to 
extend its presence in the Balkans.Serbia depends on Russia for its gas 
supplies, for example, with imports of 82 percent of the overall gas 
consumption. After being thwarted by the European Union in its efforts to build 
a gas pipeline to Southeast Europe, the Kremlin is working for an alternative 
route passing through Turkey, Greece, Macedonia and Serbia, then into Hungary 
and perhaps on to Austria. And broadcasters Russia Today and Sputnik have 
presences in Serbia.Brzezinski points out that Russia benefits from the time 
when the Soviet Union existed and created infrastructural dependencies within 
the region upon what is now the Russian economy.But as the Balkan economies 
modernize and adopt European standards of law and commerce, he adds, they are 
weaning themselves from that dependency.Even so, Serbia, for example, has not 
endorsed EU sanctions against Russia. And when Russian President Vladimir Putin 
visited Belgrade last October, it was a reminder that Serbia's close ties with 
Russia sit awkwardly with its EU ambitions.Ambassador Wisner says it is 
important there be no crises for Russia to exploit that would further increase 
tensions between Russia, Europe and the United States, and that Europe must 
continue to press ahead with its inclusion of Serbia and Kosovo in the EU and 
attempt help Greece and Macedonia resolves longstanding issues.“By settling 
these questions, there is no negative ground on which Russia can play and it’s 
easier to maintain the harmony that we all need in the Balkans for its own 
purposes," he said, referring to concerns that Putin is attempting to drive a 
wedge between the Balkans and the West.An analysis late last year in the German 
magazine Der Spiegel details Russian efforts to influence developments in 
Serbia and Bosnia-Herzegovina, and to present itself as an alternative to 
Euro-Atlantic integration.Secretary Kerry echoed that concern during the Senate 
subcommittee hearing in which he described Russia as engaged in a “massive 
effort to sway nations, to appeal to them, reach out to them." Efforts that 
could result, he said, in a new kind of dangerous East-West zero sum 
game.Greater Western assistance, EU integrationWhat the Kremlin exploits in the 
Balkans, analysts say, is pervasive corruption, weak institutions and lacking 
economic opportunity. The antidote, says Brzezinski, would be greater 
assistance to the region by the West, and acceleration of integration into the 
EU.“I think that the United States can more forcefully lean forward in terms of 
reanimating the vision of a Europe whole and free, pressing forward more 
assertively for NATO enlargement, particularly to Macedonia and to Montenegro,” 
he said. “I think we ought to be working to the degree that we can to give 
Serbia greater confidence in the potentials of security cooperation with the 
West, to wean it away from its kind of pro-Russia outlook. I think continued 
and enhanced security cooperation between the countries of the Balkans and 
Western Europe — particularly Interpol and EU — is in order.”But both Wisner 
and Brzezinski agree that integration is a two-way street and that the 
countries themselves will need to drive the process through aggressive reforms 
and achievement of the standards needed to become full members of the 
Euro-Atlantic 
community.http://www.voanews.com/content/threat-of-islamic-radicalization-russian-influence-converge-in-teh-balkans/2688574.html

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"SERBIAN NEWS NETWORK" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/senet.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to