euractiv.com 
<https://www.euractiv.com/section/enlargement/opinion/why-serbias-president-vucic-chose-richard-grenell-over-angela-merkel/>
  


Why Serbia’s President Vucic chose Richard Grenell over Angela Merkel


By Filip Milacic

5-6 minutes

  _____  

Although EU membership is Serbia’s official foreign policy goal, Russia and 
China – and perhaps the USA in the future – are providing something that is 
much more valuable for the Serbian leaders: a hope that the drawing of the 
national borders will be possible again, writes Filip Milacic.

Dr Filip Milacic is a national adviser on political affairs at the OSCE Mission 
in Montenegro.

The last several weeks in Europe were marked by the outbreak of coronavirus 
pandemic. Accordingly, the stories of the pandemic’s effect on the health, 
economy and politics have been dominating the news, which is why one important 
development slipped past under the radar.

In the midst of the pandemic, Kosovo’s Prime Minister Albin Kurti lost the vote 
of confidence in the parliament.

According to the media, he paid a price for objecting to a secret deal between 
Serbia’s and Kosovo’s Presidents, Aleksandar Vucic and Hashim Thaci, which was 
brokered by US special envoy for Serbia and Kosovo Richard Grenell and which 
allegedly includes the land swap.

President Vucic, who has always been bragging about his good relationship with 
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, decided this time to go against the wishes of 
the EU and Chancellor Merkel thereby jeopardizing his country’s European 
integration.

Yet this was a completely expected move. Even though the EU membership is 
Serbia’s official foreign policy goal, for the following two reasons Serbia’s 
European integration is doomed to fail:

Firstly, the EU membership is not in President Vucic’s political interest. His 
recent bizarre press conference, in which he strongly criticized the EU and 
praised China, prompted many to regard the coronavirus pandemic as a critical 
juncture in which Serbia will decide its future path.

However, unrelated to the coronavirus pandemic, Serbia under President Vucic 
has already embarked on the path of autocratization and by praising China and 
its system he is strengthening his own political legitimacy.

In addition to it, by portraying the EU as selfish, President Vucic is also 
trying to lower EU’s popularity within the Serbian electorate and, thus, weaken 
the impact of EU’s inevitable critic of his authoritarian practices.

Secondly, even if President Vucic would be ousted from power there still 
remains a key obstacle to Serbia’s European integration– Serbian national 
question. On the Serbian political scene, there is a widespread notion that the 
national question is still to be resolved (the national boundaries are to be 
drawn again).

On that matter there is a bipartisan agreement, i.e., there is no difference 
between the stances of the ruling parties and the majority of the opposition 
parties. This is hampering Serbia’s European path because the obligations of a 
potential EU membership are in a collision with Serbia’s aim to resolve the 
national question.

Serbia must make a deal with Kosovo, which would most probably imply its direct 
or indirect recognition. This is very unlikely to happen as the recognition of 
Kosovo – in any form – is extremely unpopular within the Serbian electorate.

Many surveys have shown that the prioritising of the national question is not 
only a choice of the political elite as the majority of Serbian citizens share 
that view too.

Moreover, Serbia’s constant interference in the inner affairs of neighbouring 
Bosnia and Herzegovina and Montenegro and pretensions toward those two 
countries are against one of the pillars of the EU integration– good 
neighbourly policy.

In the spirit of the 1990s the Serbian political leaders are behaving like they 
are the representatives of all Serbs in the region, and not only the Serbian 
citizens.

In other words, in Serbia, the national question trumps European integration. 
High Representative of the EU for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Josep 
Borrell, recently lamented the lack of “Thanks to the EU for the help it has 
been providing us” billboards on the streets of Belgrade.  So far this ‘honour’ 
has only been reserved for China and Russia.

The EU could double its financial assistance, but it would still not ‘deserve’ 
the gratitude billboard on the streets of Belgrade because Russia and China – 
and perhaps the USA in the future – are providing something that is much more 
valuable for the Serbian leaders: a hope that the drawing of the national 
borders will be possible again.

This explains why President Vucic risks alienating German Chancellor Merkel and 
Brussels by making a secret deal with Kosovo’s President Thaci under the 
sponsorship of Grenell.

Serbia’s Foreign Minister Ivica Dacic repeated on several occasions that the 
current American administration is more receptive to Serbia’s vision of 
Balkan’s future than any previous one and Serbia should seize this opportunity.

Serbian priorities lie there, and not in the reforms that would bring it closer 
to the EU membership. It is time for the EU to acknowledge it.

 

-- 
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 view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/senet/05e901d61ed1%244caad2f0%24e60078d0%24%40gmail.com.

Reply via email to