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Belgrade's Biden conundrum: How US-Serbian relations will shape up post-Trump ǀ 
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Vuk Vuksanovic Researcher and think tank associate

6-8 minutes

  _____  

Many in Europe were happy 
<https://qz.com/1929408/how-are-european-leaders-reacting-to-biden-win/>  that 
Joe Biden triumphed 
<https://edition.cnn.com/2020/11/07/politics/joe-biden-wins-us-presidential-election/index.html>
  over Donald Trump in the 2020 US presidential elections in November, as 
evident from the congratulatory messages. Among numerous leaders congratulating 
Biden was Serbian president Aleksandar Vučić 
<http://rs.n1info.com/English/NEWS/a669583/Vucic-congratulates-Biden-hopes-that-good-cooperation-with-US-will-continue.html>
 , who wrote on Twitter: "I wish you wisdom and resoluteness to face current 
challenges for the benefit of America and the rest of the world. I hope we will 
continue the good cooperation we had with Trump with you as well, and I am 
grateful for that".

However, this message clearly shows that for Vučić and Serbia, Biden's win 
brings challenges, as Vučić was among those in Eastern Europe 
<https://apnews.com/article/joe-biden-donald-trump-viktor-orban-serbia-aleksandar-vucic-ee5af0e59e073a4b9fe7c8085eb5d0d8>
  who hoped for Trump's re-election.

It was not the first time that Vučić bet on the wrong horse. In 2016, Vučić 
<https://balkaninsight.com/2016/11/22/we-need-to-talk-about-alek-11-21-2016/>  
endorsed Hillary Clinton against Donald Trump. So, why Trump this time? First, 
Serbs remember Biden as an ardent advocate 
<https://balkaninsight.com/2020/10/20/joe-biden-woos-americas-bosnian-albanian-voters-before-polls/>
  of military interventions against the Serbs during wars in both Bosnia and 
Kosovo in the 1990s. Secondly, given Biden's political biography, Trump was 
perceived 
<https://www.b92.net/eng/news/politics.php?yyyy=2020%26mm=06%26dd=28%26nav_id=108804>
  as someone from whom Serbia could secure a less painful resolution of the 
Kosovo dispute, one that Vučić hoped he could sell to the people at home 
without committing political suicide.

Ultimately, Vučić also saw an opportunity in Trump to establish a partnership 
with the US, which was something that Belgrade had tried to do but failed to do 
so for decades. In September 2020 
<http://rs.n1info.com/English/NEWS/a638607/Vucic-says-Serbia-managed-to-open-White-House-doors.html>
 , after Serbia and Kosovo signed an economic normalisation agreement in the 
Oval Office brokered by Trump, Vučić told the Serbian media that the White 
House doors finally opened for the Serbs after being reserved solely for 
Albanians and other Serbian adversaries from Yugoslav Wars.

However, with Biden now in charge, Serbian leadership faces new challenges. The 
first challenge concerns Kosovo. Some expect 
<https://ecfr.eu/article/commentary_a_biden_victory_could_reset_transatlantic_relations/>
  that Biden in his more transatlantic outlook 
<https://www.brookings.edu/blog/order-from-chaos/2020/11/17/reviving-the-trans-atlantic-relationship/>
  will coordinate US Balkan policy with the EU, including its most influential 
country, Germany. For Vučić, the nightmare is having Germany and the US jointly 
pressuring him to recognise Kosovo, without any face-saving settlement that can 
be sold to the Serbian voters. The second problem involves China. Over the past 
years, the Chinese presence in the Balkans 
<https://warontherocks.com/2017/11/unexpected-regional-player-balkans-china/>  
has increased, and Belgrade has boosted its ties with Beijing 
<https://thediplomat.com/2019/01/serbia-chinas-open-door-to-the-balkans/> . It 
will become increasingly difficult for Serbia to balance between the US and 
China in light of the growing rivalry between the two powers.

China would have been a problem for Serbia in its relations with the US, even 
if Trump had been re-elected. The negative attitudes towards China are becoming 
something of a bipartisan consensus 
<https://www.pewresearch.org/global/2020/07/30/americans-fault-china-for-its-role-in-the-spread-of-covid-19/>
  in the US. In September, the Trump administration also made a push 
<https://thediplomat.com/2020/09/in-serbia-chinas-digital-silk-road-might-be-in-trouble-very-soon/>
  against the presence of the Chinese tech giant Huawei in Serbia. The domestic 
environment in Serbia also complicates things. In yet unpublished public 
opinion research conducted by myself and colleagues from the Belgrade Centre 
for Security Policy 
<https://bezbednost.org/en/#:~:text=The%20Belgrade%20Centre%20for%20Security,advocacy%2C%20community%20development%20and%20education.>
 , 13 per cent of respondents perceived the US as the greatest enemy of Serbia, 
behind Croatia and Albania.

Given the painful recent history between Serbia with the US, this is a 
relatively low figure, indicating that pro-Trump narrative projected by the 
Serbian elite had some effect. However, now that a new US president will be in 
the White House, and one that is not popular in Serbia, that figure will almost 
certainly increase. It would be domestically risky for Vučić to reverse his 
policies on either Kosovo or relations with the likes of China if the public 
perceives him doing so as a result of pressure from an unpopular US President.

What options does President Vučić have at his disposal in managing Belgrade's 
relationship with Washington under these new challenging circumstances? The 
first option will be to rely on the personality factor. Vučić already has a 
history with Biden. The two leaders met twice from the time when Vučić was the 
Serbian prime minister, and Biden was US Vice-President in the Obama 
administration, first in Washington in 2015 
<https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/the-press-office/2015/09/15/readout-vice-president%E2%80%99s-meeting-serbian-prime-minister-aleksandar-vucic>
  and then in Belgrade in 2016 
<https://www.b92.net/eng/news/politics.php?yyyy=2016%26mm=08%26dd=16%26nav_id=98921>
 .

Indeed, Vučić is choosing his words carefully. "I have never uttered a bad word 
about Biden. I know him better than Trump. Three days ago, I said Biden was 
likely to win, but I think it would be better for Serbia if Trump had won," 
Vučić 
<http://rs.n1info.com/English/NEWS/a669583/Vucic-congratulates-Biden-hopes-that-good-cooperation-with-US-will-continue.html>
  told the Serbian media.

Second, Vučić and the Serbian government will probably rely on their blossoming 
partnership with Israel 
<https://www.middleeasteye.net/opinion/israel-discovers-europes-soft-underbelly-balkans>
 . To get closer 
<https://www.middleeasteye.net/opinion/why-did-serbia-and-kosovo-sign-trumps-israel-deal>
  to Trump, Serbia agreed to move its embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, and Vučić 
has also built ties with the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) 
<https://www.predsednik.rs/en/press-center/news/address-of-the-president-of-the-republic-of-serbia-aleksandar-vucic-at-the-annual-conference-of-the-american-israel-public-affairs-committee-aipac>
 , the Israel lobby organisation in the US. Some believe that Serbia will give 
up 
<https://insidearabia.com/the-impact-of-the-arab-israel-deals-on-the-balkans/?fbclid=IwAR1EQaz03K_zD--m7J6m4S0a9T1yYZXROYPuC74HTD2yhasEGtS6scLSgWg>
  on the embassy move now that the Trump is gone. However, Belgrade will 
probably use Israel and its lobby in the US to gain access and to alleviate any 
potential political pressure from the new administration.

The third option, Belgrade can also bide time in the hope that for Biden, 
Europe and the Balkans will not be priorities 
<https://carnegieeurope.eu/strategiceurope/83191>  as he will be governing a 
divided country and he will be consumed with countering China. Here is the 
tricky part for Vučić: the US will increasingly take note of Serbia when the 
Chinese factor is present. On the day when Biden's victory was confirmed, Vučić 
said 
<http://rs.n1info.com/Vesti/a669342/Vucic-Ponosni-smo-na-prijateljstvo-sa-Kinom.html>
  that Serbia is proud of being China's best friend in Europe.

Finally, if faced with firm US pressure on Kosovo, Vučić will try and 
reinvigorate his partnership with Russia to get diplomatic protection on that 
issue. Not a pleasant task as a partnership with Russia has been on a downward 
spiral 
<https://rusi.org/commentary/russia-and-serbia-partnership-past-its-prime>  and 
Putin did not like Vučić's pivot towards Trump.

Now that Trump is out of the picture, Serbia will not be able to complete its 
pivot towards the US and sever its partnerships with Russia and China, as it 
has to wait to see what stance the new US leadership will take on Kosovo. One 
thing is sure; it is not easy being Aleksandar Vučić these days.

*       Vuk Vuksanovic is a PhD researcher in international relations at the 
London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), an associate of LSE 
IDEAS, LSE's foreign policy think tank, and a researcher at the Belgrade Centre 
for Security Policy (BCSP)

_____________

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