rferl.org 
<https://www.rferl.org/a/serbia-u-s-ambassador-djucic-vucic-biden-better-relations/31077554.html>
  


Serbian President Sends Lieutenant To Washington As Belgrade Seeks Tighter U.S. 
Relations


Todd Prince

9-11 minutes

  _____  

WASHINGTON -- The massive new residence of the Serbian ambassador in the 
Embassy Row area of Washington is more than an upgrade for its young inhabitant 
and his family.

Ambassador Marko Djuric says the nearly 100-year-old, Georgian-style brick home 
is also a symbol of the investment the Balkan nation is making in its 
relationship with the United States, an important regional peace arbitrator.

A key aspect of that investment includes plans to open a trade office with 
consular services on the West Coast as Belgrade seeks to deepen ties with the 
U.S. tech industry.

Djuric told RFE/RL that Serbia will also open another consulate in a 
yet-to-be-determined American city -- adding to the ones it already has in 
Chicago and New York -- as part of a renewed outreach to its diaspora.

The ambassador will be helped in his government, business, and cultural 
outreach by a staff that has grown by 50 percent in the past few months.

"We came with a very ambitious agenda to increase the level of exchange between 
our two countries and increase the level of trust," he told RFE/RL on January 
22 at the new residence, which he will use to host officials and events.

One day earlier, Washington penned an agreement with Belgrade to launch the 
Serbian operations of the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation, a 
state-run institution that invests in private companies operating in critical 
sectors of the economy and offers political-risk insurance to encourage 
investment.

"I'm convinced that we'll have a more solid base for closer political ties the 
closer we get in economic terms," Djuric said. "And this is what we want to 
achieve. This is the strategy."

The Serbian Chamber of Commerce, which is partnering with the embassy to open a 
West Coast trade office, has already taken steps to make that happen with 
several trade missions to the United States since 2019, including meeting 
officials on Capitol Hill to promote business ties. Two years ago, the chamber 
hired the D.C.-based lobby firm Yorktown Solutions as part of its U.S. outreach 
effort.

Military Cooperation

Djuric is also hoping to increase military cooperation, including Serbian 
companies supplying U.S. arms manufacturers with components or weapons.

Serbia inherited a strong military-industrial complex from the former 
Yugoslavia and sells rifles and ammunition in the U.S. retail market. The U.S. 
Army announced in December it had requested that a Serbian-made, wheeled 
howitzer participate in an international competition 
<https://www.defensenews.com/land/2020/12/17/us-army-mobile-howitzer-shoot-off-participants-emerge/>
  scheduled for early this year.

"When you're a small country it's not easy to be in the same pond with global 
players who are all competing for their share of this market. This is one 
reason why Serbia's defense industry is looking for ways to partner with the 
U.S. defense industry, so that we can maybe jointly engage in certain 
projects," said Djuric, adding he had met with officials from the Defense 
Department.

A potential impediment to further military cooperation between Belgrade and 
Washington could be notorious Serbian arms dealer Slobodan Tesic, who is 
believed to be involved in many of Serbia's armaments and munitions companies 
and has been accused of involvement in many illicit international arms deals.

Tesic -- considered one of the biggest arms dealers in the Balkans -- was 
blacklisted by the United States in 2017 and nine of his associates were hit 
with sanctions <https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/sm849>  in 2019 
for doing Tesic's bidding in running his material support network. Tesic has 
been on the United Nations travel ban for nearly a decade for his role in 
selling arms to Liberia.

Tesic either continues to own or control the Serbian arms companies Partizan 
Tech, Technoglobal, Grawit Limited, and Charso Limited, the U.S. Treasury 
Department said.

Working With Biden's Administration

Djuric will have his work cut out for him especially after Democrat Joe Biden, 
a Western Balkan hand, was elected president, analysts say.

U.S.-Serbian relations were severely strained after the breakup of Yugoslavia 
three decades ago, though ties have gradually improved.

The United States led a NATO air campaign against Serbian forces in 1999 to 
stop a deadly crackdown on its ethnic Albanian population in Kosovo. Washington 
then led an international campaign to recognize Kosovo's independence in 2008.



Then-U.S. Vice President Joe Biden (left) with Aleksandar Vucic in Belgrade in 
August 2016 

Serbia's refusal to recognize its former southern region as an independent 
country lies at the heart of its problems with the United States and the 
European Union.

Belgrade's tight relations with Moscow, its growing business ties to China, the 
modernization of its military, and what critics say is a rolling back of 
democratic practices are other contentious issues in bilateral relations.

Washington and Brussels are dangling membership in international organizations, 
such as the EU, to entice Belgrade to change its stance on the recognition of 
Kosovo.

Close Confidant

Djuric, 37, took up his job in Washington in December and is one of the 
youngest foreign envoys to the United States. It is also his first foreign 
posting.

Despite his lack of a formal foreign-service experience, analysts say his 
appointment -- much like his new residence -- is a sign of Belgrade's desire to 
enhance ties with Washington.

Djuric is a close confidant of populist Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic, who 
was elected in 2017 after serving as prime minister for several years.

Djuric was one of the first to join Vucic's Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) in 
2008 and currently serves as one of its vice presidents. Vucic tapped him 
several years ago to lead Serbian negotiations over Kosovo, putting him at 
times at the table with U.S. officials. He was also an informal SNS liaison to 
the pro-Kremlin United Russia party, the Chinese Communist Party, and Israel's 
ruling Likud party, analysts say.



Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic (left) with Marko Djuric in Belgrade (file 
photo) 

"He is a guy who has Vucic's ear, knows him well, and I think that's a strength 
for any ambassador," Kyle Scott, the U.S. ambassador to Serbia from 2016 to 
2019, told RFE/RL. "I can see that Vucic would want to have somebody who he has 
total confidence in here in Washington."

Djuric, Scott said, is very experienced in dealing with Americans.

Vuk Vuksanovic, an analyst at the Belgrade Center for Security Policy, told 
RFE/RL that the appointment of Djuric is "Vucic's way of sending a message to 
Washington that 'I am very interested in forming closer ties.'"

His appointment was followed a month later by Vucic's dismissal of two 
ministers with close ties to Russia, which some viewed as a doubling down on 
efforts to sway Western perceptions of Belgrade.

Djuric was appointed as Serbian ambassador to Washington in October, a month 
before the U.S. presidential election that pitted Donald Trump against Biden.

Trump was viewed in Belgrade as someone who could deliver Serbia a better deal 
on Kosovo than Biden, and Vucic expressed his preference for the incumbent. He 
also offered ample praise to the Trump administration for its efforts, led by 
envoy Richard Grenell, to secure the Kosovo and Serbia economic normalization 
agreement, which Vucic signed at the White House in September.

"Had President Trump been reelected, mending Serbia's relationship with the 
U.S. would have been possible without many strings attached regarding Serbia's 
record on democracy and human rights, its relationship to the Kremlin, or its 
treatment of transitional justice and war crimes committed by its government in 
the 1990s," Majda Ruge, a Balkan expert and senior fellow at the European 
Council on Foreign Relations, told RFE/RL.

"This sort of carte blanche on many policy issues will not be available under 
Biden's team. Therefore, the success of Mr. Djuric's mission will depend on 
Serbia's willingness to tackle some of these big topics and Mr. Djuric's 
ability to convincingly communicate Serbia's willingness to do so," she said.

Economic Progress?

Djuric downplayed the importance of the U.S. election result on the 
Serbian-U.S. relationship and expressed optimism that the two countries could 
still make progress on bilateral ties, especially in the economic sphere.

He pointed out that Vucic met Biden twice -- in 2009 and 2016 -- when he served 
as vice president in Barack Obama's administration and that Serbian officials 
are familiar with key members of his administration.

Serbian Foreign Minister Nikola Selakovic said Vucic and Biden could meet later 
this year, though did not say where.

"We should try to isolate the differences as much as possible and simply bypass 
things that we cannot agree on now. And look at the bigger picture," said 
Djuric, who was one of about 1,000 people that attended Biden's inauguration on 
January 20.

While Kosovo is the dominant issue, Scott said Belgrade should not 
underestimate the importance of domestic reforms if it wants to improve 
relations with Washington.

Critics have accused Vucic of tightening his grip on the country, including 
restricting press freedoms. Biden ran on a platform of strengthening democracy 
around the world and highlighted his concern about a rollback in the freedoms 
of some European countries.

"I don't feel that [Serbia] has taken them as seriously as they could have over 
the last few years. They are now making a better game of talking about it, but 
they have got to stop talking about it and actually start doing things," Scott 
said.

 

-- 
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/019f01d6f725%24540f5570%24fc2e0050%24%40gmail.com.

Reply via email to