al-monitor.com
<https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2021/07/serbia-has-its-reasons-sending
-ambassador-syria>  


Serbia has its reasons for sending ambassador to Syria


Vuk Vuksanovic @v_vuksanovic

6-8 minutes

  _____  

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad
<https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2021/7/17/syrias-assad-sworn-in-for-4th-term
-in-war-torn-country>  was sworn in July 17 for his fourth seven-year
presidential term after winning more than 95.1% of the votes in
democratically dubious elections held May 26. The United States and the
European Union do not recognize the outcome of the elections
<https://www.dailysabah.com/world/syrian-crisis/assad-regimes-elections-not-
free-fair-us-eu-members> . However, there are those in Europe who do. Among
them is Serbia
<https://www.ft.com/content/b40a657f-7dcf-4968-af5e-033f1237af08> , an EU
membership candidate
<https://ec.europa.eu/neighbourhood-enlargement/countries/detailed-country-i
nformation/serbia_en>  that intends to send an ambassador to Damascus,
although the name of the new ambassador has not been disclosed.   

The EU reacted to the Serbian move. EU spokesman Peter
<https://www.b92.net/eng/news/politics.php?yyyy=2021&mm=07&dd=16&nav_id=1112
77>  Stano stated, "The EU's position regarding the normalization of
relations with the regime in Syria is clear and unchanged, and the recent
elections organized by the Syrian regime cannot lead to international
normalization."

He continued, "It should be taken into account that the Serbian government
has repeatedly confirmed that European integration is a strategic priority
for the country."

The logical question is, why is Serbia sending an ambassador to Syria? It
has little to do with bilateral ties between Belgrade and Damascus, but
instead with a wider context of Serbian foreign policy. 

Indeed, what bilateral points can Serbia draw? Contracts for its arms
industry? This is dangerous given the risks associated with the Assad regime
and the controversies caused by the presence of Balkan weaponry
<https://balkaninsight.com/2016/03/15/balkan-made-weapons-identified-at-syri
an-battlefield-03-10-2016/>  in the Syrian conflict. The old ties from
Yugoslav nonalignment remain. In 1967, in solidarity with Egypt and Syria
over the Six-Day War, Tito's Yugoslavia severed relations
<https://www.jta.org/1967/06/15/archive/yugoslavia-breaks-diplomatic-relatio
ns-with-israel-follows-moscow-line>  with Israel. In 2012, with the start of
the Syrian war, Serbia had to evacuate its citizens
<https://www.taiwannews.com.tw/en/news/1988880>  in Syria; they were mostly
women who married Syrian nationals during the former Yugoslav era. Yugoslav
state companies
<http://www.energoprojekt.rs/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/A4-Monografija-ENG-s
mall3.pdf>  had a history of doing projects in Syria. However, Yugoslavia
and most of its big state firms are gone, and it is dubious how much Serbia,
a developing country, can help reconstruct Syria.  

The fact that Syria has been a nonrecognizer of independent Kosovo played a
part in the fact that Serbia "has never severed
<https://www.b92.net/eng/news/politics.php?yyyy=2021&mm=07&dd=16&nav_id=1112
77>  diplomatic relations with Syria." Indeed, according to the Serbian
Foreign Ministry, "Until the appointment of our new ambassador to that
country, they took place at the level of a temporary charge d'affaires,
which was conditioned by the security situation in that country at the
time." During the war, the Serbian Embassy <http://www.damascus.mfa.gov.rs/>
to Syria operated from Lebanon. 

However, there is broader geopolitical logic at play. Europe
<https://www.euronews.com/2021/06/17/which-eu-states-are-rebuilding-diplomat
ic-relations-with-assad-s-syria>  itself remains divided on this issue.
There are EU members that are rebuilding ties with Damascus. The Czech
Republic was the only EU member with an embassy in Damascus since 2012; the
Austrian Embassy operates from Lebanon, while Bulgaria, Greece, Cyprus and
Hungary are reopening their embassies. Compared to Serbia, these countries
are sending charges d'affaires, a lower level of diplomatic representative
that hands in diplomatic credentials to the foreign minister of the
receiving country, unlike the ambassador who hands them to the head of
state. From the EU standpoint
<https://www.b92.net/eng/news/politics.php?yyyy=2021&mm=07&dd=16&nav_id=1112
77> , by sending an ambassador who will hand his credentials to Assad,
Serbia legitimizes his regime. So why the Serbian move? 

Since 2008, Serbian foreign policy has been shaped by the global financial
crisis and the unilateral declaration of Kosovo's independence. The 2008
financial crisis and subsequent crisis in Europe impeded the ability of the
EU to enlarge to the Balkans
<https://www.dahrendorf-forum.eu/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/From-Fatigue-to-
Resistance.pdf> , and Serbian opposition
<https://oxford.universitypressscholarship.com/view/10.1093/acprof:oso/97801
99698394.001.0001/acprof-9780199698394>  to Kosovo's independence forced
Serbian diplomacy to distinguish between governments that recognized
independent Kosovo and those that did not. Under those circumstances, it
became difficult for Serbia to align itself with the EU
<https://www.isac-fund.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/ISAC-CFSP-Analysis-202
0.pdf> 's policies, particularly when it involved its main backer on Kosovo
- Russia. In the case of Syria
<https://www.isac-fund.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/ISAC-7-Years-of-Alignm
ent-Analysis.pdf> , Serbia aligned with those EU declarations that did not
impede on Russia's interests in Syria. 

Serbia tried to be careful, though. In 2017, Serbia gave up on sending a
military demining team
<https://balkaninsight.com/2017/05/02/serbia-not-allowed-to-participate-in-m
ilitary-activities-in-syria-04-28-2017/>  alongside their Russian
counterparts to Syria, both due to insufficient capacities and to preserve
neutrality on the Syrian conflict and the West-Russia tensions. However, now
the situation is different. After a temporary crisis in ties
<https://rusi.org/explore-our-research/publications/commentary/russia-and-se
rbia-a-partnership-past-its-prime>  with Russia and Belgrade's failed bet
<https://www.euronews.com/2020/11/23/belgrade-s-biden-conundrum-how-us-serbi
an-relations-will-shape-up-post-trump-view>  on the reelection of US
President Donald Trump, Belgrade needs to partially re-pivot toward Moscow
to get diplomatic protection in the Kosovo dispute. In doing so, Serbia is
extending goodwill gestures toward Moscow by embracing its only Middle
Eastern ally - Syria.

There is also a factor of Iran - another Assad supporter. In April 2021,
Serbian Foreign Minister Nikola Selakovic visited Iran
<https://www.mfa.gov.rs/en/press-service/statements/selakovic-iran-supports-
serbia-international-organizations>  to ensure that Tehran remains a
nonrecognizer of Kosovo. Moreover, after Serbia designated the Iranian proxy
in Lebanon - Hezbollah - as a terrorist organization
<https://www.jpost.com/breaking-news/serbia-designates-hezbollah-as-terroris
t-organization-report-642126>  in 2020, Belgrade had to compensate Tehran in
Syria.  

In addition, the security issue motivates Belgrade to have a presence in
Damascus. The migration crisis
<https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/europpblog/2017/05/25/western-balkans-casualty-conn
ectivity-war-eu-turkey/>  caused by Middle Eastern instability was an
unpleasant memory for Serbia as a transit country. The migration crisis also
built upon Serbian fears of terrorism
<https://rs.usembassy.gov/country-reports-terrorism-2014-serbia/>  as some
of its citizens from Bosnian-populated Sandzak region and Albanian-populated
Presevo Valley were joining the Islamic State (IS) and other jihadi groups
in Syria. The return of jihadi
<https://www.ispionline.it/en/pubblicazione/returning-western-balkans-foreig
n-fighters-long-term-challenge-24762>  volunteer fighters to the Balkans is
a growing concern for nations there. Several Serbian citizens
<https://www.slobodnaevropa.org/a/crveni-krst-srbije-u-kontaktu-sa-nekoliko-
gra%C4%91ana-iz-kampova-u-siriji/31187515.html>  were trapped in refugee
camps in Syria after the fall of IS.  

Embracing Assad can also be domestically popular for the Serbian government,
as there is a tendency to make analogies
<https://www.b92.net/eng/news/world.php?yyyy=2016&mm=11&dd=02&nav_id=99576>
between pressures exercised by the West against the Assad regime with the
Serbian experience of the US military interventions against Serbia in the
1990s. In 2019, the late Patriarch Irinej
<https://balkaninsight.com/2019/06/04/serbian-patriarch-sparks-controversy-b
y-meeting-syrias-assad/>  of the Serbian Orthodox Church met Assad in
Damascus.  

While the Serbian Embassy move is frustrating for EU officials in Brussels,
the episode only speaks of the fact that Serbia cannot alter its foreign
policy at this moment - not with the current stalemate in the EU
integrations process or the unresolved Kosovo dispute. 

 

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