Serbia’s Difficult Ukraine Balancing Act

BY <https://www.diplomaticourier.com/people/nikola-mikovic> 


 <https://www.diplomaticourier.com/people/nikola-mikovic> Nikola Mikovic


March 20, 2022

Serbia is in a difficult situation, balancing its economic reliance on Russia 
against pressure from the EU—which it wishes to join—to take part in sanctions 
against Russia for its invasion of Ukraine, writes Diplomatic Courier 
Correspondent Nikola Mikovic.

Serbia remains the only candidate for European Union membership which has not 
yet imposed sanctions on Russia for its invasion of Ukraine. Belgrade is still 
trying to find a balance between Brussels and Moscow, although its room for 
political maneuvering is becoming rather narrow.

According to the Balkan nation’s President Aleksandar Vucic, Serbia is facing 
immense pressure 
<https://www.ft.com/content/45d30dc9-c2c9-48dd-9ce5-5350e7ffc49a>  to distance 
itself from Russia and openly side with the West. Although Serbia voted 
<https://balkaninsight.com/2022/03/02/serbia-backs-un-resolution-condemning-russian-attack-on-ukraine/>
  in favor of a recent United Nations resolution calling on Russia to halt its 
war on Ukraine and has supported 
<https://balkaninsight.com/2022/02/25/serbia-supports-ukraines-sovereignty-but-opposes-sanctions-on-russia-vucic-says/>
  Ukraine’s territorial integrity on several occasions 
<https://www.srbija.gov.rs/vest/en/104744/serbia-supports-territorial-integrity-sovereignty-of-ukraine.php>
 , some reports 
<https://www.b92.net/eng/news/politics.php?yyyy=2022&mm=03&dd=15&nav_id=113286> 
 suggest that Germany is demanding Belgrade abandon its neutral position 
vis-à-vis the Russian invasion of the Eastern European country. In other words, 
Berlin allegedly insists that Serbia must pick a side. 

A day after the war broke out, Serbia’s National Security Council expressed 
regret 
<https://mfa.gov.rs/en/press-service/news/conclusion-national-security-council-serbia-25-february-2022>
  at the situation, acknowledging that both Russia and Ukraine have friendly 
relations with Serbia. Brussels, however, expects 
<https://www.b92.net/eng/news/politics.php?yyyy=2022&mm=03&dd=02&nav_id=113178> 
 Belgrade to harmonize its foreign policy with that of the EU, which means that 
Serbia would soon have to join the Western sanctions regime. Such a move could 
have a very negative impact on Serbia’s country’s economy, particularly given 
that it is 89% 
<https://www.statista.com/chart/26768/dependence-on-russian-gas-by-european-country/>
  dependent on Russian natural gas. 

“Serbia respects Ukraine’s territorial integrity and considers Russia’s 
military action against it to be wrong, but will not impose sanctions against 
Moscow”, Vucic said 
<https://nationalpost.com/pmn/news-pmn/serbia-will-not-impose-sanctions-against-moscow-president-says>
  on February 25. 

According to Michael Siebert 
<https://balkaninsight.com/2022/03/16/serbia-resists-eu-pressure-to-impose-sanctions-on-russia/>
 , director general of the European External Action Service, Serbia is not 
convinced that sanctions against Russia are the right answer at the moment. 
Does that mean that Belgrade could impose sanctions on Moscow in the future?

Serbia is scheduled to hold general elections on April 3, and the vast majority 
of the ruling Serbian Progressive Party voters have a strong pro-Russian 
sentiment. That is why the West will unlikely pressure Vucic to join 
anti-Russian sanctions until after the vote. But if Serbia “picks a side” after 
April 3, such a decision could affect the upcoming negotiations between 
Belgrade and Moscow on the price of Russian gas.

Serbia hopes 
<https://seenews.com/news/serbia-hopes-to-sign-long-term-gas-delivery-contract-with-gazprom-by-may-15-777239>
  to sign a long-term agreement for natural gas deliveries with Russia's 
state-owned energy giant Gazprom by May 15. However, if the country joins 
anti-Russian sanctions, it can hardly count on preferential rates from Russia. 
In November 2021, Gazprom agreed to continue selling Serbia gas at the price of 
$270 
<https://balkaninsight.com/2021/11/25/serbia-president-hails-incredible-gas-deal-with-russia/>
  per 1,000 cubic meters until June 2022. This price is significantly lower 
than the current market one. Given that a large number of Western and Chinese 
plants are operating in Serbia, and their production is linked with cheap 
energy, it is not improbable that Brussels and Washington will allow Serbia to 
remain nominally neutral until a new gas deal with Russia is signed.

For now, Brussels tolerates Serbia being the only EU membership candidate that 
still has direct flights to Russia. However, Air-Serbia, which is mostly 
state-owned, was forced to reduce 
<https://www.ekathimerini.com/news/1179704/serbia-to-reduce-number-of-flights-to-moscow-after-criticism/>
  its operations from Belgrade to Russia after Ukrainian Deputy Foreign 
Minister Emine Dzheppar accused Serbia of “making money on Ukrainian blood”.

“They are not criticizing those that are members of NATO and that are partially 
in Europe, who have thirty times more flights than us, like Turkey,” Vucic 
reacted 
<https://ahvalnews.com/russia-ukraine/serbia-announces-reduced-russia-flights-vucic-slams-turkey-increased-operations>
 . 

Indeed, Turkish Airlines modified a large part of its schedule, increasing 
<https://www.aviacionline.com/2022/03/turkey-became-key-for-those-who-need-to-fly-between-russia-and-america-or-the-rest-of-europe/>
  the number of flights to certain Russian cities – St. Petersburg, Kazan and 
Ekatarinburg. Moreover, Turkish officials openly stressed 
<https://tass.com/politics/1421411?utm_source=google.com&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=google.com&utm_referrer=google.com>
  that they do not intend to impose sanctions on Russia, and even the EU’s 
Eastern Partnership members Azerbaijan 
<https://www.lowyinstitute.org/the-interpreter/azerbaijan-and-russian-invasion-ukraine>
 , Armenia 
<https://www.tsn24.ru/bolshe-20-stran-otkazalis-vvodit-sanktsii-protiv-rossii/> 
 and Georgia 
<https://eurasianet.org/georgia-says-it-wont-join-international-sanctions-against-russia>
  refused to join the sanctions. Serbia, however, seems to be an easy target. 
Air Serbia has been facing with anonymous bomb threats 
<https://www.exyuaviation.com/2022/03/third-bomb-threat-on-air-serbia-moscow.html>
  almost on a daily basis, and Ukrainian General Staff members recently accused 
<https://www.zsu.gov.ua/new_page/622e2f664909af001341dc68>  Russia of 
recruiting “Serbian militants” to fight in the Eastern European country, which 
is something that Belgrade strongly denied. 

“Serbia is committed to a peaceful solution to this conflict and will not allow 
its commitment to peace to be called into question in any way”, said 
<https://www.mod.gov.rs/eng/18521/ministar-stefanovic-cista-laz-da-se-iz-srbije-regrutuju-borci-za-dopunu-ruskih-vojnih-snaga-18521>
  Serbian Defense Minister Nebojsa Stefanovic, pointing out that participation 
of Serbian citizens in armed conflicts abroad is a serious crime punishable by 
several years in prison.

The country is still widely seen as a “Russian ally”, although in reality 
Serbia declared military neutrality 
<https://cfsp.rs/2019/10/07/military-neutrality-of-the-republic-of-serbia/>  in 
2007 and has conducted far more military exercises 
<http://www.nspm.rs/hronika/gabrijel-eskobar-srbija-ima-mnogo-vise-vojnih-vezbi-sa-nato-nego-sa-rusijom-i-kinom.-dijalog-jedini-nacin-za-postizanje-sporazuma-izmedju-srbije-i-kosova.html>
  with NATO countries than with Russia. Moreover, on March 15 Serbia for the 
first time joined 
<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/2022/03/15/serbia-aligns-with-eu-sanctions-over-ukraine-for-first-time/>
  the EU’s sanctions on the former President of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovych, who 
is believed to be a Russian citizen, as well as on leading members of the 
Ukrainian government from the period 2010-2014. Belgrade complied with that 
decision together with Montenegro, Albania, Northern Macedonia and Bosnia and 
Herzegovina. 

Thus, Serbia seems to be slowly distancing itself from Moscow, although the 
country’s authorities would undoubtedly prefer to implement the “non-aligned” 
policy of the late Yugoslav President Josip Broz Tito, who was successfully 
balancing between the West and the Soviet Union during the Cold War. But a new 
Cold War has new rules, and borders of a new Iron Curtain 
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2022/03/09/ukraine-russia-iron-curtain/>
  will be very far from Serbia, which will leave the country deeply in the 
geopolitical zone of the European Union and the United States.

About

Nikola Mikovic <https://www.diplomaticourier.com/people/nikola-mikovic> 

:

Nikola Mikovic is a freelance journalist, researcher and analyst based in 
Serbia covering foreign policy in Russia, Belarus, and Ukraine. 

The views presented in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily 
represent the views of any other organization.

 

https://www.diplomaticourier.com/posts/serbias-difficult-ukraine-balancing-act

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