edition.cnn.com 
<https://edition.cnn.com/2022/06/01/europe/serbia-russian-gas-eu-analysis-intl-cmd/index.html>
  


Analysis: Serbia's gas deal with Putin has created a fresh headache for Europe


Analysis by Luke McGee, CNN

7-8 minutes

  _____  

(CNN)On Sunday, Serbia's president Aleksandar Vucic 
<https://cnn.com/2022/04/04/europe/serbia-election-vucic-winning-second-term-2022-intl/index.html>
  announced that his country had agreed to a new three-year gas supply deal 
with Russia's state energy provider, Gazprom. 

The news came at an awkward time, and in doing so, Vucic created a fresh 
headache for the Western anti-Putin alliance 
<https://cnn.com/2022/03/02/europe/ukraine-putin-europe-security-analysis-intl-cmd/index.html>
  and, notably, for the European Union. 

On the other side of the continent, EU heads of state were mired in in grueling 
negotiations over a sixth package of sanctions against Moscow. The final deal, 
announced late Monday, includes a partial ban on Russian oil imports to the 
bloc. 

But Brussels was forced to make an exemption for oil 
<https://cnn.com/2022/05/31/energy/eu-oil-ban-analysis-intl-cmd/index.html>  
that is imported to Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic via a pipeline, in 
order to get everyone on board. This was seen by some EU members as a major 
concession. 

While Serbia is not an EU member state, it is part of an EU enlargement plan 
that also includes some of its neighbors. The EU is set on expanding to the 
east and sees the Western Balkans as key to European security -- even more so 
in light of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. 



Of these Balkan states, Serbia in particular is seen as crucial for numerous 
reasons. 

Its size, population and geographical location all make it a major stakeholder 
in the geopolitics of the region. If you want to have a conversation about the 
future of Bosnia or Kosovo, you are going to need the Serbian government in the 
room. 

However, Serbia is also very reliant on Russia when it comes to gas. It is also 
militarily cooperative with Moscow. In short, Serbia benefits enormously from 
its relationship with Russia, and even if it obtains EU membership down the 
road, it will not want to burn its bridges with the Kremlin. 

This creates two simultaneous realities for the EU that, when placed next to 
one another, are rather difficult to reconcile. 

Serbia is so big and important that it is crucial to the EU's enlargement 
project, which seeks to strengthen and expand European values, stability and 
security.

It is also so big and important that it can do deals with Russia, China and the 
EU all at the same time -- however it sees fit -- and still be the apple of 
Brussels' eye.

That might be about to change, though.

While Serbia has backed several UN resolutions condemning Russia's invasion, it 
has not sanctioned Moscow or aligned itself with Brussels on sanctions against 
Moscow -- something candidate states are expected to do. The new Russian gas 
deal, some EU officials and analysts fear, may be a step too far for some EU 
member states. 

"If concluded, the deal would dash hopes of those who saw an opportunity to 
reduce the Russian influence in the region," said Filip Ejdus, associate 
professor of international security at the University of Belgrade. 

Ejdus believes Vucic might be seeking to have his cake and eat it. He predicts 
the Serbian president "will certainly make reassurances that Serbia remains on 
the EU path, while maybe still expecting a better counter-offer by German 
chancellor Olaf Scholz."

However, Ejdus warned that "the gamble might backfire this time," as the EU has 
other policy priorities at the moment; he says trust between the two parties 
may be permanently damaged. 

Whether that means that accession talks stall, or that the EU takes a different 
approach, remains to be seen. However, there is no denying that the gas deal 
has been a particularly bitter pill for officials and diplomats in Brussels to 
swallow. 

"We are worried," one senior EU official told CNN. "Alignment from countries 
outside the EU is more important than ever, for countries inside the EU that 
are trying to hold the line," they said, referring specifically to Hungary, the 
EU member state most opposed to a hard stance on Russia. 

 
<https://edition.cnn.com/2022/05/31/energy/eu-oil-ban-analysis-intl-cmd/index.html>
 

Steven Blockmans, director of research at the Centre for European Policy 
Studies, told CNN that ever since the start of the war, "the EU has been 
pressuring third countries, including China, to have a similar approach to 
sanctions. If even states currently trying to join the EU circumvent the 
sanctions, it lends credence to outliers within the bloc to withstand pressure 
from Brussels to support a strong common position on Russia."

And the difficulties Serbia is causing Brussels don't end with sanctions. "This 
whole situation is a major pain for us, because it ties in with the 
conversation about whether or not Ukraine should join the EU," said one senior 
European diplomat. Ukraine formally applied for EU membership in early March, a 
process that can take years even when the bloc's members fully support a new 
country joining. 

Multiple officials and diplomats explained to CNN why this debate is so tricky 
for the EU and its internal conversation about the bloc's future. 

Some member states want to speed up the process for Ukraine, and think Serbia's 
lack of alignment with the EU's approach on Russia makes a case for countries 
that want to align as soon as possible to get preferential treatment. 

Others don't want Ukraine or the Western Balkan nations to join at all, fearing 
that they would alter the balance of the EU, giving eastern European states 
more power in a bloc that has historically been dominated by Western European 
countries like Germany and France.

Finally, some member states share a degree of Euroskepticism and would welcome 
another member state less enamored with calls from some countries, notably 
France, for the bloc to become more closely politically integrated. 

All this might seem insignificant in the grand scheme of things, while a war is 
being fought on the European continent. However, Putin's invasion of Ukraine 
has created an opportunity for Europe's security map to be redrawn. 

 
<https://edition.cnn.com/2022/04/04/europe/hungary-serbia-elections-putin-friends-analysis-intl-cmd/index.html>
 

To some extent, countries traditionally aligned with the US have grasped the 
opportunity to strengthen Western security with both hands. Finland and Sweden 
appear set to join NATO while others, most notably Germany, have committed to 
huge increases in defense spending.

The UK, no longer part of the EU, has worked well with its European allies and 
shown that -- despite Brexit -- it can still play a leading role in a united 
European front.

On the other hand, the chaos and uncertainty also creates opportunities for 
people in positions like Vucic's. He is useful to Brussels and to Moscow and 
clearly feels he can continue playing both sides for all they're worth. 

The EU has faced many difficulties since the Ukraine crisis began, and keeping 
all 27 of its member states on side has been no easy task. But the fact that 
Serbia's gas deal happened in the same week that EU leaders met to have a 
showdown over banning Russian energy (one that ended with a fudge) underscores 
the extent to which some things are simply out of Brussels' centralized hands.

As time goes on, that could become a very tricky issue for the future of the 
European project.

 

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