original.antiwar.com 
<https://original.antiwar.com/patrick_oreilly/2022/11/06/the-wests-ongoing-coercion-of-serbia/>
  


The West's Ongoing Coercion Of Serbia - Antiwar.com Original


Patrick O’Reilly

7-9 minutes

  _____  

On Tuesday, Serbian Armed Forces used electronic jamming measures to neutralize 
a drone 
<https://www.aa.com.tr/en/europe/serbia-shoots-down-drone-on-border-with-kosovo/2728147>
  violating its airspace, near its southern border with the disputed territory 
of Kosovo. Only one day previous, Belgrade scrambled 
<https://www.azerbaycan24.com/en/serbia-issues-shoot-down-order-for-drones/>  
MiG 29 fighter jets against UAVs detected close to the border crossing and 
military installations at Merdare. While the UAVs swiftly withdrew, the 
incident resulted in Serbian President, Aleksandar Vučić, issuing a shoot-down 
order, which was observed in action just the following day.

As investigations into the drone’s origin continue, Vučić has stated 
<https://www.rt.com/news/565830-serbia-drone-downed-kosovo/>  that the downing 
of the drone "shows we are serious." "We do not threaten anyone, we aren’t 
sabre-rattling, but we are determined to protect Serbia and its freedom and 
independence," he continued.

As Serbia’s disputes with Kosovo are longstanding, such an antagonistic turn of 
events may to many seem unexpected. Yet, this latest wave of provocations, 
follow a pattern of increasing political pressure applied on Serbia by the EU 
over its stance on Russia, which is now seemingly taking on military dimensions 
via NATO and Pristina.

Serbian Defense Minister, Miloš Vučević, recently pointed 
<https://www.rt.com/news/565753-serbia-drones-kosovo-military/>  out that 
Serbia’s military has been on high alert for some months now, following a 
flaring of tensions between Serbs and Kosovan authorities in July. The unrest 
came about after the attempted roll out of a policy that would force Serbs in 
Kosovo’s north to re-register their cars with number plates issued in Pristina, 
and not Serbia.

According to Pristina, the policy, which is now being implemented in phases 
from November 1st after a requested delay by the US Ambassador in Kosovo, 
should run across the whole region, including in Serb enclaves. In response, 
Vučić has accused 
<https://www.rt.com/news/565753-serbia-drones-kosovo-military/>  Pristina of 
failing to fulfill its obligations established by previous EU-mediated 
agreements, such as granting autonomy to Serbs in Kosovo’s north, which would 
go a long way to alleviating the current standoff. He has also highlighted that 
whilst neglecting its commitments, Pristina cites those same agreements as 
justification for its continued crackdown on documentation.

By August, diplomatic solutions appeared to be progressing somewhat, with NATO 
Secretary General, Jens Stoltenberg, meeting with Vučić to address solutions to 
the situation. While Stoltenberg reaffirmed 
<https://rs.n1info.com/english/news/vucic-informs-stoltenberg-of-incidents-kfor-ready-to-react-if-needed/>
  that “should stability be jeopardized, KFOR stands ready to intervene”, Vučić 
expressed that Serbia would “continue to respect the KFOR mandate in line with 
international norms”. Additionally, he explained that he presented Stoltenberg 
with "a list of Pristina’s special units’ raids in the north," and "a list of 
all incidents and attacks on the Serb population."

The week previous, Kosovo PM, Albin Kurti, was more combative in his assertions 
<https://exit.al/en/2022/08/11/kurti-warns-of-escalation-of-tensions-and-possible-new-conflict/>
 , declaring that Kosovo is "vigilant, but not afraid" of a conflict with 
Serbia. "Kosovo is a state now, this is not the year 1998," he added, "this is 
2022, so we are much more prepared to defend our sovereignty, territorial 
integrity, to defend our democracy, rule of law, constitutionality, and to 
defend our progress."

Vučić, who has been explicit in his wish for Serbia to join the EU, has also 
insisted that Serbia cannot recognize Kosovo’s independence. In June, Germany’s 
Olaf Scholz stated 
<https://apnews.com/article/russia-ukraine-olaf-scholz-germany-serbia-22f93d9854de67767fd1723e8cb0a8b8>
  that Serbia’s recognition of Kosovo was imperative to its path toward 
membership, and would accelerate the process significantly. Unsurprisingly, 
this carrot has remained unattractive to Belgrade, and as the EU now opts for 
the stick, it also reveals its real intentions. Just last week during a visit 
to Belgrade, EU President, Ursula von-der-Leyen, declared 
<https://euobserver.com/world/156357>  that Serbia should align with EU 
security policy and sanctions against Russia if it is serious about future EU 
membership, which in essence "means sharing our values."

Given Serbia’s troubled history with NATO, and the unfolding sanction induced 
energy crisis in Western Europe, Vučić will be well aware of the ambiguity of 
von-der-Leyens notion of ‘EU values’, and the catastrophic implications of 
aligning with EU Foreign policy.

Though it would seem Serbia may find itself caught between a rock and a hard 
place irrespective of which way it turns. On Tuesday, a Berlin official told 
<https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/nov/01/serbia-must-choose-between-eu-and-russia-says-germany>
  Reuters that Serbia must decide whether it wants to join the EU, or cultivate 
closer relations with Moscow, and that Should he[Vučić] decide to go the other 
way[with Russia], this will have consequences”.

Serbia’s path to EU membership, which recent polls indicate 
<https://www.euronews.com/2022/04/22/for-first-time-a-majority-of-serbs-are-against-joining-the-eu-poll>
  most Serbs reject, is fraught with ultimatums and consequences that Belgrade 
simply cannot and will not accept. Simultaneously, it appears that refusal to 
accept such terms will also bear "consequences," the nature of which many 
geopolitical analysts will be able to now guess at more accurately, given the 
latest wave of antagonisms by NATO’s allies in Pristina.

In April, Vučić and Interior Minister, Aleksandar Vulin, alleged 
<https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/short_news/british-embassy-in-serbia-denies-reports-about-arming-kosovo-as-bogus/>
  that the UK & US had been supplying arms to the Pristina government, while 
Turkey had trained pilots, constituting a violation of Resolution 1244 that 
stipulates KFOR as the only legitimate armed force in Kosovo. While the British 
Embassy in Belgrade described the allegations as a mere fabrication, it should 
be noted that both the UK and US violated 
<https://books.google.co.jp/books?id=Y3EuDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT157&lpg=PT157&dq=UK+British+monzer+al-Kassar+bosnia&source=bl&ots=nZQX0ZybnN&sig=ACfU3U3n9wVOV7q8TrhjXlbkmdMFMFS3lg&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjI74agxtH5AhWuxIsBHZn_BSIQ6AF6BAgCEAM#v=onepage&q=UK%20British%20monzer%20al-Kassar%20bosnia&f=false>
  the arms embargoes in place during the Balkan wars of the 1990’s. This was 
done to provide arms and training to Bosniak forces and the proscribed 
terrorist organization the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA), who became 
affectionately known across US newsrooms as NATO’s "boots on the ground."

Vučić is acutely aware that if Pristina mobilizes forces in Kosovo’s north, and 
the rights and safety of the minority Serb population are threatened, he will 
be unable to idly stand by. Emboldened by its NATO military presence and 
support, and Belgrade’s geopolitical predicament, Pristina, working at NATO’s 
behest and as the EU’s point of leverage, may continue in their inflammatory 
directives toward escalation, and forcing Vucic’s hand. This in turn would also 
begin a catastrophic wave of sanctions against Serbia, which if Berlin’s 
threats are to be taken seriously, may be on the way regardless, but which 
Vučić knows Serbia could not weather as Russia has.

In Rambouillet, March 1999, during talks to negotiate an end to the 
Serbia-Kosovo conflict, the Milošević government was asked to sign an agreement 
that would allow <https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/1999/04/yugo-a14.html>  NATO 
"free and unrestricted passage and unimpeded access throughout the FRY [Federal 
Republic of Yugoslavia] including associated airspace and territorial waters”. 
After Milošević’s quite natural refusal to sign, NATO increased support for KLA 
operations, and commenced an illegal 78-day aerial campaign against Serbia, 
while fraudulently touting humanitarian concerns as their rationale.

The impossible ultimatums and military provocations being employed against 
Serbia today, bear echoes of the same coercive tactics it was subject to over 
20 years ago in Rambouillet. For all their rhetoric on respecting national 
sovereignty, Berlin’s threats and Pristina’s uncurbed provocations are a clear 
indication of the EU and NATO’s values, which care nothing of Serbia’s 
sovereignty, membership, and military neutrality, or the regional stability of 
the Balkans as a whole.

Patrick O’Reilly is an independent journalist from Brighton, UK, and Editor of 
The Parallax Report <https://theparallaxreport.org/> , specializing in Western 
foreign policy, civil liberties, propaganda, and healthcare. 

 

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