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<https://greekreporter.com/2024/03/28/serbia-president-alarming-message-conflict-balkans/>
  


Serbia's President Alarming Message of Upcoming Conflict in the Balkans - 
GreekReporter.com


Tasos Kokkinidis

3–4 minutes

  _____  

“Difficult days are ahead of Serbia,” Vucic said. Credit: NATO 

Aleksandar Vucic, the president of Serbia, warned of a potential confrontation 
on Tuesday by posting a gloomy message on social media about an unidentified 
threat to his nation.

“Difficult days are ahead of Serbia,” he said in a Facebook post. “At this 
moment, it is not easy to say what kind of news we have received in the last 48 
hours, [but] they directly threaten our vital national interests, both of 
Serbia and [Republika] Srpska,” he added, referring to the ethnically Serb 
Republika Srpska.


Vucic says Serbia may fight a difficult challenge


He vaguely alluded to Serbia <https://greekreporter.com/tag/serbia/>  fighting 
and winning in a difficult challenge ahead.

“In the coming days, I will introduce the people of Serbia to all the 
challenges that lie ahead. It will be difficult,” he said. “We will fight. 
Serbia will win.”

The strange allusion comes months after Serb militants assaulted a town in 
northern Kosovo, killing four people. The attack, which happened in September 
of last year, was timed to a “unprecedented” build-up of Serb forces near the 
Kosovo border, according to the White House at the time.

The episodes had sparked worries that Kosovo 
<https://greekreporter.com/tag/Kosovo/> , a Balkan nation that proclaimed its 
independence from Serbia in 2008, and Serbia, which does not recognize it, 
might like to intensify their confrontation.

Despite Belgrade’s announcement last year that it was withdrawing its forces 
from the border, Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti recently posted a video on 
social media that appeared to show Serbian military formations “meters away” 
from Kosovo’s border.

Kurti declared, “We are keeping a close eye on the situation in case there is 
any attempt to enter [our] territory.”

Last week, a senior American official warned Serbia against taking any military 
action.

According to Assistant Secretary Jim O’Brien of the Bureau of European and 
Eurasian Affairs, “President Vucic knows well that any use of force against 
Kosovo would be unacceptable, would be regarded as putting in danger the NATO 
troops.”

Serbia considers Kosovo to be part of its territory because it holds deep 
historical and religious importance for Belgrade. It contains many medieval 
Serbian Orthodox Christian monasteries and is seen as the cradle of Serbian 
national identity.


Belgrade considers Kosovo as an autonomous province


Kosovo declared independence in 2008, but Serbia rejects this declaration and 
considers it an autonomous province. While over 100 countries recognize Kosovo 
as independent, Serbia does not.

Last week Vucic <https://www.predsednik.rs/en/president/biography>  has hinted 
at the possibility for Serbia to withdraw from the Council of Europe (CoE) if 
Kosovo gains membership.

In an interview with Prva TV on March 22, Vucic expressed Serbia’s discontent 
with the prospect of Kosovo’s acceptance into the CoE, hinting at severe 
consequences for the region’s geopolitical landscape.

“You go with that and then we’ll see if Serbia stays in the Council of Europe 
or not,” Vucic said in an interview.

The CoE, an intergovernmental organization comprising 47 member states, is 
tasked with upholding human rights, democracy and the rule of law across Europe.

 

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