n1info.rs 
<https://n1info.rs/english/news/florian-bieber-support-for-jadar-lithium-mining-project-a-tragic-mistake-of-eu/>
  


Florian Bieber: Support for Jadar lithium mining project a tragic mistake of EU


Radar

10–12 minutes

  _____  

Political scientist and University of Graz Professor Florian Bieber said he 
believes that the costs and risks of supporting the decision to go ahead with 
the Jadar lithium mining project in Serbia will outweigh the benefits. 

“I think the cost of supporting this decision (on Rio Tinto’s Jadar lithium 
mining project) is much greater than the benefits – first of all, you push 
people away from the European Union (EU) in Serbia but also in the region, 
because you say we care more about your raw materials than about you as human 
beings. The second problem is that empowering someone like (Serbian President 
Aleksandar) Vucic in the region is dangerous, because he is not just happy to 
be a strongman in Serbia, but he also has negative influence on Bosnia, on 
Montenegro, on Kosovo, on North Macedonia. He poisons in a certain way the 
whole region. So there are lots of consequences of supporting him and making 
him more powerful that are very dangerous. The price will be very high. I think 
the benefits the EU gains from this project are much smaller than the risks and 
the costs,” Bieber told Serbian director Stevan Filipovic in the sixth episode 
of the Radar podcast.

As one of the experts who popularized the term “stabilocracy” – a concept often 
used to describe Aleksandar Vucic’s regime, where the international community 
allows a local autocrat to undermine democratic principles as long as they 
ensure regional stability – Filipovic’s guest discussed the importance of the 
Jadar lithium mining project for Europe and the Serbian government, the visits 
of German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and French President Emmanuel Macron to 
Belgrade, the support they offered as guests of Vucic, as well as the potential 
political alternatives that could shift the sociopolitical landscape in Serbia.


A miscalculation


In response to Filipovic’s comment that a significant portion of citizens 
expected understanding and support from the European Union regarding the Jadar 
project, Florian Bieber explained why that support was lacking.

He said that, just like former German Chancellor Angela Merkel supported Viktor 
Orban because the car industry is doing good business in Hungary, German 
Chancellor Olaf Scholz has now decided to back Vucic in order to use the 
lithium from Serbia to strengthen his country’s economic interests, but also 
become less dependent on China.

“You ignore the fact or you convince yourself that the problems are not as bad. 
It’s harder to convince yourself if you are a Green in Germany because you are 
supposed to care about the environment. Of course, you care more about the 
environment in your own country, but you should be more transnational in your 
conviction. But then maybe you tell yourself ‘well, it helps reduce the Chinese 
influence, maybe also in Serbia,’ and then there’s also this whole narrative – 
which I think is a mistake – but I’m not saying that people don’t believe it, 
that it will help attract Serbia to the West. You saw a lot of Western 
reporting about Macron’s visit, but also Scholz’s visit to say it kind of links 
Serbia closer to the West, and detaches it from Russia and China. I think it’s 
completely wrong,” said Bieber, Radar reported.

In his opinion, the EU’s support for the Jadar lithium mining project is a 
tragic mistake.

“The cost of supporting this decision is much greater than the benefits – first 
of all, you push people away from the EU in Serbia but also in the region, 
because you say we care more about your raw materials than about you as human 
beings. The second problem is that empowering someone like Vucic in the region 
is dangerous, because he is not just happy to be a strongman in Serbia, but he 
also has negative influence on Bosnia, on Montenegro, on Kosovo, on North 
Macedonia. He poisons in a certain way the whole region. So there are lots of 
consequences of supporting him and making him more powerful that are very 
dangerous. The price will be very high. I think the benefits the EU gains from 
this project are much smaller than the risks and the costs,” said Bieber.


Mixed messages


Bieber said he believes Vucic will not make the same mistakes as Milosevic, but 
noted that twelve full years of raising tensions, paranoia, and antagonism will 
inevitably have consequences.

Filipovic pointed out that this stance from the Western part of the 
international community has drastically increased Euroscepticism within the 
pro-European part of Serbia, and that the “dream of European values” has 
clashed with mere economic interests.

He asked Bieber if Vucic, as someone who used to say that “Serbia should kill a 
hundred Muslims for one Serb,” has space to engage in politics in such a 
Europe, and Bieber responded that no European country has a wartime legacy 
comparable to the nations that emerged from the breakup of the former 
Yugoslavia, that there is no equivalent, which makes it hard to answer.

“Of course we have politicians in a number of EU countries on the far right, 
they are far-right politicians, they are extremists, they would not state we 
are going to kill a hundred Muslims. Of course this was stated in the context 
of the war so…you have plenty of anti-Muslim politicians in Central and Western 
Europe, they wouldn’t say it, but they would send messages which say a similar 
thing. If they would say that, I think their career probably would be over and 
certainly they would not be seen as welcome by many others,” said Bieber.

“I think the problem with the EU’s support for Vucic, at least in the initial 
phases, was that they believed, wrongly of course, that he changed, that he 
wasn’t that man who said in 1996, 1995 those horrific statements, so they 
thought that he was going to be different ten years or fifteen years later,” 
the professor explained.

He said that there is no European master plan that wants Vucic or autocrats, 
but that it has more to do with the fact that, since 2008, the EU has been in a 
period of nearly constant crises and that it has been distracted, and that some 
politicians in the region, like Vucic, were very good at reading global trends 
and shifting power dynamics.

“The EU is as good and as bad as its member states, its parties, and 
politicians. When you ask me if the EU was the wrong dream, I would say no, I 
had the same dream and many people did, that this was a value-based community, 
within and outside, and it still is to some degree. It’s much less than I would 
hope it to be, much less than I would hope it to be when it comes to the 
Western Balkans or to Serbia. It missed a lot of opportunities, it made bad 
choices, but it’s not the EU but individual leaders, individual politicians. 
It’s Angela Merkel and her support for Aleksandar Vucic, it’s the Austrian 
politicians…It’s not that there is one master plan to say ‘we want Vucic’ or 
‘we want autocrats.’ It’s much more that we have, on the side of the Serbian 
president, someone who knows exactly how to maneuver and how to manipulate 
these European leaders who, and I think this is the big, important thing – the 
European Union has been distracted. I would say after 2008, we have the 
economic crisis which really took all the attention of the EU for a few 
years…There are some politicians in the region, and Vucic is the best example, 
who are very good at reading these global trends and these shifting power 
dynamics,” said Bieber.


Missed expectations


The professor said he does not blame the EU leaders in 2012, 2013, even 2014 
for thinking that Vucic, as a transformed leader, would offer stability in the 
state and region.

“In 2008, 2009, when the (Serbian Progressive Party) SNS was established, there 
was a lot of support from embassies at the time, and I think their calculation 
was very clear: they’d seen the Serbian Radical Party become the strongest 
party in the 2000s, stronger than the Democratic Party, and always threatening 
the balance, the government was always fragile, the (Democratic Opposition of 
Serbia) DOS government, the (Democratic Party) DS governments, the (Democratic 
Party of Serbia) DSS coalitions, they were always fragile, and so they saw well 
here’s a party that breaks away from the Radical Party, which is speaking 
European talk, talks about EU integration, and distances itself, in a very 
limited way, but somehow, just about enough, from the Radical Party. And that 
seemed like a good deal at the time, to say well let’s support them because 
that can create a more normal political environment in Serbia, where you don’t 
have – everybody has to be on one side in coalition and then you have the 
others who threaten democracy. The assumption back then, this was before the 
rise of far-right parties around Europe and elsewhere was like, well the normal 
way is that a country has mainstream parties, conservatives, social democrats, 
and they’re all pro-European. This is what happened in Croatia, the (Croatian 
Democratic Union) HDZ from (late Croatian President and HDZ leader Franjo) 
Tudjman’s nationalist authoritarian became more conservative, more moderately 
kind of European Christian-democrats, they become pro-European, pursue 
integration, then the country joins the EU and then they become normal 
political parties. This was the logic. The logic was the same would happen with 
the SNS, that it would become sort of a Serbian HDZ so to speak. A conservative 
party which might be nationalist but it wants to join the European Union and 
would do those things….But Vucic was lying to them, and he was very good at 
it….They did not understand what Vucic was doing once he was in power…I 
remember talking to many people in Serbia at the time, from the civil society, 
many of them were also hopeful about Vucic. Not everybody, but I do remember 
talking to quite a few people in Serbia who were at the time believing that 
Vucic could actually do difficult things and deliver,” said Bieber.

You can watch the full interview with Florian Bieber on the YouTube channel of 
the weekly magazine Radar.

 

-- 
http:www.antic.org
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"SERBIAN NEWS NETWORK" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/senet/0cc501db0cc9%24436fc5c0%24ca4f5140%24%40gmail.com.

Reply via email to