realclearworld.com 
<https://www.realclearworld.com/articles/2025/04/14/the_us_has_an_interest_in_serbias_stability_1103807.html>
  


The U.S. Has an Interest in Serbia’s Stability


Orhan Dragaš

7–9 minutes

  _____  

Protests in Serbia 
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2025/03/16/serbia-belgrade-protests-vucic-novi-sad/>
  are often interpreted as a fight for democratization, against corruption, and 
for the defense of European values. But the reality of the political scene in 
the country is far more complex.

Western capitals and media sometimes assume that the alternative to the Serbian 
president, Aleksandar Vučić, is a pro-Western, democrat who would irreversibly 
align Serbia with the EU and categorically expedite the reform process. 
However, this assumption is naive at best and dangerously wrong at worst.

Aleksandar Vučić built a relationship with the United States and the European 
Union based on pragmatic cooperation, despite frequent criticism of his 
domestic politics among some in the West, which has brought Serbia closer to 
the West’s economic and security frameworks. Under his leadership, Serbia has 
remained a key stabilizing factor in the Balkans, especially when regional 
tensions have increased—from political crises in Montenegro 
<https://www.ft.com/content/46318f2a-f919-421f-a53e-6163f2778736>  to open 
conflicts in Bosnia and Herzegovina 
<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/2025/03/04/can-bosnia-and-herzegovina-survive-after-the-top-court-ruling-against-milorad-dodik/>
  and Kosovo 
<https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-08-07/us-nato-slam-kosovo-plan-to-reopen-key-bridge-as-serbs-protest>
 .

American and European officials, including senior diplomats, privately admit 
that Vučić is the main guarantor that the region will not slide into chaos. His 
ability to strike a balance between Western expectations and Serbia's internal 
politics has enabled Belgrade to remain a reliable partner in maintaining peace 
in the Balkans.

This stability is not the result of mere political survival—it is the result of 
carefully built relations with Brussels and Washington and a willingness to 
accept and implement certain reforms 
<https://www.mei.gov.rs/eng/news/2153/more/w/0/growth-plan-and-reform-agenda-of-serbia/>
 , including Serbia's alignment with key EU policies and US interests in the 
region 
<https://kyivindependent.com/ft-serbia-hints-its-artillery-shells-are-making-their-way-to-ukraine/>
 .

Vučić's relationship with the West was built through a series of concrete steps 
by which he showed that he is willing to take decisions that, even if they are 
often unpopular in Serbia, are in the interest of regional peace and stability, 
as well as transatlantic relations.

Firstly, the Vučić government has significantly improved military and security 
relations with the West. Although he was not responsible for Serbia's accession 
<https://www.nato.int/cps/in/natohq/topics_50100.htm>  to the NATO Partnership 
for Peace program, which was signed back in 2006, his government has further 
deepened cooperation <https://www.nato.int/cps/en/natohq/photos_233884.htm>  
with the Alliance through joint training 
<https://www.kosovo-online.com/en/news/politics/us-embassy-serbia-chose-west-participating-military-exercise-nato-members-12-6-2023>
 , military-technical cooperation, and increasing the interoperability of the 
Serbian armed forces with Western partners.

A result of this strategy is the agreement 
<https://apnews.com/article/france-macron-serbia-fighter-jets-rafale-f7b73c2ddf89b309f242795c2e91c1ca>
  concluded last year for the purchase of 12 French Rafale aircraft worth 2.7 
billion euros, with which the largest army in the Balkans is strategically 
turning away from its traditional Russian supplier and toward Western partners. 
In this way, the strategic line of Russian influence, which is more than 60 
years old, is being broken.

Under Vučić, Serbia’s steps to align with NATO have strengthened its role as a 
stable factor in the region, preventing the escalation of conflicts, and 
adhered to a realpolitik approach to security policy.

Secondly, in 2020, during Trump's first term in office, Vučić signed 
<https://www.reuters.com/article/world/trump-lauds-economic-steps-between-serbia-and-kosovo-idUSKBN25W061/>
  an economic normalization agreement with Kosovo in Washington, which 
represented a revolutionary shift in the decades-long frozen conflict. Although 
it did not resolve the matter of Kosovo’s status, this agreement enabled the 
opening of new economic channels between Belgrade and Pristina, thus reducing 
the risk of new conflicts.

Thirdly, the Vučić government made it possible to strengthen economic 
cooperation with the West. Today, German, Italian, French, and American 
companies are the largest investors 
<https://www.lloydsbanktrade.com/en/market-potential/serbia/investment>  in 
Serbia, and Belgrade has developed into an important technological and 
industrial center in the region, which would not be possible without close 
cooperation with Brussels and Washington, as well as Berlin and Paris.

Since Vučić came to power, foreign direct investment from Western countries has 
increased significantly, while the European Union has remained Serbia's most 
important economic partner. For years, Serbia has been the record-holder in 
Southeast Europe in terms of attracting foreign direct investment 
<https://www.fdiintelligence.com/content/deffe8ac-bbd8-530e-a72b-a28e21a373b7> 
, amounting to around EUR 4–5 billion per year. At the same time, three 
quarters of this FDI comes from the West.

Moreover, it must be remembered that the Vučić government, and not previous 
Serbian governments, initiated 
<https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-25824520>  the negotiation process 
with the EU regarding Serbia's accession to the Union. One must also take into 
account the efforts of his government to create 
<https://apnews.com/article/europe-business-global-trade-7027282f6a93c2c12015d47717dc9d78>
  a trade union between the Balkan states through the Open Balkan project 
<https://www.rferl.org/a/albania-macedonia-serbia-summit/31619866.html> , 
following the example of the open market on which the EU was forged.

While the demonstrations in Belgrade and other cities arouse sympathy in the 
West, the real question any serious analyst should be asking is: Who would come 
to power if Vučić leaves?

The main opposition <https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cq5z8deg27xo>  force 
in Serbia is not a homogeneous, pro-Western coalition but a fragmented bloc 
dominated by populist, right-wing, and pro-Russian parties. Their messages are 
not what Brussels and Washington would like to hear. They openly reject 
<https://balkaninsight.com/2023/02/28/opposition-parties-criticise-kosovo-serbia-agreement-on-normalisation-plan/>
  any compromise on the Kosovo issue, are firmly opposed to NATO and the EU, 
and demand a much stronger orientation toward Moscow and Beijing.

Even within the “civic opposition,” there is strong anti-American and 
anti-European rhetoric. Many of the groups leading the protests are not 
explicitly pro-Western—their narrative is often characterized by populism, 
anger at the West for supporting Vučić, and unrealistic expectations of changes 
in Serbia's political course, given that they do not represent a majority of 
Serbian society.

Despite internal criticism, Serbia under Vučić has become a pillar of stability 
in a region that is still suffering from the severe consequences of the breakup 
of Yugoslavia. While Bosnia and Herzegovina struggles with constant political 
crises, Montenegro goes through waves of internal divisions, and Kosovo remains 
a potential point of conflict, Serbia has remained stable and has a predictable 
foreign policy.

The loss of Serbia as a stable partner for the West would mean creating space 
for greater Russian and Chinese influence 
<https://www.cfr.org/backgrounder/russias-influence-balkans>  in the region and 
increasing political uncertainty. At a time when Europe is confronted with 
Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine, internal economic challenges, and the 
rise of right-wing populist movements, the last thing Brussels and Washington 
want is another unpredictable political crisis in the Balkans.

Aleksandar Vučić is not a perfect leader from the West’s point of view, but he 
is a predictable and reliable partner. The alternative to his leadership, as it 
currently exists in Serbia, is not a modern, pro-European, democratic option 
but radicalized political chaos in which the West could lose its most stable 
partner in the Balkans.

Western diplomats and analysts need to move away from the simplistic narrative 
of "good protesters” opposing an “evil autocrat” and start thinking seriously 
about the real consequences of political change in Serbia. Because if Vučić 
leaves without a clear alternative, the question is not whether Serbia will 
take a step backwards but how far it will go in that direction.

Dr. Orhan Dragaš is Director of the International Security Institute 
<http://www.isi-see.org/>  in Belgrade, Serbia. He is author of The End of the 
Russian World: Russia, Ukraine, Balkans; Russia: From a Failed State to a Rogue 
State; and The Modern Intelligence-Security Community, Utopia or Reality.

 

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