<https://www.nin.rs/english/news/102483/serbia-is-presented-with-a-new-chance-for-rapid-progress>n.rs<https://www.nin.rs/english/news/102483/serbia-is-presented-with-a-new-chance-for-rapid-progress>
niSerbia is presented with a new chance for rapid progress
Milan Grujić
32–41 minutes

Serbia is in a fever dream. The malaise that has shaken the country for more 
than a year now threatens to paralyze even the little life that had only just 
begun to sprout after the ill-fated 1990s. Two decades of slow, uneven progress 
brought us to the edge of the abyss into which we were thrown by the hell of 
the breakup of the former Yugoslavia, yet our inability to shape ourselves into 
a modern and stable political society threatens to drag us back into the pit. 
There are many reasons, but the most important is the absence of consensus 
among the elites on what goal we, as a society, should pursue. Quite simply, we 
do not know where we are going, and that is why all the roads we have taken 
over the past decades look winding and dark (Oasis). If we knew our 
destination, perhaps even a wrong road might eventually lead us there. After 
all, the Earth is round.

Serbia, in fact, persistently refuses to be part of Europe, convinced it is far 
more than a single puzzle piece on the map of the Old Continent. Deluded into 
believing it is larger and more significant than it truly is, it is paralyzed 
by constant attempts to prove its own superiority, despite the lack of even the 
faintest evidence, let alone anything more substantial. At times it seems the 
only task of the Serbian intellectual elite is to perpetuate the idea of 
“higher value,” which then easily spills into everyday life, enabling politics 
to manipulate citizens and the Serbian people, a dynamic that can be, and often 
is, extremely dangerous.
You Can’t Be Everyone’s Partner

An obvious manifestation of this unfounded sense of superiority is the 
so-called “four chairs” or “four pillars” policy, formed almost twenty years 
ago, which was supposed to lead us, in the footsteps of Josip Broz, toward a 
bright future. Not only did it lead nowhere, it intensified the spotlight on 
Serbia’s delusions, most of which are now clearer than ever. Small states, 
historically, have never been able to pursue truly independent policies, and 
every such attempt ended in failure, stagnation, or the suffering of their 
citizens. Serbia is “great” only in the fantasies of its elite, and that 
fantasy easily spreads to the public, while a sober view reveals a largely 
insignificant country on the global stage, a relevant factor only in the 
fragmented Western Balkans, a region that is granted importance as a package 
deal. And precisely because of that fragmentation, and the region’s inability 
to consolidate, the Western Balkans has most often served merely as small 
change in great-power competition, small change that sometimes slips into a 
mere tip.

You cannot be good with everyone, and you never could. Balancing is possible 
only in periods of relatively stable international relations, but every crisis 
produces polarization in which small states have only one real option: to 
choose a side, even if it turns out to be the wrong one. Is it fair? No. But 
that is how it works.

The current geopolitical earthquake points Serbia, more clearly than ever, 
toward the conclusion that its only viable alternative is drawn on the map 
itself, and the map says plainly that Serbia is part of Europe, therefore part 
of the European Union. Serbia can do nothing about that, regardless of all its 
flailing, which, whatever the trajectory, only increases the number of bruises 
on its body. This situation does not fit the psychological profile of a 
self-styled giant, but that brings us back to the core problem: the delusion 
itself. If we assessed ourselves realistically, it would never occur to us to 
sneak between the legs of four giant elephants rather than take our place in 
the basket on the back of one of them.
NIN / Jugoslav Vlahović

NIN / Jugoslav Vlahović
Kalimero

The geopolitical crisis is enormous. The world order is changing before our 
eyes, once again offering us the intoxicating charms of an excess of history, 
while we once more shout in confusion: “That’s unfair.” The West is losing the 
dominance it built over centuries after the Industrial Revolution for several 
reasons. Among them is the hard-to-explain desire to further humiliate a 
defeated opponent, to break it into pieces if possible, something clearly 
visible in the approach toward Russia and in what unfolded after the Cold War. 
It did not take much intelligence to understand that constant pressure on 
Russia would produce a counterstrike, which, as so often with Russia, would be 
stronger and more brutal than necessary.

The second problem is faith in the mantra that the market and democracy would 
preserve the West’s monopoly. That illusion returned like a boomerang through 
China’s spectacular economic and technological rise, a country that is not a 
democracy and in which state, that is, planned management of the economy 
remains essential. In fact, China’s ascent is the most important reason behind 
much of what is happening in the world today. A state that has absorbed a huge 
share of global manufacturing has become a dominant international power.

The West had no coherent collective response to this reality, so the Americans 
decided to act alone. The Trump administration began retreating into its own 
“backyard”, which, predictably, extends far beyond U.S. borders, from 
Greenland, across Canada, to the northern shores of South America. Suddenly, 
Canada and Europe found themselves in trouble. Yet after initial confusion, 
they reacted with striking decisiveness to Trump’s threats.

Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney delivered a speech in Davos that many 
analysts immediately described as historic. He said “the old order will not 
return” and that “we should not mourn it,” adding that “from collapse we can 
build something bigger, better, stronger and fairer.” He called on the “middle 
powers” to cooperate, urging them to “stop invoking the rules-based 
international order as if it still functions.” Ursula von der Leyen, President 
of the European Commission, was also clear, and the doubly clear “no” from 
Canada and the European Union forced Trump to back down. The next day he 
reduced his remarks largely to self-praise about strong economic indicators in 
the first year of his term, spiced with complaints that Americans, allegedly, 
never asked anything of their NATO allies, and now, the first time they ask for 
something, something so “small” as Canada and Greenland, these ungrateful 
partners refuse. A few insults toward Europeans followed, essentially an 
expression of helplessness after a paper placed on his desk days earlier in 
which the EU threatened tariffs worth $250 billion, precisely targeted at the 
so-called swing states that decide who governs America.
PROFIMEDIA / Ognjen Stevanovic / Alamy

PROFIMEDIA / Ognjen Stevanovic / Alamy
The “Serbian World”

In the coming years, perhaps decades, the bloc division into an American, 
Russian, Chinese and European world is likely to harden into barriers that a 
state of Serbia’s size and weight will not be able to jump. Carney spoke openly 
about these blocs in Davos. Small states will have their best chance at 
prosperity if they place their “world” inside one of the larger ones, and 
understanding that our so-called “Serbian world” can survive only alongside the 
European one may save us from a dangerous power game that could threaten the 
survival of both the Serbian nation and the Serbian state. The elephants have 
begun to dance, and their dance can easily become a trance. No Kalimero-style 
moralizing, so common in Serbia’s public space, and certainly no political 
shell game, will rescue us if we keep pretending to be clever and pushing on as 
before.

The real question is what we actually want. Europe remains the best place to 
live in the world, and a lack of awareness that, in the latest geopolitical 
reshuffle, we could hardly have landed a better hand cannot be excused by the 
desire for everyone to be happy, for Serbia to be on good terms with everyone, 
and for world peace to prevail. There is no rational explanation for Serbia’s 
refusal to accept the fact that it belongs to the European family, that we are 
where we are, that we are like those around us, neither worse nor any better, 
and that only together with them can we secure prosperity.

And here we return to the elite, which must lead this people and this state. 
Yet at least half of it currently revels in the European Union’s problems, 
chuckling from the sidelines at the difficulties European leaders face with 
Trump and the war in Ukraine, firing off at least one snide quip a day.

The absence of awareness of the essential importance of joint action, of the 
necessity of a national agreement, even if it took a year to reach, is a sure 
way to keep languishing at the bottom. Failure to understand that we must have 
a common goal, however broadly defined, say, a prosperous EU member state 
capable of meeting most of its citizens’ needs, opens space for a cynical game 
in which politics and the economic and security networks tied to it will always 
be ready to sacrifice a significant part of the nation and the state for their 
own interests. If we do not know together who we are and where we are going, 
why would each of us not pull the rope in our own direction? For more than two 
and a half millennia Aesop’s motif, the immeasurable strength of a bundle 
compared to a single twig, has appeared in the oral and written traditions of 
many nations, including the Serbian one. Yet we still do not understand it, not 
as a national community and, consequently, not at many lower, yet important, 
levels. The current political opposition is not the topic of this text, but it 
is a telling example. It is hard to explain the fact that Serbia has twenty 
opposition parties, the strongest polling at around five percent, while fifteen 
are below one percent. A functional democratic system requires at least five 
parties capable of becoming, after elections, either the leading governing 
party or a credible coalition partner.

In all of this, it is crucial to understand that achieving broad agreement on 
national goals does not mean imposing the view of any majority faction. Any 
such attempt would be like jamming a stick into the wheel of the vehicle 
carrying us through these murky times. Serbia must be plural in order to 
develop normally. Any attempt to repaint it in a single color will bring new 
suffering and misfortune and, at the very least, a delay that will be hard to 
make up for.

People think differently in every society, so it is difficult to understand why 
only Serbian elites cannot determine the main direction in which the state 
should move, or at least strive to move. What is it that Bulgarians and 
Romanians, Czechs and Poles, Croats and Albanians, Slovenes and Portuguese, 
indeed so many Europeans, know that we Serbs do not? How is it possible that 
European integration is seriously questioned only in Serbia and the Republika 
Srpska? That only here do polls show a majority not supporting membership in 
the Union? Or perhaps we know something no other nation in Europe knows. It is 
possible, but extraordinarily unlikely.

Serbia must seize the opportunity that will present itself in the coming years. 
The war in Ukraine and China’s economic dominance have pushed European elites 
toward a partial realization that Europe will have to confront military and 
political giants that are not well disposed toward it, and U.S. policy since 
Trump’s return has made it clear that Europe will have to do so largely on its 
own, perhaps with Canada. Politicians and the economic structures behind them, 
both in Brussels and in European capitals, are beginning to understand that 
addressing the Union’s internal problems is a priority, and the Western Balkans 
is one of those internal problems. A quick solution would spare Europe 
unnecessary tension and free resources for dealing with the giants mentioned 
above. The Union does not need a black hole inside its own space, and that fact 
will open a new possibility for Serbia to advance rapidly toward membership. We 
should not miss this chance.

But anyone who knows us also knows we should not celebrate in advance. Wading 
through the muddy puddles of our own delusions is our favorite national 
discipline.

-- 
http:www.antic.org
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