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Bosnia’s Serb leader meets US officials in Washington months after sanctions 
lifted
3–4 minutes
________________________________

​​​​​​​WASHINGTON

Bosnian Serb leader Milorad Dodik met senior US officials in Washington this 
week, months after the Trump administration lifted sanctions against him for 
actions undermining Bosnia and Herzegovina’s postwar peace agreement.

Dodik, accompanied by other Republika Srpska officials, including Acting 
President Ana Trisic Babic, held meetings with Secretary of Defense Pete 
Hegseth, Speaker Mike Johnson and White spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt.

After meeting Hegseth, Dodik wrote Thursday on X that the defense secretary 
“understands how essential strength, principled leadership, and the defence of 
Christian values are to preserving freedom and the dignity of nations 
worldwide.”

Separately, Zeljka Cvijanovic, the Serb member of the Presidency of Bosnia and 
Herzegovina, met Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau. According to the 
State Department, Landau underscored the US’ interest in “expanding economic 
cooperation and highlighted the completion of the Southern Interconnection gas 
pipeline as a strategic energy priority.”

Earlier this month, Dodik and Babic visited Israel, meeting Prime Minister 
Benjamin Netanyahu and Foreign Minister Gideon Saar.

Dodik, first sanctioned in 2017 for undermining the 1995 Dayton Peace Agreement 
and again in 2022, was sentenced last year to one year in prison and barred 
from politics for six years for defying international oversight.

Known for his frequent secessionist rhetoric, Dodik has repeatedly argued that 
Bosnia should adopt a new political agreement or separate entirely.

The 1995 Dayton Peace Agreement, which ended the Bosnian War, established 
Bosnia and Herzegovina as a state composed of two entities: the Federation of 
Bosnia and Herzegovina (FBiH) and Republika Srpska (RS). Disagreements, 
however, about the interpretation and implementation of the agreement remain a 
source of contention.

- Calls to Reimpose Sanctions

Critics, including Democratic Senator Jeanne Shaheen, called the Trump 
administration’s decision to lift sanctions “reckless and premature,” citing 
Dodik’s ties to Russia, and accusing him of undermining the Dayton Peace 
Agreement.

Shaheen, the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said 
Friday that Dodik’s visit to Washington has made it “abundantly clear that he 
is not interested in putting the interests of all Bosnians ahead of his 
political interests.”

“Mr. Dodik has been using secessionist rhetoric and undermining the integrity 
of the Dayton Peace Agreement, which flies in the face of the Administration’s 
justification to delist Dodik and his cronies late last year,” she said.

“The Trump Administration should move swiftly to re-impose sanctions on Mr. 
Dodik under the mandatory sanctions that I secured in the most recent National 
Defense Authorization Act,” she added.

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