February 3, 2023 | Foreign Policy

Russia’s Disastrous War Has Created an Opening in the Balkans

The West should remind Serbia not to hitch its wagon to a diminished Russia.
February 3, 2023 | Foreign Policy

Russia’s Disastrous War Has Created an Opening in the Balkans

The West should remind Serbia not to hitch its wagon to a diminished Russia.

Excerpt

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic—whose country is one of Russia’s closest allies in Europe—recently made a surprisingly strong statement in support of Ukraine. “We said from the beginning that we cannot support Russia’s invasion of Ukraine,” he said, adding that “for us, Crimea is Ukraine, Donbas is Ukraine—it will remain so.” Many experts in the West quickly concluded that Serbia had seen the writing on the wall and was cutting ties with Russia amid the latter’s failing war in Ukraine and increasingly isolated pariah status. Nobody likes a loser.

This Western hope, however, couldn’t be more misguided. Vucic’s statement is merely a continuation of Belgrade’s balancing strategy between Russia and the West. To pursue relations with each, it adjusts its relationships to suit its interests. In this case, Vucic’s apparent pivot was all about Kosovo’s right to independence, which Belgrade firmly rejects. At the same time, however, the fact remains that an isolated and weakened Russia losing in Ukraine will be a bad ally for Serbia. The West would do well to remind Serbs of this fundamental geopolitical shift.

Ivana Stradner is an advisor to the Barish Center for Media Integrity at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. Follow her on Twitter @ivanastradnerFDD is a Washington, DC-based, nonpartisan research institute focusing on national security and foreign policy.

Issues:

Disinformation Russia