Chattanooga Times Free Press

EU revisits Balkans to win friends, seek more influence

- BY RAF CASERT

BRUSSELS — The European Union is in the midst of yet another goodwill trip through the Western Balkans to drum up support for the bloc and to make sure that Europe’s historical tinderbox is not about to pick the side of hostile Russia or strategic rival China in the world of geopolitic­s.

During her whirlwind six-nation tour, EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen made a stop Friday in Serbia, by far the most important nation in the southern region, and one that has shown scant regard for solidarity in joining EU sanctions against Russia for its invasion of Ukraine.

Von der Leyen said because of the war redefining the security landscape of Europe, it’s of “utmost importance” for the EU to invest further in the Western Balkans.

“Let me assure you that the European Union is, and will remain, Serbia’s most important political and economic partner,” she said during a visit to a gas connector linking Serbia and Bulgaria.After announcing Thursday a support of $500 million to help countries in the Western Balkans cope with the energy crisis fueled by the war in Ukraine, von der Leyen pledged $165 million in grants for Serbia.

For years, the 27-nation EU has been caught in two minds over the Western Balkans: seeking to pull them close as allies and hold off foreign interferen­ce, yet at the same time, keeping them at arm’s length since their weaker economies and political institutio­ns are far from ready to seamlessly integrate into the EU’s single market of open trade and Western democratic ideals.

The result has been frustratio­n for the Western Balkan nations, sometimes bordering on alienation. And the Feb. 24 Russian invasion of Ukraine has only made matters more urgent.

“This is a question of strategic interests, and we only have one shot to get it right. So let’s not waste it,” Katalin Cseh of the liberal Renew Europe group told the EU legislatur­e last week.

“Russia and China understand the strategic importance of the Western Balkans just as well as we do. Only,” she added, “it is right on our doorstep.”

The region now comprising of Albania, Bosnia, Kosovo, Montenegro, North Macedonia and Serbia has long been a political, and sometimes literal, battlegrou­nd for world powers. A shooting in Sarajevo, Bosnia, in 1914 set off World War I, which brought down empires, redrew maps and ultimately led to World War II, after which the United States and the Soviet Union emerged as superpower­s.

With the 1991 Soviet collapse, so did Yugoslavia, the dominant power in the region. That unleashed devastatin­g wars in the 1990s that killed over 130,000, displaced millions, ruined economies and spawned ethnic hatreds that last to this day.

Even though the EU is by far the biggest investment and trading partner in the sixnation region, Von der Leyen has her work cut out in Belgrade, where right-wing and former anti-Western populist President Aleksandar Vucic has ruled for 10 years with increasing powers and allowed for the spread of Russian influence.

For years now, the EU has dangled the prospect of membership, and ensuing prosperity, for the Balkan nations. But that promise was somewhat undermined this year when the EU allowed Ukraine into the fast lane as a candidate nation, while progress on membership for Western Balkan nations has largely stalled.

That has turned several Balkan nations into EU sceptics.

Serbia’s line with Moscow irks the bloc most, especially since Vucic has refused to join Western sanctions against Russia.

“Serbia needs to step up its efforts in aligning with the EU positions,” said EU Enlargemen­t Commission­er Oliver Varhelyi.

Von der Leyen said Serbia is one of the most advanced countries on the European path but insisted on the importance of adhering to the EU’s foreign policy.

“Joining the European Union in the very end means sharing the same values, having the same directions in the geopolitic­al decisions,” she said, speaking next to Vucic. “We want to count on you, on Serbia, as a reliable partner.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/OLIVIER MATTHYS ?? From left, Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama, European Council President Charles Michel, North Macedonia’s Prime Minister Dimitar Kovacevski, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic and French President Emmanuel Macron walk June 23 to a group photo during an EU summit in Brussels.
AP PHOTO/OLIVIER MATTHYS From left, Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama, European Council President Charles Michel, North Macedonia’s Prime Minister Dimitar Kovacevski, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic and French President Emmanuel Macron walk June 23 to a group photo during an EU summit in Brussels.

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