Serbian PresidentĀ Aleksandar Vucic used to speak regularly with his Russian counterpart. The conflict is now testing relations between the two.
(Bloomberg) — Serbia, traditionally one of Russiaās closest allies in Europe, is trying to putĀ some distance between itself andĀ Moscow as the war in Ukraine strains ties between the two countries and their leaders.
In an interview in Belgrade, President Aleksandar Vucic dismissed territorial claims in Ukraine by Vladimir Putin and predicted the āworst is yet to comeā for the conflict as both sides dig in. Vucic, who had dozens of meetings with Putin in recent years and took Russian lessons to be able to speak with him directly, said he hadnāt talked with his counterpart for āmany months.ā
āWe, from the very beginning, said that we were not able and we could not support Russiaās invasion against Ukraine,ā Vucic said at his residenceĀ in the Serbian capital on Tuesday. āFor us, Crimea is Ukraine, Donbas is Ukraine ā and itāll remain so.ā
Serbia has historically sought to balance its geopolitical and economic interests between east and west, but the comments underline the gradual shift since Putinās invasion of Ukraine almost 11 months ago. Thatās significant as European allies try to isolate Russia with the continentĀ facing its most perilous period since the Cold War.
Belgradeās reluctance to join the US and the European Union in sanctions against Russia put Serbia under increased pressure to cut ties with Putin and his energy supplies even as the war hit the economy and sent inflation soaring.
Vucic, who was re-elected by a landslide last year, says EU membership is his ultimate goal. But he isĀ resisting the sanctions effort because of Russian backing for his refusal to recognize the independence of Kosovo and Serbiaās own experience with economic isolation. Russia also sells natural gas to his country at below the market rate.
Yet it would be wrong to assume his government fully endorses the leadership in Moscow, he said. āWe are not always jubilant about some of their stances,ā said Vucic, 52. āWe have a traditionally good relationship, but it doesnāt mean that we support every single decision or most of the decisions that are coming from the Kremlin.ā
The alliance between the two Eastern Orthodox nations goes back centuries. After cooling during Soviet times under Yugoslav leader Josip Broz Tito, it regained momentum during the Balkan wars and was then cemented by NATOās 1999 intervention that endedĀ the war in Kosovo.
Economically, Serbia has been moving out of Russiaās orbit for years. The country accounts for about 6% of Serbiaās foreign trade. The EU is by far the biggest partner.Ā To steady finances late last year, Serbia secured ā¬2.4 billion ($2.6 billion) funding from the International Monetary Fund and aĀ $1 billion loan from United Arab Emirates, which has been deepening ties with the Balkan country.
Yet, Serbia still stands out in Europe āĀ along with Hungary āĀ for its position on Russia. Its national airline maintained routes to the country and Belgrade is aĀ destination of choice for Russians, albeit more recently exiles fleeing Putinās regime. A poll taken last summer showed PutinĀ was the most favoredĀ world leader for Serbs.
Russian mercenary group Wagner ran an advertisementĀ in Serbia this month looking for recruits to fight in Ukraine. Vucic, however, was firm: āWagner will not do that in Serbia,ā he said in the interview, citing laws preventing Serb nationals joining up. The intervention won praise from the US ambassador to Belgrade, Christopher Hill.
āI was glad to hear from President Vucic and his administration that they can see the threat to peace and stability posed by Wagner potentially operating in Serbia,ā Hill said in an interview on Tuesday. āItās telling that this is the best Russia has to offer to Serbs: the chance to die in a faraway land for someone elseās war of aggression.ā
Read More: War Hangover in Divided Kosovo Is a Warning for Europe Defaced Putin Mural Tells the Story of Russiaās Waning Influence Russians Find Refuge From Putin in Europeās New āCasablancaā
Kosovo remains the issue that binds them, though.Ā Serbia considers Kosovo the cradle of its nationhood āĀ much like Putin views Ukraine āĀ and recognition of its sovereignty remains the biggest obstacle to any hope Serbia will fulfil its goal of joining the EU.
Vucic said heās thankful to Russia for backing him on Kosovo, and that explains why Serbia canāt back economic measures against Moscow. āWe were under sanctions for almost ten years, eight years actually, and we donāt believe thatās a solution,ā he said.
The Serb president, who served as information minister to former strongman Slobodan Milosevic, has been criticized by Kosovar authoritiesĀ for stoking tension in the past. He saidĀ heāsĀ been working to deescalate a standoffĀ in recent weeks after Serbs living in Kosovoās north put up barricades to defy the authorities in Pristina.
That came amid a sharp deterioration in relations after the predominantly ethnic Albanian leadership pushed Kosovo Serbs to adopt its identity cards and car license plates. He praised NATO-led forces known as KFOR for the professional way they handled the situation.
Still, tensions in mainly Serb-populated north Kosovo are ten times worse than usual, he said, adding he invested great efforts to convince Serbs to remove barricades because āotherwise it would have led us to a total disaster.ā
QuicktakeWhat You Need to Know About Rising Serbia-Kosovo Tensions
Vucic said it would be more realistic to take small steps than to expect some major and quick deal that would include Kosovoās recognition by Serbia, he said.
āWe need to change the situation on the ground with small steps to build confidence between the two factions and then to see how we can tackle everything else,ā VucicĀ said. āNot dreaming something that we all know that is not going to happen.ā
Serbs have gotten weary after waiting for decades to be included and now a majority is no longer keen to join the EU, according to opinion polls. That goes against the tide in other western Balkan nations that are eager to join the bloc, including Albania and North Macedonia.
Vucic is convinced that when and if that choice is put to citizens in a referendum, they will vote in favor of joining and cement their pivot westward. For that to happen, he said they will need assurances that membership is realistic. āI know that EU is our path,ā he said. āThere are no other paths.ā
More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com
Ā©2023 Bloomberg L.P.