Friday, February 14, 2020
North Macedonia Is Being Used by NATO to Target Serbia and Russia
Paul Antonopoulos, Research Fellow at the Center for Syncretic Studies
The North Macedonian House of Representatives unanimously approved on
Monday for their country to accept the NATO Accession Protocol, taking the
former Yugoslav Republic a step closer towards accession into NATO which is
expected to be completed and finalized in the spring. North Macedonia’s rapid
accession into NATO is only possible because of the Prespa Agreement signed
between Athens and Skopje in June 2018, bringing an end to the name dispute
between the two countries that emerged in 1991 with the breakup of Yugoslavia.
The Prespa Agreement, named after a lake
that traverses the borders of Greece, North Macedonia and Albania, defined
exactly what was meant by “Macedonia” and “Macedonian.” For Greece, according
to the agreement, these terms denote an area and people of Greece’s northern
region, who continue the legacy of the Ancient Macedonian Hellenic
civilization, history and culture, as well as the legacy of Alexander the
Great. In reference to North Macedonia, these terms denote the modern territory
of North Macedonia, the Slavic language and Slavic people with their own
history and culture unrelated to the Ancient Macedonians. The agreement also
stipulates the removal of North Macedonian irredentist efforts against Greek
territory and to align them with UNESCO and Council of Europe's standards.
With Greece no longer blocking North Macedonia’s attempts to join NATO
and the European Union, no time has been wasted to elevate the Balkan country
into the Atlanticist organization. There is no doubt that the Prespa
Agreement, which caused political turmoil in Athens and Skopje, was signed
only for North Macedonia’s rapid entry into NATO.
The acceleration of North Macedonia into NATO is not only a key priority
for the organization to reduce Russian influence in the Balkans, but to
continue pressurizing Serbia that was bombed by NATO in 1999 in response to the
Serbian military operation against the “Kosovo Liberation Army” terrorist
organization. North Macedonia, Serbia and Bosnia are the only non-NATO members
remaining in the Balkans, however it is important to remember that Bosnia is
effectively a U.S. protectorate, while North Macedonia has been trying to join
NATO since 1995 when Yugoslavia was completely destroyed in all but name.
Serbia has no such ambition to join NATO and is considered a problematic
country as it is the only remaining bastion of Russian influence left in the
Balkans and is preventing full Atlanticist hegemony over the region.
Syriza, the ruling Party of Greece at the time of the signing of the Prespa
Agreement, knew full well that the Prespa Agreement was largely despised by the
Greeks, but none-the-less pushed for it and signed it. It is very obvious that
the Prespa Agreement was to accelerate North Macedonia primarily into NATO,
especially as not only Syriza, but also the current ruling party of New
Democracy is loyal to NATO, with North Macedonia’s entry into the EU being
only a consolation prize for Western powers. Less than a month after signing
the Prespa Agreement, North Macedonia received an invitation to join NATO on 11
July 2018 with the accession protocol made in February 2019. North Macedonia’s
accession into the EU on the other hand has made no progress since the Prespa
Agreement was made.
For the Atlanticists, a rapid accession into NATO to contain and weaken
Russian influence in North Macedonia and to also further constrain and
pressurize Serbia was a higher priority than formalizing the Balkan country
into the European neoliberal order as an official member. Although North
Macedonia will undoubtedly join the EU eventually, it is not a matter of
urgency as making the country into a NATO member. The Prespa Agreement is
highly unpopular in both countries as they both feel they have lost out and did
not achieve their objectives of promoting their interests with the name issue.
NATO was unwilling to risk the Prespa Agreement failing and the name issue
re-emerging which would once again put on hold North Macedonia’s accession into
the organization.
North Macedonia cannot contribute to NATO in any meaningful way as it is
a poor country of just over two million people and not close to the Russian
border like the tiny Baltic states. Its accession into NATO is only for the
purpose of weakening or preventing any Russian influence in the country and to
further isolate Serbia. Despite North Macedonia being an overwhelmingly
Orthodox and Slavic country that had the potential to become another pro-Russia
state in the Balkans alongside neighboring Serbia, since its separation from
Yugoslavia in 1991, Skopje pursued a pro-Western policy and joined the NATO
program Partnership for Peace as early as 1995 and became a European Union
candidate a decade later. Why North Macedonia has pursued such a
Western-centric policy since its separation with Yugoslavia is not clearly
understood, but it is certainly understood why NATO has accelerated North
Macedonia’s membership into its organization.
Source: InfoBrics
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