European Union and NATO
concerned about Chinese and Russian influence among Balkan states during
pandemic
by InfoBrics
May
13, 2020
The European Union promised
€3.3 billion to the West Balkan countries and provinces of Serbia, Montenegro
Albania, Bosnia, Kosovo, Montenegro and North Macedonia. In return, the
European Union is demanding loyalty and renunciation of close ties with Moscow
and Beijing. However this is unlikely after the initial refusal of Brussels to
supply aid and relief and there is now little trust in European Union
solidarity.
“The EU is mobilizing a
substantial financial package, confirming the strong solidarity. Together we
will overcome this crisis and recover. And beyond that, we will continue to
support the region, including with the reforms needed on their EU path, as the
recovery will only work effectively if the countries keep delivering on their
commitments,” said European Union Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.
Her comments about
substantial financial packages only came when in March
she announced in a Twitter video message that the European Union is restricting the
export of medical devices and stressed that the ban on exports of these goods
applies throughout the entire EU and is linked to the need to maintain
sufficient supplies of medical supplies within the alliance. This
announcement prompted Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić to say that European
solidarity is just a “fairy tale on paper” and that China was the
only country who could help them.
Not only did China help
Serbia, but so too did Russia. Obviously, the European institutions, even
reluctant to help fellow member countries such as Italy and Spain, did not
hesitate to make an indignant face by denouncing Moscow and Beijing of
exploiting the coronavirus pandemic to ensure a greater presence in the
Balkans. And with the usual hypocrisy they explained that the Commission had
not denied aid, but simply stressed the need to obtain the consent of all 27
member countries before granting it. In short, a mockery. Aware that
they have lost much of their credibility, the European Union are now attempting
to recover lost ground.
The first move was the video
conference on May 6 in which European Union leaders and the heads of state and
government of the 27 member countries listened to the requests of the six
states in the West Balkans who are waiting to be admitted into Union. This
expectation was frustrated in mid-October by Emmanuel Macron’s veto who was
determined to block the negotiations to Albania and North
Macedonia. A veto officially returned last February when the French
president, under pressure from other European Union members and NATO concerned
about the favor given to Russia and China, agreed to adapt to the Commission’s
decisions.
However, North Macedonia
also faces difficulty from Bulgaria who has vowed to block any accession so
long as Skopje continues to claim there is a “Macedonian minority” in Bulgaria
and not acknowledge that the main language of North Macedonia, as Bulgaria claims, is actually a West Bulgarian dialect. Albania also
faces difficulty as it could face a veto from Greece as Tirana continues to
discriminate against the Greek minority in Northern Epirus.
However, ignoring these
disagreements that exist in the West Balkans, European bureaucrats have put on
the table €3.3 billion to be distributed to all the countries and states that
agree to refuse any Russian or Chinese aid. The need to use money to buy
Balkan loyalty is a clear sign of how unattractive the European project has now
become – having itself been questioned and become widely unpopular in Italy and
Spain.
In addition to the feared
penetration of Russian soft-power based in centuries-old relationships of
culture, identity and religious tradition with the Serbian people and their
communities in Bosnia, Montenegro and Kosovo, the Chinese and the Turks are also
exhibiting far more influence in the region compared to the European
Union. China, in addition to donating health products needed in the fight
against coronavirus is also building a new railway line. This new railway line
agreement with Hungary and Serbia and financed by the Exim Bank of China, will
connect the port of Piraeus in Greece to Budapest and Belgrade. In
addition to traditional relations with the Muslim communities of Bosnia, Kosovo
and Albania, Turkey has also developed very intense trade and exchanges with
Serbia and Montenegro.
In short, the €3.3 billion
promised by Europe risks proving to be the counterpart of an illusion that has
already vanished. And to understand it, Milorad Dodik, the Serb Member of
the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina, said “the Europe we believed in ten
years ago no longer exists today.”
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