October 18, 2007

The Russian option



The Russian
option



Oct 18th 2007 | BELGRADE AND MITROVICA





From The Economist print edition



Some Serbs dream of a Russian
alternative to the European Union



DOTTED across the Serbian north of the divided city of
Mitrovica are pictures of its hero: Vladimir Putin. Russia, Kosovo's Serbs
believe, has saved them from the independence demanded by its Albanians
(Kosovars), who make up 90% of Kosovo's 2m people. It is too early to be sure
they are right. But Western diplomats are worried by Serbia's dalliance with Russia.



Marko Jaksic, a member of Serbia's Kosovo negotiating team,
helps to run northern Kosovo. He is a deputy leader of the party of Vojislav
Kostunica, Serbia's prime minister. If America and many European Union
countries recognise a unilateral declaration of independence by Kosovo, he
expects Serbia to offer Russia military bases “in Serbia, and especially on the
border of Kosovo”. He adds that Serbia should abandon its bid to join the EU,
and claims that Mr Kostunica thinks similarly but has less freedom to talk
openly.



Such talk is meant to send chills down Western spines. If
Serbia gave up trying to join the EU, not only would it return to the isolation
of the 1990s but it could also drag the whole region down with it. How serious
is the risk? Mr Kostunica's party is aligned with Mr Putin's United Russia
party, and its official position is that Serbia should be neutral. Mr Kostunica
has disparaged a potentially independent Kosovo as nothing but a “NATO state”.





A source close to President Boris Tadic, whose party is in
uneasy coalition with Mr Kostunica, concedes that, if Kosovo's independence is
recognised, it will be hard to instil “European values” in Serbia. Even Serbs
who would secretly like to be shot of their troublesome southern province fear
that full independence would be disastrous. They predict that Mr Kostunica
would, if not formally end the country's bid for EU membership, at least slow
it down, as well as trying to punish countries that recognise Kosovo and
companies that trade there and in Serbia.



Yet the Russian alternative does not look appetising. The
prospect of Russian bases in Serbia is “very unlikely”, says Ivan Vejvoda, who
heads the Balkan Trust for Democracy, a big regional donor to good causes.
Serbia is surrounded by the EU and NATO. “The Russian thing is a temporary,
opportunistic thing, a balloon which will burst once we are over Kosovo,” he
says. There is much excitement in Serbia about Russian companies moving in. On
the list for privatisations that may interest them are JAT Serbian airlines,
Belgrade airport, a mine in Bor and NIS, Serbia's oil company. Alexei Miller,
head of Russia's energy giant, Gazprom, met Serbian leaders to discuss
potential pipelines on October 9th. But so far Russian companies (except for
Lukoil) have been notable by their absence. Russia is only the 18th-biggest
investor in Serbia; the country's largest single exporter is owned by US Steel.
The EU has poured lots of money into rebuilding Serbia. If Serbia kept on
track, a lot more cash could come—and Russia offers little.



On October 15th Montenegro signed a “stabilisation and
association agreement” with the EU, normally a step towards membership. Serbia
could soon do the same. But a negative report to the EU from Carla Del Ponte,
chief prosecutor at The Hague war-crimes tribunal, means that it must first be
seen to do more to catch the fugitive Ratko Mladic. Ms Del Ponte will visit
Serbia soon to check progress (the government has posted a reward for the
missing general, 12 years after he was indicted). This suggests that the
Russian option is, as one diplomat puts it, “loose talk”—for now. If many EU
countries recognise an independent Kosovo next year, it will be their turn to
call Serbia's bluff.



http://www.economist.com/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9993395&fsrc=RSS





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