Three
separate pressure points in the country are threatening to convene into
a major source of destabilization sometime in the near future.
Anti-Serb sentiment reared its ugly head when a vicious mob attempted to stone the Serbian Prime Minister to death during his commemorative appearance at a Srebrenica memorial.
Republika
Srpska’s expression of constitutional autonomy is ruffling feathers all
throughout the federation, and if a compromise isn’t reached, the
planned referendum will surely be held. All the while, anti-Serbian
rhetoric and political scare tactics are being used in a coordinated
effort to paint Banja Luka as Bosnia’s bad guy, a one-sided view which
is being disseminated by both Victoria Nuland and now Federica Mogherini.
Bosnia is
back in the spotlight as the source of Balkan instability, with three
serious issues cropping up in the country in just the past two weeks.
Then,
in reaction to the proposed creation of a Court and Prosecutor’s office
that would have illegal jurisdiction over the entire country (violating
the Dayton Agreement that ended the civil war), the autonomous Republika
Srpska announced that it will hold a referendum on the issue, which
drew extremely hysterical rebukes from the rest of Bosnia and the West.
Finally, just this Sunday, a UK newspaper revealed what many had long suspected, and it’s that ISIL may have finally set up base inside the strategically located country.
Although
appearing to be three separate issues, all of these flashpoints have the
distinct and real possibility of merging together (as Balkan crises
quite often do), and interestingly enough, certain outside forces might
nudge events along this scenario in order to promote their geopolitical
goals over the region.
Recipe For Disaster
Let’s look a bit more in detail at the individual parts of this larger problem:
Vucic Assassination:
The Serbian
Prime Minister was almost pelted to death with stones while paying his
respects at Srebrenica, the site of a tragic event that Serbs regard
as a crime and not “genocide”.
In fact, just immediately prior to the assassination attempt, Russia vetoed a UK-sponsored UNSC resolution to recognize the event as such. It stated
that the document’s clear political motivation in labelling the events
“genocide” unevenly attributed blame to the Serbs, would have incited
more ethnic hatred, and could have aggravated regional tensions.
Sadly, Russia’s valiant effort didn’t preemptively quell the forthcoming violence, since according
to Republika Srpska President Milorad Dodik, former Balkan warlord and
wanted war criminal in Serbia, Nasir Oric, disguised himself in the
crowd that day and incited the masses to riot, which led to them trying
to kill Vucic.
Republica Srpska Referendum:
The fragile two-decade-long peace in Bosnia is held together by the extraordinarily complex and generally unworkable Dayton Agreement agreed
to by all sides in 1995. It places a foreigner in control of the
country’s most important position, the Office of the High Representative
(OHR), while creating a mangled ‘power-sharing’ apparatus for the
citizens themselves.
The specific
composition of the two chambers of parliament and the tripartite,
rotating presidency invites a lot of discussion but discourages any real
decisions from being made. While the country’s two constituent entities
(Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Republika Srpska) are
nominally autonomous, there’s been an overall trend towards Sarajevo and
the OHR overstepping their authority over the Serbs, ergo the current
crisis.
Republika
Srpska asserts that the Dayton Agreement doesn’t give the OHR the right
to create a nationwide court system, let alone one that it feels will be
institutionally biased against Serbs.
In response,
its National Assembly has agreed to hold a referendum, but this has led
to frenzied rhetorical attacks that President Dodik is trying to break
apart Bosnia.
In reality, the
country’s other forces and the OHR have been trying to push the republic
into this position for quite a long time in order to justify possible
punitive measures against it.
They’ve
never gotten comfortable with the idea of Serbian autonomy, and they
especially fear Dodik’s recent outreaches to Russia (he attended the Saint Petersburg International Economic Forum last month). It’s for these reasons that Nuland strongly alluded
to Republika Srprksa in declaring that “it is unconscionable that the
unity of the state is still publicly questioned” and implicitly blamed
it for Bosnia’s failure to formally join Euro-Atlantic structures.
ISIL:
Bosnia has
been a hotbed of Islamic militancy and a destination for foreign
terrorists since the beginning of its civil war in the 1990s, but with
the rise of ISIL, it looks to have once more reverted back to its
notorious role as the jihadi gateway to Europe. Even before ISIL’s propaganda video extolling the ‘virtues’ of Balkan jihad, a terrorist targeted the town of Zvornik
in Republika Srpska in late April, screaming “Allahu akbar”
before shooting three police officers and getting killed as a result.
With Bosnian
intelligence revealing that 150 of its citizens have already joined ISIL
(and 50 of them having returned back to the country), it shouldn’t be
surprising that the terrorist group’s flags were reportedly flown
in a small village like Gornja Maoca (controlled by radical Wahhabists)
or that the British just reported on the existence of a base in Osve,
both of which coincidentally abut the Republika Srpska border.
Complicating
the threat even further, some fear that the tens of thousands
of illegal immigrants (some of whom are legitimate refugees) that have
flooded the region since the beginning of the year might have created a
‘humanitarian cover’ for terrorists to exploit in infiltrating the
region, making many nervously wonder whether Gornja Maoca and Osve are
just the tip of the iceberg.
Explosive Combination
These three
destabilizing factors – anti-Serbian sentiment, Sarajevo’s
constitutional oversteps, and ISIL’s covert growth – dangerously risk
combining into an explosive mix sometime in the coming months. While
it’s impossible to predict the future, one can in fact make an educated
forecast about where certain indicators are headed, and in this case,
it’s fairly troubling.
Remembering
how anti-Serbian sentiment was quickly channeled into an assassination
attempt against the visiting Prime Minister in Srebrenica, it’s logical
to conclude that a similar, more professional stoking of ethnic hatred
over a longer period of time could produce a more widespread and violent
effect in all of Republika Srpska against all Serbs.
Add in the
ISIL factor and its two sympathizer bases right next to Republika Srpska
(plus the Islamic terrorist attack in Zvornik), and it’s foreseeable
that an anti-Serbian terrorist war might break out right around the time
of the planned referendum.
Who’s Poisoning The Well?
But who
would want to break Bosnia apart? Most likely the same forces that
wanted to tear Ukraine apart in order to drag neighboring Russia
into the fray. These actors identify Republika Srprska as being
‘Serbia’s Donbass’, in that there’s deep ethnic, cultural, and
historical bonds linking the two entities despite the international
border between them. If they can tempt Serbia into an intended quagmire
by using dead Serbs as ‘bait’ (as they failed to do with dead Russians
in Donbass), then they could destabilize the whole country and stop it
from becoming Balkan Stream’s continental hub. As with most wars then, a
forthcoming one in Bosnia would be truly about energy geopolitics.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do
not necessarily reflect the official position of Sputnik.
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