As russia and china seek a beachhead in the western balkans, a u. S. -u. K. Push could avert an authoritarian turn

As russia and china seek a beachhead in the western balkans, a u. S. -u. K. Push could avert an authoritarian turn

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The Western Balkans was thrown into an existential political crisis after France blocked Albania’s and North Macedonia’s negotiations for European Union accession late last year. The


significance of this hold on EU expansion should not be underestimated. Membership in the bloc was the overarching social and political goal of the region’s six countries for almost two


decades. The resultant vacuum is being filled by authoritarian adversaries. Building on Britain’s recent re-engagement in the region, the time is now for a new U.S.-U.K. partnership in the


Western Balkans. The stakes were so high for EU membership that the government of (now) North Macedonia agreed to change its name last year to overcome Greece’s objections to its drive for


EU inclusion. Despite the considerable political risks that leaders in both North Macedonia and Greece took with their own voters to achieve their agreement, French President Emmanuel Macron


upturned their hard-won victory, arguing for fundamental reforms within the EU and in the enlargement process. Vocal protests from German Chancellor Angela Merkel and EU President Donald


Tusk went unheeded, and the French veto is unlikely to be lifted in the foreseeable future. Macron’s decision to halt EU enlargement has created a political and security vacuum in the


region. Forces adversarial to transatlantic interests and democratic values are now effectively poised to fill the void, namely Russia and China. Russian machinations in Balkan politics and


societies are manifold. They range from multiple soft-power interventions, to economic and energy coercion, to hard-power exercises such as the Kremlin-backed October 2016 coup attempt in


Montenegro. Authoritarian China’s footprint deepens and broadens, too, as it bluntly wields its economic influence through its multilateral “17+1” regional program to promote Chinese


business in Central-Eastern Europe, the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), and bilateral infrastructure projects. A highway project linking the Adriatic port of Bar to Serbia is estimated to


increase Montenegro’s debt to 80 percent of its GDP. In Bosnia, China provided a €614 million loan to finance the Tuzla coal-fired power plant; its terms are worryingly opaque. Moreover,


China’s state-run companies enjoy unfettered access to EU funding in public infrastructure projects. One example is Croatia’s Peljesac bridge project: approval and current construction have


proceeded with total disregard to the tensions it predictably raised between Zagreb and Sarajevo, given the bridge’s potential to obstruct passage to the Bosnian seaside town of Neum, the


country’s sole option for future port construction. CHINESE LENDING AND RUSSIAN ENERGY CONCESSIONS The lending terms of these and similar projects are unfeasible, considering the


insufficient growth of most Balkan economies. Indeed, EU Commissioner Johannes Hahn noted that “China never cares how and if a country is able to pay its loans. And if they cannot pay, there


is some pressure that things are transferred into their ownership.” This is a reality increasingly becoming clear to regional leaders caught between the imperative to develop and the


dangers of unscrupulous Chinese lending and Russian energy concessions. The countries of the Western Balkans need alternative partnerships if they are to avoid the clientele status pursued


by Beijing and Moscow. After two decades of unparalleled investments in the Middle East, Americans and Brits are disinclined to shoulder the burdens associated with institutional and


democratic development abroad. Their reservations are justified. But policymakers and their constituencies need to be sufficiently clear-eyed to not conflate the failings of massive


nation-building projects in Iraq and Afghanistan with the generally successful military and development engagement in the Western Balkans. U.S. interventions in the Western Balkans in the


1990s saw zero combat-related casualties, with a financial cost that pales when compared with Iraq and Afghanistan. And the benefits of the U.S. involvement in the Balkans in the 1990s


reverberated far and wide. Successful U.S. efforts to stop the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina and an attempted genocide in Kosovo bolstered the moral standing and legitimacy of the world order


being led by the United States. Accordingly, the region’s three Muslim-majority countries (Albania, Kosovo and Bosnia) have among the most pro-American and least anti-Semitic Muslim


populations anywhere in the world. In an age when the appeal of religious extremism remains virulent, this ruling in the court of public opinion should be prized. Genuinely sustainable


progress in the Western Balkans turns on jobs, equitably distributed revenue, and the physical security that undergirds effective governance. Without that, democratic gains will remain


threatened by authoritarian actors. U.K. AND U.S. RAMP UP ENGAGEMENT The United States and the United Kingdom are especially well-positioned to prevent such a disadvantageous outcome. Over


the past three years, the U.K. has demonstrated its concern for greater European security by gradually re-engaging in the Western Balkans in security and development. As for the United


States, late 2019 saw the State Department’s appointment of two special envoys to the region. This impetus for change demands a clearly defined and cost-effective plan to keep the Western


Balkans moving forward in its greater European integration. Regardless of the current prospects of EU accession, these U.S. allies in an important region can progressively strengthen their


contribution to the transatlantic community as their societies stabilize and prosper. The White House and Whitehall should act quickly to offer alternative quick-funding mechanisms to rival


China’s BRI in the Balkans and to help countries in the region find alternatives to Russian natural gas. Furthermore, the U.K. government of Prime Minister Boris Johnson could build on the


successful temporary deployment of British troops before the 2018 general election in Bosnia by making the deterrence-building presence of U.K. forces permanent. Finally, 20 years after


successful Anglo-American humanitarian intervention against the military forces of Serbia’s Slobodan Milosevic, the time has come to drive an equitable deal between Belgrade and the Kosovo


capital of Pristina that would spur Serbia’s recognition of Kosovo’s independence and statehood. The European Union’s appeasement of Serbia in hopes it would come around once it has greater


assurances of EU accession has not worked. A peaceful Western Balkans that has been integrating, however haltingly, into Euro-Atlantic institutions is one of the great post-Cold War


accomplishments for the United States and Europe. Allowing China and Russia to fill the vacuum left by an inward-looking EU will reverse over two decades of progress in a region that is


crucial for the West’s own stability and as an example that it can again be a force for good in the world. _(This analysis is based on a report published by the authors’ U.S.-Europe


Alliance. Join them on Thursday, Feb. 13, for a discussion of the paper in Washington D.C., hosted by the Alliance in conjunction with the Advisory Council for Bosnia and Herzegovina and the


United Macedonia Diaspora, and moderated by Just Security Washington Editor Viola Gienger. RSVP here.)_ _IMAGE: THE PRIME MINISTER OF THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF CHINA, LI KEQIANG, SPEAKS


DURING HIS VISIT TO THE CONSTRUCTION SITE OF A BRIDGE CONNECTING THE CROATIAN PENINSULA OF PELJESAC WITH THE REST OF THE COAST AND CROATIA’S MAINLAND ON APRIL 11, 2019. THE BRIDGE, MOSTLY


FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN UNION, IS BEING BUILT BY A CHINESE COMPANY AND IS THE LARGEST STRUCTURE OF ITS KIND UNDER CONSTRUCTION IN EUROPE. (PHOTO BY ELVIS BARUKCIC/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES)_


FEATURED IMAGE: Prime minister of People's Republic of China, Li Keqiang, speaks during his visit to the construction site of the bridge connecting the Croatian peninsula of Peljesac


with the rest of the coast and Croatia mainland on April 11, 2019. - The bridge, mostly funded by European Union is built by a Chinese company and currently is the largest structure of its


kind built in Europe. (Photo by ELVIS BARUKCIC / AFP) (Photo credit should read ELVIS BARUKCIC/AFP via Getty Images)