I’d bet on his leaving. Dodik is no hero or
martyr. Serbia won’t want him, as that would further complicate its
relations with the US and the EU. Hungary might take him, as it did
a former North Macedonian Prime Minister. But I imagine him most
appropriately joining Syrian President Assad in some presumed Moscow
suburb. Dodik is not a killer like Assad, but he is an autocrat and
merits an autocrat’s fate.
Serbia
In Belgrade, the issue is a political one,
albeit rooted in the failure of the state’s prosecutors to
do their jobs properly. Massive demonstrations protesting
against an increasingly autocratic President Vucic. The
demonstrators hold him responsible not just for an incident
that killed 16 people, but also for a corrupt system of
governance that ignores the rule of law. For full
documentation, see this report of an ad hoc, nongovernmental
group.
The demonstrations have weakened Vucic,
but there is no alternative in sight. He has held on for
months, sacrificing a prime minister but still keeping his
own position. In power as Deputy Prime Minister, Prime
Minister, and President since 2012, Vucic has survived
several previous rounds of popular protest, relying in part
on Russian help against “color revolution.” He sacrifices a
minister or two and eventually calls early elections, which
he uses patronage and ballot stuffing to win.
This time could be different. The EU and
US appear less inclined now than previously to regard Vucic
as better than any conceivable alternative. The Trump
Administration, which I had assumed would support him if
only to protect the Trump family building plans in Belgrade,
has said little. The EU is also reluctant to back him.
Vucic’s support for Dodik in Bosnia may be one reason, and
his solicitude towards Russia another. In both Brussels and
Washington, officials seem to have awakened to what Balkan
experts have been saying for some time: Vucic is
irremediable.
What’s next?
In Bosnia and Herzegovina, the judicial
decision on Dodik’s appeal will be the next predictable
action-forcing event. In Serbia, the students have started
to call for early elections, which otherwise wouldn’t be due
until 2027. The key questions there will be whether the
political opposition can united against Vucic and mobilize
even broader support than the protests. And whether the
election will be truly free and fair.
Democracy and rule of law in both Bosnia
and Serbia are in the balance. The US and EU should be
preparing to do their utmost to ensure they gain.
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