Month: July 2020

Serbian civil society under attack

Civil society and media organizations in Serbia are facing a government crackdown by means of financial investigations designed for preventing terrorism. Two hundred and thirty (230!) of them have issued the following protest against this government effort to squelch the remnants of Serbia’s post-Milosevic democracy. The US Embassy has protested, politely but firmly. Some EU parliamentarians have also spoken up. Much louder and more persistent protests will be required to get President Vucic and Prime Minister Brnabic to block and reverse this abuse. How about a statement from Foggy Bottom and from the European Council or the Commission?

Civil society and media will not give up the fight for a democratic and free Serbia

The media and civil society organizations demand from the Ministry of Finance and the Administration for the Prevention of Money Laundering to immediately present the grounds for suspicion due to which they ordered the extraordinary collection of information about organizations, media, and individuals from the commercial banks. The article of the law, referred to by the director of the Administration for the Prevention of Money Laundering, states that such inspection should be performed exclusively for organizations for which there are grounds for suspicion of their involvement in the financing of terrorism. Since the list includes numerous organizations and individuals dealing with investigative journalism, protection of human rights, transparency, film production, development of democracy, rule of law and philanthropy, the conclusion is that this is a political abuse of institutions and a dangerous attempt to further collapse the rule of law in Serbia.

The abuse of legal mechanisms and institutions to unlawfully put pressure on the media and civil society organizations is a drastic attack on freedom of association and freedom of information. For years, the government in Serbia has been facing serious criticism from both international and domestic organizations regarding the threat to these two important freedoms. Such an attack on organizations that advocate for establishing Serbia as a state governed by the rule of law with respect for the law and a genuine fight against corruption, is an additional argument that these values are seriously endangered in Serbia. Organizations, media and citizens will not give up the fight for a free and democratic state, regardless of threats and pressures. Such and similar moves by the authorities only further motivate us as citizens to persevere in the defense of our own country.

The media and organizations will take all appropriate legal actions against those involved in this abuse, including the prosecution of those responsible, but above all they will insist on complete and clear answers on how this could have happened. We remind the public that the organizations and media from the list are subject to various types of regular state control, including inspections and rigorous checks of financial operations by the Tax Administration and the National Bank of Serbia, as well as by their own donors. Any legal inspection of the work of organizations is welcome and we will always support it. On the other hand, we will fiercely oppose the abuse of institutions and procedures, because that is our mission – the fight for a democratic and legal state.

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Stevenson’s army, July 31

Tata is out. Good.
Diplomats push back at returning to offices.
Postal Service cuts back just when it’s needed for elections.  That’s one of several threats to the elections discussed in a good CFR session.
-CFIUS had increased workload in 2019. Here’s the official report.
– The USG didn’t run its pandemic playbook, as it should have.
– Intriguing idea: non-kinetic ASAT
– Back to normal: approval of Congress falls

My SAIS colleague Charlie Stevenson distributes this almost daily news digest of foreign/defense/national security policy to “Stevenson’s army” via Googlegroups. I plan to republish here. To get Stevenson’s army by email, send a blank email (no subject or text in the body) to stevensons-army+subscribe@googlegroups.com. You’ll get an email confirming your join request. Click “Join This Group” and follow the instructions to join. Once you have joined, you can adjust your email delivery preferences (if you want every email or a digest of the emails).

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Real presidents

And this is the parting message from the worthy man to whom they gave tribute.

I can’t say I knew John Lewis, but I did meet him one evening at the Corcoran Museum when my wife was Chief Curator there. I don’t remember our conversation about whatever political issue was then roiling Washington, but I do remember the impression he left. He was precisely as described by these real presidents: modest and genuine, with time to listen, absorb, and appreciate what people were saying to him.

I was also present for his March on Washington speech in 1963. His was a radical voice, but a radical voice in favor of a reasonable goal to be reached with nonviolent means: he wanted the equality promised in America’s founding documents, no more but no less. His was not the voice of separation or threats of violence, but rather of integration and reason.

No, President Trump was not at the funeral. He would not have been welcomed, and he would not have been at ease. His is an America where suburbs resist integration, real estate moguls discriminate against minorities, police are licensed to mistreat citizens, tax cuts are for the rich, pardons are for people the president likes, and the election is over before all the votes are counted.

Real presidents don’t think that way. And John Lewis brought out the best in them.

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Biden will have his hands full

Time for a summer update on President Trump’s diplomatic initiatives, more or less in his priority order:

  1. Trade with China: importing less than half of what is called for in the “first phase” agreement.
  2. Re-initiating nuclear talks with Iran: Trump said more than a year ago he would talk with no pre-conditions. Tehran won’t, despite “maximum pressure.” Iran wants sanctions eased first.
  3. Getting rid of North Korea’s nuclear weapons: Kim Jong-un has in effect said “no.”
  4. Ending the war in Afghanistan: The withdrawal is proceeding, but progress in intra-Afghan talks is minimal.
  5. Removal of Venezuelan President Maduro: He has weathered the challenge and remains firmly in power.
  6. South China Sea: The US has rejected China’s sovereignty claim but is doing nothing about its military outposts.
  7. Helping Ukraine force the Russians out of Donbas: The Administration has provided lethal weapons to no avail.
  8. Reducing Saudi oil production to jack up world prices: Saudi production is down, but world prices are still in a trough.
  9. Initiating a democratic transition in Syria: Congress has beefed up sanctions, but Trump can’t even begin to get Assad out.
  10. “Deal of the century”: Not going anywhere but into the shredder. Even Israeli annexation of part of the West Bank is blocked.

This skips a lot. For example:

  • the President telling Chinese President Xi that it was fine to put (Muslim) Uighurs into concentration camps,
  • withdrawing from the Paris Climate accord, the Trans-Pacific Partnership, and several favorable arms control agreements with Russia,
  • moving US troops out of Germany to the delight of Moscow,
  • failing to counter Russian bounties for Taliban who kill US soldiers in Afghanistan,
  • saying the right things about Hong Kong and withdrawing its trade preferences, but with not discernible impact,
  • not responding to foreign initiatives to undermine the US elections, and
  • withdrawing from the World Health Organization in the midst of a pandemic.

American foreign policy has rarely been so ineffectual, never mind whether the priorities are right. The Administration doesn’t think past its own next move. The President is incapable of it and won’t let others do it for him. He behaves as if the adversary has no options. Much of what the Administration does is for show, without considering however how most of the rest of the world sees the situation. The only customers for this foreign policy are the domestic audience of China hawks, Russia doves, oil and coal producers, and evangelical Christians, along with President Putin, Prime Minister Netanyahu and a few other would-be autocrats around the world.

Getting out of the foreign policy hole Trump has dug will be a big challenge. President Biden, if there ever is one, will have his hands full even if he pays attention only to the first three of the items above. Let’s hope he can somehow save us from the consequences of four dreadful years.

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Stevenson’s army, July 30

– LA Times has a summary of Robert Draper’s new book on the Iraq war.  [I’m happy to say I just got a copy from my newly reopened library.]
– I have a piece debunking the “wag the dog” theory. Yes, foreign policy decisions including use of force, are often driven by domestic political considerations, but the US just doesn’t start wars in presidential election years.

DOD now sees protesters and journalists as “adversaries” in mandatory training manuals.
– The Gang of 8 are feuding over what to tell us about foreign interference in the election.
– DOD announced withdrawal of troops from Germany. Fred Kaplan has a good critique.
Reading between the lines, it looks to me as if DOD is slow-rolling the matter, making it easy to reverse course after the election.
Daily Beast reports on all the dark money flooding into our elections this year.
Congratulations to the NYT editor who wrote the line saying the tech execs who testified yesterday all wore “trust me suits” and ties.
Breaking news: the quarry for the Stonehenge stones has been found 15 miles away. Still not know is how they were transported 4500 years ago.

My SAIS colleague Charlie Stevenson distributes this almost daily news digest of foreign/defense/national security policy to “Stevenson’s army” via Googlegroups. I plan to republish here. To get Stevenson’s army by email, send a blank email (no subject or text in the body) to stevensons-army+subscribe@googlegroups.com. You’ll get an email confirming your join request. Click “Join This Group” and follow the instructions to join. Once you have joined, you can adjust your email delivery preferences (if you want every email or a digest of the emails).

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High level ho hum

The Atlantic Council today unveiled at a Western Balkans Partnership Summit its latest product. Some readers may remember that I panned a previous “Balkans Forward” report. This new one suffers none of the faults I cited then. It is a high-level step in a good direction: a statement signed by presidents and prime ministers in favor of economic integration among the Western Balkans 6 (or WB6: that’s North Macedonia, Albania, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, and Serbia) and integration of that region with the European Union. Too bad–and symptomatic of underlying political problems–that they did not sign it, but instead put it out as “the chair’s” conclusions. Not clear to me who the chair was.

The dissolution of Yugoslavia in the 1990s produced five of the WB6, three of which had to fight for independence. It was only natural that newly independent states, and new states in a conflicted neighborhood, would put up border fences and controls where there had been none previously. Albania, an adversary of Socialist Yugoslavia and one of the most isolated countries in the world during the Cold War, already had tough border controls. The result was economic fragmentation in the former Yugoslav space and beyond that has persisted far beyond any serious security threats.

Jim O’Brien at the Partnership Summit cited a figure of 10% of WB6 GDP lost to long waiting times, documentation issues, infrastructure bottlenecks, and other barriers to integration. The Covid-19 pandemic makes these particularly unfortunate, he argued, as the WB6 have an opportunity to gain more investment as the EU seeks to shorten its supply lines and improve its economic resilience. The WB6, located between the main body of the EU and Greece, could benefit as a result.

Presidents and Prime Ministers of the WB6 have now committed to reduce delays at their borders, cut red tape that increases trade friction, and build much-needed infrastructure to improve connectivity. Favorable bilateral arrangements are supposed to be automatically available to all 6, a kind of “most-favored nation” provision. Donors–including the EU, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, and the US Development Finance Corporation–have committed to finance the effort. Money, as the EBRD representative at the meeting suggested, should be no object, not least because the EU has already committed 13.5 billion euros to the region to counter the Covid-19 impact. The President of Serbia and the Prime Minister of Albania propose monthly meetings at their level to monitor implementation. Progress will also be checked at the Berlin Process Summit planned for Sofia in the fall.

All of this is good, if rather mundane. As Albanian Prime Minister Rama put it, small steps can add up to big things. “Green lanes,” which by EU definition delay shipments less than 15 minutes at a border, are to be instituted among the WB6 and several of the leaders want them instituted between the WB6 and the EU. Infrastructure projects are to be made “shovel ready.” Operations of the Central European Free Trade Agreement, to which the WB6 are all parties, are to be improved and expanded to intellectual property and environment. Phytosanitary certificates are to be harmonized. Chambers of commerce are to be involved in monitoring implementation. The existing Regional Coordination Council will ride herd to keep things moving.

The barriers to achieving these and bigger steps toward integration are real. As Serbian President Vucic noted, it has taken 7 or 8 years to even get ready to begin work on the Nis/Pristina part of a highway that has been finished between Pristina and Durres (in Albania) for that entire time. He was not sanguine about removing existing barriers to trade between Kosovo and Serbia, which exist mainly on his own side of the border for political rather than economic reasons. Transportation agreements between Serbia and Kosovo supposedly negotiated by US envoy Grenell went unmentioned (or at least I didn’t hear them mentioned), I suppose because they are not implemented. I heard no commitment by Bosnia and Herzegovina Prime Minister Tegeltija to accepting Kosovo passports for visa-free travel.

The fact is that the barriers to economic integration are not all bureaucratic. Almost any trade issue can be seen through the lense of national sovereignty and political convenience. Domestic politicians will seek to gain advantage from battering the powers that be for perceived softness toward a disliked state or ethnicity. Serbia has lots of non-tariff barriers that block imports and travel from Kosovo. Bosnia does as well. For both, the reasons are political, not economic. Until the 2018 agreement (Prespa) between North Macedonia and Greece, the road to Thessaloniki was not freely available to North Macedonian trade and talks are still ongoing to remove barriers. Not to mention the EU’s refusal so far to implement the visa-free travel for Kosovo that Pristina earned by implementing more than 100 technical requirements. But the political stars have not yet aligned.

I might add: sometimes political stars don’t align because someone who benefits from trade barriers doesn’t want them to. The barriers among the WB6 present enormous opportunities for corruption: I doubt the smugglers have much trouble getting through, because they are ready and willing to pay. There might even be one or two leaders among the WB6 who benefit from the payoffs.

So yes, regional economic integration presents enormous opportunities. But it is yet to be shown that the WB6 are prepared to look past the political barriers and get the job done. That is why participation of the leaders is needed for ho-hum problems: only they can waive the political obstacles and go for the economic benefits. I won’t be surprised if they hesitate, so the EU and US will need to be ready to intervene with political muscle as well as hard cash from time to time. Let’s hope it works.

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