Current:Home > InvestSeparatist Bosnian Serb leader Milorad Dodik vows to tear his country apart despite US warnings -Wealth Legacy Solutions
Separatist Bosnian Serb leader Milorad Dodik vows to tear his country apart despite US warnings
View
Date:2025-04-16 04:12:12
BANJA LUKA, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) — The Bosnian Serbs’ separatist leader vowed to carry on weakening his war-scarred country to the point where it will tear apart, despite a pledge by the United States to prevent such an outcome.
“I am not irrational, I know that America’s response will be to use force … but I have no reason to be frightened by that into sacrificing (Serb) national interests,” Milorad Dodik, the president of Bosnia’s Serb-run part, told The Associated Press in an interview Friday.
He said any any attempt to use international intervention to further strengthen Bosnia’s shared, multiethnic institutions will be met by Bosnian Serb decision to abandon them completely and take the country back to the state of disunity and dysfunction it was in at the end of its brutal interethnic war in the 1990s.
Because Western democracies will not be agreeable to that, he added, “in the next stage, we will be forced by their reaction to declare full independence” of the Serb-controlled regions of Bosnia.
The Bosnian War started in 1992 when Belgrade-backed Bosnian Serbs tried to create an “ethnically pure” region with the aim of joining neighboring Serbia by killing and expelling the country’s Croats and Bosniaks, who are mostly Muslims. More than 100,000 people were killed and upward of 2 million, or over half of the country’s population, were driven from their homes before a peace agreement was reached in Dayton, Ohio, late in 1995.
The agreement divided Bosnia into two entities — the Serb-run Republika Srpska and the Bosniak-Croat Federation — which were given wide autonomy but remained linked by some shared, multiethnic institutions. It also instituted the Office of the High Representative, an international body charged with shepherding the implementation of the peace agreement that was given broad powers to impose laws or dismiss officials who undermined the fragile post-war ethnic balance, including judges, civil servants, and members of parliament.
Over the years, the OHR has pressured Bosnia’s bickering ethnic leaders to build shared, statewide institutions, including the army, intelligence and security agencies, the top judiciary and the tax administration. However, further bolstering of the existing institutions and the creation of new ones is required if Bosnia is to reach its declared goal of joining the European Union.
Dodik appeared unperturbed Friday by the statement posted a day earlier on X, formerly known as Twitter, by James O’Brien, the U.S. assistant secretary of State for European and Eurasian affairs, that Washington will act if anyone tries to change “the basic element” of the 1995 peace agreement for Bosnia, and that there is “no right of secession.”
“Among Serbs, one thing is clear and definite and that is a growing realization that the years and decades ahead of us are the years and decades of Serb national unification,” Dodik said.
“Brussels is using the promise of EU accession as a tool to unitarize Bosnia,” said Dodik, who is staunchly pro-Russian, adding: “In principle, our policy still is that we want to join (the EU), but we no longer see that as our only alternative.”
The EU, he said, “had proven itself capable of working against its own interests” by siding with Washington against Moscow when Russia launched its ongoing invasion of Ukraine.
Dodik, who has been calling for the separation of the Serb entity from the rest of Bosnia for over a decade, has faced British and U.S. sanctions for his policies but has had Russia’s support.
There are widespread fears that Russia is trying to destabilize Bosnia and the rest of the region to shift at least some world attention from its war in Ukraine.
“Whether U.S. and Britain like it or not, we will turn the administrative boundary between (Bosnia’s two) entities into our national border,” Dodik said.
veryGood! (5)
Related
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Penelope Disick Gets Sweet 11th Birthday Tributes From Kourtney Kardashian, Scott Disick & Travis Barker
- A University of Maryland Center Just Gave Most State Agencies Ds and Fs on an Environmental Justice ‘Scorecard’
- Russia’s War in Ukraine Reveals a Risk for the EV Future: Price Shocks in Precious Metals
- 'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
- Inside Clean Energy: This Virtual Power Plant Is Trying to Tackle a Housing Crisis and an Energy Crisis All at Once
- Save 50% On This Calf and Foot Stretcher With 1,800+ 5-Star Amazon Reviews
- Has inflation changed how you shop and spend? We want to hear from you
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Inside Clean Energy: The Idea of Energy Efficiency Needs to Be Reinvented
Ranking
- How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
- ¿Por qué permiten que las compañías petroleras de California, asolada por la sequía, usen agua dulce?
- Andrew Tate is indicted on human trafficking and rape charges in Romania
- Experts raised safety concerns about OceanGate years before its Titanic sub vanished
- Jorge Ramos reveals his final day with 'Noticiero Univision': 'It's been quite a ride'
- Sony and Marvel and the Amazing Spider-Man Films Rights Saga
- Mega Millions jackpot grows to $820 million. See winning numbers for July 21.
- Inside Clean Energy: The US’s New Record in Renewables, Explained in Three Charts
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
A watershed moment in the west?
'It's gonna be a hot labor summer' — unionized workers show up for striking writers
Our first podcast episode made by AI
'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
Nature vs. nurture - what twin studies mean for economics
A cashless cautionary tale
Inside Clean Energy: US Electric Vehicle Sales Soared in First Quarter, while Overall Auto Sales Slid