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Home / WORLD / The EU empire: Brussels has kept Bosnia on a leash for decades. Now, it’s become a new battleground against ‘Russian influence’

The EU empire: Brussels has kept Bosnia on a leash for decades. Now, it’s become a new battleground against ‘Russian influence’

Moreover, the EU has actually become a main contributor to the political conflict in the country, due to its attempts to assert exclusive influence. As Russia challenges the West’s hegemonic ambitions in the region, the other side is likely to blame Moscow for the unravelling of the peace in Bosnia.

After the Cold War, the West contributed to dismantling Yugoslavia as an independent entity and thereafter sought to put its constituent parts back together under the collective hegemony of the EU and NATO. The West established a parallel international legal infrastructure detached from international law under the UN Charter.

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Former Italian prime minister Giuliano Amato once cautioned that unless Bosnia became an EU member, then the alternative was that the EU “will become mired instead as a neo-colonial power”. More recently, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov reaffirmed this sentiment by denouncing the “unacceptable colonial mentality” of the EU in Bosnia. As Western dominance declines, the entire parallel framework of international collapses.

Satellite Bosnia

The EU’s administration of Bosnia is often framed as colonial rule. The extraordinary powers used to govern Bosnia from abroad were intended for a politically neutral body to implement the Dayton peace agreement, before restoring the full sovereignty of Bosnia. Instead, these powers were appropriated by the EU and used to dismantle Dayton. All paths for Bosnia to regain its sovereignty are now blocked by Brussels.

The Bosnian War ended in 1995 with the deal that laid the foundation for the Bosnian constitution, which stipulated that Bosnia should consist of two autonomous entities – a Bosniak-Croat entity (Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina) and a Serb entity (Republika Srpska). For the Bosnian Serbs, this was the third and last option as they had fought to either prevent Bosnia from seceding from Yugoslavia or alternatively allow the Serbs to stay within Yugoslavia by breaking away from a secessionist Bosnia.

The UN authorised the establishment of the Office of High Representative (OHR) in Bosnia to implement the entity system, and in 1997 the OHR granted itself more powers to enact laws and remove elected officials who are deemed to undermine the Dayton agreement. Thereafter the High Representatives (HR) began “Europeanising” the OHR to give the EU de facto control over the governance of Bosnia.

Once the EU had asserted near-colonial control over Bosnia, the purpose of these powers changed as the OHR began transitioning “from Dayton to Brussels”. The EU argued that Bosnia could only be stable and peaceful if it became a member of the bloc, and to qualify to join, Bosnia had to dismantle the autonomous entity system and centralise power in Sarajevo. The EU has made it clear it will not return sovereignty to Bosnia until the country “is a peaceful, viable state on course to European integration”.

The ongoing tensions between Brussels and Republika Srpska are thus riddled with contradictions. Republika Srpska prioritises its autonomous entity rights above EU membership and therefore accuses Brussels of exercising unlawful control over the country. Republika Srpska frequently cautions it will reject the dictates and possibly secede from Bosnia if the EU continues to undermine the Dayton agreement and the Bosnian constitution. Meanwhile, Brussels has awkwardly and disingenuously accused Republika Srpska of undermining “the spirit” of the Dayton agreement by opposing the EU’s Dayton powers. Despite the fact that those powers are being used to undermine the agreement in the first place.

Russia vs the EU

Brussels has, reasonably, argued that the fragile region should not become a geopolitical chessboard, but unreasonably argued that power games can only be prevented by imposing the EU’s exclusive influence. The bloc’s pursuit of “hegemonic peace” implies that any foreign influence from other spheres is dangerous and must be contained.

Russia is profoundly critical of the EU’s attempt to exercise exclusive influence over Bosnia – and the authoritarian and unlawful means it required. Not mincing his words, Lavrov argued that “this is a philosophy deeply rooted in the ancient colonial and half-colonial legacy of many European countries”.

From Moscow’s perspective, the situation in Bosnia captures the faults of the crumbling unipolar order imposed by the West after the Cold War. The West established an international system based on hegemony that required a parallel legal framework based on sovereign inequality to facilitate it. NATO monopolised security in Europe, and the EU asserted itself as a “regulatory empire” as neighbouring states were expected to adopt Brussels’ regulations and laws to obtain access to the huge market.

Brussels’ efforts to export EU legislation to govern the rules for Russian energy companies with the “third energy package” has been a key source of conflict with Moscow. Even international law per the UN Charter is incrementally replaced with the Orwellian concept of a “rules-based international system”, which does not have any specific rules but endows the West with the prerogative of violating international law under the auspices of advancing liberal ideals.

As Western hegemony declined this system became increasingly fragile and we have now reached the breaking point where the current state of affairs no longer work. History demonstrates that empires begin to crumble when they overextend, as maintaining the empire exhausts resources and requires illegitimate means of control. That point has been reached as Russia rejects the ambiguous “rules-based international order”, the EU’s extraterritorial jurisdiction and the parallel legal framework in Bosnia.

Moscow is therefore likely to offer more support to the president of Republika Srpska, who argues in favour of closing down the OHR and restoring the sovereignty to Bosnia. The EU should accept the new international distribution of power and work with Russia to develop mutually acceptable solutions. This involves phasing out the OHR that was intended to exist for two-three years to implement the Dayton agreement but has now existed for more than a quarter of a century and driven the country to the verge of rule from afar.

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The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.

© 2021, paradox. All rights reserved.

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