Balkans Russia
© Sputnik/ Sergei Guneev
Russia has always enjoyed a special relationship with some Balkan nations and the West has never been happy about it. Western capitals seem to have finally decided it is time to act.

Of late the European Union and the United States have been trying to break the bond between Moscow and the Balkans by including the region in their sphere of influence.

For Brussels, driving a wedge between the two sides means accelerating the long stagnant process of the bloc's expansion. Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro and Serbia have all been promised that they will join the EU someday but the bureaucrats in Brussels have been notoriously vague on details.

Not surprisingly, they are not the ones spearheading the process now - Berlin is. "The European Commission does nothing in the Balkans now ... 'without a green light from Germany,'" the Economist quoted an unnamed senior diplomat as saying.

Germany, often seen as the biggest advocate of the European integration, has been committed to integrating the Balkan nations into the union for some time. This became evident in July when Angela Merkel paid a visit to three countries in the region - Albania, Bosnia and Serbia.


Comment: History repeats:
The writer worryingly suggested that if Russia continues to play by the rules of the game established by the West, it will never be able to achieve its strategic goals, including the prevention of a new European war. "There is a well-known super-task in Russian European policy: to prevent a new conflict with Germany, especially in light of Washington's efforts to set the Germans up for a war with Russia over Ukraine. Can Russian policy cope with this task, flirting with the political minorities of German politics? Of course not. Then why do we attempt to persuade ourselves that everything will change - that these politically marginalized forces will grow up and show themselves?"

If Russia plays by the West's rules it will lose

Merekel Nikolic Serbia Germany
© REUTERS/ MARKO DJURICAGerman Chancellor Angela Merkel with Serbian President Tomislav Nikolic before their meeting in Belgrade, Serbia July 9, 2015
There is an abundance of reasons for the US and EU's growing interest in the Balkans, but one in particular stands out.

"Sympathy for Russia is rising in some [Balkan] countries," the weekly newspaper asserted. For instance, Serbia is contemplating taking part in a joint military exercise scheduled to be held in Russia in September.

The West sees Russia's warm relations with the Balkans as a dangerous geopolitical development which must be undermined. And expanding the bloc seems to be the way to do it.