Sunday, August 20th., 2017
NATO's Balkan Dream: 'Gaining Access to Key Strategic Facilities'
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AP Photo/ Sava Radovanovic
The
Constitutional Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina has ruled that the
Veliki Zep military facility in the country’s Serb-dominated Republika
Srpska is owned by the state. In an interview with Sputnik, Serbian
political analyst Andjelko Kozomara said the decision could help Bosnia
move toward NATO membership
“NATO
wants to gain access to key strategic facilities. The Yugoslav Army
always deployed its bases at strategic locations and by registering them
as “prospective military property,” the Bosnian authorities are making
them available to NATO, which plans to station its forces there,” he
said.
He added that the Constitutional Court’s ruling violates the terms of the 1995 Dayton Accordspeace accord under which 49 percent of the country’s territory belongs to Republika Srpska.
By
re-registering Veliki Zep and other military installations the Court is
actually downsizing the territory of the country’s Serb-dominated
entity.
Re-registration of the so-called “prospective military property” is
the final step in Bosnia and Herzegovina’s bid to join NATO, the
so-called “Membership Action Plan.”
“Just like Serbia, the majority of Bosnian Serbs do not want to join NATO. If Serbia does not want to join NATO, then Republika Srpska will not let Bosnia and Herzegovina join this military alliance. We fear, however, that things may develop just as they did in 1992 when Croats and Bosnians voted in a referendum to break away from Yugoslavia. The Bosnian Serbs did not vote, but the international community still recognized the results of that plebiscite,” Andjelko Kozomara continued.
Meanwhile, the vice speaker of Republika Srpska’s parliament, Nenad Stevandic said that the re-registration of military property will by no means facilitate Bosnia and Herzegovina’s integration into NATO because the Bosnian Serb Republic will not abide by the Court’s ruling, which violates the terms of the Dayton Accords and creates a new crisis in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
He added that in a situation like this Bosnia and Herzegovina will not be able to join any alliances.
“This is a fundamental principle of the federal makeup of Bosnia and Herzegovina,” Ivantsov emphasized.
Sarajevo and Brussels have been discussing Bosnia’s NATO membership since the mid-2000s.
Bosnia and Herzegovina joined NATO’s Partnership for Peace program in 2006. It was expected to join NATO by 2011, but the plan hit a snag over the need to hand over more than 60 military facilities to the federal government.
He added that the Constitutional Court’s ruling violates the terms of the 1995 Dayton Accordspeace accord under which 49 percent of the country’s territory belongs to Republika Srpska.

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REUTERS/ Dado Ruvic
“Just like Serbia, the majority of Bosnian Serbs do not want to join NATO. If Serbia does not want to join NATO, then Republika Srpska will not let Bosnia and Herzegovina join this military alliance. We fear, however, that things may develop just as they did in 1992 when Croats and Bosnians voted in a referendum to break away from Yugoslavia. The Bosnian Serbs did not vote, but the international community still recognized the results of that plebiscite,” Andjelko Kozomara continued.
Meanwhile, the vice speaker of Republika Srpska’s parliament, Nenad Stevandic said that the re-registration of military property will by no means facilitate Bosnia and Herzegovina’s integration into NATO because the Bosnian Serb Republic will not abide by the Court’s ruling, which violates the terms of the Dayton Accords and creates a new crisis in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
He added that in a situation like this Bosnia and Herzegovina will not be able to join any alliances.
“They are pressuring us to set off a new crisis
and blame it all on the Serbs. They have been using this practice
since 1992 by making decisions we can’t subscribe to because they
deprive us of our legitimate rights, and then blaming us for
‘destabilizing the situation’”, Nenad Stevandic told Sputnik.
Commenting on the situation in an interview with Republika Srpska’s
news agency, the Russian ambassador to Sarajevo Pyotr Ivantsov said that
matters directly pertaining to one of the country’s entities cannot be
decided without its consent.
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REUTERS/ Dado Ruvic
Bosnia and Herzegovina joined NATO’s Partnership for Peace program in 2006. It was expected to join NATO by 2011, but the plan hit a snag over the need to hand over more than 60 military facilities to the federal government.