Maliqi: Russia Patrusev this week in Belgrade, Putin aims at escalation of situation in northern Kosovo and Bosnia

Analyst Agon Maliqi has been alarmed for a visit to Belgrade this week. He says that in Belgrade, Russian security service chief Patosev heads up. “Synim, probably, is pressure on Belgrade to open a new front for destabilisation in the region, above all to support the [...] initiative.
Analyst Agon Maliqi has been alarmed for a visit to Belgrade this week.
He says that in Belgrade, Russian security service chief Patosev heads up.
The “Synim, probably, is pressure on Belgrade to open a new front of destabilisation in the region, above all to support Dodik's initiative for Bosnia's deterioration, but also the possibility for any possible escalation in northern Kosovo”, Maliki writes, Pryskopi follows.
Full text:
Good morning. At the height of tensions in Ukraine, Russia's security service chief, Patosev, one of Putin's closest people, comes to Belgrade this week.
The goal, likely, is pressure on Belgrade to open a new front for destabilisation in the region, above all to support Dodik's initiative for Bosnia's deregulation, but also the possibility of any possible escalation in northern Kosovo.
Vuciq has supported the Russian agenda in many areas, but in an attempt to balance and maintain Western reports, and aware of the consequences, until now he has proved skeptical and controlling Dodik.
If you continue to resist this pressure at this moment of major geopolitical breakdowns, the scores won by Vuciq to the west, especially in the United States, are high. If you enter adventures, it burns all the diplomatic efforts of a decade. Whatever the circumstances and whatever the outcome, this conflict between the West and Russia will redefine the context of security in Europe, where Russia sees the fate of the Balkans and that of the former Soviet states as interrelated as a range of interest with trade opportunities and exchange.
In this context, NATO-protected Kosovo does not have the luxury of continuing with sovereign and negligible approach to allies, pursuing tactical victories that fuel the excitement of the moment (eg. The plates, elections) and losing strategic perspective.
The result of this approach is that Kosovo no longer expects anyone of the high levels in the US, even for coffee in Munich conference margins.










