Serbia considers buying Chinese missiles despite US warning
 
Serbia is considering buying a modern Chinese air
defense missile system, the Serbian president said Tuesday, as the United
States warned that such deals with Beijing could jeopardize the Balkan
country’s proclaimed European Union membership goals.
Aleksandar Vucic said that “we were thinking, but we
have not yet purchased” the FK-3 system — the export version of the Chinese
last-generation, medium range HQ-22 anti-aircraft system.
Serbia, which has been beefing up its military
mainly with Russian aircraft and armored vehicles, last month received six
Chinese CH-92A attack and reconnaissance drones. That made Serbia the first
European country to deploy the Chinese unmanned aerial vehicles.
The U.S. Embassy in Belgrade said that “procuring
military and defense equipment is a sovereign decision. However, governments
should understand the short- and long-term risks and costs involved in doing
business with Chinese companies.”
“Procurement choices should reflect Serbia’s stated
policy goal of greater European integration,” an embassy statement said.
“Alternative vendors which are not beholden to authoritarian regimes offer
equipment that is both capable of meeting Serbia’s defense need and comparable
in quality and cost.”
Reacting to the statement, Vucic said: “Whenever we
decide to buy something, somebody has something against it.”
He claimed that the FK-3 anti-aircraft system is not
on the list of U.S. sanctions against China and that the purchase depends on
the financial terms of the deal.
“We will make the decision as a free and sovereign
country,” Vucic said.
The Russian and Chinese arming of Serbia, as well as
their growing political and economic influence in the Balkan state, is being
watched with unease in the West and among Serbia’s neighbors.
Tensions are growing in the Balkans, which went
through a devastating civil war in the 1990s. NATO intervened in Serbia to stop
a bloody Serb crackdown against Kosovo Albanian separatists in 1999.
Serbia, which formally wants to join the EU,
declared military neutrality in 2006 and joined NATO’s Partnership for Peace
outreach program. Its populist leadership is against membership in the Western
military alliance although most of Serbia’s neighbors are within NATO.
Asked about the latest arming of Serbia with the
modern Chinese air defense system, a NATO official who spoke on customary
condition of anonymity said “defense procurement is a national decision.”
“Serbia has the right to freely choose its political
and security arrangements. NATO and Serbia are close partners and we are
committed to strengthening our partnership with Serbia, while fully respecting
its policy of neutrality,” the official said.
          
     
                               
 
 


