Showing posts with label Flores. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flores. Show all posts

Thursday, 14 April 2016

(VIDEO) Joaquin Flores to RT on Macedonia: "Western powers are mobilizing the minority against democratic processes"

April 14, 2016 -


Joaquin Flores of Fort Russ, the Center for Syncretic Studies, and the Independent Journalists Association for Peace (AJKF) appeared on RT to discuss the latest turmoil shaking Macedonia.

Flores stressed that although many Macedonians may have legitimate grievances against the current government, the latest violent protests in response to wire-tapping scandals are merely another Western attempt at subversion. "Many Macedonians are right to be outraged about certain things. However, there is strong evidence - conclusive evidence - that much of this protest has been hijacked by Western powers in order to subvert the sovereignty of the state of Macedonia," Flores said.

The zig-zagging crisis in Macedonia, according to Flores, has to be understood in the larger context of NATO's pressuring of the Balkan states to cede more leeway and rights for entrenching its hegemony in the region. On this note, one of NATO's long-standing objectives is the removal of the somewhat resistant Macedonian government presiding over an increasingly polarized society. 

When asked whether or not the new protest tide could culminate in a coup, Flores stressed that everything depends on the state's actions and on the resistance of the majority of Macedonians who oppose foreign intervention. Flores recalled that the recent coup-attempt by Western-backed protests was beaten back by anti-NATO, pro-government mobilizations which outnumbered the "opposition" by nearly three times. In the end, Flores recalled frankly, it's important to remember that EU and NATO membership would devastate large swathes of ordinary Macedonians and their livelihoods.

"Now they [Western powers] are resorting to taking a minority of the population, albeit a sizable one, having them mobilized on the streets, and work against the democratic processes that have already decided the present government in Macedonia," Flores explained.

Overall, Flores predicts that the situation will simmer down as long as the current authorities act cleverly, calmly, and refuse to give in to Western-backed protest siege. 




     Follow us on Facebook!                                                  
              Facebook                                   

       Follow us on Twitter!
              Twitter               

             Donate!

Monday, 11 April 2016

Bausman and fraud at Russia Insider? Lavelle blows the whistle

April 11th, 2016 ~ Fort Russ News ~

~ A Fort Russ Exclusive ~ FR Editorial Staff with Joaquin Flores ~






Fort Russ's exclusive investigation sheds light on the allegations of impropriety over at Russia Insider and the story behind it all


RT's Peter Lavelle, host of the station's flagship show "Cross Talk", sent shock-waves through the alternative media community on April 7th with a stunning revelation. He published a Facebook status which acknowledged what the Fort Russ team has been receiving information on for almost a year: the mounting controversies and possible evidence of fraud, impropriety, and the alleged lack of transparency of Russia Insider's owner and Editor in Chief, Charles Bausman. 

This is what Lavelle revealed on April 7th on his Facebook status: 



The concern which Fort Russ first made public in November of last year, that  Russia Insider was among “questionably financed and managed sites promising an ‘inside view of Russia’”, was echoed by Lavelle in his April 7th statement: “I too question the transparency and openness of the site’s management and the entire operation. There appears to be no accountability.”

Russia Insider has become a popular news content aggregator and permanent fundraising campaign, which reproduces news stories taken from other various websites sympathetic to Russian foreign policy.  Readers are asked to donate money for this content which is already readily available elsewhere for free, with the unremunerated costs of creating original content shifted onto other sites' writers. It is a very interesting business model which other popular alternative journalists have regularly criticized. This was not the model that Lavelle, nor most of the other volunteers and employees had in mind. Bausman had promised them, as well as the public, hard-hitting original and investigative journalism. This much failed to materialize, by and large. 

However, this only touches on the surface of the site's problems.


Charles Bausman


Soon after it debuted in September 2014, aiming to fill a void and engage in real journalism, it quickly became clear that Russia Insider was having some delay in hiring journalists. Instead, they quickly placed ads for professional fundraisers and marketers that could help increase the coffers of one of several LLC's, controlled by Charles Bausman - one registered in the US, named 'Insider Media LLC', and the other in the Russian Federation. LLC's are not non-profits, but are for profit limited liability corporations which indemnify the personal assets of its owners from claims or suits brought about by other parties, public and private.

While the legal implications are unclear to Fort Russ in relation to how the LLC's were used and structured between the US and Russia, any regular reader of Russia Insider could attest to their marketing strategy, which strongly implied that they were a non profit organization which used all donations on salaries for journalists. On their 'Support' page, they encourage tax-deductible donations of over $1000 to go to a certain "Consortium for Independent Journalists".



The "Consortium for Independent Journalists" is actually award winning journalist Robert Parry's organization, founded in 1995, and is connected with Parry's Consortium news. It would seem that Parry and Bausman had some arrangement for contributions containing the memo line 'Russia Insider' to be transferred to Bausman. Fort Russ cannot offer any statements of fact about the relationship between the LLC and the non-profit. nor about the legality of transferring funds from a non-profit over to a LLC, or directly to Bausman himself, if indeed that was the procedure.

The website consistently claimed that 100% of the proceeds went to 'journalists'. They misinformed the public that, "We'll only spend it on journalist salaries, nothing else. Period."



In the course of Fort Russ's investigation, it has been explained to us from people very close to the operation that the above claim does not have any merit. According to one anonymous source, formerly very close to this area of Russia Insider's scheme, none (or a negligible amount) of the money raised by Russia Insider was spent on what can properly be called 'Journalist salaries'.

According to this source, instead, Bausman brought in his then wife, and her brother; saying that his brother in law was brought in on paid salary in part because she had "child support payments to make". 

The source also explained that initially she had been very interested in working with Russia Insider, after being introduced to Bausman.  Bausman gave her the "whole pitch", and had intimate knowledge of the fundraising methods, but was shut out from any information about what was done after the funds were raised. Indeed transparency and communicating were always mysteriously lacking at Russia Insider, according to the source. She compared notes with another employee. 

What she told us is that things fell apart over the last two weeks when various employees and people working on the project started to share stories and corroborated things that Bausman had done and said to different people.  "And as far as not having meetings that was kind of a big deal with Charles, is that he didn't like the idea of having meetings, that it was so corporate, and he was all about this freedom of expression, and we just kind of coast along as we do."

It appears that Bausman had some plan that wasn't explained to the team at all. "But at the same time we were having trouble figuring out which direction we were trying to go. Especially as one of the founding members was asking, are we going into a sort of volunteer driven donation based project website? Media criticism? Or are we going into a, 'how much money can we raise from investors, and you know equity, and then an exit strategy and go public? Or fully become a media company? So a lot of this stuff was going back and forth, whether it would be in speeches, emails, different stories, crowd funding, you know, nobody really knew what the direction was. But we all trusted Charles to tell us what to do, you know, to point us in the right direction. 

Problems in transparency and a lack of good corporate governance really became more prominent. "And then he had his girlfriend at the time who he said, you know she's actually going to come on board, and she's gonna become our financial controller. You've got to be thinking to yourself, now that's got to be a conflict of interest."  

"We just started seeing our budget increase more and more. But donations and advertising revenue were staying the same. Our traffic was staying the same ... "

Another source who we reached out to, who also briefly was very close to RI's investor outreach operations, explained that there was at least at first, no actual legal entity called 'Russia Insider', there was the LLC which listed Russia Insider as an asset. This claim about the non-entity nature of Russia Insider is corroborated in the contract which Lavelle, earlier today, posted on Facebook.

Bausman falsely claimed, according to our sources, in attempting to push for investors, that the site was worth some $2 million dollars US, in a failed attempt to get about $300,000 poured in. This figure is about 5000% (five thousand percent) higher than what it is realistically valued at. The reality was that this was just a content aggregating website with little to no original content that was only getting about 20 to 25 thousand unique interactions a day. This is less than, for example Fort Russ, but the presentation of Bausman's site and the ongoing campaigning and public misrepresentations of growth certainly painted a different story. 

Robert Parry and the former employees are not the only legitimate journalists or media workers who were unwittingly brought into Bausman's "disingenuous scheme". When Bausman approached Peter Lavelle about the idea of starting a legitimate news website business, with a mission to counter the mainstream western media disinformation about Russia, Lavelle was understandably excited and supportive. He brought Bausman on his show to promote the new site, and gave Bausman access to air-time other shows as well as introducing Bausman to several of RT's most competent behind the scenes media workers. Some of these media workers were, according to them, lied to by Bausman about the nature of the organization, its status and purpose. There were no labor contracts for the 'employees', or financial statements of the sort that would indicate that Russia Insider was in fact an actual organization.

Peter Lavelle was contacted at the beginning by Bausman who had pitched the idea of Russia Insider to Lavelle, and offered Lavelle both 25% percent equity in the start-up, as well as other rights to purchase or sell parts of this non-entity.  This strange status helps explain the language written on the contract (published below) between Bausman and Lavelle, which unconventionally posits that Bausman "[H]ereby agrees that when a legal entity is formed for ownership of the Russia Insider [...] news site, and other related properties, that JC will transfer 25% of his shares of the [...]"

On April 11th, Lavelle made another major statement, directly accusing Bausman of fraud.




Lavelle was concerned with the operation's lack of transparency early on, being pushed to the side by Bausman who refused to discuss details and specifics with Lavelle after their initial agreement was made.  Lavelle's relationships was at arm's length, and was not privy to any of the fund raising campaigns, and his expressed concerns about those practices and the uses of those funds went unanswered for many months.   

We spoke to Lavelle earlier today, who gave Fort Russ this exclusive statement:


"My relationship with RI has essentially been negative, very negative. I got involved in the project because I truly believe Russia gets a bad rap in western mainstream media. I then believed Charles Bausman was of the same opinion. I went to great lengths to support RI and Bausman. I was also a significant shareholder. It was Bausman who suggested the number of 25%, not me."

Lavelle continues, "At the same time, Bausman acted in very secretive ways. He systematically cut me out of any meaningful interaction with the site or RI team. I agreed to stay on the sidelines – after all I had a share. He often said he didn’t like meetings. Now I think I know why – he told different people different things." 

"But that changed when the public started to support RI with cash. I never saw any legal documents about RI (beyond the shareholding agreement Bausman and I signed). I have no idea how contributors’ money was spent. I never saw a balance sheet. I began to believe that all money sent to support RI ended up in Bausman’s pocket. I think Bausman owes a lot people a lot explanations – he needs to step up and demonstrate he is honest and transparent." 

"And when it came to my share in RI, I have witness accounts how he habitually lied about this. This really angered me. I know others who worked with Bausman and RI who were left with very negative impressions. So many promises were made; so many promises broken. Bausman has exhausted my belief in him. His actions badly tarnish RI’s journalistic mission and the great hopes of alternative media.", Lavelle concluded.

Fort Russ has learned from a trusted source Bausman has reacted to people who are exposing his malfeasance with crude personal attacks. In one case an email sent to the parents of a former RI employee, in another case a phone call to the employer of an individual who has raised the flag of fraud. In both cases, Bausman does not want to answer questions regarding his fraudulent behavior – instead he relies on below the belt personal attacks.

As it turns out, the site boasting an original “inside view” seems to be having its own inside workings exposed. The endless bombardment of crowdfunding campaigns, donation requests, and Zvezda watches for cash promotions that flood the screen of any reader of Russian Insider, are being scrutinized for allegations of fraud. 

Peter Lavelle is only the latest and the most prominent voice of concern on this matter, as several have come before him, and other accounts are still surfacing. Be that as it may, the problem is now front and center: Russia Insider is being accused by fellow information warriors and honest audiences of impropriety.  

Their question is as honest as it is simple: “Where is my money going?” 

Such a common sense inquiry has reached the next level: is the media criticism crusader practicing the same lack of transparency that he himself claims characterizes western media?

To help answer that question, we also talked at length with the well known Russian-American geopolitical analyst, Andrew Korybko, who has contributed both to Russia Insider and Fort Russ, and knows Lavelle.  Korybko was offered a position and an 'opportunity' by Bausman to get in 'on the ground floor', and a work visa in exchange for free labor.  He was told by Bausman that while he couldn't be paid, that the idea was to build Russia Insider up and then sell it off to a wealthy investor, after which Korybko would be taken care of. Korybko gave us his take today:

"Russia Insider was not accountable to their crowdfunding supporters. They said before their first campaign that they would show how every dollar was spent. Instead, more than $60,000 later, not a single receipt has surfaced and nobody has any idea how much their staff members are even being paid. Looking at the public records from their crowdfunding campaigns, some numbers also don't add up, such as why some people would donate significant amounts of money that didn't correspond to any of their given "prize" amounts. Moreover, some people would repeat this donation pattern for no reason whatsoever, leading to the possibility that some accounts were being used to facilitate money laundering due to the "tax-free" status that the company publicized that they have.", Korybko stated.

He continued, "There's no smoking gun about whether "funny money" was moving in and out of the company, but the circumstantial case as evidenced by quite a few odd crowdfunding "donations" and the failure to account for even a single dollar's worth of funds is damning. Well, truth be told, donors did see what they got for their money though, as a former US military employee and current self-described lobbyist Jacob Drezin wrote a few original submissions that rival the worst of Anne Applebaum and Luke Harding's propaganda. While RI has on his profile that he's a "volunteer", this was added post facto after the controversies erupted about his anti-Russian and anti-Syrian propaganda. Even if this reprehensible individual was not receiving any money, the fact that he was given a platform on the site to spread his venom raises serious questions about the entire RI editorial process.", Korybko affirms.

Digging deeper, Korybko tells us: "The idea behind RI is honorable, but the execution is despicable and the reality failed to live up to the much-vaunted and hoped-for expectations. Some "good" came out of the initiative because of the community that it created and the popularization of some original analyses by Alexander Mercouris, Jon Hellevig, and others, but overall, this project has totally failed in living up to its "transparent" and "people not profits" motto, and for that reason, it can be seen as a fraudulent organization. The individual writers, contributors, and promoters are not to blame -- they were just as hoodwinked as I was -- but who needs to be held to account is Charles Bausman and his inner circle that deliberately mislead all of their well-intentioned supporters (both in-house volunteers and regular visitors)."

"They gave such a black eye to the whole idea of crowdfunded journalism that it will likely hurt legitimate projects that are trying to grow in its wake. I admittedly benefited from RI's platform of exposure but grew suspicious after I took the time to objectively assess everything going on with the company. The moment that I woke up was when they suddenly stopped republishing my articles and dragged their feet by ultimately never publishing a promotional article about my book, which eventually ended up going on to be quoted by NATO's Defense College as an authoritative Russian-based source on Hybrid War. Sensing some personal problem against me that was being manifested through passive aggressiveness, I thought long and hard about everything related to RI and came to the conclusions that I just shared with everyone. I wholeheartedly and fully commend Peter for bravely taking a stand and exposing the smoking gun that proves that RI was a fraud. It confirms what I and many others had suspected. I hope that a new and improved type of Russian-based crowdfunded journalism can emerge around Peter and that all of the innocent contributors and volunteers that had nothing to do with Charles' deceit can join him in rebuilding the dream that we all know is possible."
, Korybko concludes.

Bureaucratic mishaps, disorganization, and a lack of a firm orientation are usually inevitable with popular sites at the start, especially when they skyrocket from such small beginnings. But Russia Insider is different. Firstly, it champions itself as a model of honest and grassroots journalism as a labor of love and conviction, rather than money. This is the point stressed in its numerous HD videos and non-stop advertisements clamoring for donations. Indeed, in the information war against NATO propaganda today, that “truth is on our side,” is one of the greatest merits, and therefore is not one to be taken lightly. Secondly, “questionable financing and management” are being exposed to be only part of the tip of the iceberg. 

This is quite unfortunate for the public. The rise and fall of Russia Insider seems rooted in focusing on 'best fundraising practices' and how to 'get rich quick' at the expense of long term credibility and reader dedication.

Last November, a few of our editors who had been receiving information from disgruntled donors and former volunteers, decided to take a critical look at Russia Insider's actual presentation and layout. Readers had started to complain that Russia Insider was not actually producing any original material, but was instead engaged in almost entirely a copy-paste operation taking from other sites. Visitors to the site were inundated with pop-ups which, when clicked closed by the visitor, only revealed a page smothered in e-begging videos and various campaign banners, ranging from Indie-Go-Go, Go-fund-me, to Kickstarter and more. At that time our editors took some snapshots of the 'Russia Insider' site as it appeared then.



This part of the front page, depicted above is what is known as 'above the fold'. This what people first see when they go to a site, without scrolling. Everything one can see in a normally open-sized browser window, is 'above the fold'. This is the first impression, and the most important one. It says who you are, what your stories are, what you're all about, and chiefly what's important to you. What is taking up 75% of the space, in four different 'asks' is the fundraising campaign. 

The only actual content we see is an article by John Pilger, published originally elsewhere and connected to Russia Insider in no way whatsoever.

Scrolling down the site to the second half, on the same sample day, was the below screenshot. It is evident that we see more of the same, with two more asks.  Readers may have a difficult time, now in retrospect, not finding the 'Keep the Media Honest' motto, which is another ask, a bit humorous or frustrating.  



This second photo is what we call below the fold or the 'bottom half'. However, on websites, its just the next chunk of page on the site, equal in size to 'above the fold'. While there's plenty below it, it also tells you a lot about the site. This is what only about 50% of readers are going to stop or focus on when they visit the site, before clicking on. The rest view above the fold, if not following a link to an actual article on Russia Insider.  

The iceberg that this Titanic may hit, however, is not the barrage of fundraising campaign popups and ads, profits of investors, media moguls, or military-industrial propagandists. After all, even if Russia Insider is being managed as if it were going to be squeezed for cash like a corporate scheme, the people being alienated are the millions of ordinary people eager to escape the Western media blockade who look up to such sites as Russia Insider. Also left out in the cold are those ordinary volunteers, supporters, and associates who have spent time with RI only to leave frustrated or shoved out for asking too many questions. The Russia Insider readership is not only having its trust violated, but the very practice of “philanthropy” in information war initiatives is being soured for everyone. 
Russia Insider seems to actually not involve anything like the 60 volunteers they boast, but rather three or four people at most whose main job seems to be scraping stories from the internet, and copy and pasting them to the site. What this has nothing to do with is 'citizen journalism', or even journalism at all. Even Fox News and the BBC make their own stories half of the time.

An individual who is involved in running one of the Saker websites told us: "Right as RI was getting going, this Charles Bausman found me on Skype, and started to chat me up. He gave me this Ghandiesque story about whirled peas and the like. Then he asked if I could send him my list of translators. Seemed like a genuine guy. So I did. Never heard from him again. I asked what happened, no response"

Another gentleman, who was involved at the ground-floor and was promised big things by Bausman says: "They said this was going to be real big. Said they couldn't pay me, but that someone probably was going to buy it out once it got big, then we'd all get something big too .... I remember one time I was accidentally copied on an email, they were upset about something. They had bought a bunch of fake followers from Facebook, they were all Indian or something, and they were saying 'wow' they had spent this money and the followers are useless."


The 'ground floor' insider also told us: "Their model is a failure. With all the pop-ups asking for money, and click bait, copy and paste articles -- when they do try to break a story, it's a total failure. They are not able to break an actual story through all their own self imposed clutter and ads"


Out of 49 articles which appeared on their front page on our sample day in November 2015, 10 of these are either original translations from Russian articles or blurbs written by 'RI Staff'. These blurbs are about 50-75 words, and were in fact little more than a caption with a photo that accompanies a click-bait headline. The model of the site is clear. 


At the end of the day, these problems with content and presentation are not a good model in the long term, but certainly to not indicate that there is any impropriety. But what it highlights is the way that even where money could have been spent, regardless of transparency or good corporate governance issues, it was not. 


The total amount of money raised by Russia Insider through paypal is still not known to us at the present time, but with several public campaigns that showed crowd funding figures in excess of $60k, its likely that this number is close to $100k.

This scandal and the desertion of much of the more capable staff of Russia Insider, has likely left Bausman without a ready machine to handle the, yes, next fundraising drive planned for this Spring. People who had previously given money or who were otherwise on the RI mailing list, received this strangely worded picture message earlier today at about 15.00 hours, GMT.  




Entirely separate from the campaigns was money taken from investors. With Bausman having placed his wife (or girlfriend, depending on the account) at the head of finances, creating the appearance of a conflict of interest, it will likely require a suit with a discovery process, or charges stemming from the proper authority in Russia or the US (as there are LLC's in both countries), to determine exactly how much is allegedly hidden, and where.


At the end of the day, the apparent mismanagement at Russia Insider will sour readers everywhere. In combination with what has been explained to us as the complete lack of corporate governance structures in place, and the never ending fundraising campaigns that abused and tarnished the very idea of crowd funding with integrity, this entire scandal has dealt a serious blow to alternative media everywhere.






     Follow us on Facebook!                                                  
              Facebook                                   

       Follow us on Twitter!
              Twitter               

             Donate!

Thursday, 31 March 2016

US's Kangaroo Court Foiled: Serbia's Seselj Acquitted of all Charges

March 31st, 2016 - Fort Russ News - 

By: Joaquin Flores, editor - 




Today, the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) surprised many today with its announcement of the verdict of the leader of the Serbian Radical Party Vojislav Seselj - he was acquitted of all charges, with the court finding no criminal wrong doing on his part. He was accused of financing, managing, and supporting the Serb volunteer units and inciting ethnic hatred during the wars in Croatia and Bosnia in the early 1990's. His trial and imprisonment had long been a focus of Serbia's heated internal political scene, which is split over the issue of European integration and NATO, or increased ties with the Eurasian Union and the CSTO. Seselj is seen as a symbol of Serbia's resistance to foreign military and economic domination.

His acquittal comes as a surprise, not because of the strength of the evidence against him, but indeed the opposite. Previous convictions of other Serbs had been carried out by just as much evidence, which is to say, very little. 


The trial of Vojislav Seselj

Unlike many of the others accused by the Hague Tribunal, Seselj did not hide from the court, but turned himself in to the Hague 10 days after the drawing up of the charges against him on 24 February 2004. Seselj wanted to defend his innocence in court and turn the trial into a trial against the Hague Tribunal. The prosecution lasted for 11 years and the Hague Tribunal has failed to provide conclusive evidence of Seselj's guilt. In 2014, Seselj was freed for health reasons (cancer), but proceedings against him continued. Vojislav Seselj had no plans to attend today's sentencing, as he believes that from a moral perspective he already defeated the Hague Tribunal a long time ago. Seselj's defiance of the ICTY proceedings often took place at the proceedings themselves, and these now famous - intelligent and often humorous -  indictments of the entire proceedings and indeed the entire Atlanticist legal order were recorded on film, having now become a component of popular Seselj lore and canon.


Intrigue and controversy behind his early release

His early release in November 2014 also came as a surprise, at a politically sensitive time in Serbia. Seselj had consistently maintained his innocence, and questioned the grounds of his arrest and the legitimacy of the entire procedure for the duration of his detention, pre-trial procedures, and trial. He voluntarily surrendered in 2004, and used his platform not only to prove effectively that the charges against him were false, but to ridicule and mock the criminality and incompetence of the court itself. 

The best theory behind his early release relates to Russia and the ongoing conflicts in the world which involve both the US and Russia at seemingly opposite ends, as well as the Color Revolution/Spring tactic. It is clear that the US has the most clout over the proceedings of the ICTY, as the court itself is widely viewed as a kangaroo court where the prosecution and the judges work on the same side, to arrive at a politically pre-determined verdict, on the foundation of victor's justice. Both the US and Russia see Seselj as a potential game changer for Serbian politics, but have opposing goals in mind. 

Both players understand that the actions of Seselj will figure into the stability and legitimacy of the present Serbian government of the Progressive Party. We must recall that the role of Russian doctors claiming an illness is not new; this was used with Milosevic's case, in failed attempts to have him released from prison due to his illness. There then came some coherent evidence that Milosevic's early death was brought about directly by the ICTY or its handlers, as Milosevic's defense strategy was prevailing over the kangaroo court at the Hague, even with all mechanisms stacked in its own favor. 

There is little reason to conclude that the US would have agreed to the release of Seselj if it was not part of some compromise or deal with the Russians, who provided both the diplomatic framework and medical justifications for his early release in November 2014. That means that to understand this, we cannot compartmentalize this case, and instead look at this as part of a larger global conflict, which involves live-fire conflicts in Ukraine and Syria. 

Seselj's release in November can then be seen as part of a larger negotiation connected with ceasefires or prisoner exchanges, but also in the context of any aim to destabilize Serbia. 

But it would also be an error to view this entirely in terms of Russians having some interest in his release, with the Americans entirely wanting him to be imprisoned. Rather, the US also had an angle in releasing Seselj. What was it?


The US and Russia both wanted Seselj released

Vucic is sitting in two chairs, and finds himself in a unique situation, but one similar to both Yanukovych of Ukraine and Assad of Syria. The facts and circumstances which have emerged tend strongly to confirm the view that Vucic is no longer seen by the West as someone who can remain at the head of the government. Despite his gestures, which are fiercely opposed by the fractured nationalist and patriotic bloc, he has not made significant progress in reducing Serbia's sovereignty in a number of key areas such as NATO and the EU. Furthermore, as the US has decided to move into a failed state model for the 2nd world countries of certain regions, it is likely that the West Balkans is such a region, for reasons relating both to Serbia's strategic culture and Serbia's strategic use of culture, energy markets, and geopolitical alliances. 

Stability and prosperity for certain regions do not fit into the US grand-strategy, and the US seeks a relative advantage by setting back others in areas where they found themselves unable to get ahead. This is difficult for many Serbians to understand, because Vucic has long been vilified for his attempts at being in the good graces of the West. 

It was hoped by the Atlanticist powers behind Seselj's early release that he would immediately engage in the politics he has been known for: resounding attacks against a corrupt and entrenched political establishment led by Prime Minister Vucic, which he views as bent on undermining the sovereignty and security of Serbia. Instead, Seselj frustrated them, and has refrained from attacking Vucic, who many see as farther from Seselj politically, and contrary to this did two things, which seem contradictory and frustrated the Atlanticist plot. He began attacking Serbia's now deposed political establishment of the Democratic Party, which is viewed by nearly everyone  as being closer to the West than Vucic, even if by a degree or two. At the same time he did something entirely at odds with that - in attacking President Nikolic, who is nevertheless viewed by the public as being closer politically, even if by a degree, both to Seselj and to Russia. 

The US is attempting to forge a liberal + nationalist alliance in Serbia, a standard practice for them in the Color/Spring tactic. The details vary in each country, based on profound differences rooted in culture, politics, and history. In Ukraine, nationalists were anti-Russian and saw themselves as a continuation of European identity, even where at times this clashed with Europe's new liberal self-conception and instead relied on older continental incarnations of European power such as the Third Reich. In Serbia it is quite different, nationalists are pro-Russian and specifically anti-EU and anti-NATO. Furthermore, Serbia has already experienced a decidedly pro-Western coup in the past, using the Color/Spring tactic. This means that any tactic, applied again to Serbia, must take into account and figure around those points which Serbians may already be inoculated against. 

The credibility of Seselj and the Serbian nationalist's reverence for him was sought by the Atlanticists to be used as a tool against the government of Vucic. 

One of the main operating and proven ideas is that vague or open ended political slogans can be co-opted for any purpose by those with better power at projecting their message, and connecting the dots for the masses.  In other words, without tremendous media power, one cannot control the consequences of their own statements if vague or when made with provisos, which part of that statement would be redacted,  or conversely which part highlighted and echoed, and so on.

Any vague 'anti-Vucic' remarks that Seselj was encouraged to make, can then have its conclusions drawn out and solutions created by other nationalist leaders with Western backing. 

The Russians on the other hand were several moves ahead on this play. They saw that while Seselj's release would invigorate Serbian nationalism, that this could easily and most naturally be directed towards its own aims, with a much less convoluted plot when compared to the American. Instead, Seselj was advised, or naturally intuited based on his own knowledge of realpolitik, to attack the liberals (in power for the decade following the bombing of Belgrade) and Nikolic, the current president. This clearly gave Vucic a pass, who in response elevated Seselj somewhat officially to that of the 'Third force' in Serbian politics. 



                              pro-Seselj demonstration


Why Vucic must go

Presently the government of Serbia is trying to conduct its most balanced foreign policy since the Yugoslavia period. This means that it conducts diplomacy and international dealings in a way that reflects the realities of Russia's resurgence as well as the EU's prominent though waning economic  clout, combined with US military superiority in the Balkans through NATO, including Camp Bondsteel in the occupied Kosovo region of Serbia. 

This attempt at a balanced policy creates political problems at home, with US and EU backed liberals - a minority numerically but with ties to finance, media, and light industry - seeing the Progressive Party government of Vucic as swerving dangerously off track from EU ascension, and wary of the government's economic deals with China, Russia, and the increasing Russian presence in Serbia's deep state, security apparatus, military agreements, observer status in CSTO, Serbia's refusal to play the sanctions game against Russia, and the general refusal to engage in the US dominated political narrative of 'isolated Russia'.

Serbian patriots, that is 'nationalists', on the other hand, have an opposite view. They see Vucic's conciliatory tone on subjects like Kosovo, attempts to woo foreign EU investment, as well as his statements and official policy of EU integration (though in fact there has been little if any forward movement), as well as making a passage and tax deal that favors NATO's presence, as evidence that he is against Serbia's sovereignty and is actively working with Serbia's moral and geostrategic opponents. 

The Serbian patriotic scene readily, and rightly, embraced both Assad of Syria and Gaddafi of Libya, and supported their resistance to the Color/Spring tactic, and understood it in such terms. What was absent from their collective analysis, or rather, what has failed to be underscored as it relates to Serbia, is that Vucic is in a similar situation in certain important aspects, as was Yanukovych or Assad.  In the case of Assad - there were, at the beginning, very real 'pro-Syrian' objections to Assad's governance, primarily rooted in the concessions and relationship that he built with western powers in the years directly following the US invasion of Iraq. 

Not only since the collapse of the USSR, but more so after the US's middle-east incursions, Syria sought branding as one of the 'moderate' countries in the region, which agreed to social and economic reforms in Syria, bringing in further IMF debt and forfeiting important social-government work to foreign controlled NGO's, who eventually won the hearts and minds of a sizable minority of the country's population, leading to the formation of the coalition and the FSA. 

It has been a failure on the part of Serbians to understand that prior to being scheduled for offing, Assad had attempted to maintain balanced relations with Russia, China, and Iran on the one hand, and Turkey, the EU, the US and other players on the other. While Vucic has committed to policies which critics are right to point out, the alternative supported by the west involving his removal would result in not only an end to the Progressive Party government, but to the Serbian state itself. 

This last part is critical: Serbia is in a delicate position where it has the possibility of either gaining Republika Srpska and regaining Kosovo, while maintaining regions like Vojvodina, or by fracturing and shattering further, as part of a precursor to an actual conflict between devolving local powers and hostile regional states.


Seselj refused to play a role in the Color/Spring script

The Color/Spring tactic is an active and adaptive method. The organizations which move it are capable of self-awareness, meaning they are aware that there are active attempts to subvert or derail the tactic, and the tactic adapts to this threat as a living or sentient entity would. This means that the tactic has undergone several evolutions since it was first introduced many decades ago during the Cold War, to the point where it can even adapt to political mechanisms and movements (such as in Serbia) that are aware of its methods and tactics and have therefore built some level of immunity to it. 

That means that instead of using the public's relatively non-existent pro-Western and anti-Russian sentiments towards a catalyzed 'Majdan'-like spring/occupy/color tactic, another track is being taken. The idea for Serbia is to attack Vucic for his inability to make a coherent and uniform pro-Russian policy. The result of the attack is his desired downfall, and his replacement by an actually anti-Russian government, with the possibility of the dismantling of the state both in terms of territory and the military-security apparatus. 

Because Seselj apparently understood the plot that he was expected to play a part in, and saw the trap, he was able to avoid it. This caused the ICTY to call for his return, something which the government of Serbia was wise to gesture their unwillingness to cooperate with. Had they returned him, it would have meant the creation of an occupy/spring tent encampment at the steps of government offices, with the call for Vucic to step down. 

For these reasons, today's acquittal of Seselj is both a surprise and, just as his conviction would have been, a political maneuver on the part of the ICTY and its NATO backers, which analysts will be attempting to reconcile and explain in the coming period.

The best theory so far is this: Seeing that Vucic would not hand Seselj back months ago after the urging of the ICTY and complaints by Croatia, and would not even send him for today's verdict, the West would not further their position by convicting Seselj. In fact, Vucic's refusal to hand Seselj back after such a conviction would further bolster his credibility in the eyes of the fractured nationalist bloc, and would work against the West's aims to undermine his authority, and the project to remove Vucic from power through some popular protest-type movement, connected to next month's elections in Belgrade. By simply acquitting Seselj, Vucic cannot demonstrate his fealty to the Serbian cause by refusing to hand him over. Vucic has been robbed of this opportunity, even though it provides Seselj the legal guarantees required to position himself as a viable alternative candidate for the remainder of his career.




     Follow us on Facebook!                                                  
              Facebook                                   

       Follow us on Twitter!
              Twitter               

             Donate!