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Dacic: Stability in Balkans requires common Serbia-US interest (B92)

Ivica Dacic says his message in Washington this week was that there is no stability in the Balkans unless the US finds a common interest with Serbia.

The Serbian foreign minister and first deputy PM noted that the US "has some policy of its own, and is interested in the Russian influence in the region".

For the sake of stability in the region, the US should seek a minimum common of interests with our country, Dacic told RTS.

According to him, the goal of Thursday's meeting of US National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster with ministers of foreign affairs of the countries of the Western Balkans was to show that the United States wants stability and prosperity of everyone in the region.

"I insisted that there is no stability in the region unless the United States finds a common interest with the biggest country and the biggest people in the Balkans, Serbia and the Serbian people, and in that sense we should seek a minimum of common interests in order to contribute stability to the whole region," Dacic said.

He added that during the meeting in Washington, there was no time for more serious talks, and that everyone had given their opinion on that occasion.

Speaking about the recently published report of the US think-tank Atlantic Council, proposing a new US strategy for the Balkans, Dacic stressed that in a formal sense this was not a document of the US administration but of a non-governmental organization, which "could, but doesn't necessarily" have some influence.

See at: http://www.b92.net/eng/news/politics.php?yyyy=2017&mm=12&dd=01&nav_id=102935