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Dodik: European leaders need a major war to stay in power

Dodik: European leaders need a major war to stay in power

President Milorad Dodik stated that several European politicians are preparing for a major war “to conceal domestic social problems and hold on to power.”

“The calls by European leaders for militarization are a manifestation of their inability to find solutions to the social problems they face. Europe, once based on values, has now lost them all,” Dodik emphasized.

He noted that European societies are moving away from the ideas of human rights, the rule of law, freedom of movement, and fair competition that once prevailed, becoming “increasingly fragmented and disunited.”

“The migrants they accepted have not only failed to adapt their cultural and social attitudes but have instead become even more united and now openly oppose what they found in Germany, destroying its social and political structure. These are all problems to which they have no answers,” Dodik said, stressing that “the facts speak for themselves.”

According to him, the situation within the European establishment “borders on madness.”

“The current structure in Brussels and in leading Western European countries has destroyed the social and public fabric of both Europe as a whole and their own states,” Dodik told TASS in an interview.

He added that, for numerous reasons, Europe has destroyed all the advantages it once enjoyed.

“It is therefore logical that they now see everything through the lens of militarization and fearmongering—both within their own countries and allegedly beyond their borders. We Serbs have enough historical reasons not to view this favorably. The very idea of re-militarizing Germany is catastrophic for us,” Dodik warned.

He recalled that Serbs have suffered every time Germany became militarized.

“In both World Wars, and later, when Germany sought to dominate Europe, it orchestrated the breakup of Yugoslavia, which led to civil wars. The then German government bears responsibility for that,” Dodik said.

He also pointed out that, according to surveys, the German chancellor has the lowest public support in modern electoral history, while French President Emmanuel Macron’s approval rating “has nearly dropped to single digits, around 13–14 percent.”

“They desperately need a way out—and that way out is to start defending something. But it all looks false,” Dodik concluded.

Source: RTRS

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