Serbia’s President denies sales of military equipment to Ukraine

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Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic addresses the media after holding meetings as part of Kosovo-Serbia talks, in Ohrid on March 18, 2023. - Kosovo's Prime Minister and Serbia's President held talks at a meeting chaired by the EU's Foreign Policy Chief, aimed at normalising relations between the two countries, after the two sides failed to reach an agreement in Brussels last month. The negotiations will focus on how to fulfil an 11-point agreement the EU has put on the table designed to help draw a line under decades of enmity between Serbia and its former province that declared independence in 2008. (Photo by Armend NIMANI / AFP)

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic's government has professed neutrality over the invasion of Ukraine by Serbia's traditional ally, Russia.

PHOTO: AFP

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BELGRADE – Serbia never sold weapons or ammunition to Ukraine or Russia, although Serbian arms might have reached the battlefield via third countries, President Aleksandar Vucic said on Thursday.

He spoke a day after Reuters reported that according to a classified Pentagon document, Belgrade had agreed to supply arms to Kyiv, which is fighting a Russian invasion, or sent them already.

“Serbia has not and will not export weapons to Ukraine,” Mr Vucic told reporters, adding that it equally “has not and will not” export arms or ammunition to Russia, its traditional ally.

“There’s no document that can prove that,” he said.

The document seen by Reuters, a summary of European governmental responses to Ukraine’s requests for military training and “lethal aid”, or weapons, was among

dozens of classified documents posted online in recent weeks

in what could be the most serious leak of US secrets in years.

Reuters could not independently verify the documents’ authenticity.

Serbia inherited most of the former Yugoslavia’s military industrial facilities and has made billions of dollars from weapons exports.

Mr Vucic said the Balkan country would continue to invest in its defence facilities.

He further said he was “quite certain” that Serbian ammunition would appear “on one side or the other in the battlefield” in Ukraine, after having been exported to Turkey, Spain or the Czech Republic.

“They saw one shell (in Ukraine), one bullet. So what, and where else would they appear? There are several war zones around the world.”

“Ammunition is used in wars for killing people,” Mr Vucic added.

On Wednesday, Serbian Defence Minister Milos Vucevic and Foreign Minister Ivica Dacic also dismissed the contents of the leaked intelligence as untrue.

Entitled Europe | Response To Ongoing Russia-Ukraine Conflict, the Pentagon document showed that Serbia declined to provide training to Ukrainian forces, but had committed to sending lethal aid or had supplied it already.

It also said Serbia had the political will and military ability to provide weapons to Ukraine in future.

Mr Vucic’s government has professed neutrality in

the Ukraine war

and has long tried to balance

historically close relations with Moscow

with its goal of joining the European Union.

Although Serbia has repeatedly condemned Russia’s invasion at the United Nations and other international forums, it has so far refused to join Western sanctions against Moscow.

Belgrade also recognises Ukraine as an independent state in its entirety, while Kyiv refuses to recognise the independence of Kosovo, Serbia’s former, predominantly ethnic Albanian southern province. REUTERS

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