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Serbia Political Corruption

NIS Sale to Gazprom: How Serbia Received Severed Ears of a Dead Russian Donkey

Serbia's Bitter Betrayal

The Gazprom Deception

A Deal Cloaked in Lies and Treachery

The Hidden Price of Kosovo’s Independence

When Kosovo declared independence in 2008, Serbia erupted in outrage. Nationalist fervor swept the streets, and indignation boiled over in government circles. Yet, amid the public uproar, a critical truth went unspoken by Serbian leaders: Kosovo—a symbol of sovereignty lost—was the price of a clandestine bargain that surrendered Serbia’s petroleum industry to Russian control. The corrupt Serbian government accepted this, but never revealed the truth to its people. When Serbian opposition leader Nikola Sandulović published our messages to him regarding the true events behind Serbia’s Gazprom deal, the people were shocked.

NIS Sale: The Dead Donkey’s Ears

In a deal cloaked in promises of prosperity, Gazprom Neft, a subsidiary of the Russian energy giant Gazprom, became the majority shareholder of Naftna Industrija Srbije (NIS), Serbia’s state oil company. The 51% stake was purchased for a mere USD 400 million under a “Sales and Purchase Agreement” between the Republic of Serbia and the Russian Federation. To the uninformed, this transaction seemed straightforward—an injection of foreign investment into Serbia’s economy. To those who believed in fairy tales, it echoed a Brothers Grimm story with a Slavic twist, where fortunes flow directly into the coffers of the people. Yet in reality, the only thing Serbia received from Russia was the severed ears of a dead Russian donkey.

The South Stream Lie

But reality, as often happens, diverged sharply from fiction. The USD 400 million didn’t rejuvenate Serbia’s budget. Instead, it vanished like smoke in a Balkan winter—not a single cent enriched the citizens. The money, siphoned off by a cabal of corrupt Serbian politicians and complicit Russian oligarchs, bypassed Belgrade entirely. The money flowed first to Latvia, then passed through Cyprus before spreading further into a web of offshore accounts, reaching destinations from Panama to financial centers in London, Paris, Zurich, and Geneva.

The Bitter Sting of Betrayal

Meanwhile, Serbia’s people were left with nothing but hollow promises from their leaders and the bitter sting of betrayal. The promises didn’t end with the initial sale. Gazprom dangled the prospect of Serbia’s participation in the South Stream gas pipeline—a geopolitical project poised to cement Russian influence over European energy. Yet South Stream collapsed, a victim of shifting political winds and economic sanctions. Meanwhile, Gazprom Neft claimed to have invested USD 1.2 billion in NIS. Serbian officials, if they had any spine, would demand evidence of these investments. The truth? The supposed capital infusion came not from Russian generosity but from the profits wrung out of Serbia’s own resources—all while Russian propaganda entrenched itself deeper in the Balkans.

 


The Sanctions Strike Back

Today, Russia’s fortunes have turned. Once a swaggering petro-power, Moscow now staggers under the weight of sanctions imposed by the U.S. and its allies. The U.S. Treasury has blacklisted Sovcomflot, Russia’s state-owned shipping firm, along with 69 of its vessels—tankers and LNG carriers that once ferried Russia’s energy exports across the seas. Dubai-based firms Fornax Ship Management FZCO and Stream Ship Management FZCO, which helped Sovcomflot evade sanctions, have also been designated.

Vučić’s Empty Promises

The shadow fleet, an elusive network trafficking sanctioned oil, has been targeted. Panama-flagged tankers tied to Russian and Iranian oil trades have come under scrutiny, along with operators like Argo Tanker, Sunor ILLC, and RPK Nord. The sanctions extend to Gazprom Neft’s subsidiaries, including Gazpromneft Marine Bunker—a key player in supplying fuel to vessels—and to all known affiliated entities.

The End of an Empire?

In Serbia, the clock is ticking. The United States has set a February 25, 2025, deadline for Gazprom Neft to divest its stake in NIS. Serbian tyrant and liar Aleksandar Vučić, known for his televised theatrics, insists Serbia will buy back the Russian shares. The assertion is pure fantasy. Russia demands billions, and Serbia’s timeframe is laughably short. The truth is plain: Vučić’s assurances are as hollow as the deals that sold Serbia’s energy independence. Meanwhile, Gazprom prepares to slash its central office staff by nearly half—a desperate response to record losses. The Baltic and Nordic nations, calling for a lower Russian oil price ceiling, echo Sweden’s Foreign Minister Maria Malmer Stenergaard: “The lower the price of Russian oil, the faster peace will come.” The stakes are immense. What began as an opaque transaction has metastasized into a geopolitical drama of sanctions, power plays, and economic ruin—all while Serbia watches, caught between the ambitions of Moscow and the resolve of the West.

The Fall of Gazprom: Serbia’s Bitter Truth

Rich TVX

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