Hailed as a democratic leader who was a “worthy partner” and a “breath of fresh air”, by US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright in 1998, Dodik’s transformation from democrat to demagogue since then culminated with him being sanctioned by the US last year for using his position to “accumulate personal wealth through graft, bribery, and other forms of corruption”.
In October, the US sanctioned Dodik’s adult children, along with four companies that it said “facilitate Dodik’s ongoing corruption” and allow him to “syphon public funds from the Republika Srpska and enrich himself and his family”.
Dodik’s transformation has even seen him walk back his earlier recognition that the atrocities carried out in Srebrenica amounted to genocide, calling the 1995 massacre of 8,000 Bosniak men and boys “an arranged tragedy” in 2018. Similarly, having once advocated the prosecution of war criminals Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadzic, Dodik struck a rather different tone on the eve of Mladic’s conviction for war crimes in the Hague, when he said that “whatever the verdict … Ratko Mladic remains a legend for the Serbian people”.
Dodik, whose ties to the Kremlin have become ever tighter in the past 15 years, now downplays Serbian atrocities in the Bosnian War, and has repeatedly visited Vladimir Putin in Moscow. What exactly has changed?