Macedonia is getting its chance at joining NATO. But first the nation has to pass a referendum that opinion pollsshow is favored by a majority of the country. So... it should go off without a hitch, right? Enter Russia.
Secretary of Defense James Mattis accused Russia of attempting to influence the September 30th vote using propaganda and by funding Macedonian pro-Russian groups.
Russia has denied the accusation, but here's the thing — this wouldn't be the first time Russia's attempted to subvert Western influence in the Balkans.
In 2016, Russia was accused of backing an assassination attempt against Montenegro's pro-Western prime minister to sabotage the nation's ascension to NATO.
Montenegro and now Macedonia are just two examples of Russia's battle to curb Western influence in the Balkans.
Mattis Condemns Russian Attempts To Influence Macedonia Vote
Macedonians are voting Sept. 30 whether to change the country's name to North Macedonia so it can join NATO and the EU.
Russia's been attempting to keep Macedonia away from NATO well before this recent referendum. Leaked documents obtained by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project found that Russia has been sowing discord in Macedonia since at least 2008 by using propaganda and intelligence activities.
Then there's Serbia, which is already Russia's closest ally in the region. Russian propaganda pushes pro-Russian messages and props up Serbian nationalism and anti-US, anti-European Union Serbs.