Garcevic Interviewed in US News on Europe’s Far Right Movements
Ambassador Vesko Garcevic, Professor of the Practice of International Relations at the Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies at Boston University, was interviewed for a recent article examining far right movements in Europe, specifically in Austria, as well as Russia’s influence in Austria and the European Union.
Garcevic was interviewed for a July 5, 2018 article in US News entitled “Austria Fuels the Rise of Europe’s Far-Right.“
From the text of the article:
Putin wants to drive wedges between EU member states, says Vesko Garcevic, a career diplomat who previously served as the Montenegrin ambassador to Vienna and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, among other posts.
“Moscow is well aware: They cannot break up that unity, but what they can do is actually to get them to be more focused on themselves, being absorbed by internal feuds and discussions over the EU future, or some practical issues like how to deal with Russia and migration,” Gacevic says. “The more inward looking the EU is, the less potent a global player it is.”
“In my view, it’s the result of influence: The interest of Austria to show and display its interest and relations withRussia, and to place itself in a better position once sanctions are lifted,” says Garcevic, who now teaches international relations at Boston University’s Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies.
During his diplomatic career, Amb. Vesko Garcevic dealt with issues pertinent to European security and NATO for almost 14 years. In 2004, he was posted in Vienna to serve as Ambassador to Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe. He had been a Montenegro’s Ambassador to NATO from 2010 until 2014 and served as a Montenegro’s National Coordinator for NATO from 2015 until he joined the faculty at the Pardee School.