Polygraph returned to the big door. This time, the President of Serbia invites speakers from the protest against lithium mining in Loznica to a duel. What should a lie detector show? Nothing else except that Aleksandar Vučić did not receive a single dinar, unlike those called. Also, that the head of state has Serbia in the first place, but for them it is not.
There is nothing - a statesmanlike approach and a call for constructive dialogue. And to make everything even more bizarre, it was given later after the session of the extended collegium of the General Staff of the Serbian Armed Forces: in the manner of a senior first class sergeant in front of recruits, Vučić demonstrated how much he cared about the experts on both sides of the lithium limes and the intersection of their arguments by calling for the polygraph again. So - not a little.
And that's not all. The country is facing serious security challenges: an Albanian drone is flying five and a half kilometers away from Gjakova, and Swedish-German planes are circling outside the state territory and taking pictures of Serbia. But the army is ready, strong, well armed and will be. In that name, the audience could enjoy the live broadcast of the "Fire Strike 24" exercise with BRTs from Hungary and domestic drones. "Mosquito", and other pieces of tools and special forces...
Aware of the environment in the region, Vučić nevertheless emphasized that he is convinced that "the huge number of NATO members will in no way be used against the Serbian people or Serbia". The reader has nothing else to do but calmly declare - "Uh".
But how safe are the citizens of Serbia really? Does the fact that the gendarme who was seriously injured in a terrorist attack had to correct the mistakes of the entire security sector convince them of this? Or the scandalous investigation into the disappearance of little Danka Ilić, which is why the entire public rightly wonders if anyone in the police and prosecutor's office knows their job? What is the ghostly noise saying here after the incident in the village of Banjska that turned the Serbs in Kosovo into black, and what about the bloody feasts on the streets of the regime's infernal drivers..? There is much more, but it is clear.
Like any other, the Serbian Army needs to arm itself and train. However, it is not and cannot be the only measure of security, especially due to its constant misuse for political purposes. Specifically: Serbia is in permanent danger, but if it sticks firmly to its president, everything will be fine. This long-term creation of a parallel reality does not lead to security, but only to the systematic obedience of the people. And in such a situation, no one is safe.