The Wrong Time to Choose

Why Bosnia Should Keep Christian Schmidt Until November

By Matija Lovrić

For the first time in many years, Bosnia and Herzegovina is witnessing something unusual.

The deepest disagreement over the country’s future is no longer taking place between Bosniaks, Croats, and Serbs.

It is taking place within the West itself.

The debate surrounding Christian Schmidt’s successor has exposed a reality that many Bosnians have long preferred to ignore: Washington and Brussels are no longer speaking with one voice.

And that changes everything.

For nearly three decades, Bosnia’s political system functioned on a simple assumption. The international community might disagree on many things, but when it came to Bosnia’s territorial integrity, constitutional framework, and strategic direction, the United States and the European Union ultimately stood on the same side.

Today, that assumption appears less certain than at any point since Dayton.

What is officially presented as a dispute over the next High Representative is, in reality, a dispute over two different visions of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

One vision increasingly comes from Washington.

The other remains rooted in Brussels.

And before Bosnia chooses between them, it would be wise to wait and see whether the West itself can decide which path it intends to follow.

The American approach has become noticeably more pragmatic.

Its priorities increasingly revolve around energy security, strategic infrastructure, investment, and regional stability. Projects such as the Southern Interconnection gas pipeline are viewed not merely as economic initiatives but as geopolitical instruments capable of reducing dependence on rival powers and integrating the Western Balkans more deeply into Western energy networks.

From this perspective, institutions matter.

But results matter more.

The question becomes:

Can Bosnia function?

Can projects move forward?

Can stability be maintained?

Can strategic interests be secured?

The European approach is fundamentally different.

Brussels continues to see Bosnia primarily through the lens of institutional development, democratic standards, judicial independence, human rights, and gradual integration into the European Union.

The European question is not whether Bosnia can function tomorrow.

It is whether Bosnia is becoming the kind of state that can eventually join the European Union.

The American model seeks effectiveness.

The European model seeks transformation.

The American model is faster.

The European model is deeper.

Neither is entirely wrong.

Neither is entirely sufficient.

And that is precisely why the current moment is so dangerous.

Because Bosnia is being asked to make a strategic choice at the very moment when the West itself appears uncertain about its own direction.

Christian Schmidt’s departure has become the symbol of this uncertainty.

Throughout his mandate, Schmidt embodied a model of international engagement that combined American power with European institutionalism. Whether one supported him or opposed him, his authority rested on the assumption that the major Western actors ultimately shared a common vision for Bosnia.

Today that consensus appears to be eroding.

The dispute over his successor reflects a much larger reality.

The question is no longer who should replace Christian Schmidt.

The question is what kind of Bosnia the West wants to build.

A Bosnia focused primarily on strategic projects and economic integration?

Or a Bosnia focused on institutional reform and long-term democratic consolidation?

Perhaps the most honest answer is that nobody currently knows.

And that uncertainty alone should encourage caution.

For this reason, Bosnia should resist the temptation to rush into a decision.

The most responsible solution may be the simplest one.

Christian Schmidt should remain in office until November.

Not because he is irreplaceable.

Not because his tenure was free from controversy.

And certainly not because Bosnia needs indefinite international supervision.

He should remain because the geopolitical environment surrounding Bosnia is currently in flux.

The coming months could significantly reshape American policy.

Domestic political developments in the United States may strengthen the current approach, modify it, or redirect it altogether. A change in political balance in Washington could have profound implications for America’s priorities in the Western Balkans, including its approach to the Office of the High Representative, constitutional reform, and strategic infrastructure projects.

Under such circumstances, appointing a new High Representative today risks making a long-term decision based on short-term uncertainty.

Bosnia has suffered enough from premature solutions.

Too often throughout its modern history, critical decisions have been made quickly by international actors convinced they understood the country’s future.

Some succeeded.

Others produced consequences that lasted for decades.

This is not one of those moments that demands speed.

It is one that demands patience.

The debate over the next High Representative is often presented as a question of personalities.

It is not.

It is a question of strategy.

And strategy requires clarity.

At the moment, clarity is precisely what is missing.

Before Bosnia chooses between Washington and Brussels, Washington and Brussels must first decide whether they still share the same destination.

Until then, postponement is not weakness.

It is prudence.

Sometimes leadership means acting decisively.

Sometimes leadership means recognizing that the wisest decision is to wait.In today’s Bosnia and Herzegovina, waiting until November may be the most responsible choice of all.

matijalovrich@gmail.com

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