Russia has been infiltrating European public life for more than a century - from funding early socialist movements to manipulating Western media and NGOs today.
Serbia is now the next target of this hybrid playbook.
🧵 1/20
Serbia shares deep cultural and religious ties with Russia: Orthodox heritage, WWII alliance, and dependence on Russian gas. But behind the history, Moscow’s leverage is economic, not emotional.
🧵 2/20
Western media often cast President Aleksandar Vučić as “Putin’s man in the Balkans.” Still, the reality is that Serbia is trying to stay warm, solvent, and independent while Russia uses both gas and disinformation as tools of pressure.
🧵 3/20
Serbia has been an EU candidate since 2012. The EU is its largest trading partner, investor, and donor. Moscow knows that losing Serbia means losing its last major foothold in the Balkans.
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That’s why Russia plays both friend and enforcer. When Belgrade buys French Rafale jets or backs Ukraine’s territorial integrity, Moscow retaliates with media attacks and energy blackmail.
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In May 2025, Russia’s Foreign Intelligence Service accused Serbia of “supplying ammunition to Kyiv” - calling it a “stab in the back.” This was not diplomacy. It was a warning shot.
🧵 6/20
Serbia’s leadership has condemned Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and repeatedly affirmed that Crimea and Donbas belong to Ukraine. For Moscow, that’s betrayal. For Brussels, it’s proof of progress.
🧵 7/20
Energy is where the Kremlin still holds the knife. About 85–90% of Serbia’s gas comes from Russia, mostly via Gazprom-owned Naftna Industrija Srbije (NIS). Belgrade has no quick alternative.
🧵 8/20
When Washington sanctioned NIS for its Gazprom ties, Moscow threatened to cut gas entirely if Belgrade tried to nationalise the company. That’s not partnership - that’s blackmail.
🧵 9/20
In response, the EU invited Serbia to join its collective gas-buying platform - a step to reduce Russian leverage. As Ursula von der Leyen said in Belgrade:
“We are connecting Serbia with the EU energy market - that’s real security for Serbian families.”
🧵 10/20
Serbia now faces a choice: align its energy future with Europe or stay dependent on a supplier that weaponises winter. And that’s exactly when Russia opens its second front: the media.
🧵 11/20
Opposition outlets such as N1 TV and Nova S brand themselves as independent.
But investigations show their ownership traces back to offshore companies linked to Russian financial networks.
🧵 12/20
At the centre stands Wolfram Kuoni - former Vice-Chairman of Gazprombank Switzerland, known in Europe as “the Kremlin’s banker.”
He also sat on the board of United Media, Serbia’s largest private broadcaster.
🧵 13/20
Through Kuoni’s network, Gazprom-linked funds moved through Swiss, Dutch, and Cypriot companies into Serbia’s media sector.
The result: control disguised as competition.
🧵 14/20
Dragan Šolak, the billionaire founder of United Group, used those same offshore channels to buy Serbia’s biggest advertising and TV network - then sold it back to his own holding for over €100 million.
A perfect loop of influence and profit.
🧵 15/20
Today, United Media outlets still use Western branding - including a CNN license - yet increasingly echo Kremlin talking points on energy, Rio Tinto, and Serbia’s “neutrality.”
🧵 16/20
So while the West accuses Vučić of being too close to Moscow, Russian-aligned business interests are quietly capturing Serbia’s opposition media - turning “free press” into another weapon of pressure.
🧵 17/20
This is Moscow’s modern playbook:
Not tanks, but transactions.
Not soldiers, but shareholders.
And Serbia sits on the front line.
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Belgrade’s real struggle isn’t choosing between East and West. It’s breaking free from dependence - energy, media, and money - that keep the country vulnerable to Kremlin manipulation.
🧵 19/20
The question isn’t whether Serbia is Russia’s ally. It’s whether Europe will release Russia’s hostage.
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Since the Yugoslav wars, Serbia has walked a geopolitical tightrope, both courted and sanctioned by Russia, the EU, and America. Let’s unpack how Serbia became Europe’s perpetual in-betweener.
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After the breakup of Yugoslavia in the 1990s, Serbia found itself isolated, vilified by the West for its role in Bosnia and Kosovo, and scarred by NATO’s 1999 bombing of Belgrade. The scars left by the 1990s still define Serbian politics today.
🧵 2/21
The NATO intervention was carried out without UN approval, remains the cornerstone of Serbia’s deep distrust of the West and the emotional foundation of its enduring friendship with Russia.
There is definitely a chance, a likelihood, a high likelihood there will be an “October 7th” style attack on Western soil,
says journalist @emilykschrader as she points out that “it wouldn’t be the first time we have seen a terror attack in Europe”.
We are seeing major, major efforts from Islamist organisations like the Muslim Brotherhood, to hijack the narrative, to spread disinformation, to take advantage of the ignorance of students, of Gen Z and even younger people, to indoctrinate them, warns @emilykschrader.
@emilykschrader There are subversion operations taking place in the West.
For instance, the billions of dollars that have been poured by Qatar which to promote Muslim Brotherhood ideology in the United States… says journalist @emilykschrader.
On October 7, 2023, Hamas terrorists launched a brutal attack on Israel, targeting the Nova Music Festival near Re'im, where thousands of young people had gathered for a night of music and celebration. More than 370 attendees were murdered in the massacre.
This thread remembers 20 of those young victims.
🧵 1/21
Shani Louk, 22, German-Israeli tattoo artist.
She was killed while attending the festival. Her body was then paraded by Hamas militants in the streets of Gaza City, partially clothed, with a significant head injury and blood in her hair.
🧵 2/21
Orión Hernández Radoux, 30, French-Mexican.
Shani Louk’s boyfriend, was abducted by Hamas. Originally from Mexico, he was a father to a young child. 230 days after being kidnapped, it was confirmed that Orión had been murdered while in captivity.
On October 7th, 2023, Hamas launched brutal attacks across Israel, ruthlessly killing innocent children among others.
This thread details 20 young victims, their names, and the savage acts committed by these terrorists.
🧵 1/21
Noya Dan, 12 years old: Killed during an attempted abduction, along with her grandmother, on the Nir Oz Kibbutz. Terrorists set the house they were hiding on fire.
🧵 2/21
Noya Sharabi, 16 years old: Killed along with her sister and mother when armed groups attacked their home in Be'eri.
A thread on how the UN under Antonio Guterres has built a relationship with the Muslim Brotherhood through Yusuf al-Qaradawi
There's now a nexus between Qatar, Hamas, UN-supported Islamist NGOs & the new MB base in South Africa for islamist lawfare against Israel & the West 🧵
The Network
To the surprise of many, there are close ties between UN Secretary-General António Guterres, Muslim Brotherhood’s late spiritual leader Yusuf al-Qaradawi and his Qatar-based organization International Union of Muslim Scholars (IUMS).
These players are in turn all connected to the growing Muslim Brotherhood base in South Africa and the South African Lawfare Nexus.
Qaradawi, the Muslim Brotherhood’s most influential cleric, spent decades issuing fatwas legitimising jihad against Israel, encouraging suicide bombings, and promoting antisemitic narratives.
The IUMS, founded by Qaradawi, has been formally designated a terrorist organisation by Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the UAE, and Bahrain due to its Hamas and Brotherhood affiliations.
Despite this, António Guterres met with Al-Qaradawi and visited the IUMS. The organisation’s leadership publicly confirmed and exploited this engagement, boasting of “good relations with the UN” and claiming cooperation on Islamic charity and waqf initiatives.
The IUMS used the Guterres encounter as a deliberate legitimacy laundering tactic, neutralising its terror designation in Arab countries by pointing to having received recognition by the UN.
These links are not incidental. They align with the Muslim Brotherhood’s long-standing strategy of weaponizing international institutions to delegitimise Israel.
South Africa has become a critical node in this campaign, with Qaradawi’s influence visible through key figures:
• Ebrahim “Jibril” Gabriels – Muslim Judicial Council leader, IUMS affiliate, Union of Good trustee and president of the Al-Quds Foundation South Africa.
• Ebrahim Rasool – African National Congress (ANC) politician, expelled South African Ambassador to the United States in early 2025, linked deeply and bound into Qaradawi’s radical orbit.
• Imtiaz Sooliman – Founder of Gift of the Givers, cultivating ties to Qatar and Qaradawi’s network while advancing pro-Palestinian narratives under humanitarian cover. Sooliman has a 33-year track record with only recent exposure as to his real activist agenda and affiliation with Qawadari’s Union of Good including his close ties to Gabriels and the Muslim Judicial Council
Together, these elements explain why South Africa today spearheads lawfare against Israel at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and other forums. The UN’s top official, by engaging Qaradawi and his institutions, has strengthened this islamist network.
The picture below shows Al-Qaradawi, Ebrahim Gabriels and Nelson Mandela spending time together.
2/7 🧵
Qaradawi, the Muslim Brotherhood and the IUMS
We all know about the violent Jihadist organizations such as Al-Qaida, ISIS and Hamas.
However, most people know very little about the most influential Islamist organization, the Muslim Brotherhood. Even fewer know that it has a Patron state, and one that is broadcasting Muslim Brotherhood propaganda to the homes of hundreds of millions of homes across the world. That state is the immensely oil and gas-rich Qatar and the TV channel is Al-Jazeera. The Muslim Brotherhood is strongly linked to 3 players. Egypt, Palestine and Qatar.
It was founded in Egypt in 1928 by the cleric Hassan al-Banna as a reaction to how weak the Muslim world had become in relation to the West since the Enlightenment and the Industrial Revolution. Al-Banna and other Muslim Islamists argued that the muslim community was weak due to having become corrupted over the centuries and had to go back to practicing the pure Islam of Mohammed and the first Caliphs.
The movement spread like wildfire in Egypt and one of its most notable early accomplishments was its involvement in the 1936 to 1939 Arab revolt in Palestine. The revolt failed, but the Brotherhood succeeded in making the Palestine-issue a widespread Muslim concern. After the Second World War, they lobbied for granting Amin al-Husseini, the Mufti of Jerusalem who had collaborated with Nazi Germany during the war, asylum in Egypt.
After the 1952 military coup against the monarchy, the Egyptian military started treating the Brotherhood as a rival and threat to their rule. Because of it, many of their most important ideological leaders were forced to move to Saudi Arabia and Qatar. Yusuf al-Qaradawi was the most important one. He was sent from the Al-Azhar University in Cairo in 1962 to head the Qatari Secondary Institute of Religious Studies in Doha. In 1977, he laid the foundation for the Faculty of Shari'ah and Islamic Studies at the University of Qatar. Later, he became the host of a show on Al-Jazeera called “Sharia and Life” which had a viewership of around 80 million per episode, making him one of the most influential muslim voices in the world.
The Royal Family of Qatar, the House of Al-Thani, has been using the Muslim Brotherhood as a tool to minimize political opposition against them. In exchange for allowing the Brotherhood to use the country as a base for its international operations, the Brotherhood makes sure that there is no political threat based on organized religion against the Monarchy.
Unfortunately, other countries are on the losing side of this deal. Qatar, Al-Jazeera and the Brotherhood cooperated in bringing the Muslim Brotherhood briefly into power in Egypt in 2011 and have sowed Islamist chaos throughout the Middle East since the Arab Spring started in 2011.
As the spiritual leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, al-Qaradawi played a key role in this.
In 2004, he founded the The International Union of Muslim Scholars (IUMS) as an international body of Islamic theologians working to centralize international Islamic jurisprudence.[6]
The IUMS now consists of around 95,000 Muslim scholars globally and 67 Islamic organizations.
Among its most prominent current and former members include imprisoned Saudi Islamic scholar Salman al-Ouda, the former Hamas terrorist leader Ismail Haniyeh, the chief Iranian Sunni cleric Abdolhamid Ismaeelzahi and the Malaysian politician and religious leader Ahmad Awang,
Al-Qaradawi died in 2022 but formed the organization into what it has become and despite attempts to declare him a moderate, al-Qaradi was behind several actions that made it clear that he was a radical Muslim Brotherhood islamist through and through:
• He issued several fatwas (a ruling on a point of Islamic law) for jihad against Israel – explicitly endorsing suicide bombings.
• Antisemitic incitement – framing Jews as enemies of Islam.
• Endorsement of Hamas – publicly blessing their terror campaigns as religiously
mandated.
This ideological framework positioned Israel not as a state actor in conflict but as a religious enemy to be eradicated.
Qaradawi globalised this narrative through the IUMS, embedding it into clerical institutions across continents. The IUMS was designed to be the Muslim Brotherhood’s international umbrella for religious authority. It quickly became a hub for Islamic clerics and activists connected to Hamas, the Brotherhood, and affiliated terror supporting networks.
The IUMS is:
• Designated as a Terror organization by Saudi Arabia, UAE, Egypt, Bahrain. (All citing IUMS links to the Muslim Brotherhood.
• Linked to Hamas financing via the Union of Good.
• Positioned in Doha under Qatari patronage.
This positioning gives it resources, political cover, and global reach