Mr. Bajatovic, please leave the meeting – Aleksandar Milosevic



[ad_1]

Mr. Bajatovic, please leave meeting 1

Here on Saturday there was a really good movie, a black comedy with Zoran Mihajlović and Dušan Bajatović in the main roles. Or on all channels.

The introduction is as follows: After a small country in Southeastern Europe signed an agreement with the world’s largest superpower in which it learned that it would move its Israeli embassy to Jerusalem, it broke away from the gas embrace of a rival superpower. and a lot of credit was awarded to build roads. The first?) Province with which he also signed the agreement (although in a complicated denial operation he assures that he did not do so), the president of that country, overwhelmed by an unprecedented victory in an election in which the opposition did not participate , decides to kill two flies in one fell swoop: (1) get rid of and (2) demonstrate to his new protectors the loyalty of his close but fickle coalition partners known to associate with that other power (a demonstration that these, however, they probably demanded), either by eliminating or neutralizing so that there is not an iota of doubt about who the wine is now dripping from.

The new love is shown like this: all the ministers close to the other power were expelled from the government of this small country, and those who could not be expelled were removed where they did not bother. Thus, Ivica Dačić and Aleksandar Antić withdrew, Vulin was expelled from the army directly to the police, and Nenad Popović was first expelled from the government and then promptly returned (more on this later).

It is at that moment, and after this introduction, that our weekend movie begins.

Zorana Mihajlovic, the new energy minister, close to new friends, invites directors of public companies to a meeting in the government, among them Dusan Bajatovic, director of Srbijagas, close to old friends. Although the film is domestic, the new balance of power is shown with all the theatricality of Hollywood, but the direction is sadly weaker.

The introductory scene begins with a meeting in the Government in which Zoran asks Bajatović where his associates are. As he arrived alone, and the invitation to the meeting said that he should come with his associates, Zorana immediately declared him “disrespectful to the Government” and shouted dramatically: “Mr. Bajatović, please leave the meeting!”

Bajatović refuses, confusingly defending himself: “I didn’t do anything wrong,” as the camera focuses on Zoran on the response he first saw when Blake kicked Alexis out or something like that: “Call security!” When the shot is interrupted, the crowd and the embarrassed Bajatović, pretending to be casual in an attempt to ward off his nervousness, can be seen expressively placing a chair at the table, turning around and leaving.

There the film ends (it is a short meter) and distribution begins. First, literally all the media were informed about the events described in this realization, with the official announcement of the Ministry of Energy, and then, when interest peaked, the recording itself “leaked.”

Needless to say, it was an instant hit. All the televisions took it, it was circling all the news, social networks and portals exploded, and soon it was captioned. There is no man who turned on the television or opened newspaper sites without getting lost.

The success was totally and really deserved, because, although it has a lot of hype, we rarely see such a funny grotesque on our channels, which are otherwise dominated by psychodrama.

But, let’s finally leave the sphere of cinematography and see what really happened here. After the president of Serbia gave the signal that the United States is in first place and that Donald Trump has to show that he is a man of confidence, Zorana Mihajlović, as always, recognized the political moment.

Bajatović, no doubt a Russian in Serbia, thus became the object of their rage, and the theatrical expulsion with accidentally lit cameras and a ridiculous excuse was intended as part of the campaign to keep Washington on track.

However, while this performance certainly looks convincing (Bajatović was really uncomfortable, the SPS got it again, Zorana actually used her five minutes to publicly humiliate Bajatović, an old opponent, Russia is certainly not satisfied), it sends a signal that the final secession of Putin arrived, it will be only if that Bajatović is fired in the next few days. Because it is one thing to shout theatrically at someone on television and another is to take power away from that man and put someone of your own. Someone who is not Russian. Someone pro-American.

We can guess from the Popović case if this will happen. Having first expelled all Russian elements from the government, the president decided in vain to return Popovic.

In the meantime, let us remind you that Lavrov canceled his trip to Serbia just hours before he was supposed to land, while Putin refused to come a little earlier.

It so happened that the president, in fact, lost his nerve. His initial intention to completely eliminate the Russian elements fell apart at the last minute.

One should understand his position as a man in a sandwich. On the one hand, he is obliged to fulfill the promises he made to Trump, and on the other, he was elected by Putin’s electorate in a country that depends for energy on Russia. So now you are playing a game that you can defend.

Popovic’s remnant offers an excuse that he did not “kick Russia out” but the SPS. Zorana is in the energy sector because he is an expert and not an American man, and Vulin was not retired from the military, but Stefanović had to move from the MUP.

The Americans are served the opposite, that the Russians are neutralized of defense and energy, in the hope that they will somehow tolerate Popovic.

In short, Bajatovic is probably safe from Zoran. At least until his term expires.

Truth meter

[ad_2]