Bosnia's International Overseer Christian Schmidt Resigns After US Pressure, Warns of State Collapse
Where things stand
Updated May 12, 04:56 PMNo independent verification has been obtained for claims that Christian Schmidt has resigned as the international overseer for Bosnia and Herzegovina. All reports remain single-sourced, and key details—including the reasons for his departure, the role of US pressure, and any connection to commercial interests—cannot be confirmed. As a result, the current state of the story remains unverified, with no official confirmation from relevant parties. The dossier will be updated once claims are corroborated by two or more independent sources.
Open questions
- Has Christian Schmidt actually resigned as High Representative?
- What specifically led to the reported US pressure for his resignation?
- Is there a connection between the resignation and a pipeline deal involving Trump Jr. as reported?
- Will Schmidt warn the UN Security Council about the fragility of the Bosnian state as reported?
- What is the future of the Office of the High Representative following this event?
- Has Milorad Dodik's disqualification been affected by this development?
- Will EU coordination on Balkan policy be impacted by the reported US policy shift?
What's corroborated
Dodik welcomed Schmidt's resignation on Sunday.
1 sourceacross 1 articleSince 1995, Bosnia and Herzegovina consists of two entities: the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Republika Srpska.
1 sourceacross 1 articleSchmidt disqualified former Republika Srpska president Milorad Dodik from office for six months for failing to comply with his decisions.
1 sourceacross 1 articleDodik has not dropped his secessionist views.
1 sourceacross 1 articleUS sanctions on Dodik were lifted in a move not coordinated with the European Union, signaling a shifting US approach to the western Balkans.
1 sourceacross 1 article