Premier: Serbia ready to reduce dependency on Russian gas


              Serbian Prime Minister, Aleksandar Vucic, speaks at the news conference after talks with host Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama, as the first Serbian leader to visit the nation after a troubled past, at the Palace of Brigades in the Albanian capital, Tirana, Wednesday, May 27, 2015. Both countries are trying to overcome their troubled past while working toward EU membership. Relations between the two Balkan states remain strained, mainly over the former Serbian province of Kosovo where majority ethnic Albanians declared independence in 2008 which Serbia refused to recognize.  (AP Photo/Hektor Pustina)
Serbian Prime Minister, Aleksandar Vucic, speaks at the news conference after talks with host Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama, as the first Serbian leader to visit the nation after a troubled past, at the Palace of Brigades in the Albanian capital, Tirana, Wednesday, May 27, 2015. Both countries are trying to overcome their troubled past while working toward EU membership. Relations between the two Balkan states remain strained, mainly over the former Serbian province of Kosovo where majority ethnic Albanians declared independence in 2008 which Serbia refused to recognize. (AP Photo/Hektor Pustina)

TIRANA, Albania (AP) - Serbian Prime Minister Aleksandar Vucic says his country will accept U.S. calls to reduce dependency on Russian gas supplies by adding an American-backed pipeline that would bring gas to Europe from Azerbaijan.

Vucic tells the AP in an interview that "regarding energy safety, energy security, we are ready to diversify the sources of gas for Serbia, which is very important for our American friends as well."

The U.S. has been encouraging Balkan states to move forward with the alternative pipeline, rather than setting its hopes on a project that would pipe Russian gas through Turkey. The West has accused Russia of using gas as a tool to increase its political influence over countries like Serbia.

Supporting the American-backed pipeline is a major policy shift by Serbia, a traditional Russian ally.

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