Steven Carlson on Sun, 11 Apr 1999 08:47:04 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Re: The War and its consequences |
Ivo, I haven't always agreed with your reports, but I've found you one of the most reasoned voices on nettime, and I particularly agree with your assessment of how events will develop from now. It's clearly a lose/lose situation. We all lose, and it's only a question of degree. Last night, my girlfriend and I went to visit another couple. It was a strange, tense evening because - like it or not - the war is subtley changing our relations with one another. I need to provide you with a bit of context by adding that I'm from California and my girlfriend Slavica is from Novi Sad, as are our two friends Vladi and Vesna. We all live in Budapest, and we've been friends for several years. Slavica has been cooped up in her flat for the past two weeks watching CNN with her sister and cousin, both of whom live in Novi Sad, but have decided to sit out the conflict here in Budapest. Every day, more and more people are arriving from Yugoslavia with the same idea, and while Slavica likes to tease the two girls by calling them refugees, we really don't know when - or if - the girls will return. The tension was getting on our nerves and so I suggested to Slavica that we get out of the house. Like everyone else, Vladi and Vesna have been watching the war on TV and when we all sat down to visit there was really only one topic of conversation. Vesna, who is originally from Bosnia, confessed to me she is afraid she is losing her identity. 'I'm ashamed to call myself a Serb or Yugoslav anymore. It's like being a Libyan or an Iraqi. We used to be proud to be Yugoslavs, but nobody remembers that anymore. You don't know what it's like losing your identity.' Vladi and Vesna wanted to know my opinion. The problem is all sides are to blame for creating this mess, and there are no heroes. NATO could not have chosen a better way to strengthen Milosevic, and yet now that the war has started they have to finish it. And if you ask me what is worse - NATO's bombing, or the ethnic cleansing of Kosovo - then I have to side with NATO. The Serbs aren't helping themselves one bit by parading around with targets and raising their fists at rock concerts, while their soldiers burn villages in Kosovo. But try telling this to your friends as they watch their hometown burning on CNN. And yet, they understand this. The other night, we saw burning on TV the petroleum refinery where Slavica's father works. Or used to work. And yet Slavica still thinks the Serbs need to suffer a defeat in order to get over their national martyr complex. But the situation is too complicated for black and white value judgements, which makes it all the more frustrating. Vladi and Vesna are horrified at the refugee crisis. And yet we know the Kosovar Albanians have also played their part in escalating the hatred. At one point in the evening Vesna invited me to grind the beans for coffee with a lovely hand-operated grinder. When I commented that such grinders are usually manufactured in Albania, Vesna angrily pointed out the stamp on the bottom of the machine identifying it as Serbian. You commented: > I didn't see much of what are we going to actually do with the Balkans > besides just bombing the shit out of Serbia, so far. There is some > serious political and economic effort needed to rebuild that entire > region (Bosnia, Serbia, Montenegro, Kosovo, Vojvodina, Macedonia), > which was bankcrupt even before the wars of Yugoslav succession > started, and now is beyond hope. Who is prepared to fork billions of > dollars into the region? Imagine in the early 90s that some politican had stood up and said we should spend $10 billion in an effort to overcome ancient racial hatreds in Yugoslavia, build lasting political institutions, and modernize the economy. Is that any more ridiculous that what we're doing now? You made a particularly good point here, Ivo: > It is really strange that NATO in all its sorties left Milosevic with > perhaps the most powerful weapon still undamaged: Television. > The power of electronic media is vastly underestimated. I believe that > Nazis would never loose the WW II, had Goebels have the television at > his disposal. The root of the Yugoslav crisis is the so-called media war of the early 90s, when politicians in Belgrade and Zagreb began eliminating independent media and stirring up old racial hatreds. I can't help but wonder what would have happened had the so-called 'international community' intervened at that early stage to offer alternative sources of information. Milosevic has such a stranglehold on information that most Serbs really don't know the full extent of what their army is doing in Kosovo. We have smart bombs, but we still don't have smart politicians or, for that matter, smart voters. I'm tired of all this, and I just wish it would end. ______________ Steven Carlson A conclusion is simply the place iSYS Hungary Kft where you got tired of thinking +361.266.6090 http://www.isys.hu --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl