ichael . benson on Sun, 20 Jun 1999 14:46:02 +0000 |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
Re: Syndicate: moral responsibility |
James writes: > I am always struck by how simple your view of the break up of the > Former Yugoslavia is. There are never Serbian refugees, or Croatian > or Bosnian atrocities. I submit: >>Date sent: Tue, 30 Mar 1999 23:47:10 +0000: >>...reports, forensic evidence, satellite photographs, etc. I refer >>you also to war crimes transcripts at the International Human Rights >>Tribunal at The Hague. These sources are more than enough to >>establish a very clear pattern of behavior on the part of the >>Serbian fascist --I'll say it again: fascist; that's what it is -- >>regime. >>This does not mean I am an apologist for the disgusting and corrupt >>Croatian regime, which is also fascist, nor does it mean I'm working >>for anybody; sorry! You know, deploring one doesn't have to involve endorsing the other. We're not living in a black and white world! Or this: >>Date sent: Thu, 24 Jun 1999 14:16:46 +0000 >>In fact, Bush-and-Clinton, Major, Mitterand and company >>should probably have gotten together to write a new text book on >>post-modern appeasement techniques -- in which the appearance of >>action cloaks a total unwillingness to take the political risks >>necessary to counter Serbian (or for that matter, Croatian) >>territorial conquest in Bosnia. And etc. James, you say: >The Serbs did not desolve a relatively functional state on their > own. No, on the contrary what they did was to try to re-assert centralized control in a state that had been quite effectively decentralized by Tito in the early 70's precisely to forestall nascent nationalist discontent. He was a cunning guy, Tito, and he understood how to keep a multinational country together far better than (the understatement of the decade!) Slobodan Milosevic. Of course, the above is a simplification of a complex story abridged to make a point. It involved throwing various people into jail. Removal of the autonomous status of Kosovo and Vojvodina was part of those late-80's moves by the Serbian socialist government under Milosevic to extend direct rule from Belgrade. This marked the beginning of the transition from "brotherhood and unity" socialism to "blut-boden" *national* socialism. Late 80's and 1990 attempts to broker a solution acceptable to all the republics, which would have preserved Yugoslavia, were consistently blocked by Milosevic. They all had many meetings, we saw it all on TV, they were unable to come to an agreement. Then his government stole 2/3rds of the entire state budget of Yugoslavia, one fine weekend in 1990! After that decisions were made, in Ljubljana Zagreb and elsewhere, that it was impossible to continue with the Yugoslav project. Correct decisions. Seems to me. This is all on the public record. >Was/Is Tudjman some sort of innocent? Tudjman is a corrupt fascist on the model of South American banana republic leaders of the 50's-60's-70's. Since you asked. Braids on the shoulders, ribbons on the chest, a snake in the heart. In my judgement, though, Tudjman never would have started a war. I may be wrong about this. I think Tudjman would have been content to exploit the wealth of Croatia, buy himself large state yachts and Lear jets, and make sure that every Croatian bookstore was packed to the gills with large coffee-table type books with his portrait on the cover and 500 pages or so of laudatory text inside about what a benevolent genius and father of his country he is. That's his idea of a good time. This doesn't take away from the back-log of war crimes that lead right to his door. He deserves indictment as well. But, at the beginning at least, he was reactive, not active. After all, one third of Croatia was occupied by the Yugoslav Army! But we were talking about Kosovo. Tudjman doesn't figure. > Why was Germany, and much of the West, so eager to support the > breakup of the old state? This is a typical compound of an exceedingly small percentage of truth and a large boat-load of falsehood. Secretary of State James Baker flew into Belgrade in '90 and basically said -- to Slobo and the assembled generals -- "we support the territorial integrity of Yugoslavia." Which was widely read as a big green light to impose that integrity by force. (Incidentally, Baker is also responsible for another colossal boner, when he instructed US Ambassador to Iraq April Gallaspie to tell Saddam Hussein -- in response to Hussein's direct question conveyed to Baker through Gallaspie -- that the US had "no position on Iraq's border dispute with Kuwait." Baker was a kind of green light specialist. Other people had to pay.) On the other hand, when it became clear that nothing, nothing at all, was going to keep Slovenia and Croatia from jumping out of the leaking Yugoslav boat, German foreign minister Genscher definitely saw an opportunity for Germany to re-assert a leading role in post-socialist Central Europe. And forced through recognition of those states. Over the objections of a lot of other countries. I believe, though, that he thought that such recognition might help end the Belgrade-directed campaign against Croatia. You would probably say the road to hell is paved with good intentions. My problem with Genscher's action was that it didn't hold out the requirement that Croatia adhere, in a verifiable way, to the human rights standards that are even spelled out in the Croatian constitution. After recognition that leverage was gone. Tudjman should have gone to Jasenovac, gotten down on his knees, and said that Croatia would never be able to live down that tragedy and would certainly protect the rights of its minorities. It wouldn't have been in character, though, to put it mildly! But I still think it wouldn't have changed anything. In the summer of 1990, Mihajlo Markovic, the Praxis group philosopher and a close advisor of Milosevic, made it clear to me in an interview that "steps would be taken" in Croatia. Slovenia, he said, would be allowed to leave. >Did Serbs have no legitimate interest in trying to protect Serbian > populations long established in Croatia, Bosnia, and now Kosovo? Yeah, but not by evicting the non Serbian populations in a campaign of terror and murder! Why is it so hard to understand that? The so-called Krajna region of Croatia was the first massive example of ethnic cleansing -- and I'm not talking about Serbs being evicted by victorious Croats here, I'm talking about Croats being evicted by the JNA (under the command of the appropriately-named Ratko Mladic) and vicious hordes of paramilitaries. This is all well-documented. Those who piss and moan about the very real disaster that befell the Serbs evicted from their ancestral lands in Croatia several years later generally fail to mention that those lands had been entirely cleansed of their Croat populations in '91-92. When the Croatian army showed up, the local Serbs of course ran like hell, and with good reason. "Those to whom evil is done / do evil in return". Auden. Not a justification. An observation. Some would say that Serbian 'cleansing' of the Krajna, total destruction of Vukovar, shelling of Dubrovnik, etc., was all pre-emptive -- that the Serbs had a legitimate fear of the 'Ustache regime' in Zagreb. Well, again we have a percentage of truth and a large amount of falsehood. Tudjman did very little to assuage the fears of the Serbs. But the reason state-controlled Serbian media is directly complicit in the manufacture of this war is that they worked overtime to fan the fears of the Croatian and Bosnian Serbs -- most of whom were peasants really unable to be skeptical about what they were being told, ceaselessly, by their TV's. This created conditions ripe for the ethnic cleansing that followed. When you pour into this mix the power of the JNA, and the deployment of paramilitaries specifically recruited from jails, in groups run by hardened criminals wanted by interpol (no, I'm not making this up), you've got the makings of a real blood-bath. > > You try to sound fair minded, but you see this in a way in which all > evil in the Balkans is Serbian. No, not really. But I'm not shy about identifying where that evil started, at least in it's current wave. (For a look at its origins in previous wave, look at the tragic personal family stories of Milosevic, Mladic, Adzic, Mirjana Markovic. Everything we've seen is a 20th century story.) Again, evil has a way of breeding yet more evil. If you corral civilized, essentially non-violent people in squalid ethnic ghettoes, shell them for years, all the while shouting that they are Turks, mujahadeen fanatics, etc., you are going to end up reaping the whirlwind. And you will certainly create another generation bent on revenge, a new twist in the DNA spiral of violence. You would have me out there as some pro-NATO warmonger. What I deplore is all this violence, from the beginning, and the necessity of the NATO action in the first place. It doesn't mean I don't see that necessity, though; I do. It should have happened much, much earlier. Like for example at Vukovar. All this could have been avoided, with some enlightened leadership in the West. That's the real crime. Slobodan says it takes two to make a war. Well sure; somebody hits you repeatedly in the face, and you either let that person beat you to death or you fight back, if you can. When you fight back, you are open to accusations of being a war-monger. It's not very Quakerly, but there it is. James, you accuse me of having a simple view of the break-up of Yugoslavia. It's fluff. Best, MB Michael Benson <michael.benson@pristop.si> <http://www.ljudmila.org/kinetikon/> ------Syndicate mailinglist-------------------- Syndicate network for media culture and media art information and archive: http://www.v2.nl/syndicate to unsubscribe, write to <syndicate-request@aec.at> in the body of the msg: unsubscribe your@email.adress