THE
BALKANS ARE STILL POSED TO PLAGUE THE 21ST CENTURY
By Denis MacShane
This summer sees the 20th
anniversary of the massacre of SREBRENICA. Eight thousand EUROPEANS were taken
outside, their hands carefully tied behind their backs and SERBIAN soldiers
shot them all in cold blood.
The mass graves had been
dug, the exact amount of ammunition to carry out the executions given out, and
food and drink brought for the soldiers carrying out this mass murder.
It was the worst single
massacre by armed security forces of unarmed prisoners since the days of KATYN
or the mass killings by GERMANS in World War II.
Twenty years after 1945, GERMANY
was at peace with its neighbors, had normal diplomatic relations with the
countries it once occupied or had annexed like AUSTRIA, and was at the heart of
both NATO and the EUROPEAN ECONOMIC COMMUNITY.
Thanks to bold political
leadership, the dreadful crimes of 1940-1945 faded into history, even if vivid
in memory. Compare the 20th anniversary of 1945 to the 20th anniversary of 1995
in the WESTERN BALKANS, the region from CROATIA to GREECE, where no final
settlement is in sight.
GREECE’S
COUNTER-PRODUCTIVE DIPLOMATIC POLICY
GREECE’S current EUROZONE
problems need no elaboration but GREECE has not helped itself with its
counter-productive diplomatic policy of refusing to give normal diplomatic status
to its two northern neighbors, MACEDONIA and KOSOVO.
CROATIA remains plagued
by accusations of corruption and clientelism. Sixty thousand CROATIANS took out
mortgages in SWISS francs. They now face a crippling increase in repayments
following the dramatic revaluation of the SWISS franc, when the SWISS National
Bank decided to abolish the peg of €1:CHF1.20 at the end of January.
BOSNIA
REMAINS WITHOUT COMMON STATE INSTITUTIONS,
as its SERBIAN community
in the REPUBLIKA SRPSKA simply refuses to live jointly under a common
nation-state rule with BOSNIAKS and CROATIANS.
Massive air and ground
NATO intervention, following the decision of President BILL CLINTON to reverse
his 1992 election pledge not to get involved in the BALKANS, stopped the SERBIAN
assault on SARAJEVO in 1995.
Four years later, in KOSOVO,
NATO planes and soldiers intervened when SERB militias ran amok in a rampage of
murder and ethnic cleansing of ALBANIAN KOSOVANS.
NO
VIOLENCE, BUT NO SETTLEMENT EITHER
But if full-on violence
is a thing of the past, there is no settlement to produce open borders or
regional economic integration, or to oblige nations to accept their war crimes,
as GERMANY did after 1945.
Five European member
states – SPAIN, SLOVAKIA, ROMANIA, GREECE and CYPRUS – refuse to recognize the
independent status of KOSOVO. Each may have its own reasons.
SPAIN has enclaves in MOROCCO,
resents BRITISH presence in GIBRALTAR and frets over the idea of CATALAN
secession. SLOVAKIA and ROMANIA are angry at HUNGARIAN insistence that HUNGARIAN
minorities owe a loyalty to BUDAPEST, not to the nations of citizenship.
RUSSIA and SERBIA spend
significant diplomatic resources trying to stop KOSOVO from being recognized as
a UN member state, despite 120 of the world governments now accepting KOSOVO’S
status as an independent nation.
MACEDONIA is plagued by
bitter political division with credible reports of vote rigging to keep the
current government in power. The idea of alternating governments or power
sharing is unknown in the WESTERN BALKANS where winner-takes-all clientalist
politics rules.
The only hope appears to
be EU integration. Yet SERBIA’S Prime Minister ALEXSANDAR VUCIC gave an
aggressive interview to the NEUE ZÜRCHER ZEITUNG on March 10, 2015, in which he
said, “We are not ready to recognize KOSOVO as an independent state. I hope BRUSSELS
is not waiting for any concessions from SERBIA.”
PRECISELY
WHAT THE EU WANTS
Prime Mnister VUCIC could
not be more wrong. That is precisely the concession that the EU wants. An
acceptance that KOSOVO is no longer a province or region of SERBIA, as the
surreal SERBIAN constitution asserts, would prove that SERBIA is serious about
accepting the responsibilities of being a normal EU member state.
VUCIC rejected the view
that KOSOVO was de facto an independent state. He showed a flash of anger that
the SWISS journalists would even ask him.
Yet in the same
interview, he offers no support to SERBIAN hardliners in BOSNIA stating, “We
respect the territorial integrity of BOSNIA-HERZOGOVINA with no if’s or but’s. REPUBLIKA
SRPSKA belongs to BOSNIA.”
KOSOVO
There is clearly a
contradiction between VUCIC telling SERBS in BOSNIA that they owe allegiance to
the post-YUGOSLAV state, but refusing to do the same to SERBS in KOSOVO.
Under EU pressure,
relations between BELGRADE and PRISTINA have improved. KOSOVANS can now travel
into and out of SERBIA using KOSOVO identity papers but not a KOSOVAN passport.
There is regular dialogue
between PRISTINA and BELGRADE. But as long as KOSOVO is unable to join major
international institutions like the UN because of SERB opposition, the country
cannot seek investment and foreign trade as the post-1950 countries of WESTERN
EUROPE could.
GREECE
AND CYPRUS HAVE ORTHODOX CHURCH LOYALTIES TO ORTHODOX SERBIA.
Of course, the SERBIAN
opposition is backed by the KREMLIN, which has still not forgiven the 1999 NATO
intervention that ended the power of the client SLOBODAN MILOŠEVIĆ.
The WESTERN BALKANS continue
to have too many fault lines – three religions with a dreadful history of war
and treating other faiths as mortal enemies combine with no clear distinction
between government and business, so that money-making is as important for politicians
as good government.
The GREEK crisis is the
most visible problem plaguing EUROPE. RUSSIA hovers, waiting to exploit
opportunities by offering political and diplomatic support to GREEKS, SERBS,
and MONTENEGRINS, as well as dangling energy and banking concessions to anyone
who will switch from the EU to PUTIN.
GREECE and SERBIA could
transform their negative image in the main EU capitals as well as in BRUSSELS
by promoting grown-up diplomacy and recognizing KOSOVO.
There is no evidence this
will happen. The 21st century will be as plagued by the WESTERN BALKANS as were
the 19th and 20th centuries.
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