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Save Sabrina P. Ramet-Thinking About Yugoslavia Scholar... For Later Thinking about Yugoslavia
Scholarly Debates about the Yugoslav Breakup
and the Wars in Bosnia and Kosovo
Sabrina P. Ramet
CAMBRIDGE
UNIVERSITY PRESSDK ISI6
R&b
2005
(CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRES
CaNbeiige, Near York, Melbourne, Madeid, Cape Town, Singapore, Sto Panto
Cambridge University Press
Fue Edinburgh Building, Cambridge CH2 2RU, UK
‘Published in the United States of America by Cambridge Universiey Préss,
New York
snow cambridge ore
nforsnation on thistle: wow cambridge org978052 1616904
(© Sabrina P, Ramet 2005
“This publication i in copyright. Subject to statutory exception
nd t the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements,
ho teproducion of ery part may take place without
{he miten permission of Cambridge University Press
First published 2005
Printed in the United Kingdom atthe Univesity Press, Cambridge
‘A cottage record or this publication is avoiable from the Brith Library
ISBN-13 978-0-521-85151-0 hardback
JSBN-10 0-521-85151-3 hardback
ISBN-(3 978-0-521-61690-4 paperback
ISBN 10 0-521-61690-5 paperback
‘Cambridge University Press hae a responsibilty forthe persntence or accuracy
(OF URLs for external or third-party iternet seebstesseferted 0 inthis booky
Ghd dace not goarantce that any content oa such websites is, or will remnin,
secure or apbropriate.
® wetu uiprary
it
0:‘To Danica Fink-Hafner
and.
Mitja Hafner-FinkContents
Preface age viii
List of books discussed
Glossary
1 Debates about the war 1
2. ‘The collapse of Bast Buropean communism 35
3. ‘The roots of the Yugoslav collapse 54
4 Who's to blame, and for what? Rival accounts of the war 76
5 Memoirs and autobiographies 108
6 The scourge of nationalism and the quest for harmony 138
7 Milogevie's place in history 159
8 Dilemmas in post-Dayton Bosnia 185
9. Crisis in Kosovola (with Angelo Georgahis) 200
10 Debates about intervention 220
11 Lands and peoples: Bosnia, Croatia, Slovenia, Serbia 243,
12. Southern republics: Macedonia and Montenegro in
contemporary history 280
13 Conclusion: controversies, methodological disputes, and
suggested reading 305
Index 319Preface
Thave been struck, over the years, by the persistence of certain debates —
one could even say fault Jines — within the scholarly community. These
debates cover a wide range of subjects, riveting on the best methodology
to study East-Central Europe, the nature of the coflapse of the commun-
ist organizational monopoly (# collapse completely denied by one
‘imaginative? scholar), the nature of the Bosnian War and the appropri-
ate Western response, the nature of the warin Kosovo and the appropriate
‘Western response, and the legitimacy of humanitarian intervention. But,
while these debates might appear, at first sight, to be unrelated, it turns
out, on closer inspection, that there are some threads running through.
these debates, and that in many one can identify traces of the rivalry
between idealism (the belief that moral beliefs matter, that shifts in
moral consensus can have political consequences, and that one can
speak sensibly about universal moral norms and universal rights, with,
the corollary too that there are some duties incumbent upon the inter~
national commmunity under certain conditions) and realism (the belief
that what matter in the first place are stability and secutity, that these can
bbe assured by means which are not necessarily moral in any sense, and
that decisions taken by office-holders should be and, in fact, generally
are taken on the basis of considerations of national interest, to be
understood in terms of security, stability, wealth, power, and influence),
‘or again between historical determinism which looks back over centuries
to account for present developments and theoretical approaches which
find the most relevant factors to be located in the more proximate past. Tt
js, rather obviously, possible to forge one or another synthesis across
these cleavages, but in practice these theoretical divides tend to define
rival patterns of thought, steering analysts and policy-makers alike in
alternative directions,
Other factors enter into any particular equation, of course, and not all
differences in the field are determined by these fault lines. But much is,
and it is these threads which run through the essays included in this,
volume, The chapters included herein were written as review essays ofPreface &
the literature, and this volume, thus, represents a series of reflections
upon the Jiterature relating to the Yugoslav breakup and subsequient
conflicts. More than 130 books in four languages (English, Getman,
Italian, and Serbian/Croatiar/Bosnian) are discussed in somne detail
herein, and analysed in terms of theie philosophical or methodological,”
frameworks. Additional literature is discussed in passing, Taken in sum,
these essays constitute a serious effort to come to terms with the growing
Jirerature on the subject and to take stock of the principal debates and
contsoversies. It is my hope that this book will be useful not only 10
specialists but also to students interested in making sense ofa potentially
confusing avalanche of work.
‘The material published herein draws from the following previous
publications of mine: “Tracing the Roots of the Collapse of Yugostavia’,
in Modern Greek Studies Yearbook, Vol. 9 (1993), pp. 429-87 (hereafter,
A); ‘The Transition in Eastern Burope: Prophets, Chroniclers, and
Revisioniste’, in Modem Greve Studies Yearbook, Vol. 10/11 (1994/5),
pp. 913-27 (B); ‘Revisiting the Horrors of Bosnia: New Books about
the War’, in East European Polities and Societies, Vol. 14, No. 2 (Spring
2000), pp. 475-86 (C); “The Sources of Discord, the Making of
Harmony: Books about Yugoslav Violence — A Review Article’, in
Euaope-Asia Studies, Vol. 53, No. 2 (2001), pp. 351-6 (D)} "Views from
Inside: Memoirs concerning the Yugoslav Breakup and War’, in Slavic
Reviats, Vol, 61, No. 3 (Fall 2002), pp. 558-80 (F); ‘Can a Society Be
Sick? The Case of Serbia’, in Jounal of Human Rights, Vol. 1, No. 4
(December 2000), pp. 615-20 (Fj ‘Debates about Intervention: Recent
German Books about Bosnia and Kosovo’ ~ Part 1 in Internationale
Politik - Transatlantic Edition, Vol. 4, No. 2 (Summer 2003), pp.
91-100 and Part 2 in the same journal, Vol. 4, No. 3 (Fall 2003), pp.
101-6 (G)s ‘Kuga nacionelizma in zapustina vojne’, in Teoria in praksa,
Vol. 40, No. 4 Guly-August 2003), pp. 759-70 (HD; ‘Miloievié and
Kosovo through Western Byes: A Review Essay’ (co-authored with
Angelo Georgakis, currently Assistant Professor of History at Westmont
College, Santa Barbara) in Modern Greek Studies Yearbook, Vol. 16/17
(2000/1), pp. 591-602 (I); and ‘In Search of the “real” Miloievié: New
Books about the Rise and Fall of Serbia’s Champion’, in Journal of
Human Rights, Vol. 2, No. 3 (September 2003), pp. 455-66 0). The
website for ‘Taylor & Francis, which publishes Europe-dsia Studies and
Journal of Hunan Rights, is www.tandf.co.ukjournal, [am grateful to
the editors of the respective journals, etc., for permission to reuse this
material.
‘The material is not, however, simply reprinted here. On the contrary, I
have moved sections of one essay into another essay, removed somex Preface
books discussed, and have added a large number of books to what I
discuss. Chapter I is based on C, with the discussion of two books
moved elsewhere and with a discussion of books by Norbert Both,
‘Norman Cigar, and Michael Sells added. Chapter 2 is based on B.
Chapter 3 is based on A, with a discussion of wo books deleted and
with the addition of discussion of books by John B. Allcock, Neven
Andjelic, Branimir Anzulovié, Christopher Bennett, Lenard J. Cohen,
\Vjekoslay Perica, Andrew Baruch Wachtel, and Susan 1. Woodward.
Chapter 4 is essentially new, but incorporates the discussion of the book
by Takis Michas originally published in H. Chapter 5 is based on E, but
incorporates the discussion of books by Boutros Boutros-Ghali and John.
‘Major originally published in C, with the addition of discussions of the
memoirs of Veljko Kadijevié, Stipe Mesié, and Javier Pérez de Cuellar.
Chapter 6 is based on D, with a discussion of Tim Judah’s Kosovo moved
‘elsewhere and with the addition of a discussion of books by Ivan Colovié
and Jasna Dragovié-Soso taken from H, and new discussions of books by
Keith Doubt and Stjepan G. MeStroviés an earlier discussion of Rusmir
Mahmutéchajié’s Bosnia the Good, originally published in Ds is not
included in chapter 6, Chapter 7 is based on J, but incorporates the
discussion of Slavoljub Djukié’s book originally published in F, as well as,
new discussions of recent books by Dusan Paviovié, Vidosav Stevanovi,
and Massimo Nava. Chapter 8 is essentially new, but incorporates the
discussion of books by Sumantra Bose and Elizabeth Cousens/Charles
Cater originally published in H. Chapter 9 is based on I, with the
deletion of discussions of books by Branislay Anzulovié and Greg
Campbell, and with the addition of a discussion of Tim Judah’s Kasovo,
originally published in D, and with the addition of a discussion of Alex
Bellamy’s Kosovo and International Saciety. Chapter 10 is an extended
version of an article originally published in G, Chapter 11 is essentially
new, but incorporates a discussion of Norman Cigar’s Vojslan Kostunica
originally published in F. Chapter 12 and the conclusion were written
expressly for this volume. Translations are my own unless otherwise
noted.
Lam grateful to the three anonymous readers for comments on an
earlier draft of the manuscript as a whole, and to Denis Basié, Norman
Cigar, Cathie Carmichael, Marko Hoare, Diane Koenker, Branka
Maga’, Martha Merritt, and Marius Soberg for comments on portions
of this manuscript. I wish to thank Karen Anderson Howes, copy-editor
for this book, for her great care with my text, Tam also geatefal to John
Haslam, the commissioning editor at Cambridge University Press, for
his lively interest in this project and encouragement to develop it.Books discussed
(Numeral in parentheses indicates the chapter in which the book is,
discussed; the conclusion makes only brief references to various books,
and does not offer full reviews.)
Memoirs
Bildt, Carl, Peace Journey: The Struggle for Peace in Bosnia (8).
Boutros-Ghali, Boutros, Unvanquished: A US-UN Saga (5).
Dizdarevié, Raif, Od snurti Tita do smirti Jugoslavije: Sojedodenja (5,
Conclusion).
Denoviek, Janez, Der Jugoslawien-Krieg: Meine Wahrheit (5).
Halilovié, Sefer, Lukaua strategija, 3rd expanded edn (5).
Tzctbogovié, Alia, Sjedanja> Autobiografshi zapis (5).
Jania, Janez, The Making of the Slovenian State 1988-1992: The Collapse
of Yugoslavia (5).
Kadlijevié, Veliko, Moje vidjenje raspada: Vojska bex drave (5).
‘Major, John, The Autobiography (5).
Mamuia, Branko, Sludaj Jugoslavija (5).
Mesié, Stipe, The Demise of Yugoslavia: A Political Memoir (5).
‘Owen, David, Balkan Odyssey (4).
Pérez De Cuéllar, Javier, Pilgrimage for Peace: A Secretary-General’s
Memoir (5).
Peuitsch, Wolfgang, Bosnien und Herzegowina fiinf Jahre nach Dayton.
Hat der Priede eine Chance? (8).
Rose, General Sir Michael, Fighting for Peace: Lessons from Bosnia (4).
Radolf, Davorin, Rat koji nismo hujeli: Hrvatska 1991 (5).
Sarinié, Hrvoje, Svi moji tajni pregovori sa Slobodanom Milogeviem
1999-1995, 1998 (5).
Spegelj, Martin, Sieéanja vojnika (5).
‘Tomac, Zdravko, The Struggle for the Croatian State . .. Through Hell 10
Democracy (5).sii List of books diseussed,
Zimmermann, Warren, Origins of a Catastrophe: Yugoslavia and Its Des
overs, revised edn (4).
Academie books about and popular treatments of Yugoslavia
Abrahams, Fred, A Threat t0 ‘Stability’: Honan Rights Violations in
‘Macedonia (12).
Allcock, John B., Explaining Yugoslavia (3).
Andjelic, Neven, Bosia-Flerzegovina: The End of a Legacy (3).
Anaulovié, Branimir, Heavenly Serbia: From Myth to Genocide (3)
Banac, Ivo, The National Question in Yugoslavia: Origins, History, Potties
(Conclusion),
Banac, Ivo, With Stalin, against Tito: Cominformist Splits in Yugoslav
Gommunisn: (Conclusion).
Bartlett, William, Croatia: Between Europe and the Balkans (11).
Becker, Jens and Achim Engelberg, Montenegro int Unibruch: Reportagen
tid Essays (12).
Bellamy, Alex J., Kosovo and International Society (9).
Benderly, Jill and Evan Kraft (eds.), Independent Slovenia: Origins, Mover
rents, Prospects (11, Conclusion).
Bennett, Christopher, Yugoslavia’s Bloody Gollapse: Causes, Course and
Consequences (3).
Bieber; Florian (ed.), Montenegro in Transition: Problems of Identity and
Statchood (12, Conclusion).
Bose, Sumantra, Hostia afier Dayton: Nationalist Partition and Inter
national Intervention (8).
Both, Norbert, From Andifrence to Entrapment: The Netherlands and the
Yugoslav Crisis 1990-1995 (1).
Buckley, Mary and Sally N. Cummings (eds.), Kosovo: Perceptions of War
cand lis Aftermath (9).
Burg, Steven L. and Paul S. Shoup, The War in Bosnia-Herzegovina
Bulmic Conflict and Intemational Intervention (1).
Calic, Marie-Janine, Krieg und Frieden in Bosnien-Hlercegovina, revised
and expanded edn: (10, Conchusion).
Central Intelligence Agency, Balkan Battlegrounds: A Military History of
the Yugoslav Congtiet, 1990-1995, 2 vols, (Conclusion).
Chandler, David, Bosnia: Faking Democracy after Dayton, 2nd edn (8).
Cigar, Norman, Genocide in Bosnia: The Policy of ‘Ethnic Cleansing? (1s
Conclusion).
Cigar, Norman, Vojslew Kogtniea and Serbia’s Future (11).
Cohen, Lenard J., Broken Bonds: Yugoslavia’s Disintegration and Balkan
Politics in Transition, 2nd edn (3)List of books discussed sit
Cohen, Lenard J., Serpent in the Bosom: The Rise and Pail of Slobodan
Milosevié (7).
Colovié, Ivan, The Politics of Symbol in Serbia: Essays in Political Anthro-
pology (6),
Conversi, Daniele, Gennan-Bashing and the Breakup of Yugoslavia (4,
Conclusion).
Cousens, Elizabeth M, and Charles K, Cater, Toenard Peace in Bosnia:
Inplementing the Dayton Accords (8).
Cowan, Jane K, Macedonia: The Policies of Identity and Difference (1.2)
Danforth, Loring M, The Macedonian Conflict: Ethnic Transuationalism int
a Transnational World (12).
Denitch, Bogdan, Bthnic Nationalism: The Tragic Death of Yugoslavia (4).
Djukié, Slavoljub, Milofevié and Markovié: A Lust for Power (7).
Donia, Robert J. and John V. A. Fine, Jar, Bosnia and Hercegovina: A
‘Tradition Betrayed (11).
Doubt, Keith, Sociology after Bosnia and Kosovo: Recovering Justice (6).
Dragovié-Soso, Jasna, ‘Saviours of the Nation’: Serbia’s Intellectual Oppos-
ition and the Revival of Nationalism (6, Conclusion).
Hisermann, Daniel, Der lange Weg nach Dayton: Die westiche Politik und
der Krieg im ehemaligen Jugoslawien 1991 bis 1995 (10).
Elsisser, Jitrgen, Kriegsverbrechion: Die tédlichen Liigen der Buoxdesregierung
‘und ihre Opfer im Kosovo-Konflit, ath edn (10)
Asser, Jrgen (ed,), Nie wieder Krieg ole uns: Das Kesovo und die nene
deutsche Geopolitik (9).
Fink-Hafner, Danica and Terry Gox (eds.), Into Biwope? Perspectives from
Britain and Slovenia (11).
Fink-Hafner, Danica and John R. Robbins (eds.), Making a New Nation:
‘The Formation of Slovenia (11).
Glenny, Misha, The Balkans: Nationalism, War and the Great Powers,
1804-1999 (6).
Goldstein, Ivo, Croatia: A History (11, Conchusion).
Gordy, Erie D., The Culture of Power in Serbia: Nationalism and the
Destruction of Alternatives (9),
Gow, James, The Serbian Project and Its Adversaries: A Stravegy of War
Grimes (4, Conclusion).
Gow, James, The Triuaph of the Lack of Will: International Diplomacy and
the Yugoslav War (4, Conclusion),
Gow, James and Cathie Carmichael, Slovenia and the Slovenes: A Small
‘State and the New Europe (11).
Harris, Erika, Nationalism and Democratisation: Politics of Slovakia and
‘Slovenia (11).siv List of books discussed
Hasenclever, Andreas, Die Macht der Moral in der internationalen Politik:
Militrische Intercentionen weslicher Staaten in Somalia, Ruanda und
Bosnien-Herzegowina (10, Conclusion).
Hayden, Robert M., Blueprints for a House Divided: The Constitutional
Logic of the Yugoslav Conflicts (6).
Hoare, Quintin and Noel Malcolm (eds.), Books on Bosnia (1).
Hodge, Carole, The Serb Lobby in the United Kingdom, 2nd eds (4,
Conclusion).
Hofbauer, Hannes (ed.), Balkan Krieg: Die Zersting Jugoslawviens (10).
Hosler, Joachim, Norman Paech, and Gerhard Stuby,
Krieg? Neue Nato-Strategie, Voikerrecht und Westeurop
Balkans (10).
Judah, Tim, Kosovo: War and Revenge (9)
Judah, Tins The Serbs: History, Myth and the Destruction of Yugoslavia (11).
Kolbow, Walter and Heinrich Quaden (eds.), Krieg wid Frieden auf dem
Balkan ~ Makedonien am Scheideweg? (12).
Kumar, Redha, Divide and Fall? Bosnia inthe Annals of Partition (8).
LeBor, Adam, Milaieoié: A Biography (7).
Takié, Reneo and Allen Lynch, Furope from the Balkans tothe Urals: The
Disintegration of Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union (1).
Mage’, Branks, The Destruction of Yugoslavia: Tracking Yugoslavia’s
Break-up 1980-1992 (3).
Maga, Branka and Ivo Zanié (eds.), The War in Croatia and Bosnia-
Herzegovina 1991-1995 (1, Conchusion).
Mahmutéchajié, Rusmit, The Denial of Bosnia (6).
Malcolm, Noel, Bosnia: A Short History (11, Conclusion)
Maleoln, Noel, Kasove: Short History (9, Conclusion).
Mappes-Niedliek, Norbert, Balkan-Mafia: Staaten in der Hand des Vir~
brechens — Eine Gefahe fitr Buropa (10).
Marko, Joseph (ed.), Gordischer Knoten. Kesovafa: Durchschlagen oder
entesirren? — Velkerrechtlche, rechtsvergleichende und politkssissenschaft-
Tiche Analysen und Perspektiven zon jingsten Balkankonglike (2).
Meier, Viktor, Jugostawizns Erben: Die neuen Staaten und die Politik des
Westens (8).
Meier, Viktor, Yugoslavia: A History of Its Demise (Conclusion).
‘Merkel, Reinhard (ed.), Der Kosovo-Krieg und das Vlkerrecht (10).
‘Mertus, Julie A, Kosovo: How Myths and Truths Started a War (9).
Mektrovié, Stjepan G. (ed.), Genocide after Emotion: The Postemotional
Balkan War (6).
‘Michas, Takis, The Unholy Alliance: Greece and Miloicvit’s Serbia (A).
‘Mojzes, Paul, Yugoslavian Inferno: Ethnoreligious Warfare in the Balkans
(Conclusion).List of books discussed. ww
Nava, Massimo, Milofevié: La tragedia di wn popolo (7).
Oschlics, Wolf, Makedonien 2001-2004: Kriegestagebuch aus einem fried-
Trehen Land (12),
Pavlovig, Dusan, Afteri i modell: Ogledt ',politict w Srbiit pod Milosevi-
dem (),
Perica, Viekoslav, Balkan Idols: Religion andsNationaliso in. Yugoslav
States B)
Pentifer, James, The New Macedonian Question (12).
PleStina, Dijana, Regional Development in Conmuonist Yugoslavia: Succes,
Failure, and Consequences (3).
Popov, Nebojfa (ed.), The Road to War in Serbia: Trauma and Catharsis
(6, Conclusion).
Poulton, Hugh, Who Are the Macedonians? (12, Conclusion),
Ramet, Sabrina P, Balkans Babel: The Disintegration of Yugoslavia from the
Death of Tito tothe Fall of Milaievié, 4th edn (Conclusion).
Ramet, Sabrina P., The. Three Yugoslavias: The Dual Challenge of State-
building and Legitimation among the Yugoslavs (Conclusion).
Router, Jens and Konrad Clewing (eds.), Der Kosovo Konflikt: Ursachen,
Vorlauf, Perspekeiven (9).
Roberts, Walter, Tito, Mihailouis, and the Allies (Conclusion).
Rumiz, Paolo, Masken fir ein Massaker. Der manipulierte Krieg: Spuren-
suche auf dem Balkan, expanded German edn (10)
Rusinow, Dennison 1, The Yugoslav Experiment, 1948-1974 (Conclusion).
Sadkovich, James J., The US Media and Yugoslavia, 1991-1995 (1s
Conclusion).
‘Schmid, Thoms (ed.), Krieg im Kosovo (9).
Sell, Louis, Slobodan Miloievié and the Destruction of Yugoslavia (7,
Conclusion).
Sells, Michael A., The Bridge Betrayed: Religion and Genocide in Bosnia (1).
Seroka, Jim and Vukaiin Pavlovié (eds.), The Tragedy of Yugoslavia: The
Failure of Democratic Transformation (3).
Shrader, Charles R., The Mustim-Croat Gieil War in Central Bosnia: A
Military History, 1992-1994 (A).
Silber, Laura and Allan Little, The Death of Yugoslavia (1, Conclusion).
Simms, Brendan, Unfinest Hou: Britain and the Destruction of Bosnia (4).
Snyden, Jack, From Voting to Violence: Democratization and Nationalist
Conflict (1).
Steindorff, Ludwig, Kroatien: Vom Mitelaler bis zur Gegenvoart (11)
Stevanovié, Vidosav, Milosevié, jedan epitaf (7).
‘Tanner, Marcus, Croatia: A Nation Forged in War (11).
Tenbergen, Rasmus, Der Kosovo-Krieg: Hine gerechte Intervention? (10,
Conclusion).ssi___List of books discussed
‘Thomas, Robert, Serbia under Miloievit: Politics in the 1990s (11, Con-
clusion).
‘Thompson, Mark, Forging War: The Media in Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and
Herzegovina, completely rev. and expanded edn (Conclusion).
‘Tomakevich, Jozo, War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941-1945: Occu-
pation and Collaboration (Conctusion).
‘Troebst, Stefan, Conflict in Kosovo: Failure of Prevention? An Analytical
Doctanentation, 1992-1998 (9)
Udovigki, Jasminka and James Ridgeway (eds.), Bure This House: The
‘Making and Unmaking of Yugoslavia, rev. and expanded edn (1).
Velikonja, Mitjas Religiows Separation and Political Intolerance in Bosnia-
Herzegovina (11).
Vickers, Miranda, Between Serb and Albanian: A History of Kosovo (9).
Vole, Angelike and Werner Weidenfeld (eds.), Der Balkan: Zeviselion
Krise und Stabilitdt (10).
Wachtel, Andrew Baruch, Making a Nation, Breaking a Nation: Literature
and Gultural Policies in Yugoslavia (3).
Weymouth, ‘Tony and Stanley Henig (eds.), The Kosovo Criss
American War in Europe? (9).
Woodward, Susan L, Balkan Tragedy: Chaos and Dissolution after the Cold
War (4)
Woodward, Susan L, Socialist Unemployment: The Political Heonomy of
Yugoslavia, 1945-1990 (3)
The Last
Academic books about Eastern Europe
Aslund, Anders, Post-Communist Economic Revolutions: How Big a Bang?
@),
Hockenos, Paul, Free 10 Hote: The Rise of the Right in Post-Communist
Eastern Europe. (2).
Horvath, Agnes and Arpad ‘Seakolezai, Tie Dissolution of Communist
Power: The Case of Hungary (2)
Philipsen, Dirk, We Were the People: Voices from East Germany's Revolu-
tionary Autwnn of 1989 (2).
Poznatiski, Kazimierz Z. (ed.), Consinucting Capitalism: The Reemergence
of Civil Society and Liberal Economy in the Post-Communist World (2)
Posnatiski, Kazimierz Z. (ed.), The Beolutionary Transition to Capital-
ism (2)
Tismaneanu, Viadimir (ed.), In Search of Givit Society: Independent Peace
‘Movements in the Soviet Bloc (2).
‘Tismaneanu, Viadimir, Reivoenting Politics: Eastern Burope from Stalin t0
Havel (2).Glossary
ORIENTATIONS ABOUT MORALITY
Consequentialism: the belief that the morality of a given law or prac
tice or action may be best assessed by determining what its consequences
Conventionalism: the belief that there is no external standard by which
fone may assess the morality or immorality of the laws or practices of a
given government and that it is meaningless to speak of universally valid
moral precepts, except arguably in a nominal sense as established by
‘written international agreements.
Universalism: the belief that one can speak sensibly of a universally
valid moral standard by which one may criticize the laws or practices of a
given government for being wrong (immoral) and that one can establish
some universally valid moral precepts by the exercise of unaided reason.
ORIENTATIONS ABOUT THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN
SOVEREIGNTY AND HUMAN RIGHTS
Idealism: the belief that sovereignty is relative to morality and that
governments should be held to a universal moral standard,
Realism: the belief that human rights arc relative to sovereignty and
that governments should enjoy a wide latitude in their domestic policies
on the principle of noninterference in the internal affairs of another state.
Relativism: any orientation which relativizes morality or which treats.
the rights of one (group of) people as less important that the rights of
some other (group of) people.1 Debates about the war
1
‘The ficld of Yugoslav studies has long been divided. In the Tito era,
much of the literature was, very roughly, divided berween those who
viewed Tito as ‘one of ours” (Has Tito gone bourgeois?’, a 1966 article
asked) and those who took a more critical view of the Yugoslav leader.
Early in the post-Tito years, the field was divided ~ again, roughly
speaking ~ between those who believed that Yugoslavia had achieved a
degree of stability sufficient to warrant, for example, the optimistic
sentiment that, ‘while the problems confronting the post-Tito leadership
are serious, they do appear to be subject to solution within the existing
framework’,’ and those who believed that the Yugoslav socialist system
‘gs it exists has begun to undergo a process of decay’ to the extent that
the outlook for the survival of Yugoslavia could only be judged to be
‘rather bleak’?
‘More recently, the field of ‘Yugoslav’ (or perhaps, post-Yugoslav)
studies has again been divided largely between two camps (though not
all works fall into one of these two camps, of course). On the one side are
those who have taken a moral universalist perspective, holding that there
are universal norms in intemational politics, that these norms are founded
in Universal Reason and expressed in international covenants such as
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and that, in recounting
the horrors of the recent War of Yugoslav Succession of 1991-5, the
analyst must account for the disintegration of socialist Yugoslavia and the
outbreak of hostilities, identifying culpable parties. Among the works
which best exemplify this schoo! are James Gow’s Triumph of the Lack of
Witt (1997, discussed in chapter 4), Thomas Cushman and Stjepan
G, Meitrovie’s This Time We Knew (1996), and, among those works
presently under review, Norman Cigar’s Genocide in Bosnia (1995) and
James Sadkovich’s The US Media and Yugoslavia (1998). Authors in this,
‘school tend to befieve that claims regarding state sovereignty cannot be
absolute, insofar as system legitimacy is measured in terms of a system’s
12 ‘Thinking about Yugoslavia
observance of basic human rights. Drawing theit inspiration, in at least
some cases, from Immanuel Kant, these authors also find x natural
affinity with Jirgen Habermas, whose writings take their point of depart
ure as ‘the universality of basic rights’ and the notion that legal systems
should ‘enshrin{e} universal moral principles!“ My own affinities lie
with this school.”
‘On the other side are authors who reject the universalist framework,
with its emphasis on universal norms and universal human rights and
who, in their accounts, embrace one or another version of motal relativ
ism, Most of these authors embrace state sovereignty as their supreme
principle, rejecting any appeal to higher values which might justify
‘external intervention — thereby adopting a position which brings them.
into coalition with the moral conventionalism of ‘Thrasymachvs (Plato's
Republic, Book 1). Emblematic of this approach are Lenard Cohen’s
Broken Bonds (2nd edn, 1995, discussed in chapter 3), Susan
Woodward’s Balkan Tragedy (1995, discussed in chapter 4), Robert
M. Hayden’s Blueprints for a House Divided (1999, discussed in chapter
©, and, among the works presently under review, Burg and Shoup’s
War in Bosnia-Herzegovina (1999). Hence, for example, while Wood-
ward ‘dismisses Albanian claims to self-determination [in Kosovo}
on the [conventionalist] grounds that their constitutional classification
..« a8 @ nationality rather than as a constituent nation made them
ineligible for such rights"® — recall Thrasymachus’ assertion that justice
is what the rulers say it is - Burg and Shoup subscribe to the notion
of the primacy of sovereignty, supporting ‘the rights of states to de-
fend their sovereignty and territorial integrity and to conduct 1
internal affairs free from external interference’,’ failing to specify any
qualifications or curtailment of this principle regardless of tyranny or
violations of human rights (both of which are taken to qualify or set
Jimits to sovereignty in Locke's Second Treatise of Government and also
in the US Declaration of Independence). Authors in this second schoo!
tended to be more sympathetic, in the 1990s, to the arguments made
by MiloSevié, Karadiié, and their collaborators and to be critical of.
Germany (and, in the case of Hayden, also of Slovenia). Drawing their
inspiration from realist suppositions which may be traced back
to Thomas Hobbes," these writers tended to treat Milotevié (who took
power in Serbia in 1987) and Tudjman (elected president of Croatia
in 1990) as equally responsible for the exacerbation of the crisis which
had already engulfed the countr.
Ironically, however, it was neither a work inspired by universalism nor
one inspired by relativism which had the greatest impact on the generalDebates about the wor 3
reading public but, rathes, a sand castle known as ‘the myth of ancient
hatreds’, promulgated by Robert Kaplan in his best-selling book, Ballean
Ghosts. Lacking any sturdy foundations, Kaplan’s explanation crumbled
at the first touch but, in spite of that, it had its baneful influence,
infecting the rhetoric of British prime minister John Major and, by their
‘own admission, influencing the thinking of US president Bill Clinton
and EY mediator David Lord Owen, not to mention the many ordinary
citizens who read the book and concluded from it that, for reasons not
made clear; Kaplan considered the peoples of the Balkans unusually wild
and predisposed to violence. But the concept did not spring fully
developed out of Kaplan’s head. Nearly two decades earlier, in his widely
read book, Wartime, which dealt with the Second World War, Mitovan
Diilas wrote that ‘the hatred between the Orthodox and the Moslems in
these parts is primeval, and referred to ‘ancient tribal conflicts’? For
that matter, a CIA report dating from 1957 had come dangerously close
to advocating an ‘ancient hatreds’ explanation by writing that ‘the
Serbs and Croats, conditioned by separate histories and cultures, have
developed deep-seated mutuel animosity’.'° Tt is certainly trac that
Serbs and Croats had opposite responses to the Austrian occupation of
Bosnia-Herzegovina in 1878, and that the history of Serb—Croat inter-
actions between 1921 and 1945 was one afflicted by conflict and mutual
misunderstanding, but to refer to ‘separate histories and cultures’ is to
paint ona much larger historical canvas. There are three major problems
with the thesis of ‘ancient hatreds’: first, it is simply not trae that
relations among the peoples of the Yugoslav area were marked by
‘any special hostilities which distinguished their relations from, let us
say; the relations between Germans and French; second, itis false, as
demonstrated by the fact that those referring present problems to
‘ancient? hatreds, are typically unable to cite any ancient problems
indeed, the Serbs and Croats did not even live in the Batkans in
‘ancient’ times, if one accepts the conventional definition of ‘ancient?
as referring to the roughly three millennia which ene with the fall of
Rome in 476 CR); and, third, it distracts the reader from examining
relevant evidence which might lead one to more useful conclusions.
1
‘The literature on the Yugoslav war of 1991-5 has produced a dizzying,
array of competing interpretations and understandings. Among the most
contentious issues have been the following questions:4 Thinking about Yugostavia
‘© Who started the war and whose fault was it? Were the Slovenes in any
way blameworthy?
‘* What was the nature of the Tudjman regime and were the Croatian
Serbs entitled to Taunch an insurrection?
» Did Germany violate any written or unwritten rules of diplomatic
behaviour in 1991 and was Germany to blame for the escalation of
violence in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina?
‘* Was the principle of ‘one man, one vote’ appropriate for Bosnia~
Herzegovina in 1991/2; i.e., was there any basis on which to introduce
democratic institutions, or would a version of consociational authori-
tarianism have been preferable?
+ Was the Vance-Owen Peace Plan, actively under discussion in early
1993, a positive step or a plan to reward ‘ethnic cleansing’?
© What were the war aims of the Bosnian Serbs and were they primarily
offensive or defensive?
© What was the nature of Izetbegovié’s platform and programme —
fundamentalist Islamic or secular-liberal?
«Did the war have a genocidal character?
‘The controversies typically emerged fist in local polemics and in news-
paper reports, but were carried over into scholarly works for a variety of
reasons which need not detain us.
Whose fault? Not everyone has been concemed to assess responsi-
bility; for some writers, the roots of the problem lie elseiwhere whether
in the political system or in the economy or in history or in a combin-
ation of these. Lenard Cohen, for instance, as will be shown in chapter 7,
argues that Serbs as a nation have historically determined tendencies
to think of themselves as victims and to prefer strong-arm rule, appeal-
ing to historical experiences and shared folklore to account for these
alleged tendencies. Cohen’s framework is, thus, similar to (though not
identical with) thet found in Branimir Anzulovie’s Heavenly Serbia,
Which sought to identify a Serbian tradition of violence fostered by
ecclesiastical elites and cultural artifacts. The two key differences are
(() that Anzulovié provided specific erguments and artifacts as evidence,
and (2) that, while Cohen makes no mention of the possibility of an
‘escape’ from historically determined patterns, Anzulovié assures us that
itis possible for nations to change their behaviour. Anzulovié’s argument
is explored more fully in chapter 3.
Stil, among those noting human agency, most have identified vari-
ously ‘Belgrade’ or ‘the Serbian side’ or ‘MiloSevié and his henchmen’ as
bearing primary responsibility for the war. Typical of this orientation is
Christopher Bennett, who accordingly sees MiloSevié’s coup within the
Serbian party organization (in 1987) as marking the turning point,Debates about the war 5
setting Yugoslavia on a course towards war and noting that Serbi
‘military action in Bosnia-Hercegovina had been prepared many months
in advance . . . and] coordinated with the JNA [Yugoslav People’s
Army)! He reports that the first violence in Sarajevo involved a
Serbian wedding guest being shot dead ‘by an unidentified assassin’.!?
Nata’a Mrvié-Petrovié, in an introductory chapter for an edited
collection, says that it was ‘Moslem irregulars’ who fired at the Serbs’
wedding partys and reports, as the first offensive action in Bosnia,
Muslim attack on @ JNA column retreating from Sarajevo on 2 May
1992. Moreover, while Bennett asserts that the UN arms embargo
imposed on all the post-Yugoslay republics in September 1991 at
Belgrade’s request crippled the Muslims? capacity to defend themselves,
Mrvié-Petrovié writes that ‘Especially in 1992 and 1993, [Bosnia’s}
Moslems were generously assisted by the Organization of Islamic
Conference . .. This help included weapons."
‘Viktor Meier, in his carefully researched treatment of Yugostavie’s
collapse, clearly identifies ‘the Serbian side’ and in the first place
‘Milosevié as the driving force behind the war, and reports that the man
killed at the wedding party had been shot by ‘a criminal of Muslim
nationality’." Meier also notes that the Serbian offensive in Bosnia
began in April ~ @ point overlooked by Mrvié-Petrovié, I have reported
the differing accounts of the shooting at the wedding in order to illus
trate # point, which is that there are often differences not only of
interpretation but also concerning rather unimportant details.
‘Warren Zimmermann and Robert Hayden offer altemative accounts,
however, blaming the Slovenes for contributing to the crisis, Zimmer-
mann, the former US ambassador to Yugoslavia, identifies Milogevié
personally as the ‘villain’ in the plot, but criticizes the Slovenes for being
self-centred, arguing that they should have stayed in Yugoslavia longer in
order to try to help the federation to reach a solution satisfactory to all
parties.'? Hayden, by contrast, seems to want to make the Slovenian
leadership co-responsible with MiloSevié for the breakup of the country,
welling at length on Slovenia's constitutional amendments adopted
in September 1989, which, in his view, ‘made the outbreak of internal
war inevitable’."® Moreover, while every other book with which T am
familiar refers to the Slovenian-Croatian joint proposal (1990) to trans-
form Yugoslavia into a confederation, Hayden prefers to use the deno
tatively identical but connotatively distinct term confederacy, and
resuscitates American president Abraham Ligcoln, in support of his
own ‘anti-Confederate’ banner.!”
But Hayden is an exception. For most analysts, including Norman
Cigas,"® ‘Thomas Cushman and Stjepan G. MeStrovig,!9 Reneo Lukié
and Allen Lynch,*® James Sadkovich,”* Michael Sells,*? and Laura6 Thinking about Yugoslavia
Silber and Allan Little,”* there is no doubt concerning the incendiary
role played by MiloSevié and his associates. Moreover, as @ result of the
publication of various memoirs and of the testimonies given in the trial of
Slobodan Milogevié, Belgrade’s culpability in the war has been extensively
documented,
m
Tudjman and his policies. Franjo Tudjman’s ill-considered remark,
dating his clectoral campaign in 1990, that he was gratified that his wife
was neither a Serb nor a Jew, continues to haunt him, even after his
death in December 1999, With only a few exceptions, English-language
tweatments of Tudjman tend to be negative. Bennett’s comment that
‘temperamentally Tudjman was without a doubt the least at home in a
democracy’ is marked by its reserve, Hayden, by contrast, paints
Tudjman in darker colours and invites the reader to see ‘Tudjman as a
‘milder’ version of Adolf Hitler.?* Moreover, as Cushman and Meftrovié
note, Serbian intellectuals produced a string of polemical works during
the war years, painting Tudjman as a rcincazation of Croatian fascist
‘Ante Pavelié, who ruled over the Nazi-sponsored Croatian puppet state
during the Second World War.?°
Sells provides a damning summary of Tudjman’s 1990 book, Waste-
lands of Historical Reali, in which, says Sells,
‘Tudjman revealed’an anti-Semitic tendency. He suggested that Jews are geno-
cidal by nature and that Jews were the major executioners in Uhe Ustashe death
‘camp of Jasenovae.. .. The problems of the Jews ate of their own making,
‘Tugjman implies; Jews could have avoided them had they heeded what he calls,
vaguely, ‘the traffic signs.”
‘Tudjman’s decisions, soon after taking office, to introduce the kuna
(the currency used in medieval Croatia and in fascist Croatia alike) and.
to fire Serbs working in the Croatian police force were certainly unwise
and, in the latter instance, showed a deep insensitivity to the welfare of
ordinary Serbs living in Croatia, But Serbs also complained about the
use of the Fahounica, the red-and-white checkerboard emblem, in the
new Croatian coat-of-arms, alleging ~ falsely ~ that it wes a throwback to
the days of Pavelié and his Ustaén movement. But, in fact, the Sahounica
had been featured in the Croatian coat-of-arms since the end of the
thirteenth century and had also been used during the socialist era, as the
Serbs must have known. Croatian Serbs must also have known, as
Croats certainly did, that whereas the first square in the upper-left
comer of the fascist-era coat-of-arms had been white, the corresponding,Debates about the war 7
comer in the Croatian coat-of-arms in the interwar period, the socialist
cera, and in Tudjman’s Croatia alike was red.® Silber and Little, in their
otherwise brilliantly researched and balanced account, apparently
became confused, representing the Sahounica as something contraband
in socialist Yugoslavia”® and claiming that ‘"Tudjman’s insistence on the
Jahoonica as the symbol of a sovercign Croatia, and his insensitivity
towards legitimate Ser anxieties, were grist to the mill of Babié’s Party.”
‘But they are quite right in noting that, under Belgrade’s influence, the
Serbian Democratic Party in Croatia ‘consciously revived memories of
the 1940s° among Serbs in order to kindle hatred of Croatia.”
Meier, by contrast, offers a spirited defence of Tudjman’s use of
iraditional Croatian symbols. “The number of national symbols which
a nation has at its disposal is limited’, writes Meier:
“The Ustafe had adopted a lot of the old Croatian tradition or folklore; it would
have been unusual if these symbole had not been endorsed also by today’s
Croatian state. Even in Germany, today’s netional anthem and the name of the
‘currency were used by the Nazis, but no one has ever suggested that this signified
that the Federal Republic wa® associating itself with Nazi tradition.”*
‘More controversial than his use of symbols, however, were Tudjman’s
speeches, writings, and policies. In this domain, Michael Selis writes that
“Tudjman refused to acknowledge the full extent of Ustashe persecution
of Serbs during World War II’, adding that ‘nationalists associated with
‘Tudjman’ consciously stoked hatreds in order to ignite a war” —a point
argued in detail by Silber and Little.”*
‘But Tudjman has had defenders as well as detractors. One ofthose who
hhas tried to present Tudjman in a favourable light is James J. Sadkovich,
who, at this writing, is completing the composition of the first biography
in English of the Croatian leacer. Admitting that Tudjman proved to be
controversial as president, Sadkovich reproves Western academics and
joumalists who ignored the Croatian leader's ‘respect for formal,
procedural democracy’ and notes that Tudjman was among those who,
in early 1993, ‘shad pressed for the creation of an international court
to try war crimes’.>* For Sadkovich, the widespread portrait of Tudjman
as a provincial authoritarian is superficial and inaccurate, as is the notion
that he was a ‘fascist’ or a ‘radical nationalist’, Rather, says Sadkovich,
the Croatian leader should be seen as a somewhat ‘archaic intellectual’
who, if ‘long-winded and old-fashioned’, was nonetheless a ‘Croatian
patrio? attracted to humanism.”® Sadkovich also documents a pervasive
tendency of Western reportage to be distinctly unsympathetic to Croats,
‘who were sometimes blamed even when it was Croat villages which were
being overrun by the Yugoslav Army and Serb paramilitary forces.8 Thinking about Yugoslavia
Germany’s role, The huge clamour over Germany's allegedly,
damaging role is largely due to a combination of four factors: a relentless
anti-German line taken by Serbian propaganda in the Milofevié era, the
desire by Lord Carrington to find « scapegoat for the failure of his efforts
at mediation i the latter part of 1991, persistent anti-German senti-
‘ments eattied over from the Nazi era in general and from the Second
World War and the Holocaust specifically, and an influential article
by Beverly Crawford, published in 1996, For Crawford, Germany's
diplomatic recognition of Croatia in December 1991 was seen by its
Buropean Community partners as ‘a crucial breach of consensual norms
Jn intemational law” and figures, thus, as ‘a case of defection from
international cooperation’.*° Burg and Shoup agree with the basic out-
lines of Crawford’s argument, adding that the EC decision to recognize
Slovenia and Croatia, taken under pressure from Germany, ‘seemed t0
intensify the Serbian threat to Bosnia’2? They further mention the
declaration by the Serbian Autonomous Region of Bosanska Krajina,
fon 18 December 1991, that it was a constiouent part of "Yagoslavie’— a
county which both juridicelly and in point of fact had ceased ro exist —
rather than of Bosnia, Burg and Shoup interpret both this act and
the declaration of the Serb Republic of Bosnia-Herzegovina three days
Jater as direct responses to the EC decision to recognize Slovenia and
Croatia. *®
Not so Lukié and Lynch. Like Daniele Conversi,”® they believe that
criticism of Germany's championing of Slovenia and Croatia on the
grounds that it Was ‘premature’ or ‘unilateral’ or that it contributed to
the escalation of viotence in Bosnia is misplaced. On the contrary, they
argue, encouragement to the well-armed Serbs eame not from Germany
bat from France and Great Britain, who ‘were in eflect prepared to see
‘Croatia (and later Bosnia and Herzegovina) be defeated by Scrbia’,*”
Moreover, Latkié and Lynch argue, the EC had agreed in July to ex-
tend recognition to Croatia and Stovenia in October (at the end of the
three-month moratorium on independence imposed on the separating
republics) so that it was Britain and France that, through their oppos-
ition to recognition ‘defected’ ~ to use Crawford’s term — from the EC
consensus, not Germany“! ‘The German view, Lukié and Lynch ex-
plain, was that ‘To criticize the policy of non-recognition was tanta-
‘mount to acquiescence in the continuing use of military coercion by
the Serbs.’
John Major, in his aforementioned autobiography, provides some
backing for this viewpoint, urging that ‘subsequent events do not suggest
that withholding recognition would have prevented the evil that
followed’,** Sarah Kent, finally, records @ position midway betweenDebates about the war °
Burg/Shoup and Crawford on the one side and Lukié/Lynch and Con-
version the other, questioning the ‘wisdom’ of following Germany's
advice regarding recognition but adding that ‘to call that recogni
“premature” is to invoke the patronizing rhetoric of colonialism’."*
Norbert Both makes # nuanced contribution to the continuing debate
about Germany’s role in the context of his study of Dutch foreign policy
during the Yugoslav War. He points out that, as early as November
1990, in the context of a meeting of Furopean Community ministers,
Germany argued forcefully that human rights had to take priority over
the maintenance of Yugoslav unity — a position which, interestingly
‘enough, was brushed aside by most of the EC ministers present.*° The
German Foreign Ministry voiced concerns four months later, when
Serbian security forces backed by tanks suppressed the anti-war pro-
testers who had taken to the streets of Belgrade; Germany wanted to
jgsue a tough warning to Belgrade, but other EC members felt that
Germany ‘was racing ahead of developments’.*® In May 1991, develop-
ments in Yugoslavia turned ugly, with violence at Borovo Selo.
According to Both, Germany circulated a draft resolution among EC
ministers calling on Belgrade to respect human rights, work for democ-
racy, and honour the right to national self-determination; as before, most
of the other EG member states (though not all) continued to feel that
Yugoslavia’s territorial integrity and unity should remain the highest
priority for the EC, ahead of those values which the German government
‘vas championing,
‘What Both adds to our understanding of the EC debate over recogni-
tion of Slovenia and Croatia in 1991 is the following. The Netherlands
was, in fact, the most forceful advocate (as of July 1991) of a tough
ine against Serbia and of accepting the inevitability of Slovenian and
Croatian independence.*” But when Hans Van den Broek, foreign
minister of the Netherlands and president of the EC from summer
1991, put forward a tough resolution, Germany, on whose support the
Dutch hed counted, declined to back them and, instead, joined the
French in proposing a weaker resolution. According to Both, an import
fant season why the Germans declined to back the Dutch proposal was
sour relations between the top politicians in the Netherlands and
Germany, which had developed at the time of German reunification,
which the Dutch had opposed. *® Butby mid-September, German foreign
minister Genscher joined Italian foreign minister Gianni de Michelis in
declaring that Germany and Ttaly would be prepared to recognize the
independence of Slovenia and Croatia if negotiations broke down, Even
30, it was Van den Broek who proved to be ‘instrugnental in opening the
way to a decision in favour of recognition’ when, on 8 and 9 October, he10 Thinking about Yugoslavia
spent hours on the telephone with various Furopean and American polit-
icians arguing the case for recognition.“ Then came the fall of Vukovar to
Serb forces on 18 November, which, for the Dutch, transformed the
‘Yugoslav erisis from a diplomatic and political cvisis to a moral one.
Both also offers an account of a meeting of Christian Democratic
government leaders and party chairmen on 26 November, which played
& pivotal role in the move towards recognition of Slovenia and Croatia
Meeting at Stuyvenberg castle near Brussels, Christian Democratic
leaders from Germany, Italy, Belgium, Luxembourg, the Netherlands,
and Greece agreed thet Slovenia and Croatia should be recognized by
Christmas at the latest.”° In other words, what has been deseribed in
‘much of the literature 9s a German initiative could be better described as
4 Christian Democratic initiative involving leading figures from six
states. The Dutch subsequently had second thoughis, chiefly because
they feared that recognition might have negative effects on the unstable
situation in Bosnia,?? but by then the die had been cast. Kohl and
Genscher may have been the loudest advocates of this. communally
reached policy but, according to Both, it was ultimately a multilateral,
Christian Democratic initiative, rather than a German one ~ Crostian
gratitude to Kohl and Genscher notwithstanding
Vv
Democracy in Bosnia, Considerable controversy has also surrounded
the referendum conducted by the government of Alija Izetbegovié on
28 Februsry-1 March 1991 concerning Bosnian independence. Orga-
nized at the behest of the EC’s Badinter Commission, which held that
4 referendum was a prerequisite for international recognition of inde-
pendence, the vote produced a clear majority in favour of indepen-
dence - 99 per cent of those voting, and 63 per cent of those eligible to
vote, The problem was that, as a result of a decision taken by Radovan
KaradZit’s Serbian Democratic Party (of Bosnia), the overwhelming
majority of Serbs boycotted the referendum (or were kept from the
polls by Karadzié’s people, according to some reports). Indeed, as Silber
and Little point out, Izetbegovié was, by then, championing the princi
ple ‘one man, one vote” (as opposed to a system whereby a majority
‘within any one of the national groups could veto a decision taken by
the majority of Bosnian citizens) not only within the context of the
referendum itself but also as the basis for the future organization of
the Bosnian state.°? This was, in fact, the very principle which Milodevié
had championed previously in the context of socialist Yugoslavia, when,
he had tried to reduce the autonomy of the constituent republics.‘Debates about the war u
‘Burg and Shoup argue, however, that ‘simple electoral democracy was
not the answer',®* and explain much later that ‘the referendum .. . was
from the Serb point of view a step towards war’.”* Yet they also claim
that ‘Serbia did not attempt to broaden the conflict to Bosnia'* =
thereby implicitly denying that Belgrace had been involved in any
preparations for bringing the war to Bosnia, Moreover, as they tell it,
“the firot engagement of Serbian forces from outside Bosnia occurred in
Bijeljing on April 2 and 3 [1992], when an armed confrontation between,
the Muslim Patriotic League and local Serb territorial units took
place's in other words, the eruption of hostilities in Bijeljina should
be seen as an unplanned action in which neither side bore any special
culpability.
Hayden goes further, describing ‘protection of the rights of minorities’
but not majority rule as ‘an essential element of democracy’ and
mentioning ‘the refusal of Bosnian Serbs to accept the superior right of
Croats and Muslims to proclaim a Bosnia that would include them
against their wishes’.”* Since Hayden does not use the same words when
it comes to the preferences of Croats and Muslims living in Serb-
controlled areas, let alone for the Albanians of Kosovo, it would seem
apparent that the ‘superior right” he is rejecting is majority rule. If 1 am
reading Hayden's text correctly, this means that he believes that national
groups in Bosnia should have enjoyed a veto over all important politi-
‘eal decisions — an arrangement associated variously wit
tional democracy or with the framework of a state organized on the
basis of constitutional nationalism (to use Hayden's term), but not
liberal democracy."
Cigar joins Silber and Litde in highlighting the hypocrisy of the
Bosnian Serbs’ position on the referendum, noting that they had con-
ducted their own ‘Serb-only’ referendum three months earlier, voting 10
‘ion with Belgrade, regardless of what Bosnia’s Croats and
‘Muslims might wish for themselves. Hayden does not (or did not, at
the time he finished his book) consider that this Serb-run referendum
involved any implicit claim to a ‘superior right’, however.
For Lukié and Lynch, efforts to portray the Serb offensive against
non-Serbs in Bosnia as a natural or understandable response to the
referendum are misguided, They note that the existence of a Serbian
plan to annex portions of Bosnia-Herzegovina (the ‘Ram’ or ‘Frame-
work’ plan) had been public knowledge since September 1991, when the
independent Belgrade weekly magazine Vreme published details.°" In
their view, ‘intemnational recognition of Bosnia and Herzegovina was
essentially a pretext exploited by Serbia to justify its act of aggression
against (Bosnia)’."*12 Thinking about Yogoslavia
‘The Vance-Owen Peace Plan. The illsfated Vance-Owen peace
plan of 1993 has had its share of advocates and detractors and, even
now, more than @ decade Inter, it remains the subject of dissension.
‘There have been three distinct controversies concerning the plan: frst,
whether it rewarded Serbian aggression or should be seen rather #8 &
Practical solution; second, whose fault it was that the plan was not
accepted; and, third, whether it would have been smart for the United
States and other Westem states to intervene militarily to compel the
three sides to accept the plan, Among the plan’s harshest eritics at the
time were the Dutch, who opposed it because “it was considered unjust
and it was thought that a better alternative could be had." Whatever
the plan’s moral demerits, many writers have acknowledged its expedi
ency. Matie-Janine Calic, for instance, writes that ‘it was not entirely
incorrect to describe (the plan] as “s last chance for peace”’.°*
Brendan Simms, who protests that the plan was unjust, blames the
plan’s failure squarely on the Bosnian Serbs, who in fact rejected it.
Lord Owen blames the Americans and, in this, is seconded by James
Gow, who argues that the United States could have used force to
implement the pian.** Gow argues further that the Vance-Owen Peace
Plant was a better plan than what was finally aecepred at Dayton more
than two years later. Carole Rogel, for her part, divides the blame for
the plan’s failure between the Bosnian Serbs and the Clinton admi-
nistration, noting that the former thought that they were not being
allocated as much land as they wanted while the latter thought that
the Serbs were being allocated too much of Bosnia’s territory.°?
Noxbert Both, howeves, thinks that the Dutch government must be
added to the equation, and blames ‘the Bosnian-Dutch-American axis?
for the plan’s ultimate demise, Bosnian Serb rejectionism being also
an element.
Bat Gow’s notion that the plan could have been implemented by
force, over the objections of the Bosnien Serbs, admits of some
refinement. Norbert Both, for example, notes that, even as the plan
\was under discussion during spring 1993, Bosnian Serb forces continued
to make advances, in the process undermining the prospects for even an
enforced implementation of the plan. Both also offers a revisionist
account of US objections to the plan, According to his version, the
Clinton administration objected to the plan not because it was immoral
or insufficiently ambitious, but, on the contrary, because it was, in
the administration's view, “overly ambitious’.’ Moreover, it was not
the Bosnian Serbs or the United States unilaterally who sounded the
death knell for the Vance-Owen Peace Plan. This came, rather when
the United States joined Russia, Britain, France, and Spain ~ withDebates about the war 6
Germany pointedly excluded, over German protests! — in signing a
resolution in support of a new plan, the so-called Joint Action Program,
on 22 May 1993,
Finally, there is a pessimistic note from ‘Tim Judah who, in his 1997
review of Serbian history, claims that ‘itis a mistake to believe that had
the Bosnian Serb parliament sitting in the Paradise Valley Hotel in the
mountains above Sarajevo accepted it, it would ever have been imple~
mented. Milosevié urged the Bosnian Serbs to accept the plan on the
premise that they had won the war and the Vance-Owen plan was the
best guarantee that they could keep most of the land they now con-
trolled. There was no intention of actuslly fulfilling its terms, just as the
Serbian leadership had never intended to fulfil the terms of the Vance
plan for Groatia.””?
War aims, ‘The question of Serbian war aims is closely connected
with the issues of culpability and pre-planning, and thus, here too,
there are differences of opinion. For example, Francine Friedman, in a
review of Cigar’s Genocide in Bosnia, claims that Cigar gives ‘short
shrift to Serbian fears of marginalization in Croatia and Bosnia and
Herzegovina’,” thereby suggesting that the Serbian recourse to arms
was, at least in part, defensive in nature. Bennett, however, dismisses
such claims, highlighting Milogevie’s irredentist project and pointing to
the Serbian leader’s decision to move the indigenous Serbian population
of western Slavonia to eastern Slavonia, from which local Croats and
Hungarians had been expelled, in order to consolidate his territorial
conquests,”
Burg and Shoup give 2 more Lydian interpretation of Belgrade’s
intentions, alleging thar, by 1 November 1991, Belgrade hed abandoned
‘the pursuit of a greater Serbia? in favour of 'z more nuanced strategy’,”*
though they do not explain why such a strategy involved the commit-
ment of Serbian/FRY (Federal Republic of Yugoslavia) military’ and
economic resources to the campaign in Bosnia which began only five
months later. ‘They also tread onto unabashedly normative terrain in
‘making the following surprising statement
(Our account makes clear that one side —the Muslims — was the aggrieved party,
fighting for its eurvival as a political community, fnot for its very existence. But,
at the same time, the evidence we present here makes it clear that all three parties
including the Muslims ~ were behaving, in ways that undermined any claim to
‘moral superiority."
What is curious here, of course, is that Burg and Shoup simultaneously
concede the Muslims the status of victims, while treating them as morally
equivalent with the Serbian side, the aggressors. The notion that victims14 Thinking about Yugostavia
and agaressors should be considered morally equivalent has generally
not withstood serutiny,
Cigar, Lukié and Lynch, Sells, and Sifber and Little view Serbian war
‘ims as embracing the creation of « Greater Serbian state, to which
portions of Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina would be attached, and
from which most non-Serbs would be expelled and their religious
and cultural objects destroyed. For Cigar, thus, ‘ethnic cleansing’, as
the Serb policy of mayhem, slaughter, and forced expulsion came to
be called, ‘was not simply the unintentional and unfortunate by-product
of combat or civil war. Rather, it was a rational policy, the direct and
planned consequence of conscious policy decisions taken by the Serbian
establishment in Serbia and Bosnia-Herzegovina."”? Francis Boyle, in
‘The Bosnian People Charge Genocide, cites UN special rapporteur Tadeusz,
Mazowiecki’s conclusion that ‘ethnic cleansing does not appear to be
Imerely] the consequence of the war, but rather its gioal’./” Nor was
material profit irrelevant, as Silber and Little point out; on the contrary,
‘Muslims and Croats were typically forced to sign documents surren-
dering their property rights to Serbs, before being allowed to flee for
their lives.”®
Sells, in a striking passage, shows how ‘ethnic cleansing” worked: in
the period from April through July 1992, Serb militias killed or expelled
all of Zvornik’s Muslims and destroyed all of the town’s mosques as well
28 all evidence of half a millennium of interconfessional coexistence. At
the end of the operation, the new Serbian mayor of Zvornik, which had
hitherto had_a Muslim majority, announced, ‘There never were any
mosques in Zvornik.’” In this way, ‘ethnic cleansing? also entails the
ing of history.
y
The nature of Izetbegovié’s programme. ‘Throughout the war
years, Serb propagandists never tired of accusing Bosnian president
Lreibegovié of secking to establish an Islamic fundamentalist state,
while apologists and propagandists for the Izetbegovié government re~
sponded by portraying that government as a paragon of liberal tolerance,
secular democracy, and advocacy of interethnic and interconfessional
harmony, Parties to the dispute typically offered contrasting interpret-
ations of Lzetbegovie's youthful work, The Islamic Declaration, which
outlined certain Tslamic principles of government, TIneluctably, analysts
also represented the Tzetbegovié government in diverse ways. Aleksa
Djlas, the internationally regarded Serbian writer, claimed, for example,
that ‘most Muslim leaders believed only 2 Muslim should be allowed fullDebates about dhe war 5
citizenship’, though he added that ‘only Muslim extremists .. . thought
non-Muslims should be expelled from Bosnia’.
‘Along the same lines, Burg and Shoup say (in the context of a discus
sion of 1990) that Izetbegovie ‘carefully avoided specifically advocating
the estoblishment of an “Islamic state” in Bosnia’, phrasing which
makes sense only if onc supposes that the elder Bosnian actually wanted
to establish such a state in Bosnia. They also refer to the ‘overtly
Islamic and Muslim nationalist orientation of the SDA [Party of Demo-
cratic Action) leadership around Izeibegovié’, while noting that Adil
Zalfikarpa8ié’s rival Muslim Bosniak Organization ‘held little appeal
outside of liberal Muslim circles’.®)
For Cushman and Meitrovig, efforts to construe Alija Tzetbegovié as
an Islamic fundamentalist were ‘taken directly from Serbian prope-
ganda’ and have no basis in fact. On the contrary, they argue, in his
book, Islant between East and West, ‘Izetbegovie’s admiration for the
West is 50 great a8 t0 be pathetic, given how the West has rejected
him.”*? Yet, as they note, “The construction of Izetbegovié as an Islamic
fundamentalist (had) important ramifications for Western policy."*?
Silber and Little, as ever offering rich detail, cite a speech Izetbegovié
gave in 1990, in which he resolutely rejected anything smacking of
fundamentalism or Muslim hegemony. “We are not on the road to a
national state’, Izetbegovié said on that occasion:
ur only way out is towards @ free civic union. This is the future, Some people
may want that [to make Bosnia a Muslim state} but this is not a realistic wish
[Even though the Muslims are the most numerous nation in the republic, there
fre not enough of them (to justify such a poltical aspiration].
Genocide, Of all the issues discussed here, perhaps none has such
poignancy as the question of genocide: did Serbian actions in Croatia
and/or Bosnia-Herzegoving constiuute genocide or not? What is striking
is the correlation between methodology and conclusions. Hayden and
Burg/Shoup look to scholarly definitions of genecide and conclude that
the case for genocide has not (or had not, atthe time of their writing, at
least) been macle; Boyle, Cigar, and Cushman/Meétrovié rely on the
legal definition of genocide as per the United Nations Convention on
the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (1948) and
conclude thet genocide did take place in Bosnia and that the Serbian side
‘was the perpetrator. Bennett, for his part, relies on a commonsensical
understanding of genocide to argue that ‘ethnic cleansing is but a eu-
phemism for genocide’, pointing out, however, that the advantage of
Using the former term is that it does not place the great powers under any
obligation to make an effective response.*®16 Thinking about Yugoslavia
At the outset of their work, Steven Burg and Paul Shoup commend-
ably point out that they were unable to reach agreement on the question
of genocide. ‘For one of us [Burg?}, it isa central issue’ they write, while
‘for the other [Shoup?], [itis] « charge that is highly politicized and must
therefore be made cautiously, if at all. In spite of this, itis the latter
viewpoint which, as far as I can set, dominates in the discussion which
follows, giving rise to a certain scepticism. But even allowing for some
scepticism, itis hard to know what to make of Burg and Shoup's allega~
tion that, in Operation Storm, in whic, according to Human Rights
Watch (final figures), a total of 526 Serbs and 253 Croats lost their
lives,*” ‘the Serb population of {the} Krajina was cleansed, and its
remnants subjected to systematic abuse and murder on a scale that
right raise the question of genocide’,*® even while, in considering the
more numerous Muslim and Croat casualties, they had questioned
“whether, in fact, genocide was taking place’?
‘Some writers deny that the Bosnian Muslims suffered genocide, based
oon the argument that they were not eradicated. Sells, by contrast, rerurns
to Rafael Lemkin, who coined the term, and notes that Lemkin never
intended for the term to require the destruction of an entire community.
Lemkin defined genocide, rather, as ‘a coordinated plan of different
actions aiming at the destruction of essential foundations of the life of
national groups’.?® Guicled by this understanding of the term, Sells con-
cludes that the Serbian ‘effort (in the years 1992-5] to destroy both
Bosnian Muslim culture and Bosnien multreligious culture and to des-
toy the Bosnian Muslims as a people” was indeed tantamount to geno.
cide, ond that only their reluctance to become involved induced NATO
powers to refuse to acknowledge that genocide was in fact taking place.?!
“The first serious effort to assess the background to the genocide in
Bosnia and to come to grips with its social context is, without question,
‘Norman Cigar’s insightful and brilliantly executed book. Cigae shows
how political, cultural, and ecclesiastical clites in Serbia prepared
the ground over a period of years, mentioning, for example, Olga
Lukovig-Pejanovi’s book, The Serbs: The Oldest Nation, which ‘eveated?
that the Garclen of Ecien had been situated in an arca presently in Serbia,
that the Serbs invented writing, that the Greek poet Ovid wrote his
‘works in Serbian, and so forth.”* He also quotes an uni
in the Serbian government who, in 1994, apparently declared:
‘Today, many around the world dream about being Serbs: the individual on Fifth
Avenue eating a hamburger, the Eskimo breaking the ice and fishing, the
Frenchman sroling slong the Champs @’Biysées . . . Be happy that you are
Scibs ... Be happy that you belong to this people... You are eternal.”Debates about the war "7
Having argued for a connection between the collective mental states
induced by such propaganda and the willingness to perpetrate violence
against others — which is the central point in a book by Ivan Colovié to be
discussed in chapter 6 ~ Cigar tums his attention to the policies executed
and voices of protest. What he found, among other things, was that there
were significantly more voices of moderation among both Croats and
Bosniaks (Muslims) than among Serbs, He notes, for example, that the
independent but erratic Zagreb weekly, Globus, showed that documents
adduced by Mate Roban’s Croatian Defence Council (HVO), the mili-
tary arm of the Bosnian Croats, purported to prove that the Bosnian
government had formulated plans to slaughter local Croats, were forget
ies.° He also argues forcefully that air power could have been effective
in disrupting the Bosnian Serbs’ ability (© move troops and supplies into
and around Bosnia-Herzegovina.®?
VI
‘The Udovigki/Ridgeway volume is, in some ways, mote ambitious then.
the aforementioned books, offering 2 comprehensive overview of the
twoubled history of the South Slavs. Although an edited collection, the
chapters hold together remarkably well, generally offering @ Serbian
oppositionist, which is to say liberal-cosmopolitan, viewpoint, but with
an insider's understanding of Serb perceptions, and Serbian develop-
ments and modalities. Tracing the course of Yugoslav history fom 395
to 1999, but with emphasis on the final rwelve years of this period, the
volume includes, among other things, separate chapters on the Tito era,
the first decade after Tito’s death (ie., 1980-90), the role ofthe media in
stoking interethnic hatreds, the army, the resistance in Serbia, the resist-
ance in Croatia, intemational aspects of the Yugoslav conflicts, and ~
new to the second edition ~ a chapter by Jasminka Udovizki on Kosovo,
Udovitki sets the stage in her introduction by tracing the collapse of
Yugoslavia to what she calls ‘political ethno-kitsch’ washing over Serbia
in the years after 1987. The entire popular culture, including folk con-
certs, popular fiction, sporting events, mass rallies, and of course the
media, became obsessed with the idea that the Serbs had been wronged
by the other peoples of Yugoslavia, that they were, in fact, ‘the Jews of
the Balkans’. Serbian and Yugoslav society might have been able to
resist this propaganda, she implies, had the country possessed ‘a resilient
‘web of democratic institutions’, But unfortunately, she relates, the emes=
gence of civil society and of civic consciousness alike had been stifled in
both the interwar kingdom and Tito’s communist Yugostavia, with the18 ‘Thinking about Yugoslavia
result that the country lacked any such protective network.” What is,
more, the Yugoslav public was not able to recognize the nationalist
avalanche, ‘for what it was: a pernicious assault on the most basic
norms of democratic life and 2 populist subterfuge engineered from
above as a prelude to war. The public instead identified nationalism with
patriotism.’ ‘These lines make clear Udovitki’s affinity for the idealist
approach to politics
Of particular interest in this volume is the chapter on the media ("The
‘Media Wars: 1987-1997’) by Milan MiloSevi. In this study, the author
focuses on the media in Serbia, showing how it manipulated images to
stoke hatred and resentment, One example comes from 1989 when, in
response to the publication of Franjo Tudjman’s controversial book,
Bespuéa (Wastelands), in which the retired general had revised the
conventional figures about the number of people who had died at the
Jasenovac concentration camp in the Second World War and during the
war as a whole, Serbian authorities undertook to have mass graves
opened and their contents displayed in front of television cameras,
supposedly so that people would understand just how bad the war had
been.®” This television campaign gave Tudjman a standing which he
might otherwise not have attained and, ironically (since that was not the
intent of the Serbian authorities), helped to propel Tudjman into the
office of president of Croatia when Croats, fed up with the propaganda
barrage coming out of Belgrade, looked to Belgrade’s apparent nemesis
to be their leader. Later, after the war had got underway, Serbian televi-
sion continued its manipulations, as Milan Milodevié shows: Serbian
viewers, sitting glued to their television sets, watched as the corpses of
Bosnian Muslims killed by Serbs were shown, but they were told that
these were the bodies of Serbs killed by Mustims!"®? But Croatian,
television was no more reliable, according to the author. What is even,
more striking is that, in spite of extravagant distortion and politicization
of images and reportage, surveys conducted by the Institute for Political
Studies in Belgrade in mid-1992 found that more than 60 per cent of
Serbian television viewers did not doubt the truth of what they heard on.
television.
‘The second edition of the Udovitki/Ridgeway volume also includes, as
already mentioned, a new chapter on Kosovo, written primarily to
provide an account of the crisis of 1998-9, culminating in NATO's air
campaign against the FRY, Udovitki combines an astute sensitivity to
historical factors with a realistic assessment of the forces which inflamed
the crisis, never allowing herself to slide into historical determinism. She
points out that Serb and Albanian nationalisms mirrored cach other,
without nationalists on either side ever being aware of the similarity ofDebates about the war 19
theit positions.'®? She takes note of both Albanian and Serb resentments
during the communist era. And she recounts how more than 20,000
Serbs left Kosove during the years 1981-7, fuelling the general resent=
ment which brought Milofevié to power and provided the backdrop for
the abolition, by Serbia, of the province’s autonomy in March 1989. She
sensibly describes the Dayton Peace Accords as a turning point for most
Albanians of Kosovo, It is arguable that, until then, ordinary Albanians
might well have considered some form of autonomy, for example as a
constituent republic coequal with Serbia and Montenegro within the
rump Yugoslav federation, and not have insisted on full independence.
But when the Albanians saw that their concerns were not being ad-
dressed at Dayton, they lost hope of a negotiated settlement and, as
Usdovidki puts it, after that, the Albanians treaied the Belgrade author~
ities as ‘an occupying force’ pure and simple." Her account of the rise
of the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) is rich in detail. She notes, for
example, that KLA fighters may have obtained training in Albania, Iran,
and Pakistan, and cites Western sources to the effect that the KLA
received assistance from German intelligence sources in the mid-
1000s. She also writes that the KLA developed connections with the
Kosovar Albanian mafia in Germany, Switzerland, and Italy.?*
As the KLA began its violent activity against Serbian targets inside
Kosovo in 1997, pressure built up on the Belgrade regime to respond,
‘Udovidki asserts:
‘The Serbian regime would have acted within its constitutional prerogatives had it
‘imed its activities against the mafia-tinked, foreign-supported assassins of Ser-
bian police, civilians, and state employees, including ethnic Albanian ones.
Instead, Beigrade struck back not just at the criminal elements but at civilians
aswell
Yet the Belgrade regime could scarcely have done otherwise, since it
‘was not a Rechtstaat, but an autocratic regime with stunted democratic
nstitutions, whose ruling party owed its position to its promotion of
intolerant nationalism. In a review of an earlier incarnation of Burt This
House, Marko Attila Hoare criticized the contributors for failing to
‘express feven] the slightest sympathy or understanding for the national
rights of non-Serb peoples. In their view these are not an issue . . .
Rather, “the crucial issue for Yugoslavia” was “the rights of minority
‘ethnic groups in the republics and provinces.” This tums out to mean
‘only the Serbs in Croatia, Bosnia and Kosova, since the grievances of
other minorities are given no space and their rights are not defended.”
‘The chief non-Serbian minority (using the term in a mathematical
sense) within the Republic of Serbia has been the Albanians, and this20 Thinking about Yogoslavia
new chapter corrects any imbalance of which the first edition may have
been guilty, a least 10 some extent. At the same time, the volume makes
4 point of emphasizing that there were not only nationalist Serb, but
also antisnationalist Serbs such as the ‘many Serbs in Croatia {who} were
against the war and refused to be turned against their Crostian neigh-
bors'!°” and the ‘progressive activists fin Belgrade) who ied to reach
not just moderate Albanians but also their own old-time Albanian
fiends’! A chapter by Sven Balas (a pseudonym) argues the same
point on behalf of Croats, noting the presence of anti-nationalist and
antiTudjman Croats, including among intellectuals." Again, where
the Muslims/Bosniaks are concemed, the chapter written jointly by
Usovidki and Stitkovac records how, in March 1992, tens of thousands
of Bosnians (involving not just Mostims, for whom the term Bosniaks
is generally used) ‘took to the streets of Bosnia’s towns shouting, “We
‘vant to live together.””!!° Yer, rather obviously, the voices of the anti-
nationalist opposition were drowned out in Serbia, Croatia, and Bosnia-
Herzegovina, and Serbs and Croats proved unable to dislodge their
respective governments from their disastrous courses (at lesst, in the
case of Croatia, until the Washington Agreement).
vin
Thave already discussed some of the ideas presented in the volumes by
Sadkovich and Burg/Shoup, but return to them briefly in conjunction
with a discussion of the Magai/Zanié volume, insofar as they offer
study in contrasts. Both volumes provide nutshell summaries of the
Yugoslav theatre in the Second World Was, both criticize American
media coverage of the war in Bosnia Gadkovich judges it to have
been pro-Serb, while Burg and Shoup argue that it was anti-Serb), and
both offer clear interpretations of the Bosnian war, albeit from opposite
vantage points, The Sadkovich volume draws on an extensive list of
English-, Serbo-Croat-, and Italian-language works, including analyses
of the media, as well as a wide array of American media sources, more
than sufficient to give his argument weight. The Bury/Shoup yolume
reflects a familiarity with English-, Serbo-Croat-, and German-language
materials, including UN documents and American newspapers such as,
the New York Fines, the Washingion Post, and the Boston Globes as well as
such local newspapers as Borba, Politika, and Oslobodjenje. The British
newspaper, the Guardian, is also cited extensively by Burg and Shoup.
‘Sadkovich’s concern is to show how American journalists misled the
American public, whether consciously or through ignorance. He notes,
for example, that some journalists who covered the Balkans duringDebates about the war an
1991-5 had had no previous familiarity with the aree and uncitically
accepted the distorted view of history given in Serbian propaganda,
namely, that one could dra a direct line from the Second World War
(which ‘the journalists misunderstood in some important details) to the
‘Wor of Yugoslav Succession of 1991-5.""" Overall, he criticizes the US
media for having displayed a persistently pro-Serb, anti-Croat, and anti
‘Muslim bias, providing extensive documentation. CNN comes in for
special criticism, for alleged oversimplification, shallowness, and triviliza-
tion,’ while Sadkovieh indicts the American media more generally for
contributing to a dulling of the moral sense and a paralysis ofthe will.
Sadkovich also has hatsh words for the conventionalist school, siming
bis toughest criticism at Woodward's Balkan Tragedy and Cohen's
Broken Bonds, and associating Gale Stokes (in particular, the Yugoslav
sections of The Walls Came Tumbling Down (1993)) with them. Wood-
ward is criticized for reducing history 10 abstract forces and processes,
thereby filing to identify the human agents responsible for certain
policies,!"* for construing ‘the Serbs as victims of an international con-
spiracy' involving ‘Germany[,}. . . Austzia, Hungary, Italy, the Vatican,
Denmark, ... and the US Congress’,'!? and for repeating as if a fact
Karadiié’s inaccurate'® claim that the Serbs had “owned” 64 percent
of Bosnia’ prior to the outbreak of hostilities,""” among other things.
Cohen is criticized for referring to the conflict as ‘a pattern of ethno-
religious violence and atrocities against innocent civilians that was all too
familiar in the segion’,"* for anti-Croat prejudices," and for accepting
the notion that the hostility displayed by Groatian Serbs towards the
‘Tudjman government was the result of spontaneously recalled memories
of the Second World War rather than of the propaganda campaign which
hhad been waged by the Belgrade media since soon after Miloievié's
accession to power.!?°
It is unlikely that Sadkovich would have had favourable things to say
bout the Burg/Shoup volume, had it appeared early enough for him to
have considered it, since it is closer in spirit to the works he criticizes
thon to the universalist position which he articulates."*! The Burg/
Shoup voluze is, in fact, a classic statement of the realist position, as 1
have defined it. Having already rejected any criticism of iliberal nation-
lism on the basis of liberal principles," Burg and Shoup seek to
marginalize moral arguments, asserting that ‘the moral argument for
intervention, however well-intentioned, did not fully address the moral
dilemma of whether the lives of Western soldiers were worth less than the
lives of the Bosnians the West would be trying to save’."° Elsewhere is
the book they ceclare that only a threat to international peace can justify
military intervention in the affairs of another state'™ ~ a curious claim22 Thinking about Yugostavia
insofar as the UN Charter codifies wo cases in which the use of force is
justified: these are the right to individual or collective defence against
armed attack, and the certification that there is @ serious threat to
collective security.'#? More to the point, many scholars of international
Jaw argue that norms of international behaviour have evolved! in the past
half-century and that there is, in fact, a plausible case that massive
violations of human rights not only legitimate international intervention,
but actually require it.
‘Strangely, in artempting to give an account of the mejor approaches to
conflict management in situations of ethnic conflict, Burg and Shoup
assert that (American) academia is, in their view, ‘dominated’ by wo
approaches: the ‘pluralist or integrationist’ approach, which, in fact,
does not favour integration at all but ‘calls for the isolation of groups
from one another at the mass level through entirely separate networks of
social and political organizations” with each group being granted a veto
‘whem its “vital interests” are at stake’, and the ‘power-sharing’ ap-
proach, which is based on ‘collectivist definitions of rights’ and the
presumption of the legitimacy of ‘group claims to state-constituting
status’27 What is stiiking is that neither of these approaches could be
called ‘liberal’, which is to say that Burg and Shoup do not believe that
faith in classical liberalism is a dominant view in American academic
circles!
Equally controversially but consistently, Burg and Shoup criticize
James Gow's allegation that the West lacked the will to take the action
necessary 10 end the Bosnian war in 1993, countering that “To argue that
intervention could be based on “will” alone’ ~ not Gow’s argument"
‘ignores the responsibility of democratic leaders to consider the costs of
intervention to their citizens in terms of “blood and treasure” . .. [On
the contrary,} the refusal to intervene appears to {have} reflect{ed]
responsible democratic leadership, rather than a lack of will"? More
than 200,000 people died in Bosnia during the war of 1992-5, while the
White House hesitated. When the United States finally acted in August
1995, Bosnian Serb defences against American military might proved to
be nonexistent
‘The Burg/Shoup volume contains a number of strange statements,
among them:
© the allegation that, concerning Bosnia’s future, there were, as of
1990-2, ‘two altemative views, both Ser”!?? .. phrasing which sug-
gests (whether deliberately or as a result of inattention to their own
words) that the Croats and Muslims had no coherent views;Debates abour the war 23
« the allegation that ‘even those who advocated the use of US air power
feared that fighting would intensify as a result”? — q representation
which does not seem appropriate whether one talks of George Shulz
or Margaret Thaicher or Zbigniew Brzezinski or myself, let alone
Alexander Haig or the increasingly frustrated US Congress;
their recluction of attempts to establish a liberal ‘civic state? (gra-
djanska dréava) to ‘efforts of one or two groups to impose their will
oon the third’, as if there were no compelling argaments for liberal
majoritarian democracy.!*?
‘The Burg/Shoup volume is not without its uses, The authors have
compiled @ lot of information, detailing sundry military, political, and
diplomatic aeions over the course of a decade, But thelt story iy told
from a pro-Serbian,'** anti-Muslim,'™* relativistic!” perspective, It is
odd that they allude, in the context of their discussion of events between
October 1991 and March 1992, to the NAY ‘transer of arms” 19
Bosnia’s Serbs, when this Serbian arms transfusion had begun, not after
October 1991, but already in 1990 (so that, by mid-March 1991, the
JNA hd ilegly transferred nently 52,000 firearms to Serb militias in
Bosnia);'"° instead, by placement, they associate this with accounts of
what were in fact lazer efforts by local Croats and Muslims to. arm
themselves, writing that che ‘Bosnian Muslim Green Berets were organ
ized in fall 1991°'*? (which is to say, after the hostilities in Croatia had
begun and at least two months after Bosnian Serbs had begun arming
themselves).
‘The Magat/Zanié book not only provides a useful corrective to the
Burg/Shoup volume, but has quickly established itself as a classic in the
field, In its original Croatian edition, ** the collaborative volume shot to
the best-seller ist in Zagreb and Sarajevo and remained there for several
weeks. The book is the first major study of the military aspects of the
war,'®? but also sheds light on political and legal aspects of the conflict.
‘The major chapters are weiten by: General Martin Spegelj, former
Croatian defence minister; General Anton Tus, former chief-of-staff of
the Croatian Army (FY); Ozren Zunec, professor of history tt the
Univesity of Zagrebs Generat Jovan Diva, former deputy chief of tall
of the Army of Bosnia-Herzegovina; Marko Attila Hoare, @ lecturer at
Cambridge University; and Norman Cigar, a professor of strategic studies
at the US Marine Corps Command and Staff College at Quantico Vir~
ginia. Other contributors are Dugan Bilandzi¢, Rusmir Mahmut¢ehaji¢,
Paul Williams, Warren H. Switzer, Ofelja Backovié, MiloS Vasi¢, and
Aleksandra Vasovi.24 Thinking about Yugoslavia
‘The revelations by Spegelj and Tus are particularly striking. Spegelj,
for example, reports that in December 1990, when presented with a
draft defence plan for Croatia, Tudjman rejected it, saying that he did
‘not want to have any defence plan; indeed, Tudjman turned down two
more defence plans between then and the end of July 1991.""° Spegelj
also reveals that, 9s early as March 1991, the Croatian Ministry of
Defence had learned of a JNA plan to take control of Serb-inhabited.
azeas of Croatia"! — a point which makes clear that the JNA was already
acting in collaboration with Miloevié by that time. But Spegelj also
presses a point he develops at greater length in his memoirs (discussed.
in chapter 5), namely, that in strategic terms, the best time for Croatia to
seize JNA weaponry would have been during the period when the JNA
was preoccupied with Slovenia (25 June-10 July 1991), arguing that
Croatian authorities could thereby have brought the war to a speedy
close.!? Spegelj blames Tudjman for the delay in moving against JNA
barracks and depots, and also for issuing an inexplicable (in Spegels
mind) order on 26 December 1991 to halt a Croatian counteroffensive
which, in the space of twenty-five days, had retaken much of western
Slavonia,"
General Tus echoes Spegelj’s criticism of Tudjman, both for his
decision not to occupy all the JNA installations in Croatia'“* and for
strategic errors on the battlefield. Specifically, if the Croatian Army had
‘occupied the Petrova Gora barracks before Vukovar was surrounded, the
town could have been saved, according to Tus, since Petrova Gors was
crucial to the JNA siege. The HV began its thrust towards Vukovar
during the night of 12/13 October, with diversionary actions in which
some enemy targets were destroyed; by noon, Croatian forces had taken
control of half of Marinci, a nearby village. But already at 9 a.m. on
13 October, President Tudjman had called General Tus to ask him to
stop the operation so that Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans
Frontiéres could get to Vukovar and evacuate the wounded. At the time,
‘Tus told Tudiman that it was not possible to call off a successful
breakthrough. But after the HV was already inside Marinci, Tudjman
telephoned Tus for @ second time, ordering Tus to suspend the
operation at once. The HV now suspended the campaign to allow the
humanitarian convoy to pass, but the JNA manceuvred the convoy
around the area for two days while they laid mines in the area and
brought in reinforcements, cutting the road to Vukovar./*? By the time
the convoy had evacuated the wounded and left the combat area, the
military situation around Vukovar had changed; the window of eppor-
unity for a Croatian rescue operation had closed, setting the stage for
the eventual collapse of the resistance in Vukovar.Debates about the war 25
Ozren Zunec, in a chapter devoted to the successful Croatian military
operations of 1995 (Operation Flash in western Slavonia and Operation
Storm in the Krajina), notes his fundamental agreement with Spegelis
declaring that, as of the end of 1991, Croatia ‘had broken the back of the
whole JNA offensive’ and, according to Zunec, could easily have retaken
its territory; Tudjman did not do so, says Zunec, because of his territor-
inl pretensions in Bosnia-Herzegovina,'"® But whereas many observers
had depicted the HV’s reconquest of western Slavonia and the Dalma-
tian hinterland in 1995 as primarily muifizary accomplishments, Zunec
emphasizes that the Krajina Serbs had failed polivcally as wel, lacking a
clear strategy or even a functioning state apparatus."
Jovan Divjak’s chapter on Bosnia, 1992-3, is one of the most import-
‘ant pieces ever written about the fighting in Bosnia. He provides con.
cexete examples of the illegal behaviour of Bosnian Serb leaders Karadié
and Krajiinik, as well as of Serb deputies to the Bosnian Assembly, and
offers details of JNA/Bosnian Serb preparations for war. And where Burg,
‘and Shoup congratufaze the international community for its long inaction
in Bosnia (‘responsible democratic leadership’, as they call it), Divjak
charges that ‘The international community is responsible for failing to
prevent the genocide and reducing its involvement to merely providing
humanitarian aid and localizing the conflict so that it would not spread
to the rest of the Balkans."
And finally, Marko Attila Hoare, in a chapter devoted to civit-mititary
relations in wartime Bosnia, argues that, in the course of the war, the
sump state and the Bosnian Army evolved into the private instruments of
Teetbegovie and his Party of Democratic Action (SDA). He blames,
the general staff of the Bosnian Army for having made no effort to come
to Srebrenica’s assistance in summer 1995,1° and portrays the United
Sates, Britain, and France as cynically looking for ways to partition
Bosnia, rather than save it."
‘Taken as a whole, The War in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina prompts
a reassessment of the ‘conventional? view of the war as fostered in
segments of the Western press. Prepared well in advance, the war cannot
wed as merely the desperate ‘last recoursc’ of threatened Serbs; nor
can Tudjman be exonerated even sere the defence of Croatia is concerned;
and nor, finally, is it possible to proceed as if it was clearly the earnest
wish, on the part of the United States, Britain, and France to find a just
solution to the conflict. On the contrary, such doubts, inter alia have
been raised in this book.
As for the volume assembled and edited by Quintin Hoare and Noel
Malcolm, I found this to be an invaluable collection of short reviews
of works relating, in whole or in part, to Bosnia, published in West26 “Thinking about Vogostavia
European languages (chiefly English, German, and French) since 1990,
with sharp, often witty, and occasionally brief summaries of the litera-
ture, The editors? judgements impress me as generally reliable, and the
book will surely remain indispensable for those desiring « summary
guide to a voluminous literature on Bosni:
‘The editors divide their coverage into two parts, Part One contains
three sections: essential readings (listing twenty-one books and one mono-
graph, three of which appear on my own list of personal favourites at the
end of this volume, pp. 305-18); oiher recommended readings (listing
sixty-four books and monographs, one of which appears on my list of
personal favourites); and other readings (listing 253 books and mono-
graphs, six of which appear on my list of personal favourites). In Part
‘Two, the editors reprint longer reviews of nineteen books. Coverage
includes works in English, German, French, Italian, Spanish, Norwe-
ian, Swedish, and Dutch.
‘The editors cannot be accused of indulgence towards authors for
whose work they feel contempt, dismissing one work for ‘half-baked
populism’, ‘sloppy mistakes’, and ‘ludicrous’ statements," another for
‘misleading if not downright mystficatory over-simplifications’,"*> stil
another as ‘touching but very insubstantia?,!* and yet another for being
‘intolerably sentimental and inaccurate’.'** Commenting on Nathaniel
Harris's The War in Former Yugoslavia (1997), they write, ‘Pity the
“young people” subjected to this kind of dumbing down, where every-
thing is relativized, facts are few and far between, explanation is perfunc-
tory, and Western politicians like international bodies are above
criticism."!°® Some of the characterizations are 0 pejorative as to pro-
voke the occasional morbid chuckle, Edgar O’Ballance’s Civil War in
Bosnia (1995) is ‘dismally unintelligent... fand] lacks even the slightest
documentary value’.!? Gabriel Plisson’s Mourir pour Sarajevo (1994) is
a ‘rag-bag of a book’, containing ‘snippets of useful information, but also
some exrors’."°® Mary Pat Kelly’s ‘Good to Go’: The Rescue of Scott
O'Grady front Bosnia (1997) is an ‘excessively detailed account of a
minor incident’ filed with ‘long extracts’ from interviews conducted
with everyone involved." Perhaps the most damning review in the
Hoare/Malcolm volume is that accorded 10 Yossef Bodansky, whose
Offensive in the Balkans (1995), an ‘unusually shrill piece of pro-Pale
[ie., pro-Bosnian Serb] polemics’, offers a warning that a military inter-
vention in Bosnia might well ignite a Third World Wer. Hoare and
Malcolm comment: ‘Curiously, the text was produced in November
1995: anyone can get predictions wrong in advance of the event, but
it requires a special telent to make false predictions about events that
have already happened.’¥©° But perhaps my ‘favourite’ review in thisDebates about the war a
collection ~ if I may put it that way ~ is the editors’ characterization of
Edward Ricciuti’s War ir Yugoslavia (1993) as a ‘picture-book, appar-
ently produced for schoolchildren or dim students, . .. [which] manages
to discuss the origins of the war without blaming anyone or anything
(except “1,500 years of history”. ..)°.1"
But I would be remiss if I did not acknowledge that Hoare and
Malcolm are also generous with praise when they feet that one or another
book merits praise ~ and many books receive accolades from the polyglot
Back in 1991, as the war in Slovenia was drawing to a close, a high-
ranking Serbian official remarked that the coming conflict in Croatia
would make what had happened in Slovenia look like Disneyland. Of
course, picking up the Disneyland motif, one might note that the Krajina
could, properly enough, be translated as Frontierland, while Kosovo has
perhaps earned the sobriquet Adventureland, recalling that mnost ‘adven-
tures’ have a desperate character to them. Macedonia might be Never
neverland, at least in the eyes of Greek nationalists who wanted nothing
less than to expunge its name and history altogether. I think of Bosnia as
‘Tomorrowland, indicating a sense of foreboding for the future and
offering & warning of a possible ‘future’ to be avoided. Serbia under
Milogevié figured ~ dare I say clearly? ~ as a kind of Fantasyland, where
fantasies of national salvation raised Serbian spirits to dizzying heights,
only to see their spirits dashed in the course of eight years of war and
privation. And dominating Fantasyland is, of course, Sleeping Beauty's
Castle, where the slumbering beauty lies in repose until a princely kiss
will awaken her. Serbia’s Sleeping Beauty's Castle is the so-called House
of Flowers, where Tito lies buried. But Yugoslavia’s sleeping beauty,
unlike Disney's, will sleep forever. The only fairy tales still circulating in
this Fantasyland are the dangerous ones.
noes
1 Steven I, Burgs Conflict and Cohesion in Socialie Yugoslavia: Political Decsion-
‘Making since 1966 (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1983), p. 339.
2 George Schépflin, Political Decay in One-Party Systems in Basten
Europe’, in Pedro Ramet (ed), Yugoslavia in che £980s (Boulder, CO: West
view Press, 1985), pp. 312, 321
3 See the contributions by Christine von Kohl and Julie Mertus to the round
table on Kesovo in Human Rights Review, 1, 2. January-March 2000).
4 Ciaran Cronin and Pablo De Greiff, ‘Editors’ Introduction’ to Jurgen
Habermas, The Inclusion of the Other: Studies in Paitical Theory, trans. from
‘German by Ciaran Cronin et al. (Cambridge: Potity Press, 1998), pp. si,28 ‘Thinking about Yugoslavia
5 See, in pariulan, my Whoxe Democracy? Navonatiom, Religion, and the
Dosrine of Coletive Right in Poei989 Basers Europe (Lankan, MD»
Rowman & Litdeield, 1997), esp introduction, chep. 3, conclusions ‘Evil
and the Obsolescence of Siate Sovereignty’, Human Rights Revisw, 1, 2
Gaminry-March 2000), pp. 127-35; “The Classical Libera Tradition: Ver
sions, Subversions, Aversion®, ‘Traversions, Reversion’, in Oro Luthas,
Keith A. McLeod, end Mite Zegar (eds), Liberal Denaerag, Citizencib
and Rawcarion (Niegara Fals, NY: Mosse Press, 2001), pp. 46-675 anc
Balkan Babel: The Disintegration of Yugoslavia from the Death of Tito to the Fall
of Milosevid, 4th edn (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 2002).
6 Review of Susan L. Woodward's Balkan Tragedy: Chaos and Disolon afer
th Gold Wer (Washinton, DC: Brookings Insttacion Pees, 195) by Atila
Hoare, in Bosnia Report, 15 (April-June 1996), reprinted ia Quintin Hoare
and Noel Malcolm (ede), Hooks on Bosnia (London: Bosnian Instivets, nd
[1999]), pp. 175-6,
Steven L. Burg and Pal S, Shoup, The War in Bosnia Hersegovina: Ethic
Gane and International Iterention (Axsionk, NY: M. E. Sharpe, 1999),
pi
‘As Ihave noted in my ‘Clasicl Literal Tradition’, pp. 50-1, 53-5.
Miloven Djila, atin, trans. fom Serbian by Michael B, Petrovich (New
‘York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1977), pp. 40, 120,
10 CIA, *Yugostavia ~ Politica”, National Inelizence Sure (1 October 1957),
clase secret, declassifed 22. Novernber 2000 under the Freedom of
Information Act by the acthoriy of ND 011144, by SDTIST, Vol 9,
Section 50, Chap. V, NIS #215 on deposit at she National Archives TI,
RG-273, Box 92
Christopher Bennet, Yugoslavia’: Blody Callas: Conse, Cour and
Consequences (ashngzon Squaze, NY: New York University Pres, 1995),
p. 187, See aso. 94
12 ids p. 186
13 Notaia Mivié-Peteovg, “A Bcf History of the State of Bosnia Herzegovina
(Geom its Origins to the 1995 Dayton Peace Acconds)s in Vesna Nikolic
Ristanowé ed), Women, Fileee an Ware Wartne Vicinizatonof Refugee
in he Balhons(adapest: Cents! Boropean University Pres, 2000), p. 13.
See aso p. 123 and Bennet, Vngoileia's Body Callaps, p. 238
14 Viktor Maes, Vngoroiae Hit of Its Demis tans, from German by
Sabrina Ramet (London and New York: Rowtledge, 1999), p. 211
1 Werren Zimmermann, Onis af a Goasraphe: Yugorovin and le Destroyers,
revised edn (New Yorks Times Books, 1995).
16 Robert A. Hayden, Blunt fora Fore Divided: Dre Conttonal Lagi of
‘the Yugoslav Conflicts (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 1999)
p23.
17 Hedy pp. 64-5,
18 Norman Cignr, Genccite in Bosna: The Poi of 1
Stotion, TX: Texas ARM University Press, 1995)
1
tic Cleansing” (CollegeDebates about the war 29
19 Thomas Cushman and Stjepan G. Mettrovic (eds), This Time We Knew
Wertern Responses to Genocide in Bosnia (New York and London: New Yorks
University Press, 1996).
20 Reneo Lukié and Allen Lynch, Europe from the Balkant to the Urali: The
Disintegration of Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union (Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1996).
21 James J. Sadkovich, The US Media and Yugoslavia, 1991-1995 (Westport,
CT: Praezes, 1998).
22 Michael Sells, The Bridge Betrayed: Religion and Genocide in Bosnia (Bet
and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1996).
23 Laura Silber and Allan Little, The Death of Yugestavia (London: Penguin
Books and BBC Books, 1995).
24 Bennett, Yigoslavia’s Bloody Collapse, p. 135.
25 Hayden, Blueprints p. Bl
26 Thomas Cushman and Stjepan G. Mebtrovic, ‘Introduction’, ia Cushman
and Me&travie, Thi Time WVe Knew, p. 18
21 Sells, Bridge Betrayed p. 95.
28 Slavko Granié, ‘The Croatian Coat of Arms: Historical Emblem or Contro-
versial Symbol, Journal of Croatian Studies, 34-5 (1993-4), pp. 5-28.
29 Silber and Little, Death of Yugoslavia, p. 87
30 bid, p- 105.
31 Meier, Yugodavia, p. 134,
32 Sells, Bridge Betrayed, p. 8.
33 See the case of Gojko Sudak and Josip Reihl-Kir, described in Silber and
Little, Death of Yugoslavia, pp. 153-4, 157.
34 James J. Sadkovich, Franig Tudman: A Political and Duellectual Biography
(manuscript, work in progress), chap. 1, pp. 3, 7. Iam grateful to the author
for permission to quote from his work-in-progress.
35 Ibid, chap. 1, pp. 13-14, and chap. 5, p.
36 Beverly Crawford, ‘Explaining Defection from International Cooperation:
Germany's Unilateral Recognition of Croatia’, Ward Polites, 48, 4 (July
1996), p. 483.
37 Burg and Shoup, War in Bosnia-Flerzegovina, . 98,
38 Ibid, p. 9.
39 Fora convincing refutation of the usual anti-German ‘erguments” raised in
connection with the War of Yugoslav Succession, sec Danicle Conversi,
Geman-Baching and the Breakup of Yugoslavia, Donald W. Treadgold
Papers in Russian, East European, and Central Asian Studies, no. 16
(Geatile: Henzy M, Jackson Schoo! of International Studies ofthe University
of Washington, 1998).
40 Lukié ancl Lynch, Europe from the Balkans tothe Urls, p. 271.
AL Mid, p. 272.
42 Ibid, p. 273.
43 John Major, The Autobiography (New York: HarperCollins, 1999), p. 534.
ley30 Thinking about Yugoslavia
44 Sarah A. Kent, ‘Writing the Yugoslay Wars: English-Language Books on.
Bosnia (1992-1996) and the Challenges of Analyzing Contemporary Fis
tory’s American Historical Review, 102, 4 (October 1997), p. 109. The
account given by Silber and Little in Death of Yugotlania (pp. 220-3) Is
close in spirit to Kent's analysis, criticizing Germany's ndvocacy of recogni-
tion but declining to blame the subsequent flare-up of hostilities in Bosnia
‘on that recognition.
45 Norbert Both, From Indiference to Envopment: The Netheslands and the
Yugoslav Crisis 1990-1995 (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press,
2000), p. 90,
46 bid, p. 91
47 Ibid, p. 105.
48 Ibid, pp. 114-18,
49 hid, p. 123.
50 Ibid, p. 134,
51 Ibid, pp. 133-4.
52 Silber and Little, Death of Yugoslavia, p. 231
53 Burg and Shoup, War in Bosnia-Herzegovina, p. 69.
54 Ibid, p. 117.
55 tid., p. 98.
56 Tbid., p. 119.
57 Hayden, Bluprnts, p. 68.
58 Ibid, p. 114
59 Robert M. Hayden, ‘Constitutional Nationalism in the Formerly Yugoslav
Republics’ Slavic Review, 51, 4 (Winter 1992), pp. 654-73,
60 Cigar, Genocide in Bosnia, p. 122.
61 Lukié and Lynch, Burope from the Batkans to the Urals, p. 204.
62 Ibid, p. 205,
63 Both, From Indifference ro Entrapment, p. 153.
64 MarieJanine Calic, Krieg und Frieden in Bosnian-Hercegovina, revised and
expanded edn (Frankfurt-am-Main: Suhekarp, 1996), p. 192.
65 Brendan Simms, Unfinest Hour: Britain and the Destruction of Bosnia
(London: Penguin, 2002 edn).
66 James Gos, Triumph of the Lack of Will: Inernational Diplomacy and the
Yugoslav War (London: C. Hurst & Co.), 1997, pp. 175-6, 235-49.
67 Carole Rogel, The Breakup of Yugoslavia and the War in Bosnia (Westport,
GT: Greenwood Press, 1998), p. 63,
68 See Both, From Indiference to Enarapment, p. 229.
69 bid, p. 157
70 Ibid.
‘71 Tim Judah, The Serbs: History, Myth, and the Destruction of Yugoslania (New
Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1997), p. 299.
‘72 Francine Friedman, review of Norman Cigat’s Genocide in Bosnia, in Slavic
Review, 55, 2 (Summer 1996), p. 462.Debates about the war 31
73 Bennett, Yugosavia’s Bloody Collapse, p. 171
74 Burg and Shoup, War in Bosnia-Hereegovina, p. 89.
75 Ibid, p. 181.
76 Cigar, Genocide in Bosnia, p. 4.
77 Quoted in Francis A, Boyle, The Bosnian People Charge Genocide: Proceedings
at the International Court of Fusice Concerning Bosnia v, Serbia on the Preven
tion and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Amherst, MA: Aletheia Press,
1996), p. 95.
78 Silber snd Little, Bearh of Yugoslavia, p. 271
79 Quoted in Sells, Bridge Betrayed p. 3.
£80 Alcksa Dilas, “The Nation That Wasn'r’, in Nader Mousavizadeh (ed.), The
Block Book of Bosnia: The Consequences of Appeasement (New York: New
‘Republic Bool/Basie Books, 1996), p. 25.
81 Burg and Shoup, War in Bosnia-Heraegovina, pp. 46, 47
82 Cushman and MeStrovié, Introduction’, p. 28,
83. Ibid.
84 Silber and Little, Death of Yugoslevi, p. 230; fist bracketed phrase inserted,
by Silber and Litles second bracketed phrase inserted by SPR.
85 Benneut, Vugaslavia’s Bloody Collapse, . 238.
86 Burg and Shoup, War in Bosuia-Hersegovina, p. 14.
87 ‘Crostia: Impunity for Abuses Committed During “Operation Storm” and
the Denial of the Right of Refugees to the Krajina’, Hunan Rights Watch
Hesinhi, vol. 8, No. 13 (August 1996), p. 7.
88 Burg and Shoup, War in Bosnia-Hersegovina, p. 414.
89 Ibid, p. 402. On p. 183, in explaining why Bosnian Serb policies ought
not to be viewed as genocide, they urge that ‘the practice of expelling
‘Muslims from Serb-concrolled territories and the tendency to single out
men and boys for execution — while in themselves despicable — seem
contrary to an intent to destroy the Muslim people as such? (heir
emphasis).
90 Quoted in Sells, Bridge Betrayed, p. 24.
91 Ibid, p. 25.
92 Cinas, Genocide in Bosnia, p. 14.
93 Quoted ibid,
94 bid. p. 133.
95 Ibid, p. 160.
96 Jasminks Udovi8ki, Introduction’, to Jasminka Udovidki and James Ridge
\way (eds), Burn This House: The Making and Unmaking of Yugoslavia, rev.
and expended edn (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2000), p. 1
97 Ibid, pp. 3, 5-6.
98 Wid. p. 6.
99 Milan Milotevié, “Phe Media Wars: 1987-1997’, in Udovitit and Ridgeway,
Bion This Howe, p. 112.
100 Ibid, p. 114,32 Thinking about Yugoslavia
101 Bids p. 124.
102 Jesmninks Usovithi, ‘Kosovo, in Udovitki and Ridgeway, Burm This Howse,
2.317
403 Ibid, p. 325.
104 Ibid pp. 326-7
105 sbi, p. 330,
106 Aria Hoare, view of Jesminks Udovithi and James Ridgeway (eds),
Yugoniavia's Ec Nighonare (1995), ia Hoare and Malcolm, Books on
Bosnia, p88
107 Bjub Sttkovac, ‘Croatia: The Fitst War’, in Udovisk and Ridgeway, Bu
This Howse, p. 164.
108 Udewiat, ‘Kosovo’, p. 324,
109 Sven Balas, ‘The Opposition in Croatia’, in Udovitki and Ridgeway, Burn
This House, pp. 267-80.
110 Jesminks Udovidlt and Kjub Svtkovao, ‘Bosnia and Hercegovinst ‘The
Second Wary in Udowthi and Ridgeway, Burn This Howse, p. 183.
111 Sadkovieh, US Me, p. 37.
112 Ibid, p. 67.
113 See bd, p. a
114 Ibid, p88
115 Ibid, pp. 157-8,
116 For # corsctve, see Carole Hodge, The Serb Lobly in the United King-
doy, Donald W. ‘Treadgote Papers in Russian, Bast Faropean, and Cental
‘sian Studies, no. 22 eat: Henry M., Jackson School of International
Suudice of the Universiy of Washington, September 1999), pp. 13 and
65, n. 34
117 Sadlovieh, US Media, p. 165.
118 Lenaed J. Cohens Broken Bonds, 1st edn (Bouldes, CO: Westview Press,
1993), at quoted in Sadkovih, US Media, p- 239
119 Sadleovieh, US Media, pp. 132°3
120 Ibid p. 143.
121 Sadovich Tater reviewed the Bung/Shoup yohume, which he thonght
‘appeared sympathetic to the JNA and the Serbs’, He also charged that
‘Burg and Shoup teat atrocities selectively, viewing Croatian expulsions of
Mrutims a5 “stnte-spontored”, bat spectlatng thatthe Serbian "scorched
arth approach" suggests ether «total lack of contol by Serb leaders
‘ver extremists, oF an obsession with removing al signs of Muslim pees
fence.” According to Sadkovich, Burg and Shoup also ignored important
literature and aid nto ‘moral equivalency’. Sadkovichs review was pub
lished in Review of International Affair 1,1 tama 2001), pp. 99-102
122 Borg nd Shoup, Warn Homia-Hersegceia, p. 11 (a aleeagy noted inthe
text ofthis chaps).
123 Ibid, p. 402
124 tid, p10.
125 Bruno Simma, ‘Die NATO, dic UN und milirische Gewahanvendung
Rechtliche Aspekt, in Reinhard Meskel (ed), Der Kosno-Riien und das
Volkert (Frankfor-am-Mein: Suhkamp, 2000), pp. 11-13.Debates about the war 33
126 See, for example, Andreas Hasenclever, Die Mache der Moral in der inter
nationalen Politik: Micavische Imervenionen westcher Staawen in Somalia
‘Buena und Besnen-Flerzegivina Feankt: Campus Verlag, 2000), p. 39
127 Burg and Shoup, [Varin Bosnia-Horzegoviva, pp. 65 1.
128 Gow Trtonph ofthe Lack of Wt.
129 Burg and Shoup, War in Boova-Herzegovina, p. 401.
130 Ibid, p59.
BI Bid, p. 187,
132 Bi, p. 79.
133 See, for example, iid pp. 109, 121-2, 176, 183, 367, 405,
154 See, for example, iid, pp. 13, 52, 168, 195, 284, 364, 975,
135 See, or example, id pp. 184, 401-2
136 Jovan Divjak, “The Firat Phase, 1992-1993: Struggle for Survival and
Genesis of the Army of Bosnie-Herzegovina’, in Branka Magid and 1v0
Zanié. (eds), The War in Croatia and. Bosna-Hlereegovina 1991-1995
(London and Portland: Frank Cass, 2001); p. 154
137 Barg and Shoup, War in Bostia-Terzegouina, p. 4. Aecording to a C1A
publication, te Council forthe National Defence of the Muslim Nation
twas formed in Jane 1991. See Balkan Battlegrounds: A Miltary Histry ofthe
Yugoslav Confit, 1990-1995, 2 vols. Washington, DC: Office of Rossin
and Buropean Analysis of the Central Intelligence Agency, May 2002),
vol. bp. 130.
138 Branka Maga and Ivo Zonié (eds), Rat u Hroatshoj i Bosn i Hecegovni
1991-1995 (Zogeeb/SacajevolLondon: Naklada Jesenski i Tark, Dani, and
Bosnian Institute, 1999),
139 Te was followed by: Balkan Bategrounds, the second volume of which
consists mainly of aps.
140 Martin Spegel, “The First Phase, 1990-1992: ‘The JNA Prepares for
Aggression and: Croatia for Defence”, in Magai and Zenié, The War ie
Croatia and Bosnia Herzegovina, p. 39.
141 1d, p.29,
142 Iie ps 3
143 bid, p. 35.
144 Anton Tus, “The Wari Slovenia and Croatia up tothe Sarajevo Ceaser’,
in Moga and Zanig, The War in Croatia and Besnia-Herzegouin, p50.
145 Ibid, p. 56.
146 Ozren Zunce, ‘Operations Flash and Storm’, ia Mae and Zanié, The War
in Croatia and Bosnia-Heraegovina,p. Th
147 Zeid, p. 83.
148 Diviak, ‘The Fist Phese, 1992-1999’, p. 167
149 Marko Atta Heare, ‘Cilian- Military Relations in Bosnia-Herzegavina
1992-1905}, in Maga’ and Zanié, The Wein Croatia and Bosnia-Herzogona,
pp. 178-9.
150 Pod. pp. 195-6.
151 Marko. Attila Hoare, comments in ‘Discussion: ‘The International
Response’, in Maga and Zanié, The War in Croatia and Bosnia- Herzegovina,
pp. 308-9.34 Thinking about Yugoslavia
152 Hoare and Malcolm, Books on Bosnia, p. 68.
153 Ibid. p. 69.
154 Ibid, p.73.
155 Ibid, p. 69.
156 Thi
157 Ibid, p. 53.
158 Ibid, p. 54.
159 Ibid, p. 63.
160 Bid, p.57.
161 Ibid, p. 70,
REFERENCES
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Grits 1990-1995 (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2000), p. 267.
Burg, Steven L. and Paul S. Shoup, The War in Bosnia-Flerespovina: Edie
‘Conflict ana Bnernational Intervention (Armonk, NY: M. B. Sharpe, 1999),
p. 499,
Gigat, Norman, Genocide in Bosnia: The Policy of Bilis Cleansing? (College
‘Station, TX: Texas A&M University Press, 1995), p. 247.
Hoare, Quintin and Noel Malcolm (eds.), Books on Bosnia (London: Bosnion
Tnstitute, nd [1999]), p. 207.
Luk, Reneo and Allen Lynch, Europe from the Balkans to the Urals: The Disinte-
‘gation of Yugodlavia ond the Soviee Union (Oxford: Oxford University Press,
1996), p. 436,
‘Maga, Branika and Ivo Zanié (eds), The War in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina
1991-1995 (London and Portland: Frank Cass, 2001), p. 383.
Sadkovich, James J, The US Media and Yugoslavia, 1991-1995 (Westport, CT!
Praeger, 1998), p. 272.
Sells, Michael A., The Bridge Betrayed! Religion ond Genocide in Bosnia (Berkeley
‘and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1996), p. 244,
Silber, Laura and Allen Little, The Deash of Yugoslavia (London: Penguin Books
‘and BBC Books, 1995), p. 400.
‘Udoviéki, Jasminks and James Ridgeway (eds), Burn This House: The Making
‘and Unmaking of Yugoslavia, rev. and expanded edn (Durham, NC: Duke
‘University Press, 2000), p. 386.2 The collapse of East European communism
I
‘The collapse of communism throughout Bastern Europe and the Soviet
Union was not irrelevant to the disintegration of Yugoslavia, On the
contrary, the Yugoslav disintegration may be usefully viewed as con-
nected with trends throughout the region, in the sense that Yugoslavia
shared a common ideology of equality and problems of legitimation,
economic degeneration, and institutional dysfunctionality with other
states in the region. Moreover, insofar as ‘self-managing socialism’ was
intended to constitute a third path between the ‘state capitalism’ of the
Soviet bloc and the ‘monopoly capitalism’ of the American-led bloc, and
insofar as the Yugoslavs had long profited from playing one superpower
against the other, the implosion and breakup not only of the Soviet bloc
but also of the Soviet Union itself could not but have a direct and
significant impact on the Yugoslav federation. This is not to say that,
‘once the Soviet bloc collapsed, Yugoslavia necessarily had to break up.
But it ig to say thet Yugoslavia would inevitably have been affected by
trends unleashed by that historic process. Chapters 3-4 take up the
questions of why Yugoslavia broke apart and why it slid into sanguinary
swat, What this chapter contributes is a discussion of the context in which
‘Yugoslavia’s disintegration took place.
a
As long as the communists held sway in Eastern Europe, Western soci
scientists could be found arguing variously that there was no significant
change occurring in the communist world (¢.g., Bauman,' Korbosiski),”
that change was occurring via erosion and decay moving ineluctably and
inexorably in the direction of system collapse and revolution (e.g.
Conguest,’ Schipflin,* Kux°), and that change was occurring through
precisely identifiable phases but that elites could, through their policy
choices, affect the evolutionary path through which their systems passed
(€.8 Meyer,® Tucker,’ Jowitt*).
3536 Thinking about Yugoslavia
In the period after 1989, Western social scientists interested in the
Russian and East European world continued their earlier debate in a
new guise. Social scientists may now be broken down once more into
three groups. There are, first, those who believe that communism was 2
largely or purely evil phenomenon which was overthrown by democratic
capitalism in a ‘Glorious Revolution” (apologies to Charles 11); here Lam
thinking of analysts such as Fukuyama,? Weigel,!° and ‘Tismaneana."!
‘These authors subscribe ro an insurrection model of revolution, empha-
sizing the role of dissidents (on, if one prefers, opposition elites) in
bringing down the communist system. Then there are those who view
the events of 1989-90 not as an insurrection coming out of nowhere, but
as an organic part of long-term processes of decay, on the understanding
that all great revolutions (whether one thinks of the French Revolution,
the Bolshevik Revolution, or the Chinese Revolution) occurred at the
culmination of extended periods of decay. OF the authors under review
here, Philipsen notes, for example, that ‘far from being spontaneous [or
sudden], the revolution had been building for years'."® And, finaly,
there are those who define revolution along the lines of the first group
of authors, but share, with the second group, an understanding of the
events of 1989 as organically related co the dynamics of change
unfolding over the preceding decades. Adherents of this third school
(Poznatiski in particular) therefore argue that no revolution took place in
1989, and that it makes more sense to emphasize the continuity of post-
‘communist systems with their communist predecessors than to dwvell on
discontinuities
Tam struck by the theoretical compatibility berween the pre-1989
advocates that communist systems Were impervious to significant change
and those who now deny that anything revolutionary occurred in 1989.
Asin, the pre-1989 analysts of decay have something in common with
pluralist triumphalists such as Fukuyama, Tismaneanu, and Weigel.
And, again, there are some broad theoretical continuities between
pre-1989 analyses of phases in system change and post-1989 analyses
that link revolutionary collapse to extended periods of decay.
‘The distinction between revolution and insurrection is crucial to an
understanding of the tapestry of issues at stake here. RL. Leslie distin-
guishes between revolutions, in which internal pressures reach the point
\where eruption is unavoidable, and insurrections, in which the insuc-
gents, responding to a situation which they consider unacceptable,
decide autonomously to have recourse 10 force.!? According to this
interpretation, then, revolution is seen as a cathartic stage in an evolving
process, while an insurrection may occur even in conditions entirely
‘unpropitious for disturbances or political upheaval. ‘This distinction is“The collapse of Bast
sropean communism 37
crucial because those who most strenuously protest thet no revolution
occurred in 1989 (e.g., Poznaiiski, as indicated above) generally conflate
revolution with insurrection, and construe revolution as a disjunction
having no organic connection with what preceded it. An alternative way
{0 think of revolution is to construe it as ‘a change in the principles of
legitimation and order underpinning a political system’. In this latter
view, ‘Revolution does not have to occur in a flash. Few revolitions
do... [In facts] revolutions are always evolutionary, and yet they are
revolutions all the same’.
Confusion (ox, for that matter, disagreement) over words often goes
hand in hand with confusion (or disagreement) over methodologies and
conclusions. Take, for example, Horvath and Szakolezai, ‘These two
authors maintain that ‘the very fact of [the] collapse [of communism}
and especially the way it happened overthrew all existing, theoretical
frameworks used in the past for the analysis of the internal structure of
these states’."? If this were true, then presumably the only recourse
would be to begin the slow process of building up entirely new theoret-
ical frameworks, which would be free of the concerns, assumptions, and
methodologies of the now-abandoned theories of past writers, No more
‘would students of political seience read Hobbes or Mill or Hegel or Kant
‘os, for that matter, Almond or Verba or Pye or Huntington or Brinton’s
brilliant study of revolution, or any other producers of ‘existing theoret-
ical frameworks’, Was it the anthors? intention to urge such vast clespait?
Perhaps not. But the mere fact that their doleful lament could find its
way into print wes symptomatic of the fact that some scholars had
reached an intellectual dead end.
‘This despair is, moreover, founded on a myth. Various scholars,
among whom Emnst Kux and George Schépflin were, as far as I know,
the first, pointed out throughout the 1980s that the communist sys-
tems were in decay, that a revolutionary transition had alzeady begun ~
and it is not to their discredit that other scholars did not take them
seriously or, in some cases, even deny that they had ever written any-
thing prescient. A 1984 publication focusing on religious ferment in
the East European region noted, for example, that this ferment ‘presents
the communist authorities with a challenge as trying and as complex
as the multificeted economic woes currently afflicting the region, and
pechaps as dangerous [to the communist organizational monopoly]
in the long run as the crisis of legitimacy brought into focus by the
appearance of the independent trade union Solidarity between 1980
‘and 19817! — thus identifying the crisis of legitimacy, economic deter-
oration, and religious ferment as forces for change. Three years later,
the same author drew attention to the-fact that ‘in all of these countries38 Thinking about Yugoslavia
{of Easter Europe], the combination of countervailing pressures is
producing a breakdown of earlier patterns of modus vivendi’; moreover,
as the communist systems sank into crisis, ‘system decay? and collapse
loomed ~ the author noted ~ as a distinct possibility.'” Students of
popular culture were, moreover, particularly well situated to pick up
on symptoms of decay, mot because these processes started in the
cultural sphere ~ they started in the political sphere ~ but because
the cultural sphere provides a canvas on which the trends in polities
may be projected’® (and thereby reinforced). (Anyone who has ever seen,
Vaclav Havel’s play, The Temptation, or read Ludlvikt Vaculik’s A Cup
of Coffee with My Interrogator can scarcely have failed to grasp this
point.) Among those scholars whose works are discussed in this chapter,
at least one (Vladimir Tismaneanu) seems to have been aware by 1987,
if not carlicr, that the political escarpment in Eastern Europe was
shifting. But the myth of collective ignorance has had devout believers,
evidence to the contrary notwithstanding,”
A deep methodological chasin separated the self-described ‘realists’
from those I call ‘idealists’. Realists, specifically, emphasized party con~
trol of communications, security and military forces, the official media,
political structures, and the economy itself, snd therefore downplayed
pressures for change. They tended to limit their research interviews to
government people, the more prominent the better, thereby choosing
tunnel vision and ignoring what was happening on the fringes, Idealists,
by contast, emphasized changes in the moral consensus, in political
culture, the persistence of resistance in various forms, and the growing
consensus among the public on two key points: (1) that the system was
illegitimate, and (2) that it was necessary to create zones for legitimate
social and political action, in effect to construct an underground parallel
society. Idealists conducted interviews not only with government
officials but also with human rights activists, ecclesiastical figures, femi-
nists, journalists, and even, in some cases, rock stars, Based on this
broader sampling, from which government officials were not excluded,
idealists concluded, soon after 1980, that the pressures for change in
East-Central Europe were significant and ultimately could not be
resisted
Writing as early as 1984, Schépflin already understood the processes
at work:
‘The East Buropean political experience since the communist revolution his had
‘one extraordinarily paradoxical and contradictory aspect . . . [T]he need for
reform .... [simultaneously] increases and looks ever less likely to be achieved, 30
that change requires a major upheaval .. . Orderly, incremental change weakens
or disappears as an alternative from the mental map of politics.*”"The collapse of Bast Furopean communism sa
Schépflin identified processes of politcal decay throughout the region
‘and noted that pressures for democratization were increasing ~ pressures
which he predicted would only accelerate the decay of communist
systems throughout the region.
Even earlier, in March 1980, Emst Kux was able to anticipate a
deepening of economic and political crisis eventually leading to a situ-
ation in which ‘upheavals could develop in a number or all of the East
European countries more or less sirnultancously’.”" Writing nearly ten
years before his prediction would be fulfilled, Kux was able to identify
accurately the factors that would culminate in the collapse of the com-
‘munist system in Bast-Central Europe. It is pity that scholars seem to
have forgotten about his work
Somewhat later, a Helsinki Watch publication of 1986 spoke of
Poland’s ‘quiet revolution’, and detailed the strategy of the Polish under-
ground, which was said to involve, above all, the construction of parallel
social, educational, cultural, and even scientific institutions and struc:
tures that would slowly sap the communist system ofits power.”? What
all ofthese forecasts had in common was that they took society seriously;
they did not assume that all important information, decisions, and
actions came from the government, as the ‘realists’ did. They did not
assume that real change was precluded in advance, as Bauman’s
nonetheless brillant essay of 1971 argued.
mt
‘The literature to be discussed here is only a small sempling of the
‘burgeoning literarure on the post-communist transformation in
Bastern Europe, but provides a lens through which to examine the
theoretical debate brought into focus by the collapse of communism
and the ensuing and still unfinished political transition. In particular,
as shall show, as important for the researcher's ultimate sensitivity 10
incipient changes and to gathering trends as the choice between realism
and idealism was the chaice of what is called ‘level of analysis’
‘The most, widespread choice made by researchers throughout the
period after the Second World War has been one variant or another of
what could be called elite-centric (or ‘top-down’) analysis. This would
include elite analysis (by which I mean analysis of the ruling elite),
studies of party and governmental behaviour, and any analyses taking
as their starting point the decision-maker (including the most common
versions of both rational choice theory and nonrational analysis).”*
‘The fundamental assumption made by such analysts is that policies,
decisions, ideas, changes ~ indeed, all ‘important’ political phenomena40 Thinking ebout Yugoslavia
~ originate at the top of the political pyramid (or at least somewhere near
the top) and flow downwards. It follows that the only people worth talk
ing to are high government officials and, possibly, fellow scholars. The
notion that opposition groups such as Charter 77 (in Czechoslovakia),
Solidasity (in Poland), or the pacifist movement (in the German Demo-
cratic Republic) could have any impact was dismissed by many adher-
cents of this approach, who were wont to chuckle to themselves when
those studying these phenomena showed that they took them seriously.
Political change, according to the ‘elite-centric’ view, came on the initia-
tive of the elite, who were presumed to be able to select the timing, paces
form, and character of such change as might occur. Earlier macro-
‘adjustments, such as the economic reform packages adopted throughout
the region in the 1960s, could be explained entirely in terms of elite
decision-making, and even the Prague Spring of 1968 did not serve to
confute the certainty that adherents of this school felt, There is a strong
tendency for adherents of the elite-centric approach to be ‘realists’ but
not all ‘realists’ are absorbed in elite analy:
‘The chief alternative to the elite-centric approach is, as might be
guessed, the socio-centric (or ‘bottom-up’) approach, which takes soci-
ety and its composite actors as the point of departure. The political
culture and (usually) interest group approaches fit in here, alongside
studies of social movements and opposition currents, as well as politic
ally driven studies of culture, among others. Shifting the level of analysis
from government to society has tangible consequences for assumptions,
methodology, even for one’s choice of interview subjects. Indeed, &
researcher subscribing to a ‘socio-centric? approach would expect to
learn more about social and political change from talking to people
engaged in the cultural sector than from government ministers
Adherents of this approach emphasize the vulnerability of any govern-
‘ment to pressures from below and appreciate that no political oz eco-
nomic system should ever be taken as permanent or fal, At this level of
analysis, change is typically given more emphasis. There is 4 strong
tendency for adherents of the socio-centric approach to be idealists,
bbut not all idealists engage in socio-centric analysis.
‘The works under review here include three single-authored mono-
graphs, two edited collections, and two compilations of interview data
(the Philipsen compilation being far more integrated and mote fully
analysed than the Horvath/Szakolezai compilation). In terms of meth-
odology, the books by Tismancana and Philipsen are the clearest
examples of socio-centric analysis, while those by Poznatiski are the
clearest examples, in this ser, of elite-centric analysis.‘The collapse of Bast European communisin a
“The respective authors also subscribe to entirely different models of
the transition, I have identified three models among this literature: the
transition ae revolution (Ashund, Hockenos, Philipsen, ‘Tismaneanu);
the transition as collapse (Horvath and Szakolezai)s and the transition
as evolutionary transformation Poznaiiski and some of his contibu-
tors). Differing assumptions underline these competing models. For
Philipsen, for example, itis a given that the masses played a central role
in the changes unleashed in 19895 his is a view of a mass-driven revolt
tion, The attention which Hockenos pays to opinion poll data betrays
the similarity of his interpretation of the events of 1989. Tismaneanu's
‘work, however, reveals an alternative assumption, namely, chat dissident
clites played the central role in propelling events forward. Without such
leadership, he argues, the revolution of 1989 would never have occurred.
Tis model could be described as an insurgent-elite-driven revolution,
‘The difference in leading assumptions helps us, in turn, to understand
that there are (at least) two major branches of socio-centric analysis —
one, examining social attitudes, changes in collective behavious, and.
other indices of political culture, and the other focusing on’ dissident
elites and their relationship to society.
By contrast with socio-centric analysis, Horvath and Szakolezai
assume that the central and most important fact of the transition was
that the establishment elites (ie., the communists) were no longer in
sufficient control — an assumption that recalls Schépfin’s analysis nearly
a decade cali. And, finally, advocates of a model of evolutionary
transformation assume that the establishment elites were in a position to
control significant aspects of the direction of personal well-being. Else-
where, Poznariski has argued that the communists themselves destroyed
the communist system, in order to consteuct nomenklatura capitalism and
entich themselves personally.?* As a result, in Poznayiski’s view,
Not only was the ultimate collapse nor the result of a dramatic revotution, but
neither should it be portrayed as the triumph of an abused society — workers and/
or intellectuals ~ over « privileged party/stae intent on defending the status quo.
Instead of a heroie process in which society struggled and the party/state resisted,
here is a case where the elite often acted to destroy the system by itself - and
langely for its”?
But while most analysts write as if one or another of these models will
explain processes throughout the entire region, there are grounds for
suggesting that the revolutionary model best fits the East German,
Polish, and Czechoslovak cases, that the collapse model best fits the
cases of Slovenia, Croatia, Bulgaria, and Albania, and that a version of
the evolutionary model would best fit the cases of Macedonia, Serbia,42 ‘Thinking about Yugoslavia
and Romania (without suggesting any equivalence among the politics of
the latter three countries), Bosnia-Herzegovina’s descent into war and
division into three sectors marks it as a special case, while Hungary is a
very mixed case, with clements of all three models: starting as a case of
evolutionary change, then gathering impetus and displaying rapid decay
(as per the collapse model), and finally involving mass demonstrations
which gave at Jeast the appearance, if not having some of the substance,
of revolutionary transformation.
Vv
In the following pages, I shall focus my discussion on the respective
authors? interpretations of the transformation effected or begun in 1989,
their evaluation of the roots of this transformation, and their assessments:
of the legacies of communism, Most of the authors discussed here would,
accept the definition of revolution penned by Sigmund Neumann, as ‘a
sweeping, fundamental change in political organization, social structure,
economic property control and the predominant myth of social order,
thus indicating a major break in the continuity of development’.%® But
while Phitipsen emphasizes the human factor, and most especially
underlines the deepening disaffection of the population as a significant
element in the spiral towards revolutionary transformation, he also
dwells on the speed with which the indigenous domestic opposition, in
castern Germany, disappeared before it was able to put together an
effective political organization that might have offered an alternative to
annexation by the Federal Republic.
For Philipsen, economic decay lay behind the country’s drift towards
system collapse. As he put it,
In terms of modern industrial production, the economy was in shambles. Sup-
plies were disorganized, much of the infrastructure oversized and badly oot-
moded, the enviconment increasingly threatened by industrial polfution, and
incilciency #0 institationalized that work itself proceeded at a desultory pace.
{As the growth of the Bast German economy came to a grinding hale in the mid.
seventies, the inelicieney, waste, corruption, and lies that were an organie part of
this peculiar Leninist mode of production tangibly began to undermine the
system's legitimacy.””
‘Yet, for all that, the opposition, sss Philipsen shows, aspired not to create
a revolution, but only to reform the system. (This is in sharp contrast
to Poland, where leading figazes in the political undexground spoke
explicitly of effecting a gradual and incremental revolution from below.)
Philipsen also presents interview data that demonstrate that the
communist elite had likewise become convinced by the mid-1980s that‘The collapse of Ease European communism 43
fundamental political change had become imperative." ‘The East
German communist elite thought, of course, in terms of a system re-
form which would leave them at the helm of power, while the political
opposition in the GDR believed that the system had reached a dead
end and had to be replaced by some form of pluralism. Hence, while
both the ruling socialist unity party (SED) and the East German oppos-
ition realized that fiandemental chenge wes ineluctable, their assess-
ments as to what direction that change should take were themselves
fundamentally different.
The thin but illuminating volume by Anders Aslund largely con-
firms Philipsen’s assessment of the contribution of economic decay to
political decay. Aslund highlights problems of shortages, rising inef
ficiency, technological backwardness, poor incentives, and lack of en.
vironmental protection as endemic in the socialise systems, and argues
that growth rates across Eastern Burope fell steadily in the 1970s and
1080s, He specifically notes that Poland, the USSR, Bulgaria, Romania,
and Albania had reached the point of complete stagnation by 1989.2
I was, thus, in his view, the economic insolvency of the socialist sy
tem which, more than anything else, sowed the seeds of the system’s
disappearance,
‘Aslund argued that the advantages of a fast transition (shock therapy)
heavily outweighed such advantages as might be attached to more cau-
tious strategies of privatization. Among the reasons he cited are the
willingness of people to tighten their belts if they see the possibility of
eventual relief, the need to minimize intemal inconsistencies within the
system, the prevalence of corruption during processes of transition, and
is belief that ‘a quick systemic change transforms the intellectual cli-
mate’.”” He finally arrives at what he considers the ideal sequencing of
transition: first, democratization and political demonopolization;
second, the passage of new laws, to provide # legislative framework for
subsequent economic transformation; third, passage of a combined
package of macroeconomic stabilization and liberalization; fourth, the
holding of parliamentary elections; ith, privatization and the build-up
ofa strong private sector; and sixth, economic restructuring.” What is
striking about this sequence is that, with the partial exception of the third
factor, itis the precise reverse ofthe sequence of events in Spain from the
end of the civil war in 1939 to the instauration of Prince Juan Carlos as
king and the restoration of democracy after Franco’s death - a sequencing
Which, further, has been held up for emulation by Juan Linz and Alfred
Stepan.” But given that Eastern Europe was in deep economic crisis by
the end of the 1980s, as well as the pervasive demands for democratiza~
tion, the Spanish model was surely irelevant to Eastern Furope.44° Thinking about Yugoslavia
Poznatiski rejects the approach taken by Philipsen and Astund and
pointedly qualifies the role played by economics. Where Astund writes of
stagnation and decline, Poznatiski argues that ‘no economic calamity
preceded the recent collapse of the political order, and . . . indeed some
countries actually did rather well economically (under communism] (for
example Czechoslovakia)’ By contrast with Philipsen and Tismanean,
Poznatiski denies that social or popular pressures constituted the primary
force for change. On the contrary, Poznariski credits the communist
parties themselves with having chosen the path of self-destruction ~
a choice he attributes 10 a combination of ideological erosion within
the party and (paradoxically, given his own mixed picture of the so-
cialist economies) growing party disillusionment with the econon
performance attainable under socialism. ™*
Poznatiski denies that it makes sense to talk of nonviolent revolution,
guiet revolution, or gradual revolution. He concludes that the changes
surrounding 1989 had a purely evolutionary character and criticizes whet
he calls an erroneous tendency to ‘call the disintegration of the com-
munist regimes of Eastern Europe revolutions’. They cannot be revo-
lutions, in his view, because ‘the party itself [wJas an equal or more
essential force in the collapse’.?®
Writing no earlier than December 1991,%7 Poznatiski argued that some
form of reformed communism. remained a possible scenario for Poland
and other states in the region,”* and predicted that the dominant form of
ownership reform even after 1991 would involve various corrupt forms
of privatization and the forcing of new private entrepreneurs into patron~
client relationship(@) with the political leadership, thus, with reformed
communists.”® Poznatiski’s predictions have proven to be the most
accurate where Serbia, Montenegro, Macedonia, Bosniz-Herzegovina,
and Albania are concerned. Whereas Astund called for rapid divesting
and privatization, Poznatiski argued for a gradual withering away of the
public sector, asserting that spontaneous privatization may be preferable
to rapid privatization orchestrated from above.‘®
Among Poznariski’s contributors to his 1992 collection, at least one ~
Valerie Bunce ~ places a greater emphasis on economic deterioration
than does her editor. She also seems to place greater cmphasis on the
importance of political culture and society in general. In a particularly
insightful passage, she notes:
‘Stalinism cannot be understood simply as an obstacle to capitalism and democ-
racy. Paradoxically . . . Stalinism made some contributions to at least the
democratic side of the equation . .. What Stalinism did, in particular, was to
‘create... a resourceful and autonomous society a necessary, but by no means
sufficient, condition for liberal democracy."‘The collapse of Fast European communism 45
Other contributors to the 1992 Poznatiski volume pay some attention
to the psychological (Leszek Kolakéwski) and economic (Mira Marody)
legacies of more than four decades of communist rule, The chief strength
of this volume is its attention to economics (especially in chapters by
Josef Brada, Janos Kornai, and Jozef van Brabant).
Poznariski’s 1995 collection was conceived as a sequel to the earl
volume, but differs in having a more explicitly normative thrust. In his
introduction, for example, Poznatiski highlights that ‘the minimal state is
the goal, while a strong state is the method”? ‘This forthright statement
sets the tone for the book; which is prescriptive in the first place, and
analytical insofar as analysis backs up policy prescription. Poznaiiski and
his 1995 collaborators are, with one exception, concerned to advocate
graduatism in economic transformation. ‘This graduslism is given the
label ‘evolutionary model’, which Poznariski, alone among the contribu-
tors, wants fo associate also with an insistence chat nothing revolutionary
took place in Fast-Central Europe in 1989-90. In practice, these are,
indeed, separable positions; i.e., there is no reason why someone who
believes that a gradualist policy in post-communist East-Central Europe
is best should necessarily deny the comprehensive nature of the system
collapse of 1989-90,
‘The exception in this collection is Josef Brada, who charges that
gradualists are unable to account for some salient economic develop-
ments in the Russian-East European area and argues that only a rapid
transition has some assurance of realizing the twin goals of economic free
enterprise and political pluralisin.”? It is to Poznayiski's credit that he
included both sides of the debate in his book.
v
Viadimir Tismaneanu’s two volumes are, without question, among the
most usefull and most insightful books dealing with the transformation in
Eastern Europe which, although having roots earlier, entered a new
phase at the end of the 1980s, These two volumes also present an
alternative both to Philipsen’s analysis, which emphasizes the weakness
and difficulty of co-ordination within the opposition and credits spon-
taneous social upheaval with having effected the collapse of communism
in the GDR, and to Poznatiski’s approach, which downplays the import
ance of either opposition or society and stresses the convictions, deci-
sions, and choices of the ruling elite for providing the propulsive force for
change. On the contary, for Tismaneanu, it is precisely organized
opposition which most warrants study in authoritarian systems and46 ‘Thinking about Vogoslavia
which constitutes the most reliable barometer of impending political
change.
‘Although published only in 1990, fn Search of Gill Society must have
been launched early in 1987 at the very latest, given the dates when the
composite chapters were completed, As such, the volume’s focus on
independent peace movements betrayed a prescient understanding of
the potential, and ultimately cemonstrated, political importance of these
movements. Whereas Poznaiski dismisses grass-roots organizations as,
virtually meaningless, ‘Tismaneana attributes ro them the capacity 10
undermine established political systems. And, in contrast to sundry
writers who have construed ‘revolution’ as a brief, sudden, and violent
mass action producing the immediate overthrow of political elites, Tis
maneanu and his collaborators show deeper understanding of the ineze~
mental nature of revolution, realizing that in Easter Europe the
revolution unfolded over a period of a decade (from the appearance of
the Polish trade union Solidarity in 1980 to the end of communist
domination in the region in 1989-90). Tn his opening chapter, for
example, Tismaneanu notes that Polish independent activist Adam
Michnik had formulated a strategy of evolutionism, calling for patience
and commitment toa long struggle. ‘The democratic opposition must be
constantly and incessantly visible in public lif’, Tismaneanu quotes
Michnik as saying, ‘must create political facts by organizing mass
actions, must formulate alternative programs. Everything else is an
illusion.
For Tismaneanu and his contributors, the independent peace
movements that arose in communist Eastern Europe were much more
than mere pacifist organizations. They were movements fighting for
human dignity, embryos of the civil society that would eventually be
restored. They were, in the view of these writers, inherently principled
and democratic.
"The chapters in this book were written in early 1988 and updated
between January and February 1989 ~ months before the collapse of
communism in the closing months of 1989, and well before the infam-
ous East German elections of May 1989, Given that circumstance, the
understanding shown by Tismaneanu and his contributors of the trans-
formative potential of independent peace movements" is all the more
refteshing, and provides 2 healthy corrective to the self-serving cynicism,
of certain sceptics who, even more than a decade later, still indulge in the
self-gratfying illusion that no one had a clue as to what was going on in
the region. Tismaneant: and his contributors not only anticipated the
inevitable collapse of communism,*” but also grasped the significance of
the contributions of grass-roots organizations to the process of collapse.‘The collapse of East Buropean communism a
But it is in Tismaneanu’s other book, Reivwonting Potties, that his
analysis of the sources of political change emerges most clearly. In his
view, political change is the work of brave individuals such as Vaclav
Havel, Lech Walgsa, Mibai Botez, and Adam Michnile as well as of
organizations such as the Hungarian FIDESZ. Akin 1 what is often
called the great-man theory of history, Tismancanu’s analysis empha-
sizes dissidents and dissident ideas. For Tismaneanu, history is no moze
and no less than the history of competing ideas. In a characteristic
passage, he quotes Michnik: Social changes follow from a confrontation
of different moralities and visiont of social order. Before the violence of
rulers clashes with the violence of their subjects, values and systems of
ethics clash inside human minds.”**
VI
Jn contrast with the foregoing books, the collaborative effort of Agnes
Horvath and Arpad Szakolezai ~ The Dissolution of Communist Power ~ is
a strangely incomplete. work. Based on largely undigested interview
material and interspersed with tengthy and largely unapplied summaries
of some of the more transparently obvious ideas of Michel Foucault, the
book brings together the results of questionnaires and follow-up inter-
views with Communist Party members and apparatchiks in Budapest in
February-March 1988 and September-October 1988. What is truly
surprising is that, while the interviewees clearly believed that the com-
munist system was in a state of advanced decay, the authors themselves
express surprise that the system did in fact collapse.
But the book is important in that it provides an alternative point of
emphasis. Rather than attributing political change to a shift in elite
strategy (as in Poznariski) or to pressure of an articulate opposition
(as in Tismaneanu) or even to a groundswell of popular discontent (as
sen), these authors focus on the decay of party structures
themselves. ‘The party, as Horvath and Szakolezai show, took upon
itself far more assignments than it could reasonably handle and ex-
perienced difficulty in ridding itself of discredited practices, even after
the upper echelons of the party had called for reform." One of the
problems that the party experienced was an inherent inefficiency built
into the very nature of authoritarianism. As they explain, the greatest
danger to such a system is free thought and most especially (in theit
view) on the part of office-holders. In order to squelch free thought
and stifle inaovative work, the party concocted the practice of hol
regula, time-consuming meetings, which filled the time, compelling
participants to act out rituals of conformity, and accustomed people to48 Thinking about Yagoslavia
hierarchical control and supervision. Inevitably, these meetings also
hindered efficient work methods."
Ubimately, Horvath and Szakolczai argue, communism collapsed
because it was a historical anomaly, a political absurdity. Its absurdity,
they claim, consisted in the communists” offering outdated solutions to
new problems, even while representing themselves as the vanguard of
the future. They compare the practice of communism with driving @
Model T in today’s London.>! They paint communism in such decadent
shades that the need for the opposition disappears altogether. For
Horvath and Szakolczai, it would seem, independent activism may have
produced a lot of courageous writing and dramatic headlines. ‘They
might even concede that it provided a field for autonomous moral
action. But, for them, independent activism was largely, if not entirely,
irrelevant to the eventual collapse of communism. Communism, in their
view, collapsed of its own weight
Finally, Paul Hockenos, in his 1993 book, Free to Hate, paints @
portrait of @ revolution that runs the risk of running awry. Moreover, in
his analysis, it was not just a question of the efflorescence of extreme
right-wing groups that accompanied the collapse of communism; it was
also a question of monopolist and nationalist tendencies on the part of
the new post-communist governments themselves, In Hungary, for
example - as Hockenos notes — the first post-communist government
Jost no time in taking steps to bring the media under control, even while
mounting a full-scale assault on the modest gains that women had
registered under communist rule,”? In Poland, the heavy-handed efforts
of the Catholic Church to translate Catholic ethics into national law
seriously complicated Poland’s transition. to democracy. Moteover,
‘much more than the other authors discussed here, Hockenos is painfully
aware that socialism was not all negative and thet the transition has
involved an abandonment of both some of the negative and some of
the positive facets of the socialist system, On this point, he quotes Pastor
Almuth Berger, 2 former dissident: “The GDR’s collapse and outright
rejection of all that it stood for and presided over also discredited any of
its positive aspects, Many people, who expressed real solidarity with
third world countries before, today will have nothing to do with it. Its
impossible even to use the word “solidarity” today, so negetive are its
connotations,
Against this background, Hockends outlines the newly emergent
far-right currents in Eastern Burope, showing, at the same time, their
connections ~ whether organic or via mythological connections ~ with
interwar trends. Hockenos emphasizes that racial prejudice was always
latent in Eastern Europe, and that its new strength has little to do‘The collapse of Fast European communisin 49
with the presence of non-native people (whose numbers, at least
until recently, were not especially great), but with the uncertainties
created by the transition itself. As a result, as he notes in his conclu-
sion, ‘although independent society exists, nationslism and chauvinism
have stymied the development of a progressive democratic. political
culture’.
Hockenos is a paradigmatic socio-centric researcher, and many of his
conversations with skinheads and other people took place in bars and
discos, What emerges is a concept of political change which is uamistak-
ably fashioned at the grass-roots, In this respect, Hockenos is closer to
Philipsen than to any of the other authors under review here,
Absent from this gallery of political landscapes is a depiction of the
Soviet Union as pivotal to the processes of change unleashed in Eastern
Europe. Karen Dawisha’s Kastern Europe, Gorbachen and Reform? prob-
ably comes closest to this model, although Charles Gati’s 1987 discus-
sion®® was also sensitive to the Soviet factor in the gathering momentum
in Eastern Europe in the late 1980s. Of the works discussed in this
chapter, ‘Tismaneanu’s edited collection probably shows the most
sensitivity 10 the importance of Gorbachev's changes in encouraging
discontents in Eastern Europe.” But, that said, it is worth recalling
that the pressures for change in Eastern Europe were building up
quite autonomously (above all in the GDR, Poland, Hungary, and
Czcchostovakia®® — and, in its own way, Yugoslavia), and that what
Gorbachev's reforms accomplished was not to initiate pressutes for
change in Fastern Europe, but to allow them to build moze quickly than
they might have otherwise.
vi
While the foregoing volumes speak in general terms, one may note that
there were some variations in patterns of transition in the region, In
Poland and Hungary, pressures in 1988 induced communist power-
holders to enter into negotiations with the opposition, yielding power
peacefully in the course of 1989. In East Germany and Czechoslovakia,
‘mass demonstrations and, in the case of the GDR, mass exodus within
the space of a matter of weeks were necessary to bring the communists to
the negotiating table. In Romania, popular rebellion was sparked by the
efforts by the secret police to take a wayward clergyman into custody and
Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu, having failed to escape the coun-
uy, was put on trial and executed rather hurriedly, In Albania and
Bulgaria, the communists tried to manage the transition but succeeded
only in postponing their loss of power briefly.50
about Yugostavia
But it was in Yugoslavia that the path out of communism took a tragic
detour, The Yugoslav pattern was, of course, different ail along. Even
during the Second World Was, the Yugoslav communists were going
their own way for example, by beginning to organize Partisan resist
ance even before the Soviet Union was attacked, There are several
reasons for Yugoslav specificity, but, when it comes to decommuniza~
tion, the chief reason must be located in the federal system, which had
the results (1) that decommunization and repluralization unfolded at
different rates and took different forms in the different republics, (2) that
local republic elites appealed to the etinic constituencies associated with
their respective republics, thereby rendering ic virtually impossible that a
‘Yugoslav consensus might be found, and (3) that the local republic elites
enjoyed power bases ‘at the periphery’ It is with an eye to the dangers
inherent in such a formula that Jack Snyder warned, in 2 2000 publica-
tion, that ‘ethnically based federalism and regional autonomy should be
avoided, since they create political organizations and media markets that
are centered on ethnie differences’,”” How the transition played out in
‘Yugoslavia and how these and other factors shaped that country’s path
are examined in the following chapter.
Notes
1 Zygmunt Bauman, ‘Social Dissent in the Bast European Political System’,
Archives Exropéenvtes de Sociologie, 12, 1 (1971)
2 Andra} Korbotiski, “The Prospects for Change in Eastern’ Europe’ and
"Reply’, Slavie Review, 33, 2 (June 1974), pp. 219-39 and 253-8,
3 Robert Conquest, “Who Was Right, Who Was Wrong, and Why’, Encornter
(London), July-August 1990, pp. 3-18,
4 George Schdplfin, ‘Political Decay in One-Party Systems in Eastern Europe:
Yugoslav Patterns’, in Pedro Ramet (ed), Yugotlania in the 1980s (Boulder,
(GO: Wesiview Press, 1985), pp. 307-24.
5 Himst Kux, “Growing Tensions in Rastern Europe’, Prolents of Communion,
29, 2 (Mateh-April 1980), p. 37.
6 Allred G. Meyer, Commi, ath edn (New York: Random House, 1984).
7 Robert C. Tucker, The Soviet Political Mind: Studies in Stalinism and Post-
Stalin Change (New York: Praeger, 1963).
8 Kenneth Jowitt, ‘Inclusion and Mobilization in Buropean Leninist Systems’,
in Jan F, Triska and Paul M. Cocks (eds), Political Development in astern
Europe (New York: Praeger, 197), pp. 93-118.
9 Francis Fukuyama, “The End of History?”, The National Interest, 16 (Summer
1989).
10 George Weigel, The Final Revolution: The Resistance Church and the Collapse of
Communion (New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992), for
‘example on p. 16.16
"W
18
20
2
2
Ey
24
‘The collapse of Bast European communism 31
Vladimir Tismaneanuy, Reinventing Potties: Raster Burope from Stalin to Haval
(New York: Free Press, 1992).
Ditk Philipsen, We Were the People: Voices from East Germany's Revolutionary
Ausionn of 1989 (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1993), p. 197.
RF Leslie, Reform and Snsurvection in Russian Poland, 1856-1865 (University
of London: Auilone Press, 1963), p. x.
Sabrina P. Ramet, 1Vhose Democracy? Nationalivn, Religion, and the Dectrine of
Collective Rights in Post-1989 Hastors Europe (Lanham, MD: Rowman &
Littlefield, 1997), p. 169.
‘Agnes Horvath and Arpad Szakolczai, The Dissobuion of Communist Power
The Case of Hungary (London and New York: Routledge, 1992), p. xi
Pedro Ramet, ‘Religious Ferment in Baste Europe’, Survey, 28, 4 (
1084), p. 87.
Pedro Ramet, Cross and Commissar: The Paitics of Religion in Bester Burope and
the USSR (Bloomington, IN: Indians University Press, 3987), pp. 173, 44.
As T wrote in 1985, ‘there has not been ~ to the best of iny knowledge —
single serious claim, in any academic or scientific journal... that rock music
is a “cause” of any of these phenomena falienation, disaffection, social
nonconformity, political deviance]. Rock music can, however, provide &
setting in which drag use is “comfortable” and can offer a more exciting
alternative to youth organization work. But the social impact of rock does not
end there. On the contrary, the political messages ~ more tolerable for the
‘more secure regimes of Hungary and Yugoslevia [before Milofevil, less
tolerable for the less secure regimes of Poland and Czechoslovakia ~ consti-
tute 2 kind of “counter-socialization”. Rock music is, at the very least,
problematic for these regimes’ (Pedro Ramet [Sabrina P. Ramet), ‘Rock
Counterculture in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union’, Surwwy, 29, 2
(Sammer 1985), p. 170).
Fora rendering of full credit to some of the scholars who foresavr the collapse
of communism in astern Europe, see Sabrina Petea Ramet, Social Currents
in Eostem Eiwope: The Sourees and Consequonces of the Great Transformation,
2nd eda (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1995), pp. 10-11. Inadvert-
tently omitted from the list there were Ivo Banac and Trond Gillerg (of
‘whose predictions I was unaware at the time) who accurately predicted the
‘outbreak of the Yugoslav war and the fall of Ceausescu, respectively,
Schéipflin, ‘Political Decay’, pp. 307-8.
Kux, ‘Growing Tensions in astern Europe’, p. 37.
Reinventing Civil Society: Poland’s Quiet Revolution, 1981-1986 (New York
Helsinki Watch, 1986), p. 7
See, for example, Janice Gross Stein, ‘Can Decision-Maleers be Rational and
Should They be? Evaluating the Quality of Decisions’, Jensalem Journal of
Inernarional Relations, 3, 2-8 (Winter-Spring 1978), pp. 316-39; and
Mitiam Steiner, “The Search for Order in 8 Disorderly World: Worldviews
and Prescriptive Decision Paradigms’, Irueriational Organization, 37, 3
(Summer 1983), pp. 373-413.
Kazimierz Poznatiski, ‘An Interpretation of Commmunise Decay: The Role of
Evoludionary Mechanisms’, in Communist and Post-Communist. Studies,
Vol. 26, 1 (March 1993), pp. 21-3,
oor’ xtrircann
NP TBR52 Thinking about Yugoslavia
25 Ibid, p. 3, emphasis in the original.
26 Quoted in Michacl McFaul, Post Communist Politics: Demoeratic Prospects in
Rusia and Hosters Europe (Washington, DC: Center for Strategic and Inter-
national Studies, 1993), p. xi
27 Philipsen, We Wore she People, p. 32.
28 Ibid p. 96.
29 Anders Asiund, Post-Communist Economic Revolutions: How Big « Bang?
(Washington, DC: Center for Strategic and International Studies, 1992), p.3,
30 Ibid, p. 33.
31 Wid, pp. 38-9.
32 Juan J. Linz and Allted Stepan, ‘Political Identities and Electoral Sequences:
Spain, the Soviet Union, and Yugoslavin’, Daedalus, 121, 2 (Spring 1992),
pp. 123-39.
33 Kazimierz Pozniiski, ‘Tntroduction’, in. Kazimierr Poznatiski (ed.), Gon
smveting, Capitalism: The Reemergence of Civil Soviet» and Liberal Economy in
te Post-Communist World (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1992), p. 1.
34 Kazimierz Poznaviski, “Epilogue: Markets and States in the Transform-
ation of Post-Communist Europe’, in Poznafski, Constmicting Capitalim,
pp. 204-5.
35 Ibid, p. 202.
36 Ibid, p. 204.
47 See his reference to the “former Soviet regime” in his chapter, ‘Property
Rights Perspective on Evolution of Communist-Type Economics’, in
Posnasski, Consmecting Cepitaliom, p. 80,
38 Ibid.
39 Ibid, pp. 76-1.
40 Poznasiski, Bpilogue’ p. 210.
41 See Valerie Bunce, “Two-Tiered Stalinism: A Case of Self-Destruction’, in
Poanatiski, Constructing Capitation, pp. 37-8,
42 Kazimiere Poznatiski, Introduction, in Kazimierz Z. Poznasiski (ed.), The
Evolutionary Transition to Capitalism (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1995),
. wil,
43 Josef C. Brada, ‘A Critique of the Evolutionery Approach to the Economic
Transition from Communism to Capitalism’, in Poznatiski, Evoluionary
‘Transition, esp. pp. 193, 203.
44 Vladimir Tismaneanu, ‘Preface’, in V, Tismaneanu (ed.), bn Search of Civil
Society: Independent Peace Movements in the Soviet Bloc (New York and
London: Routledge, 1990), p. vi
45 Michnik, as quoted in Vladimir Tismeneanu, ‘Unofficial Peace Activism in
the Soviet Union and East-Central Burope’, in Tismaneanu, Jn Search of
Givit Society, p. 2.
46 Sce, for example, Tismancanu, ‘Unofficial Peace Activisw’ p. 47.
47 See, for example, Mikiés Hareszti, “The Beginnings of Civil Society: The
Independent Peace Movement and the Danube Movement in Hungary’, in
‘Tismaneamu, Jn Search of Civil Society p. 86.
48 Tismaneanu, Rebroenting Politics, p. 155.
49 Horvath and Szakolezai, Dissolution of Communist Power, p. 58.
50 Ibid. pp. 106-7.‘The collapse of East European communisin 53
51 Ibid, p. 210.
52 Paul Hockenos, Free to Hate: The Rite of the Right in Post-Communist Bastere
Europe (London and New York: Routledge, 1994), pp. 120-2.
53 Medi, p. 38,
54 Ibid, p. 303.
55 Karen Dawisha, Rasen Burope, Gorbacheo and Reform: The Great Challenge,
2nd edn (Cambridge: Cambridge University Prese, 1990).
56 Charles Gati, ‘Gorbachev and Eastern Europe’, Foreign Affairs, 65, 5
(Summer 1987), pp. 958-75,
57 See especially the chapter by Eduard Kuznetsov in Tismaneanu's collection.
58 Sce Ramet, Soeial Curents in Eastem Europe, 2nd edn, esp. chapters 1-4
59 Jack Snyder, Frum Voring ro Violsnce: Democratization and Narionali Confit
(New York: W, W. Norton, 2000), p. 40.
REFERENCES
Astund, Anders, Post-Communist Economie Revolutions: How Big a Bang? (Wash
ington, DC: Center for Smategic and Internationsl Studies, 1992), p. 106.
Hockenos, Paul, Free to Hate: The Rite of the Right in Post-Communie Basrem
Europe (New York and London: Routledge, 1994), p. 330.
Horvath, Agnes and Arpad Szakolczai, The Dissoluion of Conmunst Power: The
Case of Hungary (London and New York: Routledge, 1992), p. 254,
Philipsen, Dirk, We Were the People: Voices from East Germany's Revolutionary
Autionn of 1989 (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1993), p. 417.
Poonasishi, Kezimierz Z. (ed.), Constructing Capitation: The Reomergonce of Civil
Socieey and Liberal Economy in the Post-Communist World (Boulder, CO:
Westview Press, 1992), p. 230.
The Evolutionary Transition to Capitalim (Boulder, CO: Westview Press,
1995), p. 240,
‘smaneanu, Viedimir (€4.), In Search of Civil Societys Independent Peace
‘Movements in the Soviet Bloc (New York and London: Routledge, 1990),
p. 191
Tismeneanu, Vladimis, Reinventing Polite: Eastem Burope from Stalin to Havel
(New York: Free Press, 1992), p. 312,3 The roots of the Yugoslav collapse
1
‘The split between idealists and realists is, of course, not the only debate
to have divided the field of Yugoslav studies. For as long as I have been
observing Yugoslavia, I have been struck by the ongoing (and unend-
jing) debate between scholars who have wanted to have faith in any
formula or arrangement that might be presented as potentially stabiliz~
ing and favourable, and scholars who have lived in expectation that
catastrophe was around the comer. This temperamental difference
between optimists and pessimists was reflected in differing views of
selfmanagement, the 1974 constitution, post-Titoist policy in Kosovo,
the prospects for communism in Eastern Europe as a whole, the
dangers (0%, for optimists, ‘alleged dangers’) of civil war in Yugoslavia,
the prospects for the establishment of the rule of law in post-commun-
ist Eastern Burope, and the prospects for a negotiated peace in ex-
‘Yugoslavia, In the early 1990s, one of the manifestations of this debate
‘was that aptimists took to blaming the Yugoslav civil war on Westen,
manipulation (which was, in fact, the Serbian propaganda line), on the
assumption that, left to themselves, the Yugoslavs would never have
gone to war, while pessimists found sufficient roots of the conflict
internally.
‘To some extent, the difference between optimists and pessimists was
sustained by differences in their very research methodologies. Optimists —
who were sometimes ‘cynical optimists’, optimistic about system sur:
vival and institutional stability, but disinterested in human rights
struggles locally ~ tended to focus their attention on official publications,
and to devote their interview energy to talking with officials. By contrast,
pessimists ~ who were often committed to the advance of human rights,
‘but pessimistic, say, about the capacity of communist Yugoslavia to
embrace a liberal programme of human rights in a peaceful and evolu-
tionary fashion ~ cast their research nets wider, king into account
religious, social, even countercultural elements, alongside the official
58‘The roots of the Yugoslav collapse 55
wpoint, Needless to say, cynical optimists never tired of dismissing
Bast European dissidents as ‘marginal types’ of no real or potential
importance, while pessimists were equally tireless in insisting on the
power and force of dissent.
Inevitably, it was exclusively the pessimists who provided early wam-
ings of the approaching collapse of socialist Yugoslavia and outbreak of
intercommunal war (and, for that matter, of the decay and impending
collapse of communism in Buster Europe generally). Now that these
events have come to pass, itis possible to look at subsequent analyses of
the roots of the breakup and war, and contrast these with the anslyses
offered at the time, and also to look for new transformations of the
unending debate between optimists and pessimists.
‘Undoubtedly the roots of the Yugoslav wars (in Slovenia, Croatia, and
Bosnia-Herzegovina, 1991-5, and in Kosovo and Macedonia, 1998-
2001) ate diverse, and there is no need to engage in Procrustean efforts
to reduce the complexity of socialist Yugoslav development to some
supposed pre-eminent factor. On the contrary, economics, demograph-
ics, programmatic choices, institutional structures, religious cultures,
elite dynamics, and deficiencies in system legitimacy all played a role
in pushing the country towards violent breakup, Be that as it may,
scholars have often favoured one or another element as the leading
explanatory factor.
1
One approach to the Yugoslav crisis is to trace the collapse of socialist
Yugoslavia to economic factors. Among such writers to emphasize the
economic sources of eventual disarray is Dijana Plestina (in her Regio-
nal Development in Communist Yugoslavia, 1992). Outlining communist
economic policy from 1945 to 1990, she highlights the political sensi-
tivity of regional economic disparities in multiethnic Yugoslavia and
describes communist efforts to ameliorate these disparities. But in
spite of their efforts, Slovenia, Croatia, and the Belgrade region in
northern Serbia consistently outpaced the rest of the country in terms
of investment and most other economic indices as well, while Bosnia,
‘Macedonia, Montenegro, and, above all, Kosovo continued to lag
behind with high rates of uncmployment. Given the nominal commi
‘ment of the communist leaders to eliminsting regional economic in-
qualities, their failure to do so inevitably gave rise to recriminations
and complaints. The less developed republics complained that the fed-
eration was not doing enough for them and noted that payments from
the more developed republics were frequently late, sometimes by as56 Thinking about Yugosiavia
much as a year and a half, The more developed republics in turn claimed
that their own growth was being slowed by the necessity of providing,
support to the less developed republics, and complained that these funds
‘were often ill-spent. By the carly 1980s, there was deepening resentment
on both sides of this debate, and everyone felt ‘exploited’ by the system.
But in the late 1970s, the earlier economic boom (which had benefited
the developed republics and especially the Dalmation coast more than
the rest of the country) ground to a balt, and economic troubles started
to pile up. What PleStina shows so well is how economists from the
different republics now offered solutions which they presented as “best”
for the federation as whole, but which turned out to be prejudicial to
the needs of their own respective republics. The conclusion is inevitable:
‘economics could not be divorced from nationality policy in multiethnic
‘Yugoslavia, On the contrary, economic problems fuelled interethnic
resentments and frictions.
‘The final act in the drama of the Socialist Federated Republic of
Yugoslavia (SFRY) was signalled by the appearance of Serbian banker~
tured-politician Slobodan Milogevié on the potisical stage. Politically
prominent since 1984, Milofevié was elected secretary of the League of
Communists of Serbia in 1986 and pushed his erstwhile mentor, Ivan
‘Stambolié, who had become president of Serbia at the time Milosevié
assumed the secretaryship, into an early retirement at the end of 1987.
Upon assuming power in Serbia, Milosevi¢ immediately transformed the
language of politics, and opened a space for the convening of Serb
nationalist rallies (the famous witize!) at which participants were en~
couraged to make demands based on the supposition of ‘ethnic rights’.
Ostensibly spontaneous, these, meetings were carefully organized
by Milogevie’s collaborators, and were financed by the apparatus which,
Milofevié controlled.’ The Serbian public was more than receptive
to Milofevié’s chauvinistic message. Pleitina’s answer to the question
‘why? highlights the pauperization of much of the Yugoslav labour force,
with many Yugoslavs being forced to take out bank loans just to cover,
daily expenses, ‘In that climate of uncertainty’, Plestina notes, “the
chauvinist rhetoric of the man who could “tight” any variety of “wrongs”
=a sort of latter-day Don Quixote of the masses — propelled Miloievié to
the position of undisputed leader in Serbia, and.in most Serb areas of
Yugoslavia.’? And with Miloevié’s rise to power began the countdown
to intercommunal war,
‘A more extreme version of the economic approach is that taken by
Susan Woodward in her prize-winning Socialist Unemployment. What she
wants is to endeavour to offer a unicausal explanation, but she does not
quite manage this. Her argument is that the driving force for political‘The roots of the Yugoslav collapse 57
change in socialist Yugoslavia was unemployment.” Unemployment, she
says, affected the political elite’s ‘capacity to enforce policy goals’,
undermined ‘the delicate balance in constitutional jurisdictions of the
federal system because of the intensified competition among property
owners to protect their capital assets from declining further’, negatively
affected ‘the system’s capacity to adapt politically to the requirements of
new economic and social conditions’, and impaired ‘the country’s ability
to continue to manage unemployment itself." If unemployment is the
heart of the problem, then nationalism, Woodward tells us, is ‘only a
negative manifestation’, or perhaps, better said, an epiphenomenon, of
discontent generated by unemployment.> The argument is provocative,
especially insofar as it seems to be erecting the scaffolding for # unicausal
argument. But Woodward ultimately qualifies any such argument, Un~
employment was, in fact, not enough to push the country over the brink.
Rather, she tells us, ‘The pressure for change in Yugoslav economic
policy and for political reform in the 1980s came as it had in the past ~
not from domestic political forces [or from discontent over unemploy-
ment} but from the intemational system.”® International creditors
demanded changes, reforms were carried out to accommodate those
demands, political leaders in Slovenia above all but also in Croatia reacted
to these reforms by demanding more comprehensive systemic change,
and, asa result of Slovene-Croatian pressure, the country moved steadily
in the direction of ever more encompassing decentralization, culminating
logically in the disintegration of the country, according to Woodward.’
Unless the international creditors were demanding changes to correct
problems created by the country’s unemployment, it would appear that
that factor may have stipped out of the equation, But this does not appear
to have been the case, since she tells us that the IMI’s focus was on
demanding policies to fight inflation end that this emphasis entailed
restrictions on credit and imports which, in tum, required cutbacks in
production and labour, thereby fuelling unemployment.
Woodward is openly revisionist, challenging the conventional’ no-
tion that the ‘Tiro-Stalin split of 1948 marked a watershed in postwar
‘Yugoslav history, suggesting that developments in 1946, 1947, and 1949
all make better candidates for watersheds.” Given her scheme for under-
standing the evolution of economic policy in postwar Yugoslavia, the
reform of 1965, the crushing of the liberals in 1971-2, and the passage of
the fourth postwar constitution in 1974 also cannot qualify as ‘defining
moments’ (her tetm).The yeat 1961 qualifies as such a moment because
it marked the peak in postwar employment, as does 1971, not because of
the crushing of the Croatian liberals (the liberals in Slovenia and Serbia
id not feet Tito’s axe until the following year), but because it marked58 Thinking about Yugoslevia
the point in time when the rising rate of unemployment began to esca~
fate dramatically. This, in turn, leads her to offer the following perio-
dization scheme for postwar economic policy: 1950-7, transitional
period with continued problems of unemployment; 1958-67, reduction.
in the labour force accompanied by the worsening of regional inequal-
ities; 1968-78, high rate of capital formation; and 1979-89, system
breakdown." The 1963 constitution and the fall of Rankovié are both
folded into the second phase. It should be emphasized, however, that
‘Woodward does not suggest that this periodization scheme defines
phases in, let us say, federal relations or policies in noneconomic
spheres. Woodward's book excited at least some scholars when it was
published a decade ago, But its revisionism has not had any lasting effect
‘on the field of Yugoslav studies, and her endeavour to trace the breakup
‘of socialist Yugoslavia to international factors remains a minority view.
Indeed, she herself adopts a different approach in her Balkan Tragedy
(discussed in the next chapter), published the same year as Socialist
Unemployment.
Branka Maga’ (The Destruction of Yugoslavia, 1992) takes « rather
different approach, focusing on the more purely political aspects of
‘Yugoslavia’s evolution, 1980-91, with special stress on the deterioration.
of Serb-Albunian zelations in the province of Kosovo and the uses made
by Belgrade of that deterioration, Her book opens with a challenge,
declaring that the April 1981 Albanian riots in Kosovo were nothing
less than a ‘watershed? for Yugoslavia as a whole.’
‘Yet, at the same time, she is bitterly aware of the menacing way in
which the past has always heunted the present in Yugoslavia - the
resentment by non-Serbs of the way the interwar monarchy ‘rested
essentially upon a single nationality (albeit the largest), the Serbs, and
++ trampled on the national ‘ing Yugoslav peoples’,'?
the diffise anger associated with memories of the mutwal slaughter of the
Second World Wer, and the different memories each of Yugoslavia’s
constituent peoples has had of developments after 1945. But she avoids
the trap of historical determinism, and, rather than simply blaming the
increasing chauvinism of the Serbs after 1986 on ‘the legacy of the past’,
she highlights the role played by Belgrade intellectuals in stoking and
legitimating hatred of non-Serbs. She sees this as perhaps the single most
iportant factor contributing to the change in the political atmosphere
in Serbia after 1988, a change which, she says, ‘can best be described as
tragic for the country as a whole’.!? But institutional disarray at the
centre also played a role in allowing Yugoslavia to drift towards chaos,
‘as Magai notes. The 1974 constitution, in particular, failed to lay the‘The roots of the Yugoslav collapse 59
foundation for the effective functioning of federal institutions," thus
fuelling the gradual disintegration of the centre.
Vjekoslav Perica (Balkan Idols: Religion and Nationalism in Yugoslav
‘States, 2002) provides documentation of the contribution of Yugoslavia’s
religious organizations to the erosion of the communist system. He cites,
2 1980 police report which claimed that ‘many clerics, particularly Serb
Orthodox and Catholic, were jubilant’ at the prospect of Tito’s demise,
hoping that it would bring about the collapse of communism in the
country.}° In the years following Tito’s death, frictions flared in relations
between Church and state in Croatia and Bosnia, and in 1985, as Perica
reports, an influential newspaper columnist warned:
If we let the clergy continue their apology for clerical fascists like [Zagreb
Archbishop] Stepinac and processions and marches across Yugoslavia, we must
fear the repetition of the horrors of the Second World War... We cormmunists
bbegan to believe that the crimes of the Second World War would never be
repeated, especially natin Europe at the end of the 20th century. But I um afraid
that we have been wrong."®
‘To cope with the challenge they saw coming feom the religious sector,
the authorities combined a policy of repression of more radical clerey
‘with appeasement of clergy more receptive to co-operation with the
regime, Differences among the clergy were reflected even at the highest
levels, with, for example, Franjo Kuharié, then archbishop of Zagreb,
actively promoting the beatification of Stepinac ~ a cause considered
anathema by the regime — and Archbishop Frane Franié of Split expres-
sing positive sentiments about the Partisan struggle of the Second World
‘War and encouraging believers of his archdiocese to adopt a co-operative
attitude vis-A-vis the authorities."
‘Nor was Serbia free of problems in the religious sphere. Perica cites an
internal Croatian government document from the early 1980s which
reported that Serb Orthodox clergy working in the Republic of Croatia
had been stirring up problems ‘over land, property, or trivial conflicts
between the locals and the authorities in Serb-populated areas, in order
to charge discrimination against the Serbian minority and unequal status
for the Serbian Orthodox Church in predominantly Catholic Croatia’."*
For the Orthodox Church, the point of all ofthis was to place itself at the
helm of an ethnic-confessional revival which would both draw more
Serbs into the Church and inflate the Church’s authority and social
relevance. The Orthodox Church was playing with fire,
Although Serbs would later say that they mobilized in Croatia only in
response to Croatian president Tudjman’s policies, in fact, as Perica
notes, ‘the Serbian Church turned militant and anti-Croatian even,60 ‘Thinking about Yugoslavia
before Tudjman’s electoral triumph’."® The Serbian Church backed
Serb nationalist parties in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina and, in
Serbia, tied its fortunes to the Milosevi¢ regime. The Serbian Oxthodox
Church also played the central role in transforming Jasenovac, site of the
most fearsome concentration camp run by the Ustage (Croatian fascists)
during the Second World Was, into a major pilgrimage site and symbol of
the Serbian historical experience. What was not noted at the time was
that, by selecting a site associated with genocide, hatred, intolerance,
and ethnic strife for such emphasis, rather than a site which might be
associated with ecumenism, tolerance, and ethnic and confessional
dialogue, the Church was stoking potentially explosive emotions.
‘As Yugoslavia plummeted towards breakup and strife, the Orthodox.
clergy, rather than working towards reconciliation, ‘held liturgies near
Jong-forgotten [Orthodox] ruins where no religious activity had occurred.
for decades or, in some cases, for centuries’, in order to document
Serbian claims 10 territories lying within the Républic of Croatia.”
Not surprisingly, when the war finally broke out, even though it had
diverse roots, it quickly took on religious dimensions: specifically, the
rival forces targeted each other's places of worship so that, by the end of
1995, 1,024 mosques, 182 Catholic churches, and 28 Serbian Orthodox
churches and monasteries had been destroyed,?”
Perica closes his book by noting progress, since the end of the war, in
‘faith-based conflict management, reconciliation efforts, religious relict,
‘and interfaith understanding’, though even here he finds ‘ambiguous
‘outcomes’, and by registering 2 plea for ‘mutual respect [among
peoples}, tolerance, and observance of the laws, norms, and standards
under which Western democracies operate’.??
ri
An alternative approach, taken by Branislav Anzulovié and Lenard
Cohen, shifts the emphasis from situational variables to the mindset of
the locals. Cohen, for example, identifies ‘the [Yugoslav] population’s
predilection for political extremism’,”° which he says was ‘identified by
[Vladimir] Dvornikovic? earlier. But the ‘sheer terror and hatred? which
flashed in the 1990s were not primarily a result of the crisis which flared
in the 1980s} on the contrary, says Cohen, "The basis for such intense
feelings can be traced to the transgenerational socialization of negative
stereotypes.* Thus, within Bosnia, according to Cohen, although
‘Nationalist political leaders of various stripes in Bosnia undoubtedly
bear a major responsibility for generating an atmosphere of ethnic‘The roots of the Yugoslay collapse a
intolerance and hatred, . . .the historically conditioned proctivities of
large segments of each ethno-religious community ~ particularly cutside
the more cosmopolitan Sarajevo area — to embrace programs of aggres-
sive nationalism must also be taken into account.” This same historical
determinism re-emerges in Cohen’s later volumes Sexpent in the Bosom
(2001, discussed in chapter 7) and, in Broken Bonds, constitutes the
theoretical backdrop for a cursory overview of Yugoslav history from
1830 onwards and a rather pedestrian if detailed chronology of the wat.
A kindred effort to tcace present violence to socialization in the re-
mote past is undertaken by Branislav Anzulovié in his Heaventy Serbia
Anzulovié’s work differs from Cohen’s in three respects, however. First,
Anzulovié limits his attention to the Serbss second, he uses historical
factors to explain not just violence, but also a proclivity towards geno-
cide; and, third, unlike Cohen, who seems to believe that socialization
locks people into fixed pattems of behaviour, Anzulovié pointedly em-
phasizes that ‘the direction in which a nation has been moving can be
changed, given conscious effort and a ‘reexamination of deeply en-
trenched ideas?.* Moreover, whereas Cohen is vague about the specific
sources of ‘transgeneratignal socialization’, Anmulovié seeks to provide @
detailed accounting, tracing the destructive ethos which he finds in
Serbian culture to the myth of the Battle of Kosovo, the poetry of
Montenegrin Prince Petar Petrovié NjegoS (1813-51), songs of Dinaric
highlanders, the public role of the Serbian Orthodox Church over cen-
turies, and even the novels of twenticth-century writers Dobrica Cosié
and Vuk Draikovié. Here is an excerpt from Njegoi’s celebrated poem,
Gorski vijenac (The Mountain Wreath):
‘The blasphemers of Christ's name
‘we will baptize with water or with blood!
We'll drive the plague our of the pent :
Let the song of horror ring forth,
a true altar on 2 blood-stained rock.””
The poem deals with the massacre of Muslims by Christian warriors,
and closes with the words:
Let Hell devour, and Satan mow down!
Flowers will grow at the graveyard
for some remote future generation.”
In Anaiilovie's mind, “The rejoicing over the massacres and theit depic-
tion as a baptism in blood that leads to the nation’s rebirth make the
poem a hymn to genocide.” But its significance, for Anzulovié, lies in
its alleged influence on generations of Serbs.62 Thinking about Yugoslavia
Anzulovié locates the same problem in Draskovié’s popular novel, Nod
(The Knife). Set in Second World War-era Bosnia, the novel recounts
the maiming and killing of Serbs by Muslims, In one passage quoted by
Anzulovié, Draskovié writes,
With one swing, a8 if he were cutting a leg of lamb, he cut off her left breast,
she screamed, the blood splattered onto his forehead and cheeks, He cut off
hier nose, palled the tongue out of the mouth, and cut it off. He stuck the tip of
the knife into her eye, ciecled it « few times, and pushed the steel under the
bloody ball that was moving under his fingers. After pulling the eye out he
threw iton the copper tay in front of Father Nikifor. Then he slaughtered
LjubicaP®
Anaulovié makes his argument that The Knife worked on people’s minds
by quoting from a commander in the Serbian Guard who reported that
the novel put him into @ state of constant rage, inducing him to best up
‘Muslims, even when he was on vacation in Cavtat,*?
Anzulovie’s book has been more controversial precisely because it is
more specific, more concrete —its claims can be subjected more easily to
review. Cohen’s book has been less controversial precisely because it is
effusively vague on points which, I believe, demand to be flushed out
Few books have been as misunderstood as those written by Lenard
Cohen; to associate them with the historical determinism of Anzulovié
is to take the first step towards understanding the thinking which lies
‘behind his books. For both writers, it is not enough, in secking to
account for the troubles which pushed socialist Yugoslavia over the
brink, to limit one’s perspective to events after 1918, let alone to post-
1945 developments. Quite the contrary: for both of them, a much longer
perspective is needed.
Vv
‘The more recent volumes by Christopher Bennett, Andrew Wachtel,
and John Allcock take it as « given that the problem lay in Yugoslavia
itself but offer contrasting accounts of what went wrong with socialist
Yagoslavia. Wachtel’s focus is on literature and cultural polities, where
he rightly discerns the presence in the Yugoslay politcal establishment
of advocates of the creation of a unified Yugoslav culture. But, as
Wachtel notes, when the elite gave up on political centralism and
iniviated programmes of administrative decentralization, any notion of
realizing a unified Yugoslav culture was likewise abandoned.?? As a
result of subsequent educational reforms carried out in the 1960s, the
literature being read by schoolchildren varied from republic to republic,‘The roots of the Yugoslav collapse 6
with Croatian, pupils reading mainly Croatian writers, Serbian pupils
reading mainly Serbian writers, and so forth, In this way, the educational
reform worked to divide rather than to unify the Yugoslav community
of nations
Wachtel believes that the decentralization of educational and cultural
policy was a critical wrong turn. As he writes,
‘The void left by the graduel collapse ofa belief in any form of Yugoslav culture
was quickly filled by national-based cultural formations that tended to appear
before the expressions of political nationalism . . . Indeed, in certain crucial
‘cases, most notably Croatia in the late 1960s and Serbia in the early 1980s, it
‘would not be an exaggeration to say that nationalist political movements rose on.
the back of euleural ones rather than the other way around.”
Wachtel détails the cultural incunabula of the Serbian political backlash,
olfering an insightful analysis of Milorad Pavié’s provocative novel, The
Dictionary of the Khazars (19843 English trans., 1989), As Wachtel tells
it, Pavie’s Dictionary, which offers parallel Jewish, Mustim, and Christian
accounts of the same events, ‘implied that no agreement or mutual
“understanding could be reached among peoples who begin from differ
cent starting points’, and when, in Pavié’s novel, ‘the three individuals
representative of their religions [finally] succeed in coming together,
instead of discovering the truth they seek, all are destroyed’,* Wachtel
argues that Pavié makes it clear that he intends the reader to infer that
any attempt to aspire to truth can only end in doom. Wachtel completes
the axgument by presenting evidence that Pavie’s novel was not just 2
reflection of the notions of a particular writer; rather, he tells us, Pavie’s
Dictionary ‘had important effects, particularly on the thinking of Serbian
clites’.® Moreover, the novels ‘subversive potential was recognized in
‘Yugoslavia from the beginning’.?°
Finally, in his concluding chapter, Wachtel makes his point as explicit
as possible. Here he reiterates his central argument that
the abandonment of attempts at cultural nation building on the part of both
political and cultural elites created the conditions for the collapse of the Yugoslew
state. In foregrounding cultural processes, Iam disagreeing with the emphasis of
‘other accounts of Yugoslavia’s failure, which have placed the blame primarily on
policical and economic factors. This is not to say 1 believe that cultural analysis
alone can explain Yugoslavie’s demise. Such a claim would clearly be simplistic.
But Yogoslavia’s political and economic malaise in the 1980s, real as it was,
‘would not have led to the disappearance of the county had a robust vision of the
‘Yugoslav nation been in place.”?
John Allcock’s Explaining Yugoslavia provides a stark contrast to
Wachtel’s analysis, Allcock explains contending nationalist agendas64 Thinking about Yugoslavia
through the prism of history rather than of culture, but places the
‘emphasis elsewhere, namely, on ‘the failure of the modernisation process
in Yugoslavia’.?® The problems with socialist Yugoslavia, as Allcock sees
it, were (1) that socialism figured as an ‘anti-modern’ force, interfering
with national market processes, (2) that Yugoslav socialism in particular
embraced ‘elements of particular vulnersbility’, (3) that the system
lacked the ability to legitimate itself over the long term, and (4) that its
economy, and especially the flow of credit, was mismanaged.” In other
words, Allcock emphasizes precisely the political and economic factors
which Wachtel de-emphasizes
Allcock wants to offer an alternative to accounts which imagine that
Balkan history is a seamless tapestry of unending violence and likewise to
accounts which overstress the elements of discontinuity which one may
identify over the centuries. ‘To accomplish this, Allcock turns to socio
logical theory, weaving what might be called sociological history and
arguing that some of the more “important dimensions of the recent
conflict .. . can be regarded not as reflections of Balkan atavism, but
as indices of the modernity which we ourselves share’.“° Given this, it is
‘not sueprising that chapter 2 opens with an expostulation of the concept
of modernization and with an effort to situate the Yugoslav lands in a
European context. While admitting that this corner of Europe, together
with the restof the Balkans, has lagged behind much of Europe in terms of
economic development, Alfcock stresses that, on other dimensions, this
area was affected by, if not thoroughly penetrated by, trends elsewhere
in Burope.! On the other hand, Allcock does not want the reader to
cconclucle from this that the problem with which the Yugoslav lands heve
recently been beset are completely generic; accordingly, he is sceptical
about hopes that the integration of Slovenia and Croatia into BU struc
tures will bea simple matter. “The Balkans cannot escape their condition’,
he warns, ‘by becoming more “European”, as their defining condition as
“Balkan” itself derives from that “European” context. Their becoming.
more “Buropean” can only be expected to make them more “Balkan”.
‘What Allcock offers, as already mentioned, is a sociological history, in
‘which broader processes since the thirteenth century are interpreted in
the light of Immanuel Wallerstein’s “world-system” theory. Applying
this to the breakup of Yugoslavia, Allcock concludes that theories tracing
the disintegration of the SFRY to the death of ito (en approach which
Alleock attributes to Laslo Sekelf) are muddled and asserts that it was
only in the context of the disintegration of communism throughout
Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union that Yugoslav politics became
dysfunctional. What made the difference in this regional process, in
Allcock’s view, was the end of the threat of Soviet intervention, which“The roots of the Yugoslav collapse 65
had kept Yugoslavs on the ‘straight and narrow? up to then, That in itself
would not have been enough to push the country over the brink, how-
ever, as Allcock recognizes; an important contributing factor ‘for the
collapse of Yugoslavia was the dreadful rigidity of its internal political
structure and its consequent chronic inability to adapt to both internal
and external chanjge’."? Accordingly, when the regional environment
began to change at an accelerating pace, Yugoslav political structures
simply could not cope.
‘Turning to the question of the recent conflict, Allcock wisely notes
that traditional societies do not interpret their wars in the light of the
past. (The original chroniclers of the 1389 Battle of Kosovo did noi refer
the meaning of the battle to events which had occurred 600 years earlier,
for example.) Thus, it is a mark precisely of ‘modernity’ when societies
respond to mythologies of nation, in which a 600-year-old battle can
figure prominently.**
But if Allcock’s version of ‘modernization theory’ makes space for
engagement with the past, then the Balken tradition of the blood feud
should be seen, he suggests, not as a symptom of the breakdown of
the social order but, rather, as a manifestation of the continuing vigout
of the social order of which it has been a part, Provocatively,
Allcock marshals the concept of the blood feud to explain ‘ethnic
cleansing’, noting that ‘traditional codes of morality in the past would
have required that people be ready to kill their neighbors, as these were
precisely the people with whom it was most likely that one might be
“in blood”? Similarly, systematic mutilation of the enemy, in which
the eyes, the nose, and the genitals are often targeted, has a long
uadition in the Balkans. ® ‘The point for Allcock is not, however, that
people are locked into past patterns of behaviour, but rather thet such,
pattcmns provide templates which may be reused when the circumstances
are right.
‘Through Allcock’s prism, thus, one sees sn intersection of four
factors: the cultural template, the changing international context, the
rigidity of the political eystem, and the way in which the Yugoslavs
themselves responded to the challenges with which they found them-
selves confronted and which were, in part, the product of their own
making, Allcock closes his argument by highlighting ~ sensibly, I would
argue — the tension between programmes founded on notions.of col-
lectivity (such as nationalist programmes) and the tiberal-democratie
stress on individual rights,*” and by reiterating that ‘The disintegration
of the Yugoslav federal state after 1990 . . . [came] about because the
country found itself to be particularly exposed to a conjunction of factors
and developmental processes which have characterised the European66 Thinking about Yugoslavia
continent as a whole, and especially those parts of it which participated
in the experiment of “real socialism”.
Christopher Bennett disagrees with both Wachtel and Allcock, and
is closer to Maga’ in his analysis of the factors that caused sociali
Yugoslavia to collapse and sink into fratricidal violence. Bennett begins
by debunking notions of historical determinism (as per alleged historie-
ally rooted hatreds) as well as the notion that socialist Yugoslavia was ‘an
unmitigated failure’, though he does not associate any particular analyst
with the notion that Yugoslavie’s failure was ‘unmitigated’. For Bennett,
the story of Yugoslavia’s senguinary collapse is incomprehensible with-
ut reference to human agency, and, as he tells the story, Tito deserves
blame for having designed an unworkable system, while Mitodevié
played a key role by setting the Serbian media on a ‘war-footing’ as early
as 1987. The international community ~ which is to says the diplomats,
‘and political leaders representing the leading Western states ~ also come
in for blame first for having rigidly tried to block Slovenian and Croatian
secession, thereby, according to Bennett, encouraging MiloSevié and the
INA to go to wax, and, second, by contenting themselves with damage
limitation, rather than seeking 2 solution.%° Where Tudjman is cor
cemed, Bennett paints the Croatian president as an ‘increasingly bitter’
rman, given to ‘far-fetched conspiracy theories’, whose ‘views became
more extreme’ over the years and more ‘tainted with anti-Semitism’.**
But, at the same time, Bennett draws a clear distinction between
‘Tudjman and Miloevié, urging thet any attempt to equate the two
men would be ‘absurd! since Milogevié had been stirring up resentments
and stoking hatreds for qwo and a half years before Tudjman became
president of Croatia. (We shall return to the discussion of Christopher
Bennett's Yugoslavia’s Bloody Collapse in chapter 4.)
For myself, I find that I have points of agreement with several of the
‘aforementioned authors (though I am uncomfortable with the historical
determinism and psychological reductionism which I find in Cohen and
Anzulovié). Like Maga’, [have identified the Kosovo riots of 1981 as
defining @ watershed in post-1945 Yugoslav history and have argued
that the post-Tito Yugoslav crisis first flared in and over Kosovo, spread-
ing from there throughout the rest of the country.”® Like Pleitina and
Allcock, I have highlighted cconomic deterioration as having made @
powerful contribution towards creating the sense of crisis in the first
place,®! and, in further agreement with Allcock, I have Iaid especi
stress on the salience of system illegitimacy in defining the state’s trajec-
tory.” At the same time, the extended attention I have paid to the role of
iterary and other cultural figures, ecclesiastical elites, and the frag-
mented media” reflects my sympathy for the stress placed by Perica‘The roots of the Yugoslav collapse or
and Wachtel on culture as a prism of crisis. And, finally, in describing the
roles played by the principals in the gathering crisis,”” I have signalled
my concurrence with Bennett on the ineluctable necessity of including
human agency in the explanation, In other words, the theories presented
by these various authors need not be incompatible; on the contrary, they
may be scen as complementary parts of the whole. On this understand-
ing, one may note that the Yugoslav crisis began no later than the mid-
1970s, when the combination of oil price hikes and overborrowing
started the Yugoslav economic meltdown, ‘The underlying political il
legitimacy of the system was muted as long as Tito was at the helm, but
when Yugoslavia took an economic nosedive just as it entered the post-
‘Tito era, the challenge was enormous. Nor could the federal system be
‘ignored since, ‘when an illegitimate system confronts economic crisis, its
ability to make a unified response is highly dependent upon the structure
that system has assumed?.°® Indeed, the federation provided the'struc-
ture in which republic elites competed not for the support of Yugoslavs,
but for the support of the people of their respective republics; insofar as
the republics were organized slong ethnic lines, this translated into a
strong temptation for republic elites to compete on the basis of nation-
alist agendas. Federal prime minister Ante Markovié, Croatian Com-
munist Party leader Ivica Ragan, and Bosnian émigré-returnee Adit
Zalfikarpatié” resisted the temptation and were defeated at the polls
-Milosevié, Tudjman, andy, in his own way, Izetbegovié embraced nation-
alism and were rewarded at the polls. ‘Thus, although the nationalist
revival ‘started with the writers’, the decisions to abolish the autonomy
of Kosovo and Vojvodina in 1989, to declare a Serbian boycott of
Slovenian goods, and to set up illegal paramilitaries among the Serbs
fof Croatia and Bosnia (in 1990), thereby disrupting the unity of the
‘economic market, were not automatic reflexes or facets of the crisis; they
‘were, on the contrary, decisions taken by identifiable individuals among
‘whom Milofevié was the central figure. From my standpoint, thus, the
central systemic factors in the decay of socialist Yugoslavia were (1)
problems associated with system illegitimacy, (2) economic deterior-
ation, and (3) the ethnically based federal system, while (4) human
agency (Milogevié especially, but not solely) played a central role in
taking the country down a violent path.°"
v
By contrast with the foregoing works, Neven Andjelic wants to investi-
gate what went wrong in Bosnia specifically. For him, the key event
which sent Bosnis-Herzegovina spiralling towards fratricidal disaster68 Thinking about Yugoslavia
took place in Bosnia ~ the collapse of the Agrokomerc concern amid
srcat scandal in 1987. The basic story is well known to “Yugophiles?. In
January 1987, a fire broke ont in one of Agrokomere’s factories; when
company executives proved to be rather uncooperative with the police
investigation of the fire, the police became sus;
expand their investigation to take in all of Agrokomerc’s business. The
‘National Bank of Sarajevo made its own investigation, and, by April of
that year, authorities had documents showing that the Velika Klacuréa-
based company had issued more than 17,000 promissory notes to cover
its insolvent operations. Filset Abdié, the compeny director, had close
relations with the brother of Hamclja Pozderac, a member of the SERY
presideney, and was himself a member of the Central Committee of the
‘League of Communists of Yugoslavia (LCY) and a deputy in the Federal
Assembly. When the scandal broke, Abdié was expelled from the Central
Committee and the Pozderac brothers were dismissed in disgrace,
According to Andjelic, the scandal was the beginning of the end for
communist rule in Bosnia, resulting in the breakdown of unity in the
Bosnian political establishment and providing @ powerful impetus to
institutional decay.
Bat even with the local communist elite discredited and in disarray,
the system continued to function, albeit with some personnel changes at
the top. Even the waxing nationalist movement in neighbouring Serbia
id not affect Bosnia at first, says Andjelic. In the course of summer
1988, however, there were signs of ‘the first divisions along ethnic lines
within the political elite’ in Bosnia. There were two conditions which
accounted for this, according to Andjelic: ‘economic and political rur-
bulence in Bosnia-Hlerzegovina and the rise of nationalism in the neigh-
bouring republic’ of Serbia. These conditions, in turn, should be
understood within the context of Andjelic’s central argument, whieh is
“chat it was the crucial stream of political developments, iriggered by a
series of scandals in 1987 and 1988, which led to war’. But, Gordana
Knefevié has argued, by placing so much emphasis on developments
within Bosnia-Herzegovina in his effort to understand the roots of the
fighting, Andjelic allows the reader to imagine that the political leader-
ships in Belgrade (and to a lesser extent in Zagreb) were less culpable
than they actually were.
“Andjelic believes that bis interpretation is virtually unique ~ “virtually”
because he is willing to give Christopher Bennett some eredit for having,
understood the roots of the evisis.°° But, for che most part, Andjelic
acknowledges very little debt to the works listed in his bibliography,
which are, evidently, a cacophony of error, ‘Scholars’, he writes, ‘have
hardly begun to tackle this recent war in the Balkans seriously." Indeed,The roots of the Yugoslav collapse 6
he tells us, most scholarly works ‘can be divided into two groups: one
paying attention to history, however distant, and examples of ethnic
grievances, and the other explaining everything in terms of aggression
from neighbouring countries whilst ignoring internal Bosnian deve.
lopments’.°7 And he proceeds to denounce ‘academic and pseudo-
academic works? which offer a fare more appropriate ‘for journalists
and politicians or military officers’.°* I believe that Andjelic’s portrayal
Of the field does not do it justice, anc I hope that this chapter, together
with a parallel study of mine, may alert readers to points of view that
cannot easily be collapsed into Andjelic’s two cacophonous choirs.
‘The last book to be discussed here is an anthology ~ the product of
editorial collaboration between an American scholar (Jim Seroka) and a
Serbian scholar (Vukaiin Pavlovie). The Tragedy of Yugoslavia (1992)
brings together « distinguished group of Slovenian, Croatian, and Ser-
bian scholars; Seroka himself is the only non-Yugoslav contributor to
this eight-chapter collection. ‘The editors deserve a lot of credit for their
honesty ng that, when they began work on the volume in
‘March 1990, at a time when some scholars were worrying that the
country was headed for intercommunal war, they considered that ‘civil
‘war was only a remote possibility’, believing that ‘pluralism and demo
racy were on the eve of an historic triumph’."® The best essays in th
collection, at least to my mind, are those by Mirjana Kasapovié on
Croatian elections and Anton Rebler on the military. Writing in January
1991, Bebler showed keen awareness of the dangers of civil wat
pointing out, for example, that in December 1989, the Yugoslav Defence
‘Ministry failed to furnish a copy of its budget to the Federal Assembly.”
Bebler also highlights secret JNA efforts, begun already in spring!
summer 1990, to destabilize the noncommunist governments in Slovenia
and Croatia, and notes that, 26 of late 1990, the JNA was ‘disarming the
‘Territorial Defense [forces] and denying Slovenia and Groatia light
weapons for their police forces (while providing weapons to the Serbian
police and official paramilitary formations).”* Kasapovié, for her part,
highlights Serbia's role in stoking the crisis, drawing particular attention
to the ‘authoritarian bases of Serbian populism’ and, hence, to the
Jinkage between Serbian nationalism and anti-liberalise.”?
Also useful is a chapter by Ivan Siber on nationatism, values, and
ideology. Siber highlights the high levels of authoritarianism among
Croatian voters overall, especially among those on the left or right
extremes of the political spectrum.” This, in turn, suggests that it may
not be enough to democratize a systems it may be necessary also 10
democratize the citizens ~ to build, in the phrase of Gabriel Almond
and Sidney Verba, a civic culture.
a adenit70 Thinking about Yugoslavia
In a more recently published work, Dejan Jovié outlines eight altemna-
tive theories concerning why Yugoslavia disintegrated and sank into
‘open warfare:
© economic deterioration;
© so-called ancient ethnic hatreds;
© persistent problems of nationalism since at least 1921
© cultural differences among the peoples of Yugoslavia;
© changes in the international systems
© the role of specific personalities (whether MiloSevié and/or Tudjman
andlor Izetbegovig, or others);
the premodern character of the Yugoslay state;
© stcuctural-institutional permutations.”
Jovié himself expresses scepticism about the utility of unicausal theo-
ries, and suggests that one needs to take into account « cluster of
factors. And, indeed, the authors discussed in this chapter tend to do
so, Maga’ is perhaps the best example of multifactor analysis here,
tracing the problems which tore Yugoslavia apart to the way the past
fags haunted the present, thanks in part to the role of elites prepared
rulate people's perceptions, and also to structural-institational
permutations, Plestina, Perica, and Bennett all factor in the role of
personalities, combining this, respectively, with economie deterior
ation, cultural-religious differences, and structural-instiutional prob-
Jems. Allcock also takes into account more than one variable; from
Jovies list, Alleock includes economic deterioration, the premodern
character of the Yugoslav state, structural-institutional factors, and
the gencral failure of socialism, while Wachtel highlights the inde-
pendent potency of cultural artifuets and differences in education.
Suil, one should not make too much of Pleitina’s and Perica’s
particular foci, since it was not their purpose to explain the disinte-
gration of Yugoslavia, but rather in Pleétina’s case, to explain why
the regionalization of the economy presented problems for the coun
tuy, and, in Perica’s case, to explain and discuss the political role of
ecclesiastical figures and religious organizations in Yugoslavia over a
period of decades,
‘Among other literature, Carole Rogel, in The Breakup of Yugosievia
and the War in Bosnia, associates herself with theories emphasizing the
primacy of politics, by identifying the dysfunctional politcal system as
the root of the problem;’® and Misha Glenny, in his mammoth volume,
The Balkans — to be discussed in chapter 6 ~ traces the problems of
‘Yugoslavia back to the Vidovdan constitution of 1921,“The roots of the Yugoslav collapse n
Casting a retrospective glance back to 1983, when the first warnings
about Yugoslavia’s drift towards civil war were sounded,”” we may take
up our last task and contrast the danger signs highlighted by vwriters
before 1986 and those identified by writers approaching the subject after
the fact. First, it is clear that, already in the early 1980s, at least some
‘Western scholars were well aware of some of the challenges facing the
country. In a collection published in 1985, for example, Dennison
Rusinow noted that ‘nationalist prejudices and suspicions and the
number of “nationalist excesses” are at their highest levels since 1970-
19717," while Wolfgang Hépken drew attention to the fact that the
League of Communists of Yugoslavia was, by 1984, in an advanced
state of crisis.” In the same publication, George Schépflin outlined
the manifestations of the political decay in Yugoslavia end other one~
party systems in East-Central Europe, at a time when many area spe~
cialists were still in denial.©° Other scholars at the time noted the im-
portance of economic deterioration, Similarly, the role played by Serbian
hegemonism (noted most especially by Magaé and Plestina) in provok-
ing tensions was understood already in the early 1980s, when it existed
in a much milder strain than it would later.
(On the other hand, even after the role played by Croatian intellectuals
in the ‘Croatian Spring’ of 1967~71, Wester analysts could not antic
pate the role to be played by Serbian intellectuals in 1986, in drawing up
the famous nationalist memorandum.*' Nor, a far as [am aware, were
any outside observers able to anticipate the abrupt reversal of policy and
programme executed by MiloSevié within Serbia beginning in late 1987;
many observers had noted the selfpitying, aggressive character of the
memorandum, of course, but most, if not all, were as surprised when
Milosevié carried out an internal party coup against his best friend,
Stambolié, as was Stambolié himself. Moreover, as far as I am aware,
even the most pessimistic writers in the West tended to view the 1974
constitutional system as having merits as well as debilites, while out-
and-out optimists saw in it no less than ‘the legitimation of « revolution’.
Other factors cited by scholars prior to 1986 which have not been
stressed in this discussion include the collapse of public confidence in
the existing institutions, a trend graphically recorded in opinion polls
in the early 1980s, the party’s repression of autonomists in Kosovo,
Croatia, and Slovenia, thereby alienating important sectors of the local
publics and laying the basis for eventual separatism, and the false
solution of trying to substitute regional pluralism for political pluralism,
a solution which could have succeeded only if political consciousness
could have been contained and limited,72 Thinking about Yugostavia
1 On this point, see Svein Monnesland, For Fugoslavia og etter, th edn (Oslo:
Sypress Forlag, 1999), pp. 243-5.
2 Dijone Pleitina, Regional Development in Communist Yugoslavia: Success
Failure, and Consequences (Bouldes, CO: Westview Press, 1992), p. 133.
3 Susan L, Woodward, Sociale Unemployment: he Political Economy of
Yugoslavia, 1945-1990 (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1995),
pp. 339, 352-64
4 Thid., pp. 352, 355, 359, 361.
5 Ibid, p. x.
6 Ibid, p. 347.
‘7 This summarizes her arguments on pages 346 and 370.
8 Ibid, p. 259.
9 Ibid, p. 33.
10 Ibid, p. 240. See also pp. 201-2, 225.
11 Branka Maga’, The Destruction of Yugoslavia: Tracking Yiugoslavia’s Break-up
1980-1992 (London: Verso, 1992), p. 3
12 Ibid, p. 80,
13 bid, p. 117.
14 fi. p. 82.
15 Vjekoslay Perica, Balhan Idols: Religion and Nationalism in Yugosiaw States
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002), p. 135,
16 Jug Grize!, in Sloboda Dalmacija Split), 27 April 1985, as quoted in Perica,
Balkan Idol, p. 135.
17 Perica, Balkan Idols, pp. 136-7.
18 fbid., pp. 139-40.
19 Bbid,, p. 144.
20 Ibid, p. 152.
21 Tid, p. 166.
22 Thi pp. 239, 243.
23 Lenard J. Cohen, Broken Bonds: Yugoslavia’s Disintegration and Balkan
Polities in Transition, 2nd ein (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1995), p. 21
24 Ibid, p. 246.
25 Tid.
26 Branimir Anzolovié, Heavenly Serbia: From Myth to Genocide (London and
‘Washington Square, NY: C. Hurst and Co, and New York University Press,
1999), p. 9.
27 Quoted sbid., pp. 51-2.
28 Quoted ibid. p. 52.
29 Ibid.
30 Quoted ibid, pp. 193-4,
31 Bid, p. 139.
32 Andrew Baruch Wachtel, Mahing a Nation, Breaking a Nation: Literature and
Culewral Polis in Yugeslavia (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press,
1998), p. 174,‘The roots of the Yugoslav collapse B
33 Ibid, p. 184,
34 Ibid, pp. 213, 214
35 Ibid, p. 217.
36 Ibid, p. 218.
31 Bid p. 220.
38 John B. Allcock, Hxplaiuine Yugoslavia (London and New York: C. Hurst &
Co. and Columbia University Press, 2000), p. 418,
39 Ibid, pp. 418-23, 428-9,
40 Tbid p. 11.
4 Ibid. p. 17. For the example of the participation of Croatia and Serbia in
wider Buropean philosophical trends in the nineteenth and early sentieth,
centuries, see Helmut Dahm and Assen Ignatow (eds), Geschichve der pilo-
sophischen Tradivionen Ostewropas (Datmsiadt: Wissenschatliche Buchge-
sellschaft, 1996),
42 Allcock, Explaining Vugosavia, p. 24
43 Ibid, p. 243.
44 Ibid, p. 352.
45 Ibid, p. 390.
46 Ibid, pp. 395-6,
47 Ibid, pp. 434-6.
48 Ibid, p. 440.
49 Christopher Bennett, Yugoslavia’: Bloody Collapse: Causes, Couse and
Consequences (Washington Squate, NY: New York University Press, 1995), p.7.
50 Ibid, pp. 10, 13-14, 153, 236.
51 Ibid. pp. 128, 129,
52 Ibid, p. 242.
53 See Sabrina P. Ramet, Social Currents in Eastem Burope: The Sounees and
Consequences of the Great Transformation, 2nd edn (Durham, NC: Doke
‘University Press, 1995), chap. 8 (Serb-Albanian Tensions in Kosovo’)
54 Ibid. pp. 32-403 and Sabrina P. Ramet, Balken Bebel: The Ditintgration of
Yugoslavia fiom the Death of Tito to the Fal of Milavvié, Ath edn (Boulder, CO:
Westview Press, 2002), pp. 50-1
55 Ramet, Balkan Babel, dth edn, pp. 4, 49-50, 375-7.
56 Ibid, pp. 35-41, 81-126, 1536,
517 Ibid, chaps. 1-3,
58 Ibid, p. 50.
59 Kor Zuitikarpatie’s story, see Adil Zulfikerpaiié, in dislogue with Milovan
Djilas and NadeZda Gaée, The Bosniak (London: C. Hurst & Co's 1998).
60 Ramet, Balkan Babel, th edn, p. 153,
61 This sentence also summarizes the interpretation advanced in my Balkan
Babel
62 Neven Andjelicy Bosnia-Herzegouina: The Knd of a Legacy (London and
Portland, OR: Frank Cass, 2003), pp. 56-64.
63 Bid, p. 72
64 Tbid., pp. 21-2, my emphasis.
65 Gordana Knetevie, ‘Civil War and Civil Disagreement’, Bosnia Repors new
series, 39-40 (April-July 2004), p. 13.