November 6, 2000
Yugoslavia has just weathered some of the most shattering times of its entire existence, not least being an election which had more of an international spotlight on it, relatively speaking, than the election currently brewing in the USA. One would think that the two were vastly different - the one was an election held in a war-ravaged European "backwater", whose results could not and probably should not have possibly mattered to anyone outside the country itself; the other, a battle for the position of what has become known as the leader of the "free world", a man in whose hands would rest the life and death of nations. And yet, the results of the Yugoslav election were so important that the USA poured in the equivalent of what (if the same amount of money had been channelled proportionately into the US elections) billions of dollars to prop up the Yugoslav opposition.
The Opposition won. Sort of. The election was watched by people who had warships on full alert doing "exercises" a missile's throw from the heart of the country where it was held, and commented on in no uncertain terms - one of the candidates, it was overtly stated, "would not be allowed to claim victory". The end result showed that neither of the two main candidates had polled enough votes to claim an outright victory, but that a "runoff election" would be required according to the law of the country. This was immediately dismissed as "cooking the books", and the candidate who everyone wanted to win refused to take part in this. Revolution, in a way, followed, as people took to the streets - people who had had enough. The revolution, one burned parliament building later, seemed to achieve its objective. The candidate everyone loves to hate, the dreaded Milosevic, resigned. Vojislav Kostunica stepped up to grasp the reins of power. It was a hot seat he sat on. Let him bow down to the people whom he had lambasted in his election speeches, NATO and its cohorts, and his own electorate would turn on him. Let him not, and sooner or later he would be branded the new Milosevic. I reserved judgment, for the interim; I held off from the unseemly gloating of certain Americans to whom the results of the Yugoslav election could not possibly have mattered, and from the worried mutterings of those who saw danger in the fact that Kostunica's right hand man, Zoran Djindjic, was a known West-phile who could not be trusted with the fate of the nation. Two things then happened. One was an address by Dr Kostunica on the future of the Serbs and of Serbia. Amongst other things, he said: The question of what the Serbs have to agree to in their future relations with the Western world, and what they must never accept, is central to our future. In seeking an answer we have to be free from self-delusion of any kind. The issue "what the Serbs have to accept and what they must not" begs two further questions. The first concerns the definition of the statehood of Serbia, externally and internally. The second concerns the terms for the lifting of all sanctions.I sat up and took notice. This was rational, strong, it took a stand and drew a line in the sand. Maybe the guy had what it took after all. And then he went off to the EU summit, and behaved rather like a once-favourite spaniel, long in the doghouse, who has finally been allowed to climb back on the sofa once again. Not once in the gathering did Kostunica reiterate what he had said above, to the people who should have been hearing it. He demanded no apologies, which should certainly have been due. And what emerged from the round of international glad-handing was an intimation that Yugoslavia would rejoin the IMF (even after all the evidence of the havoc that such organisations can wreak on "clients" weak enough not to be able to dictate terms). And then Kostunica declared that "Yugoslavia" was dead, or should be. There are many who reacted to this badly; the country in which they had been born had just been obliterated. Worse, the abandonment of "Yugoslavia" implies the abandonment of the federation of Yugoslavia. Wither Montenegro? Whither Vojvodina? As far as the latter is concerned, the US is already passing laws expressing solidarity with the put-upon Hungarian minority in Vojvodina - and the fact that there have been no "atrocities" there is irrelevant, some will be manufactured before too long if they are required. Kosovo is agitating for independence. For all his rhetoric, what has Kostunica actually done�.? And then, on October 25, it became obvious why Kostunica had to have been elected to the Yugoslav presidency. The headline of an article from the UK's daily, Independent, screams: LEADER OWNS UP TO KOSOVO GENOCIDE. In it, journalist Stephen Castle goes on to say: Vojislav Kostunica, the new President of Yugoslavia, has admitted for the first time that genocide took place in Kosovo, saying he is ready to accept his share of responsibility for the crimes of Slobodan Milosevic on behalf of the Serbs.The Yugoslav election was in late September - the results were first announced on September 28. Less than a month later the West had from Kostunica what it could not get from Milosevic and from Serbia even after 78 days of pulverizing bombardment: vindication. They can point to this announcement (isn't it significant that it was made during an interview with an AMERICAN news network) and say with comfortable self-importance, "You see? We were right." This while Government committees lambaste Blair's Government for their role in Kosovo; in the glaring absence of any corroborating evidence; on the heels of mounting evidence, in fact, that the "intervention" in Kosovo was an expensive and embarrassing mistake. You know your rhetoric, Dr Kostunica. But in the wake of this statement you have just pulled the rug from under the feet of your friends, and damned your people to everlasting damnation in a special circle of hell reserved for the evil and murdering Serbs. In your speech you berate Richard Holbrook for referring to the Serbs, in a public interview, as "murdering assholes". Your "apology" may not have done so quite as blatantly, but you have just done the same. Aleksandra Priestfield is a writer and an editor. She contributes her regular columns to Swans Please, DO NOT steal, scavenge or repost this work without the expressed written authorization of Swans, which will seek permission from the author. This material is copyrighted, © Aleksandra Priestfield 2000. All rights reserved. |
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Related links
From the Sublime to the Ridiculous:
Yugoslavia and the United Nations by Aleksandra Priestfield
The Fracture Zone: A Return to the Balkans
by Simon Winchester Book Review by Aleksandra Priestfield
The Thousand and Second Night:
The Price of Truth by Aleksandra Priestfield
Peddling Pseudohistory: The Media and Literature by Aleksandra Priestfield
Rewriting History by Aleksandra Priestfield
Animals at War by Aleksandra Priestfield
Resources on the War in Yugoslavia and its Aftermath
Articles Published on Swans Regarding the War in Yugoslavia and its Aftermath