Tony Borden on Fri, 21 May 1999 21:57:33 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> IWPR's Balkan Crisis Report, No. 36, 21 May 1999 |
[orig not to nettime] WELCOME TO IWPR'S BALKAN CRISIS REPORT, NO. 36, 21 May 1999 TOWARDS A GLORIOUS DEFEAT. Belgrade is putting out signals that it is open to a settlement. The key question is how it will carry along its own public opinion--and crush dissent afterwards. NATIONAL UNITY, UTTER EXHAUSTION. Serbia is destroyed and its people are on the edge. By day Belgrade retains a semblance of normalcy. But at dusk the air-raid sirens wail, and reality sets in. A senior Belgrade columnist reports. ***************************************************** IWPR's network of leading correspondents in the region provide inside analysis of the events and issues driving crises in the Balkans. The reports are available on the Web in English, Serbian and Albanian; English-language reports are also available via e-mail. For syndication information, contact Anthony Borden <tony@iwpr.net>. The project is supported by the European Commission, Swedish International Development and Cooperation Agency, MacArthur Foundation, Press Now and the Carnegie Corporation. IWPR also acknowledges general support from the Ford Foundation. For further details on this project and other information services and media programmes, visit IWPR's Website: <www.iwpr.net>. Editor: Anthony Borden. Assistant Editing: Christopher Bennett, Alan Davis. Internet Editor: Rohan Jayasekera. Translation by Alban Mitrushi. "Balkan Crisis Report" is produced under IWPR's Balkan Crisis Information Project. The project seeks to contribute to regional and international understanding of the regional crisis and prospects for resolution. The Institute for War & Peace Reporting (IWPR) is a London-based independent non-profit organisation supporting regional media and democratic change. Lancaster House, 33 Islington High Street, London N1 9LH, United Kingdom Tel: (44 171) 713 7130; Fax: (44 171) 713 7140 E-mail:info@iwpr.org.uk; Web: www.iwpr.net The opinions expressed in "Balkan Crisis Report" are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of the publication or of IWPR. Copyright (C) 1999 The Institute for War & Peace Reporting <www.iwpr.net>. ***************************************************** TOWARDS A GLORIOUS DEFEAT Belgrade is putting out signals that it is open to a settlement. The key question is how it will carry along its own public opinion--and crush dissent afterwards. By an IWPR correspondent in Belgrade The Yugoslav public is being groomed to begin celebrating a glorious defeat. With the country devastated from more than eight weeks of NATO bombing, and dissent growing in the Serbian heartland, Belgrade has decided that it must find a way to bring the campaign to a halt, sources close to the regime say. Although willing in principle to accept all NATO's demands, it wants a face-saving formula and a free hand outside Kosovo in the rest of the Yugoslav federation. To prepare the ground for an agreement, Yugoslav military and police have already been tasked with spreading the word among the people that Yugoslavia will soon be victorious in the "unjust struggle against NATO," sources say. With opposition parties and independent media muzzled, and information about the real extent of the damage inflicted by the air strikes is unavailable, analysts here believe that public opinion can be made to swing rapidly behind any agreement Belgrade signs up to. The biggest challenge is from the street protests that began this week in the southern Serbian towns of Krusevac, Aleksandrovac and elsewhere. Between 2,000 and 3,000 soldiers appear to have tried to escape military service in Kosovo. In areas where many men have been mobilised, friends and family are venting their frustration at the war in isolated but significant outbreaks of dissent. The returning soldiers, young, exhausted and frightened, say they are not willing to die for Kosovo when they believe Serbia is likely to give it up anyway. They report that, at moments, command and communications within the province have become chaotic, leaving them dangerously vulnerable to NATO attacks. Yet military authorities have taken steps to address the soldiers' concerns, while also making clear that most of the troops are staying in Kosovo. Meantime, in what could be a harbinger of things to come, Serbia's Deputy Prime Minister Vojislav Seselj has accused the dissenters of being traitors instigated by NATO. Indeed, many fear that the regime will use an end to hostilities to ratchet up domestic oppression across the rest of the country. According to the political rumour mill, which is now in overdrive, it appears likely that Belgrade intends to maintain the state of war many months after air strikes have ended in order to shore up its ever-diminishing power base in the unruly second republic of Montenegro, in the province of Vojvodina and in Serbia proper. In the event of a peace agreement which leaves Milosevic in power, Serbia is unlikely to benefit from international aid for post-war reconstruction. As a result, an already destitute population will become increasingly desperate. Among the more pessimistic prognoses for the country's future are fears that lists have already been drawn up of individuals earmarked for liquidation. In addition to political opponents, these lists are said to include people who have failed to show sufficiently loyalty by, for example, failing to respond to the draft, boycotting the elections, leaving the country, or even working for foreign companies and media. The difficulty for Belgrade is not to give the impression to its own public that it is caving in to NATO's demands, but to be seen to be reaching a mutually acceptable agreement. The magic word which state-controlled media have begun to use is "compromise". Belgrade has said that it is willing to reach an agreement based on the statement a few weeks ago by the G8 economic powers, which was effectively a restatement of NATO's five tough demands for an end to the bombing campaign, but with some room to manoeuvre. Belgrade will only settle if it can portray a deal as a mutually acceptable agreement between the alliance and the Yugoslav authorities. For Belgrade, the key area for fudge is in replacing the demand for a NATO-led peacekeeping force in Kosovo with a UN-led force, including a strong Russian contingent--a shift which the G8 statement seems to allow. "The credibility of both sides would thus be preserved, but also the door would be open for a solution to everybody's satisfaction", says a senior Serbian official who wished not to be named. He also claims that Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic is willing to co-operate on condition that the West drop its rhetoric about war crimes. Yugoslav emissaries have been trying to inject this point into the diplomatic talks via their Russian interlocutors. In fact, Belgrade appears more concerned by events in Montenegro than by the NATO air campaign. Montenegrin President Milo Djukanovic is increasingly pursuing an independent foreign policy and has been invited to participate in a German-sponsored conference of Balkan states scheduled for late May, from which Serbia has been excluded. He even paid a surprise visit to Bonn last week to meet up with German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder with Zoran Djindjic, leader of the opposition Democratic Party and former mayor of Belgrade, in the Montenegrin delegation. Djindjic has now spent more than a month in Montenegro, where it is believed he is attempting to build and co-ordinate a new opposition block with a view to the post-war settlement. Regardless of their many differences and personal rivalries, Serbia's opposition political parties recognise the inevitability of an armed international presence in Kosovo, but wish to find a formula by which Kosovo remains part of Serbia. They also seek a settlement which protects them and others with alternative points of view from reprisals. Opposition parties are acutely aware of the toll that the NATO air strikes have taken on efforts to democratise Serbian society during the past decade. As much as they wish to see a halt to the bombing campaign, they fear that an agreement on Milosevic's terms will simply herald another clamp-down. The author is an independent journalist in Belgrade and a correspondent for IWPR, whose name has been withheld. NATIONAL UNITY, UTTER EXHAUSTION Serbia is destroyed and its people are on the edge. By day Belgrade retains a semblance of normalcy. But at dusk the air-raid sirens wail, and reality sets in. By a senior columnist in Belgrade Suddenly the story is of discontent, with rallies in several cities in Serbia and increasing strains with Montenegro. But the reality is that people in Yugoslavia have been unhappy for a long time. After only two months of bombing, memories of what used to be called "normal life" have long faded. People are edgy and tense, and no one is an optimist. There is fear, the sharp mannerisms of the sleepless, the struggle against depression, a daily fight for survival. After more than 200 air raid sirens, even those with the strongest nerves in Serbia are exhausted. By day, Belgrade still looks like a metropolis at peace. Traffic, though greatly reduced, continues to flow somehow (car owners are entitled to 20 litres of petrol a month). Cafes are full of people. Shops are well supplied with domestic and foreign goods, though store owners report that the sale of goods from NATO countries has fallen sharply. Even the cinemas are open, from ten in the morning to six in the evening. Then, with dusk, reality sets in: emptiness, darkness and fear. There are no lights in the streets, restaurants and cafes are closed, buses pass only once an hour. And people withdraw to their homes, waiting for the air-raid siren, usually around 9:10 PM. In an instant, it is clear once again that Serbia is at war. The bombing starts, terrible tectonic explosions shake buildings and windows, thick black smoke billows from various parts of the city, fires and reflections light the horizon. The advance clips for George Lucas's latest Star Wars feature film seem like nothing compared with the battles raging in the sky over Belgrade every evening: anti-aircraft tracers streak overhead, the sound of missiles rips through the night, and deafening explosions shatter any temporary, unreal night peace. Indeed, when it comes, many hours after midnight and enveloped in total darkness, silence itself seems ominous. And in bleary-eyed morning, the reminders are everywhere: Kneza Milosa street, once one of the most beautiful streets in Belgrade and home to the US, Canadian, German, Polish, Romanian and Croatian embassies, looks like Dresden in 1944. The torn and crumbled buildings of the chiefs-of-staff, the Serbian and federal Ministries of Interior, the government of Serbia--all piles of concrete and steel, like Cubist motifs of an early Picasso. The scene is similar in other parts of the city too: the Dragisa Misovic hospital destroyed, petrol reservoirs burnt, petrol stations hit, several civilian quarters razed, most army barracks simply gone. Bricks, shattered glass, ruined apartment blocks, curtains waving in the wind--it is a broad tableau of the proportions of destruction, and beyond reconstruction. The truth is that all aspects of life have been effected. Primary and secondary schools have been closed since the first day of the bombing, and like a frozen clock, students will finish with the grades they had marked up on March 24. Some of the university faculties are working; some are completely closed. The Education Ministry has promised that there will be no entrance exams for university students and secondary school pupils: all those who wish to may enroll--once the war is over. Students from outside the capital cannot attend class, because most of the bridges and many of the roads have been destroyed or badly damaged. Trips that used to take two hours now follow intricate detours and may last 10 hours. From Belgrade, it is nearly impossible to get to Montenegro, and much easier to telephone Boston than Pristina. The overriding feeling is one of uselessness. It is almost impossible to work, much less get paid for it. According to official figures, more than half a million people have had to stop working--unofficially, the number may be twice as high. But few people actually go to a job. The "economy" effectively no longer exists. People are without money, and a monthly salary of 50 German Marks seems a dream. Pensions are being paid with a four month delay, and many people get by bartering goods, such as cooking oil, rice, sugar, bananas and macaroni--all valued items in short supply. The price of cigarettes has doubled: a carton that used to sell for 10 German Marks before the war is now being offered for 20. With little to do, anxieties fester. NATO attacks on civilian targets have caused many people to spend every night in air-raid shelters. No one has any idea what will happen when all of this is over. Meantime, the regime propaganda remains as fierce as ever--referring to NATO as drugged-out, canine, murderous criminals, fascists and Nazis. The aim is to maintain the illusion that for Kosovo it is worth sacrificing everything: the factories, the bridges, the roads, the people. Such feelings of paranoia leave people immune to news of peace initiatives and other proposals--nothing seems possible anymore. This suicidal policy has failed to generate a popular backlash, because there is no chance for one. The few oases of freedom and pluralism-- Radio B-92, the Soros Foundation, a handful of magazines and other publications--disappeared with NATO's first bombs. Whatever is published now is subject to heavy daily censorship. There is no reporting on events within Kosovo. Our news simply repeats over and over again that we are winning a moral victory, that NATO is defeated, that we refuse to accept foreign troops, and that Kosovo will forever stay in Serbia. "The media are on the patriotic course," Vojislav Seselj, Serbia's deputy prime minister, boasts. Most opposition parties have fallen into line behind the regime, or been silenced. War laws have been passed revoking the right to a fair trial and allowing discretionary detentions, the seizing of apartments and other property, even the reading of private mail. Zoran Djindjic, leader of the Democratic Party, has been attacked by the regime media as a "traitor". "Spontaneous" demonstrations against him and his colleagues have been staged in front of his party's headquarters in Belgrade, and he has been directly threatened. Stories in the press have predicted that he will end up on the "garbage dump of history"--a Serbian euphemism for the morgue. No wonder Seselj can also proclaim: "For the first time, we have national unity." The regime propaganda is based on a very simple premise: whoever is against Slobodan Milosevic is a supporter of NATO and the enemies of Serbia. In this way, dissent becomes morally impossible: one is either for or against. Again, Seselj has led the charge against the families and young soldiers in Krusevac and other towns who have protested over the continuation of the fighting in Kosovo. As a result, even if some kind of deal over Kosovo is made, Milosevic has achieved his main aim: unlimited power. So what if soldiers have been deserting, that there are many casualties, and that NATO attacks in Kosovo are unrelenting and taking a heavy toll. Radio Television Serbia keeps telling us that we are defending the planet from the New World Order and that Serbia is winning. The author is a senior columnist and editor in Belgrade, whose name has been withheld. IWPR'S BALKAN CRISIS REPORT, NO. 36 -- ### -- --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl