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Yugoslavia R.I.P.
Within days of Montenegro's successful referendum on independence
on Sunday, Prime Minister Milo Djukanovic will be arriving in Brussels
to open talks on joining the European Union, while other Montenegrin
diplomats arrive in New York to seek admission as the 193rd member
of the United Nations. A country that was extinguished 88 years
ago has risen from its grave -- and the mini-empire that absorbed
it has finally come to an end.
With Montenegro's independence, the last vestige of former
Yugoslavia is gone: Serbia has lost its seacoast and reverted to
its land-locked borders of 1918. Yugoslavia was a project that was
bloody at the start, bloody again in the middle, and exceedingly
bloody in its last years in the 1990s. The lesson we should draw
from this is: no more shotgun marriages in the name of tidiness.
As the Ottoman (Turkish) empire retreated down the western
side of the Balkans during the 19th century, half a dozen Christian
ethnic groups who spoke closely related South Slavic dialects were
candidates for nationhood, but not all of them got it. The Slovenes
and Croatians became part of the Austro-Hungarian empire, which
eventually absorbed the Bosnians as well. Serbia and Montenegro
became independent states in 1878, but after the Balkan wars of
1911-1912 the Macedonians were just handed over to Serbia (which
almost doubled in size).
As early as the mid-19th century, many Serbs believed that
all the western Balkans should eventually be ruled from Belgrade.
In his famous Nacertanije (Programme) of 1844, Ilija Garasanin,
Minister of Internal Affairs in a Serbia that was still technically
under Ottoman rule, outlined the stages by which Serbian control
might gradually extend to include the whole of the region, and generations
of Serbs were taught to dream of that Greater Serbia. Their opportunity
came with the First World War, which destroyed the Austro-Hungarian
empire and left the Slovenes, Croatians and Bosnians free to seek
their own destinies.
Where they all ended up, however, was in the new, Serb-dominated
state of Yugoslavia. The victorious great powers let the Serbs have
their way in part because they owed Serbia a favour (since it had
fought on the winning side), but mainly because it was a tidier
arrangement than cluttering up the western Balkans with half a dozen
small countries. They even bundled long-independent Montenegro into
the new Yugoslavia (although some Montenegrins immediately revolted
against rule from Belgrade).
The Kingdom of Yugoslavia was dominated by Serbia from the
start: all of its prime ministers were Serbs, as were 161 of its
165 generals. So it fell apart at once when Nazi Germany invaded
in 1941, and a Croatian fascist regime set out to take revenge on
Serbians and assert its own independence: over half a million people
died in Croatian concentration camps. Then Communist guerillas took
power after the Second World War and reestablished Serbian domination,
killing all those (mostly Croatians and Bosnians) who had collaborated
with the Germans.
Communist Yugoslavia lasted almost half a century, but when
it started to break apart in 1992 the Serbs would not let go, and
it took four wars and a quarter-million deaths before Serbia finally
accepted the loss of its South Slav empire. Even after that the
European Union tried to hold Serbia and Montenegro together, bullying
the Montenegrins into accepting a lopsided two-country federation
(Serbia has twelve times as many people as Montenegro) in 2003.
But the Montenegrins insisted on the right to a referendum on breaking
up that union after three years, and last Sunday they exercised
that right.
Kosovo will almost certainly also get official independence
from Serbia by the end of this year, and there will then be seven
countries where fifteen years ago there was only one. It is very
untidy, and you could certainly accuse some of these countries of
being driven by the "narcissism of small differences." But THEY
cared about these small differences, and bad things happened when
they were ignored. Serbia wanted to rule the western Balkans, but
it never conquered the other ethnic groups. They were pushed into
Serbia's arms by great powers that wanted to keep things simple,
and the result was almost a century of resentment and intermittent
murder. Now it's over, and they have to learn to live alongside
one another again. It will be much easier if they have some larger
context in which to submerge their differences, and there is one
at hand: the European Union.
Slovenia is already an EU member, and Croatia and Macedonia
are candidates. Montenegro is applying now, and Serbia would open
talks tomorrow if it could get around the EU's insistence that it
hand over the worst Serbian war criminals first. Bosnia will take
much longer, as it remains deeply divided between its Serbian, Croatian
and Muslim "Bosniak" communities, and Kosovo isn't even officially
a country yet.
Will the EU actually take them all in? For the sake of peace in
Europe, it should, but it will be up to 27 governments when Romania
and Bulgaria join next year. Adding the western Balkans would increase
the number of EU member states with full voting rights by another
20 percent while increasing the total population by only 5 percent.
It's a lot to ask, and we won't know the answer for years.*
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