
INTRODUCTION
In "A War Nearby", Lope Vargas examines the history of the Balkan region over the past century with an emphasis on the circumstances that led to the horrors of the past dozen years. One might wonder what interest these specific realities might have for us. In fact, these events graphically portray methods that the state uses to recuperate social struggle. As Vargas points out, the attempt of the Yugoslav federation to impose austerity measures demanded by the IMF in the mid-1980's led to significant resistance among the exploited. Within the dominant ideology of the federation, ethnic nationalism based in the various republics that made up the federation played a significant role in the operations of power. While the federation was not capable of saving itself, the leaders of the various republics played on the fears roused by the collapse of a world, offering this ethnic nationalism as a stable point in a reeling world-the energy that might have gone into class struggle was twisted to the ends of the politicians of the competing republics with devastating results for the people of the region. This has given Western powers the opportunity to intervene in the name of humanity and impose their interests-and a military occupation that shows no signs of disappearing.
I have appended three other pieces to the
pamphlet to provide more information and a bit of an update and a list of
recommended readings to further an anarchist analysis of the situation.
by
Lope Vargas
In the years that followed the decomposition
of the bureaucratic regimes of eastern Europe, several "eulogizers"
of our civilization coined the description of the latest collective illusion to
mark Western life. That description-and who remembers anything else?-was the end of History. Not just the victory
of liberal capitalism over state capitalism, wrongly called communism, but the
idea that a world definitively pacified, a world forgetful of past horrors,
wars and massacres, would be born from this victory. A happy world, perhaps
just a bit boring, the planetary advent of civilization after centuries of
blood. This idea has experienced alternating destinies for some time, to the
detriment of those few who still see the horror precisely in this civilization
and those many who have seen the daily horror of civilization tattoo itself
forever on their skin. While the more ingenuous among the parties interested in
the maintenance of the world order slept tranquilly on the end of History, a not very small part of those who wanted to put
history back in motion slept just as placidly. Most untimely descendents of
positivism, the latter were still convinced at bottom of the inevitability of
civil progress. One still had to struggle hard to change the world, but the
opponent wasn't as bloodthirsty as it once was: several insurmountable limits
of correctness, if not humanity, had been set. And the worst beasts of the
past, those hidden in the corner of the consciousness of every one of us-and
not only in that of our adversary-promised not to reappear anymore. The
exploiters, civil; the exploited, irreproachable. But a single word was
sufficient to mark the funeral rites of these two brief modern illusions. Try
saying "Bosnia", and everything that one believed to be buried
forever reappears beyond the hedge of our gardens. Bosnia is the measure of how
much blood capital demands, while it tells us again what we did not want to
know: whether History advances or has stopped, we still live on the edge of
horror.
HOW FAR IS YUGOSLAVIA?
As was predictable, after
Bosnia, Kosovo followed, and maybe after Kosovo, Macedonia will follow, in a
tight sequence of massacres that will make us wring our hands. From Sarajevo
on, those who have been responsible for the Yugoslav carnage have sought to
hide their role in the events; time after time, they have unloaded all guilt on
the bloodthirsty Balkan commanders, and now they have successfully defined the
NATO bombing as humanitarian intervention. On the other hand however, everyone
has sought a safe port against the storm of their conscience, and all this
shouting of "No to the war!" until one is exhausted has only served
to hide powerlessness in the face of such frighteningly close and
incomprehensible events. In search of any certainty, so many have given heed to
the orphans of Viet Nam and Nicaragua, that they came to depict the Serbs as a
small nation under attack, determined to defend what is left of socialism with
gun in hand. From this one gets the unpresentable anti-imperialist slogans on
the walls and the posthumous elegies to Tito. Others have invoked diplomacy and
politics, that is to say, war by other means. Still others have thought to
escape from the horrors by taking refuge in the churches to pray to the god in
whose name the worst misdeeds have been committed. These positions are not only
the fruit of the fertile encounter between stalinism and christianity; they are
ways like others of keeping Yugoslavia distant from our homes.
From the moment it began, our paid
interpreters and commentators on international politics have been revealing the
particular reasons for the latest Yugoslav war and for the western
intervention. The elements of the conflict-geopolitical and economic-have been
patiently enumerated. No one has been forced by counter information to uncover
hidden and decisive truth. Everything is said about this war except the
essential, that which no further list of data can succeed in telling us. If we
want to try to achieve an understanding of the gangrene spreading throughout
the Balkans in recent years, we should not lose sight of the social question:
the history, on the one hand, of those who try to accumulate wealth and power
without many scruples and, on the other hand, those who suffer conditions of
life that are imposed on them and at times try to rebel. The recent history of
Yugoslavia creates a new awareness. The clash that is born from social division
does not necessarily lead toward new and free worlds. Neither through the
superimposition of small changes which mold reality little by little in the
image of . our dreams nor through the accumulation of the conditions that will
determine a definitive future explosion of the reality that displeases us. The
unfolding of this clash can only provoke those social breaks in which everything
finally becomes possible. And this everything includes freedom, but also the
worst of oppressions. It is only in light of the social question that the
ensemble of data that they have spewed in our face about the current Balkan war
can assume a certain, frightening, coherence. If there is social division here
as there is in Yugoslavia; if the specific forms that the social struggle has
assumed in Yugoslavia was determined largely by necessities ripened in our West
then we are already at war... yes, we, as well. And if this is not enough for
us, we would do well to be aware that nothing guarantees that the mechanisms
that drive so many Yugoslav exploited to participate in this horror could not
appear tomorrow precisely in the heart of our civilized world. Now, Yugoslavia
is not so far away.
THE BALKANS ON
A CARD
Heading in the opposite
direction to that taken by Theseus, in the end, we follow the thread of social
struggle to the center of the Balkan labyrinth in order to get to know the
Minotaur. Outside the labyrinth is the Europe of the beginning of the 20th
century, the totality of interests that outlined the present border of Albania
in 1912 and led to the organization of the territorial power that would take
the name of Yugoslavia around the Serbian state at the end of the first world
war.
The Balkans never underwent
that long historical process characteristic of western Europe through which the
borders of different kingdoms came to approximately coincide with the idea of
as many nations. The very idea of a national state only appeared a short time
ago in this peninsula, which had been subdivided between the Hapsburg and
Ottoman empires until recently. Thus, the territory of the old Yugoslav
federation was actually the area in the Balkans where several different
populations mingled in the era of the great empires. Macedonians, Bulgarians,
Albanians, Croatians, Serbians and others populated this region without giving
it any national homogeneity. Just as the Italian Renaissance carried in itself
the prospects for the social changes that rendered it possible, so the struggle
of the Balkan populations against Austrian and Turkish domination had social
characteristics. But not solely. If in western Europe the concept of the nation
now rests on the continuity of a power over a given territory, in the Balkans
the mythological element prevails: the darkness of foreign domination and
suffering followed a supposed "age of gold", giving a mystical,
almost messianic, significance to the redemption of each ethnicity. Every
single national mythology has survived the collapse of two great Empires, being
exalted or repressed from time to time according to the interests of different
western powers that have sought to control the region.
The Albanian national
identity experienced a formidable thrust beginning in 1910-when the Italian and
Austrian chancelleries began to construct an Albanian state under their
protection in order guarantee their hegemony over the Adriatic. It reached its
peak with the annexation of Kosovo, Cianaria and some Bulgarian territories-the
great Albania-under the guidance of the fascists of Galeazzo Ciano.
The Yugoslav political borders, like those of
much of eastern Europe, have the particularity of not having been outlined as a
consequence of conflicts between the different states that compose the Balkans,
but rather of being imposed according to the power relations between the
victors of the two world wars. Thus, these borders express the successive
balances between various powers and are meaningful only as long as these
balances last. The foundation of Yugoslavia does not spring directly from the
demands made along these lines by different minority strata of the Slav
populations of the Balkans-demands that were expressed in the efforts to give
body to a Serbo-Croatian literary language among other things. Above all, it
responds to two vital needs of the victors of the first world war. First, that
of creating a sufficiently solid state around the Serb realm by adding the Slav
regions confiscated from the Austro-Hungarian Empire to it in order to make it
into a barrier to German expansionism toward the Mediterranean. And, equally
important, that of insuring an allied military presence in the heart of the
Balkans that would be in a position to give some stability to the entire
region. These same strategic options were retained at the end of the second
world war with the supplementary guarantee of a prospect for internal stability
that was much more convincing than in the past, thanks to the federal organization
of the new state. Besides, for the first time in the brief history of
Yugoslavia, a real and powerful popular outburst identified its interests with
those of the state. To the nationalist mythologies already present in the area,
an artificial one was added-that of Yugoslavia. If the previous mythologies
brought their force to past struggles against the Turks and the Austrians, this
new one caused the populations to participate together in a single national
consciousness through the founding myth of resistance to fascism and the war of
liberation from the Germans, creating a patriotic ideology that had not existed
until that time.
IMAGES FROM THE LABYRINTH
Here we are then before the
entrance of a labyrinth in which the paths of the social clash and those of
nationalism run parallel. Hundreds of years of suffering for the exploited of
the Balkans are re-elaborated in favor of the ruling classes who present
themselves as heirs of the heroes of past struggles, under the watchful eyes of
the western chancelleries and the Comintern. Nationalist discourse is used
permanently in Albania like it is in Yugoslavia in order to maintain a minimal
level of social cohesion, and as soon as any turbulence appears on the horizon,
the ethnic myths are expanded to the point of exasperation. The regime of Enver
Hoxha, more backward and less flexible than that of Tito, would come to build a
good part of its stability on a permanent anti-Yugoslav and anti-Greek
mobilization. Hoxha re-elaborates and updates the traditional Albanian codes;
he presents himself as continuing the work of Scanderbeg, "father of the
fatherland" of Albania, and tries to substitute the cult of
"Albaniety" for the three religions present in the territory -- orthodoxy,
catholicism and islam. The supposed ethnic primacy of the Albanians as the only
people in a position to establish communism is combined with the myth of
proletarian internationalism. Even the vicissitudes of international politics
are read through the filter of an ethnic standard. For example, the break with
Moscow after Stalin's death is explained in terms of the character of the
Slavic people who supposedly lean intrinsically toward despotism and barbarism.
Then, after the break between Tito and Hoxha in 1948, the heart of the
nationalist discourse becomes the "liberation" of Kosovo where the
Albanian population has to live together with Slavs who are inevitably
barbarians.
If the Albanian bureaucracy
entrusted its stability to this ceaseless cultural and ideological nationalist
production as well as fierce repression and a few social concessions for
forty years, the bureaucracy that ruled Yugoslavia would combine a federalist
discourse with the nationalist one.
The "miracle" of
Tito, praised so highly by the stalinists of our day, consists of developing
bureaucracies from ethnic foundations for every Yugoslav region in perpetual
rivalry among themselves and in presenting himself as the only figure in a
position to make them live together. Behind the official federalist ideology
derived from the Resistance, the ensemble of national particularisms has been
meticulously cultivated and the very threat of nationalist explosion used as an
element of stability by the regime. Few political regimes in the world can
boast of an attention to the question of "cultural liberties" and
"respect for minorities" equal to that of the Yugoslav regime. All of
the ethnicities present in Yugoslavia received instruction in their own
language, read their own newspapers and watched their own television channels.
All official documents were translated into the main languages. In this way,
the national problem became an integral part of the mode of social division and
management of the Yugoslav system. However, the technique of fomenting
nationalisms in order to strengthen the Federation could not be applied in
Kosovo. Since the idea of a Balkan federation that would have included the
Albania of Hoxha was tabled by force of circumstances, granting Kosovo the
status of a republic would have meant facilitating the expansionist goals of
Tirana. Thus, in flagrant contradiction with the official federalist ideology,
Kosovo has remained a mere territory of Serbia for forty years. This choice
found justification in the Serbian nationalist mythology that sees Albanians as
traitors in the struggle against the Turks and Kosovo as the cradle of the
nation. The concessions and revocations of autonomous status to Kosovo have,
therefore, been conditioned on the varying necessity of Belgrade to blow on the
nationalist fire in order to reunite the Serbian population.
Thus, while the Croatian,
Slovenian and Serbian nationalist ideologies were supported more or less openly
by the bureaucrats of the League of Yugoslav Communists, that of Kosovo was
reinforced under the table in part by the government of Tirana. The Kosovo
Liberation Army itself was born through the fusion of several old clandestine
Enverist groups, and the entire history of Kosovar independence ideology
becomes entwined with the designs for a great Albania advanced by still more
recent Albanian governments, in particular that of Sali Berisha.
We advance into the labyrinth and already the
presence of the Minotaur is impending. We will meet it shortly when class
hatred reaches its peak and is exchanged much too quickly for its contrary,
ethnic hatred, and when this precarious balance among the Balkan nationalist
ideologies is dissolved. There is no precise turning point in this Balkan
history of ours. A series of converging processes of a varying nature exists,
causing explosions that in themselves could open the door to some new.
scenario.
THE COLLAPSE
OF THE STATE
During the 1980's the
federal structure of the Yugoslavian state demonstrated that it was no longer
in a position to control the social situation. The international organizations
bound the granting of loans-without which the Yugoslav economy would
suffocate-to the application of the prescription for reorganization formulated
by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). But the attempts to restructure the
heavy industrial sectors of the economy met with an ever-rising wave ever
resistance among the exploited, and long strikes followed one after another in
all parts of the federation. Thus the Yugoslav bureaucracy began to lose all
international credibility, because it was unable to efficiently reorganize the
economy. In the face of this breakdown of the economic machinery, the interests
of various bureaucratic factions suddenly came into competition, due to major
imbalances existing in the industrial development of the federation. Slovenia
and Croatia-both relatively industrialized and modern opposed the more
backwards republics of the south. The wealthier republics, at that time, were
bound to the others by ties of obligatory solidarity that were realized through
the financing of consistent federal funds.
Up to that time, as we have seen, the
bureaucracy put forth a double discourse, superimposing the official cult of
federalism and Yugoslav unity onto a constant call to national identity. At
this point, however, the federalist discourse ceased to be useful or meaningful
since, in order to survive, each republic had to renegotiate the bonds of
solidarity that tied it to the others. In order to accomplish this, there was
no alternative but nationalism to mobilize the population, convincing it that
its troubles were caused by the rival republics. The discourse in fashion among
the bureaucrats of each republic became, in summary:
"Workers, we are with you and against the others!" Obviously, the Slovenian and Croatian bureaucrats added that the economic scarcities of this period were due to the excessive amount of federal funds confiscated by the backward Serbia. On the other, hand, the Serbian bureaucrats tried to convince the exploited of their republic that all responsibility lay with the Croatians and Slovenians.
These maneuvers are not new
in Yugoslav history, but in the past they have never brought about decisive
transformations, always being successful at reestablishing the social
discipline necessary for making the economic machinery start again after a
period of negotiation and a few reciprocal concessions. The ruling groups that
managed this process during the '80's did not realize quickly enough that
international economic pressures left only a minimal margin for maneuvering in
order to renegotiate a new internal balance. At a certain point, no one was
able to concede anything any more. Besides, Tito had left a series of decision
making procedures as an inheritance that were sufficiently complex that they
prevented each regional interest from imposing itself through institutional
tools. Thus the struggles of the exploited were able to break each attempt to
put the economy back in motion and the harmony of the federation was reduced to
impotence.
THE EXPLOITED IN THE DESERT
Throughout the 1980's, the
discourse on which the Yugoslavian bureaucracies based their power
progressively lost credibility.
As we have seen, the system
of values that held the country together was crushed by its own contradictions.
The unitary mythology born from the Resistance crumbled under the renewed
weight of nationalist propagandas, and its official heir, the armed forces,
lined up openly behind the Serbian faction of the central power. Attempts at
economic restructuring placed those few "securities" that had been
offered to the exploited during the last forty years into crisis, goading them
into struggle. One is not dealing with a mere social or economic involution; an
entire world is collapsing.
Thus, social tension
continues to grow, but those who are struggling no longer has anything to which
to cling. The memory of the facade of "proletarian internationalism"
imposed by the bureaucrats for forty years stands in the way of the idea that
the exploited of different nationalities could achieve solidarity among
themselves against the common masters. It is the very awareness that common
masters exist that is weak. The enemy is not located with clarity.
In this situation the use of
nationalism assumes a new importance. Embellishing the interests of every faction
of the Yugoslavian bureaucracy with those of past history, all the sleeping
grudges of Balkan history are awakened. The exploited much too consistently
react to the collapse of the certainties of the past by clinging to the last of
these, nationalist propaganda, rediscovering values to share and masters to
obey; discovering a community and a history of which they can feel a part and
for which they can spend the enormous energies accumulated over so many years.
During these same years, a
process similar to the one in Yugoslavia was set in motion in Albania. Here we
can see the moves that were able to influence the situation in Kosovo that is
so very interesting in this sense.
With the death of Enver
Hoxha, the Albanian leaders found themselves facing a series of thorny
problems. Since the time of the rupture with Beijing, the country lived in
almost absolute isolation. As we have seen this isolation found a justification
in Albanian particularism, but with the passing of years it finally led to the
irreversible freezing of the entire industrial apparatus. The enormous
installations that were imported first from the Soviet Union and then from
China-already obsolete due to a lack of maintenance and spare parts-spin
uselessly. Inside the factories, the workers continue to work in order to
produce nothing, and the regime cannot afford dismissal, because one of its
boasts is still that of full employment. In order to survive, the only passable
road that presents itself to Ramiz Alia, Hoxha's protégé is to place industrial
restructuring together with a complete turnaround in relations with foreign
powers. For a certain period, Albanian propaganda has to tune down the
nationalistic melodies in order to be able to reopen relations with bordering
nations, particularly with Serbia.
Thus, in the second half of
the 1980's, the Kosovar problem, around which the Albanian collective identity
had been constructed, suddenly became a " mere internal Yugoslav question.
Meanwhile, the prospects of economic liberalization opened by the Alia regime
caused the enmity toward the west to collapse in the Albanian imaginary.
Hoxha's heir himself is, thus, the one to undermine the ideological basis of a
regime that until then had tried to construct its identity completely in the
negative, claiming to be surrounded by Slav "barbarism" on the one
side and western "immorality" on the other.
In a matter of a few years,
the Albanian exploited find themselves in a vast desert. No economic
securities-not even the miseries of the. past-no collective values exist to
reassure them anymore; the only time they can still comprehend is that of
the Kanan, the codes of the ancient clannish structures. Insurrections without
leaders or demands follow one after the other, culminating in the uprising of
1997 and the subsequent western intervention that returned Albania to its old
status as an Italian protectorate. The person who succeeded in controlling the
situation for a short time before the arrival of the Italian military was
Hoxha's former doctor, Sali Berisha.
His government, which was
swept away by the insurrection of 1997, rebuilt a system of strong values for
the Albanians, reelaborating those of the past in positive and in negative,
blending Kanan, nationalism, vicious economic liberalization and violent
"anti-communism". This is how the "liberation" of the
Kosovar cousins would become a national problem, how a good part of the arms
pillaged from the barracks during the insurrection would end up in the hands of
the KLA and how the north of Albania would be transformed into the logistic
base for anti-Serbian independence guerrillas.
And here we are, at last, at the center of
the labyrinth. On the one hand, we have the unknown, all the immense
possibilities opened by a situation in which no certainties or values suffocate
the exploited anymore, in which an entire world seems to need just one last
push to collapse. On the other hand, there is the Minotaur bellowing from its
throat. It is a monster that the world has known much too well, which -is
called ethnic war in the Balkans today. For capital, first the threat of war
and later war itself are emergency tools for reestablishing social peace. When
it can no longer produce any certainties, all that is left for it to do is ride
some Minotaur. It's not a matter of returning to a past that was worse, as we
may have believed. The new Balkan wars are a sign of modernity. This friendship
between capital and the monster is not a great discovery. And us? We try to
keep quiet for a moment, to act in such a way that the words that may possibly
have been with us for our entire life do not continue to delude us. No peaceful
and orderly revolution announces itself on the horizon, no sun of the future
rising; when all the checks collapse, when collective myths and certainties
have no more place in the heart of the exploited, when accumulated rancor
explodes, nothing an be guaranteed anymore. And this can only frighten us,
timid civilized beings that we are. Perhaps we are more fearful of that lack of
guarantees than of the Minotaur. So then, which do we, ourselves, choose? When
Yugoslavia arrives on our shores, are we really certain that we will face this
fear at last, or will we, like the Yugoslavs, find the terrible embrace of the
Minotaur in the passageway sweet?
THE FLOOD
The river of social
struggle, that of the bankruptcy of two states and that of the collapse of
every value have already mixed their waters. Only one stream is missing in
order for these rivers to merge and transform this flood into a bloodbath; it
will arrive from the West.
The crisis of the Yugoslav
state in the 1980's coincided with the necessity of rearranging the European
balance. The existence of Yugoslavia itself no longer responded to the
interests of the powers that had favored its constitution. German expansionism
toward the Mediterranean, now being carried out in the context of the united
Europe, no longer needs to be blocked. The federal system shows itself to be
unable to guarantee the functioning of Yugoslav commerce any more and runs the risk
of social explosion much too close to the tranquil western shores. Necessarily,
the European Economic Community (EEC) has to promote the creation of new state
entities that could replace the now useless Federation, marking the passage
that opened from the internal Yugoslav crisis-a crisis studded with threats,
repression and police extortion-to the military crisis. Up until a few weeks
before Slovenia's declaration of independence, in fact, the threat of secession
was considered an extreme means of pressure more than a real possibility in the
nationalist game of prominence carried out by the Yugoslav bureaucracy. But the
guarantee to recognize this new state-agreed to more or less discreetly by the
EEC-permitted the military solution and, in the end, imposed it. At that time, the European union seized the occasion to
officially confirm that the union of Slovenia and Croatia into one state in
order to control German expansion toward the Mediterranean was historically
superceded, granting to Germany what it had not been able to conquer in two
world wars.
The
behavior adopted by the "Community of Nations" during the conflicts
in the former Yugoslavia is understood starting from the coherence of its
actions and not as a function of the contradictory positions put forth in order
to serve as a screen. Contrary to the claims of those who try to lend credence
to the crocodile tears spilled regularly in public, this behavior is quite far
from lacking objectives. The military drift that followed from Slovenia's declaration
of independence and still continues today was inevitable from the perspective
of Western power since, with the exception of Slovenia, there are no borders
that can be determined on a national basis. Therefore, it is impossible to
build a new state without resorting to ethnic cleansing, and it was this
international strategy that actually outlined the necessity for it. The images
of this flood are today's history.
All
the evidence for this Western strategy can be found in the case of Bosnia. Ever
since the first Vance-Owen plan, the pseudo-response to the Bosnian crisis has
not been based on the historical reality of this region, but on an ideological
reality created artificially by the clash of bureaucratic interests. This is
how the partition of this territory between the three nationalist currents that
have blown it to bits was determined. The reorganization of Bosnia hides the
double objective of the division of the zones of influence in the former
Yugoslavia and the reorganization of the Balkans. The policy of the great
powers favored the deportation of populations which served to reduce the
breadth of the social contradictions that the new regional powers would have
had to face and, thus,
the risks of the extension of the Balkan conflict beyond the borders of the
former Yugoslavia. There is not a chance that the great powers would have been
accused of openly of favoring the Serbian armed forces in besieged Sarajevo.
The only real efforts of the West at this time were those of secret diplomacy,
pledged to mitigate the tensions between Serbia, Macedonia and their five
neighbors (Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Greece and Albania) at all costs.
From this point on, all the
international initiatives would ineptly pursue three objectives, independently
of the internal contradictions of the West. First, they would organize a
security zone between the former Yugoslavia and the borders of Western Europe.
This role of buffer-state is assigned to Slovenia, the internal conditions of
which lend themselves perfectly to this function: it is an industrialized and
westernized region that is ethnically coherent and small enough that the volume
of investment necessary for maintaining its stability is relatively modest. The
other two objectives are verified by the effort to subdivide Yugoslavia around
two entities that seem to have the broad shoulders necessary for this task.
Control of the Adriatic coast and the Adriatic-European axis is entrusted to
Croatia, control of the Balkans to Serbia.
With the Bosnian problem
temporarily suppressed, it was possible to contain that of Macedonia, repress
those of Vojvodina and Montenegro and militarily liquidate the problem of
Krajina during these years. If Croatia was able to keep its promises to the
West, this was not possible for Serbia as was made clear in the past few years.
The original point of explosion in the old Yugoslav federalist ideology has
come back on the scene with all its drama, revealing how poorly considered the
Western choice to entrust the control of the Balkans to Milosevic was. The
latest war, which saw the entire West engaged against Serbia, pursued the
objective of pushing out an old ally who proved to be completely untrustworthy,
while still attempting to preserve the territorial integrity of the country in
order to avoid extending the conflict to the neighboring regions: Albania,
Macedonia, Bulgaria and Greece. Up to now no one has actually recognized the
right of the Kosovar Albanians to self-determination, and the Rambouillet
accords have indicated the mere autonomy of this region as the only feasible
solution. The West used the two factions of the Kosovar independence movement,
Rugova's group and the KLA, in turn in anti-Serb functions without ever
underwriting their more or less obvious political project of the great Albania.
The Kosovar population itself was used as a logistical element in the conflict.
The only significant
about-face in Western strategy that distinguished this latest war was the
desire to no longer delegate control of the Balkans to anyone. For now, the
armies of NATO will manage it directly until new, capable a-id reliable allies
can be found in Belgrade or elsewhere.
THE FAILED SOCIAL TEMPEST
Crossroads for a thousand
different civilizations, the Balkans possess an enormous cultural wealth,
traditions that come together and mix. This is one of the reasons for their
instability. They present a field for maneuvering favorable to the promotion of
greedy politicians, but as the history of the last hundred years shows, they or
simply an insoluble puzzle for every state that wants to assert its power here.
The economic, social and cultural processes experienced in Yugoslavia and
Albania over the last twenty years are common, to a lesser degree, to all parts
of the Balkans and to that immense and desolate land that is today's Russia.
In the Balkans, the Minotaur
has been called ethnic war. In the Arab world, its strict parent gallops, the
religious integralism that has found its best pastures in Algeria. But this
does not mark a return to the past with its murmuring; it was ridden in on a
form most modern-that of capital. And when our turn comes, what will our
Minotaur be?
Cruel smirk of history, the
monster has always taken root in the speech of the exploited-whom it transforms
into executioners-while the exploiters merely use it as an approved political
weapon with an awareness that is more terrifying than the slaughters
themselves. A correspondent of the BBC furnishes an eloquent example of this in
his book, reporting a conversation between the Serbian general Mladic and the
Croatian Minister of the Interior: agreeing on the return of the bodies of
soldiers killed in the name of ethnic hatred that they themselves fomented, the
two exchanged the most sincere wishes for their respective families. In the
years to come, when they have found an acceptable balance, the representatives
of the former Yugoslav bureaucracy will be good friends once more. On the other
hand, the exploited will continue to hate each other, to feel the breath of the
beast in the air. It is no longer a question of knowing whether History has
come to an end or continues to march on. We must know how to read the questions
that events raise even when they mix dreams and nightmares together. Meanwhile,
the Yugoslav history of the past twenty years is the history of a failed social
tempest, of a potential revolt that mutated into a horrible gangrenous sore. It
is the very energy that could have sustained the conflict opened between the
exploited and the exploiters that has been kept busy on the worst war fronts.
The protagonists of social struggle have become the laborers of the terror. Of
course, sooner or later, the threads of social conflict will retie themselves,
and ethnic hatred will cease to play the lead role in the Balkan tragedy. But
from our side, how many will still have bloodstained hands? So goodbye forever
to tranquil sleep.
APPENDIXES
I am appending a few
articles from other sources. The first, "Let's Take Any Name",
explains some of the economic factors in play-particularly Italian interests
which, along with those of Germany and Greece, are of great significance in the
region. The second one, "The Nationalist Racket", gives some of the
history of the Kosovo Liberation Army. Both of these were translated form an
Italian language one-shot paper, Ne la
loro Guerra, Ne la loro Pace (Neither their war, nor their peace), which
appeared in June 1999. The last piece is a look at the socalled
"revolution" that brought about the downfall of Milosevic based on
reports from various sources including Yugoslav anarchists.
W.L.
Appendix 1:
LET'S TAKE ANY NAME
(June,
1999)
One of the factors affecting
the conflicts in the former Yugoslavia is the future of the economic control of
the Balkan region. What remains of the federation created by Tito will be
shared within areas directly controlled by different western countries,
particularly by Germany in the north and by Italy in the south. If this process
is in an advanced phase in Slovenia and Croatia, which have been German fiefs
for years, it is still in the embryonic phase for Serbia, Montenegro and
Macedonia-lands rich in natural resources and, above all, cheap labor power.
The western masters, small
and great, have had their eyes on this region for a long time, but strong
social tensions slowed down the affair. The Albanian insurrection of 1997 made
them reflect bitterly: in the course of two months, many Italian contractors
saw their enterprises razed to the ground and were forced to abandon the
country.
Hence, this war is also a tool for protecting future western investments, particularly from the risk of future social upheavals. Let's take any name of these wandering masters, particularly those from Italy, and we'll discover that behind these bombings, suspicious contractors, powerful financial groups, banks and local corporations are concealed.
Far Italian capital, the
door to the Balkans has always been Albania, since the time of the empire. But
it is since the beginning of the 1990's that so many contractors from Italy
have safely planted themselves beyond the Otranto Channel, and, if we exclude
the upheaval of 1997, from this time forward talks of creating an
Italian-Albanian integrated economic area
have been going on.
It was the extremely low
cost of labor power that attracted Italian masters to Albania. Albanian wages
ran- e from about $50 to about $75 a month. Today, according to the
Industrialists' Association of Bari (Italy), there are between 600 and 700
Italian companies in Albania, about half of them from the province of Apulia
and nearly all of medium-small dimensions. They occupy themselves with
transforming raw materials imported from Italy-through highly labor intensive
processes-into partly made and finished products that are always then exported
back to Italy.
The productive sectors with
interests in these investments are those involving textiles, shoe
manufacturing, chemicals, citrus fruit products and construction, as well as
those involving articles of stone, ceramic and metal.
The Italian businesses have
not been left alone in their work of conquest. Above all, after the
insurrection of 1997, the European Union made the Italian government provide
support for all of them. Two lines of credit were opened for their use by
branches of the Cooperation for Development of the Foreign Ministry while the
Interregnum Program 2 is occupied with financing the formation of cadres.
The AREF ( Albania
Reconstruction Equity Fund)financed by the Italian government through BERS
(the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development) and with an additional
share, by the Banca Popolare di Bariunder writes shares of risk capital (up to
a maximum of 49%) for the companies that invested in Albania. Besides, in Bari,
a secretariat of the Investment Region has
opened up for the monitoring of the initiative for cooperation between the two
countries. To seal the massive entry of Italian capital into Albania in a
definitive manner, for the first time in May, 1998, a performance of the
Levantine Fair took place on the other side of the Otranto Channel.
Along with this help in the
financial arena, the Italian masters in Albania and their local partners are
receiving consistent aid from the Italian government, which is engaged-after
the task of reorganizing and arming the forces of order-in collaborating with
the Albanians in a concentrated effort to reform the legislative, fiscal and
local judiciary systems. In this way, briefly, the final difficulties of
administrative, bureaucratic and social order for the Italian enterprises will
tend to disappear.
The Kosovar territory is
rich with beds of soft coal, lead, zinc, nickel, gold, cadmium and magnesium.
Seventy percent of its economy is represented by the Electric Company of
Kosovo-which produces most of the electricity used not only in Kosovo, but also
in Serbia and Macedonia as well-and by the mining and metallurgical complex of
Trepca, the most important in the Yugoslav Federation. Both are still
controlled from Serbia which has already launched a plan for privatization. In
addition, a substantial portion of other Kosovar businesses is under the guardianship of Serbian
contractual groups. [Of course, this has
changed with the de facto control of these enterprises now in the hands of the
NATO task force, i. e., Western Europe and the US. -translator]
In the case in which Kosovo
were to be granted autonomy-if not independence-who would be considered the
proprietor of this inheritance, who would cash in on the profits of
privatization? The Rambouillet accords have not cleared this matter up. Just as
they have not explained who will get the 416,000 square meters of productive
area not exploited by the Development Fund of Serbia.
The businesses of the
European Union that want to put their hands on Kosovar resources are not of
small dimensions at all, with Italy and ENEL being first in line, aiming at
control of the Electric Company of Kosovo. For its part, Peugeot is in
negotiation with Zastava of Kraguejevac for acquisition of the shock absorber
factory in Pristina. Zastava is itself part of FIAT.
The master of the
metallurgical sector, however, is to be Miltilineas, a Greek holding which is
already using the enormous mining complex in Trepca. It has trebled the value
of its own enterprises in the last year, thanks, above all, to investments in
the Balkans, whereas Italy's interests in the mining sector are exclusively in
magnesium mines.
Before the outbreak of the war, the Serbian
government had intentions of selling the controlling share of Serbian
Telecom-the business that controls telecommunications and the postal service.
The only candidates for this purchase are the other two shareholders in the
company, Italian Telecom and the Greek OTE, which currently own 49% of these
shares.
Appendix 2:
THE NATIONALIST RACKET
(June, 1999, slightly
revised)
Flight, extermination or
resistance: these are the three alternatives for the inhabitants of Kosovo in
the face of the advance of the Yugoslav military and the NATO bombing. We are
well acquainted with the first two; the images of slaughter and forced exile
are there before our eyes again and again as we watch television. From what we
can tell from here, the third possibility is currently represented only by the
Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA). But what price will the exploited have to pay for
this new nationalist army?
In times of peace,
nationalism is an ideological swindle that steals periods of time from the
struggle of the exploited against the exploiters. One way or another,
nationalism summons-exploited and exploiters to fight "the common
enemy" together.
But when war flares-when it
is no longer merely a threat-when an
army arrives to kill and burn, nationalism ceases to be merely an ideological
swindle, it becomes a practical racket,
hard as a rock. The case of the KLA illustrates the situation well. The
exploited, who would have defended themselves against the invaders of today if
they were armed, if left to themselves, would be able to attack the masters of
tomorrow-the nationalist leadership. Again as before, however, the rage against
the Serb invasion is easily directed into the ranks of the Liberation Army and
controlled from there. Let's not forget that the KLA, along with the Yugoslav
army, has the monopoly of arms; and
without arms, there is no way for one to defend oneself. So for most Kosovars
who want to resist the plans of Milosevic the choice becomes compulsory: either
join the KLA or be disarmed.
The elder nationalists of
Liberation Army, thus have the troops that they have always lacked at their
disposal and now face the possibility of becoming the Kosovar leadership in the
future, undermining their ancient rival Rugova.
The roots of the KLA sink
into the fertile terrain of the revolts and repressions that have marked Kosovo
for the past eighteen years. Founded in 1992, the KLA is the offspring of
several maoist and marxist-leninist groups that had been struggling for the
unification of Kosovo to Enver Hoxha's Albania ever since the beginning of the
1980's.
It was only in 1996,
however, that this organization began to make itself known and became a serious
competitor of Rugova, the unquestioned leader of the opposition to the Serbs.
Armed and trained in Germany-the historic competitor of Serbia in the
Balkans-the began to structure itself as a true and proper army, carried out
attacks against camps of Serbian refugees in Krajna and won the backing of
Albanian president Berisha. From this time on, the marxist-leninist element
tends increasingly to disappear, giving way exclusively to the nationalist
element: the declared aim is the creation of the great Albania-the union .of
the current Albania with Kosovo, the southern portion of Montenegro and the
western half of Macedonia. It was not mere chance then that when Albanian
nationalists would finally get control, in 1998, of a third of Kosovo, they
would persecute the Serbian, gypsy and mixed minorities in the "liberated
territories".
Starting in 1996, the KLA
chose to ask for aid from the clans of Kosovo and Albania, which control the
Albanian diaspora almost completely. It is in light of this solid alliance that
we should interpret the calls to mobilization made by the KLA during those
months: they were orders of compulsory conscription, just as the
"revolutionary tax" it demanded of emigrants was obligatory. Embryo
of a potential Kosovar government, the political committee made the decisions. The clans, the police of the future, were to
carry them out.
Here, then, is the price the
KLA may still make the exploited Kosovars pay: the creation of a new state, the
next dominating power, when the occupation ends.
[Editor's note: Since this was written, the
"humanitarian bombing" has been replaced by a "humanitarian
peacekeeping force" consisting of NATO and UN troops. This occupation of
Kosovo by western European and American military forces is justified by the
continuation of ethnic violence. It is doubtful that the Western powers would
care about this if they didn't have economic interests in the area, but since
they do, they need to maintain some level of stability in the area. The
Serbian-Kosovar conflict gave them the opportunity to establish a strong
military presence there to protect their interests. The prediction in the a
-iove article of the creation of a Kosovar state looks distant at the moment.
Instead the continuation of the current military occupation of the area seems
likely to continue for a while. Humanitarianism and "peacekeeping"
will probably be the ongoing face of Western political and economic domination
of the world.]
Appendix 3:
ON YUGOSLAVIA'S
LATEST "REVOLUTION":
The fall of Milosevic
The various analyses of the
late September/early October 2000 "revolution" in Yugoslavia that I
have come across in anarchist sources have ranged from cries of jubilation
(these posted at the time of the events) to Tom Wheeler's thorough discrediting
of the events ("Revolution in Yugoslavia-who won?", ANARCHY: A Journal of Desire Armed #50/fall-winter
2000-2001). The jubilation has thoroughly vanished as events unfolded as could
have been predicted. Nonetheless, I feel that Wheeler's approach (though
important as a critical analysis and one of the sources of information for this
appendix) tends to leave out parts of the reality of the events and the
background behind the Yugoslav anarchists' hopes at the time that this might go
further than a mere changing of the guards.
The storming and burning of
the Parliament building in Belgrade was certainly a bit too perfect. The (not
merely verbal) support of the US government for this "revolution" is
a good indication that there were forces in play besides the wrath of the Yugoslav
people. Still people in revolt even when it is thoroughly orchestrated-do
sometimes cut the strings and turn on the puppet-masters. Did anarchists in
Serbia have reason to think this might happen in this instance?
The Balkans do not comprise
such a large region. Albania borders on Montenegro and Kosovo-thus on what
little is left of the Yugoslav federation. Only a few years ago, in 1997, there
was an uprising in Albania that managed, in the course of a few months, to
largely bring the functioning of the state apparatus and capital to a halt. [A description and anarchist analysis of this
uprising can be found in the pamphlet,
Albania, Laboratory of Subversion (Elephant Editions, London, 1999).]
This revolt was provoked by the failure of a hyper-capitalist pyramid scheme
that the Albanian government had convinced the people to invest in. The pyramid
scheme went bankrupt and left a large portion of the populace with neither land
nor money. In spite of attempts by political groups to usurp this movement, it remained
largely autonomous and selforganized, moved quickly from making demands to
taking direct action including the ransacking and dismantling of banks, raids
on military armories (frequently aided by the mostly conscripted soldiers), the
dismantling of prisons and release of the prisoners, attacks on police and so
on. Of course, in time, the revolt was bound to spend its energy or be
recuperated into one or another of the nationalist ideologies through which the
Albanian state has tended to maintain control unless it spread beyond its
borders and achieve an awareness of the possibilities it manifested, but d ie
to Italy's economic interests in the region, it intervened with the help of its
NATO allies in an armed "humanitarian mission" to restore order before
these eventualities arose and "order"-i.e., a functioning state and
capitalist relations-has been restored.
I bring this up because this
is part of the recent regional history that Yugoslav anarchists probably took
into consideration in deciding how to respond to the movement for the removal
of Milosevic. The Albanian uprising had not originated with a consciously
anti-capitalist or anti-state agenda. It is doubtful that any uprising ever
has. It is for this reason that anarchists do not determine their participation
in a struggle in terms of the totality of its vision (we'd never participate in
anything if we did), but rather in terms of the possibilities for intervening
in the struggle in a way that encourages self-organization, direct action and insurrection.
It is through such a practice that people can come to envision a world without
hierarchy or authority. Thus, considering the origin and trajectory of the
Albanian revolt, it should be no surprise that Yugoslav anarchists would see
possibilities in the much more politically conscious revolt against Milosevic
and would choose to try participate.
Nonetheless, the
puppet-masters in this case had started the show with a clear intent and
included the most powerful forces in the world (whereas in Albania, the
would-be puppet-masters went running after the people in revolt, seeking to
place their strings on them after the fact). As "A War Nearby" makes
clear, Western powers, through the IMF and the World Bank, began manipulating
ethnic differences in Yugoslavia well before the fall of the various so-called
"communist" regimes. Milosevic, with his Serbian nationalist
rhetoric, was meant to be one of the puppets in their schemes. But this puppet
(like Manuel Noriega, Saddam Hussein and so many others) wanted his own show
and so, ultimately, proved to be a detriment to the needs of the West. After
the NATO/UN occupation of Kosovo, the time was ripe for the fall of Milosevic.
Opposition forces were strong and Milosevic was in a precarious position. In
the national election Vojislav Kostunica apparently won, but Milosevic was not
ready to give up power and the Federal Election Commission (controlled,
according to the opposition, by Milosevic and his cohorts) called for a
recount. This is when the Democratic Opposition of Serbia (DOS) called for
"total protest and total resistance, a total boycott, a peaceful general
strike".
It is often easier to see
the larger picture of a particular situation from a distance, to see the levels
of orchestration and choreography going on in an apparently spontaneous
situation. Nonetheless, Yugoslav anarchists were quite aware of the nature of
the DOS, the Alliance for Change and similar groups. Such groups have been
contenders for power in the region for years, and as such can be nothing other
than puppets for Western interests. The question that arises is whether all of
those who participated in the protests at that time were also merely
unconscious puppets, or were some actually acting in terms of their own
autonomous project of revolt. This is something we may never know since it is
only the major events that we tend to hear about.
The DOS, the Alliance for
Change and most other organized, official opposition groups have been working
quite openly with Western powers. After all, the official propaganda of the
region has been promoting the idea of the horrors of the communist past and the
freedom to be found in adapting a Western-style "free market" economy
for years. Neither the West nor the official opposition has ever had any real
interest in ending ethnic conflict regardless of rhetoric to the contrary.
Their only interest is to provide enough stability to allow the Western
economic powers to carry their enterprises forward with relative ease.
Milosevic and his policies did not provide this stability. Thus the same powers
that carried out "humanitarian bombing" and now occupy Kosovo in
supposed opposition to "ethnic cleansing" had no problem funding an
opposition group that included former members of paramilitary groups that were involved
in the alleged "ethnic cleansing" in Bosnia and Croatia.
["Revolution in Yugoslavia-who won?", ANARCHY: A Journal of Desire Armed, #50, goes into more detail on
this.] A real end to the ethnic conflict in the region would not serve the
capitalist interests in the region, because it is one of the most useful tools
for controlling the exploited and marginalized classes. "A War
Nearby" describes the ways in which the rulers in the area used ethnic
differences to suppress revolt, and unrest continues to simmer in the region.
As those who rule us well know, the chaos of ethnic conflict is easier to
control than that of class conflict, because the former is not an actual
challenge to domination. So the West is glad to support an opposition that
merely wants... to be Western, that is to say good capitalist democrats.
But there is another
opposition group that was involved in this so-called "revolution".
The group, Otpor (Resistance), [More
detailed information about Olpor can
be found in the article, “Interpreting Balkan Fairytales: ‘Serbia's October
Revolution’” by Brian Bamford, posted on A-Infos as "Anarchist movements
in Serbia" posted by Chris Robinson on February 25, 2001.] has been
praised in some parts of the anarchist press in Western Europe and the US. Otpor appears to be leaderless and to
lack a formal membership. It was founded in 1998 and made up mostly of
students. But, according to certain anarchists in Yugoslavia, this is not an
accurate picture of the group. It apparently does have a leadership that rests
in the Council of Otpor that consists
of university professors and members of the Academy of Arts and Sciences. The
members of this academy played a major role in the mid to late 1980's in
developing the ideological basis of Serbian cultural nationalism which was to
become one of the foundations of Milosevic's political campaign. Unlike DOS and
other official oppositional groups, it is difficult to trace the financial
source by which Otpor is funded, but
it is clearly well-funded with resources that cannot be explained in terms of
its predominately academic membership. For this reason, anarchists in
Yugoslavia suspect that it too is well funded by Western powers.
So it is clear that the
official opposition that called for the "revolution" in late
September, 2000 in Yugoslavia were acting in the interests of their Western
puppet-masters. Their activity was well funded and well choreographed by forces
outside Serbia and arguably the result was a foregone conclusion. It doesn't
require a complex analysis to recognize that Kostunica is a puppet and that
those who pull the strings have their armed forces "keeping the
peace" in his back yard-not leaving much room for him to deviate from
their designs. Ethnic conflict continues to burn hot enough in Kosovo to
justify the continued NATO/UN occupation. Certainly, it appears from here that
the main change accomplished with the fall of Milosevic has been a more
thorough control of the Balkans by Western interests-not just the US, but the
EU as well, particularly Germany and Italy.
But things are often very clear with
hindsight from a distance. With an awareness of the history of class conflict
in Yugoslavia, particularly against the austerity measures the government tried
to put into effect in the 1980's in order to get IMP loans, and also of the
1997 uprising in Albania, it should be clear why Yugoslav anarchists-even
though most probably aware of the orchestration of events-might choose to join people
in struggle. DOS, the Alliance for Change, Otpor
and their like were clearly just political gangs vying for positions in the
new arrangements of power that were in the works. But when people start to
struggle, as I said above, they sometimes cut the strings and the
puppet-masters lose their control. Unfortunately, I have seen nothing actually
describing how the anarchists participated in the events that drove Milosevic
from power. Were they just a tail being wagged by the loyal opposition for
their masters, or did they come with their own clear revolutionary anarchist
project? For now, we know the state and capital still reign in Yugoslavia and
all the misery imposed by this reign continue. The names have changed. The
faces have changed. But domination and exploitation continue, with a more
clearly Western face.
RECOMMENDED READING
Albania, Laboratory of Subversion,
an
anonymous pamphlet from Elephant Editions (1999)
"Albania: the Proletariat Confronts the
Bourgeois State", Communism #11,
journal of the International Communist Group (1999)
"Capitalism at the Crossroads and the
Opportunity of the Yugoslav Crisis", Killing
King Abacus # 1 (2000)
Yugoslavery-Yugoslavia:
Capitalism and Class Struggle 19181967; Some Basic Ingredients of Yugoslav
Ideology, pamphlet
from BM Blob (winter, 1991)
"Yugoslavia: from Wage
Cuts to War", Wildcat #18 (summer
1996)
"Yugoslavia
Unraveled", Aufheben #2 (summer
1993)