The Bosnian Standoff

Empire's Fantasy and Balkans Reality

by Nebojsa Malic <http://original.antiwar.com/author/malic/> , October 09, 2010 

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Though some of the results of last week’s general elections in 
Bosnia-Herzegovina have potential to prove interesting down the road, overall 
the vote was neither unexpected nor dramatic. Twenty years after the first 
multi-party election, which saw the triumph of ethnic parties and set the scene 
for Bosnia’s subsequent civil war, nothing substantial has changed in Bosnian 
politics. Serbs remain opposed to a centralized government. Croats remain 
unhappy about their dwindling numbers and influence, but would rather perish 
than agree with the Serbs on anything. Meanwhile, Muslim leaders continue to 
insist on Izetbegovic the Elder’s dream of a centralized Bosnian state, 
dominated by Muslims. This particular form of deadlock 
<http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6940TK20101005>  may well be dubbed the 
"Bosnian standoff." The Empire and partisans of liberal interventionism 
<http://blogs.praguepost.com/politics/2010/10/03/remember-bosnia/>  may find it 
frustrating, but it is a fact nonetheless.

Serbs remain opposed to a centralized government. Croats remain unhappy about 
their dwindling numbers and influence, but would rather perish than agree with 
the Serbs on anything. Meanwhile, Muslim leaders continue to insist on 
Izetbegovic the Elder’s dream of a centralized Bosnian state, dominated by 
Muslims. This particular form of deadlock 
<http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6940TK20101005>  may well be dubbed the 
"Bosnian standoff," and has been the default state of affairs since the first 
multi-party elections in 1990.

Retrenchment

In the Serb Republic, current PM Milorad Dodik’s party retained its majority, 
while Dodik himself will move to the post of President. It would not be 
unreasonable to expect that office to become more important in the coming days, 
as power in Bosnia tends to be vested in persons, rather than the offices they 
occupy. Much more interesting was the race for the Serb seat in the country’s 
three-man Presidency, which the incumbent, Nebojsa Radmanovic, won by just 
2.75%.

After many years of factional disputes, the principal Croat ethnic party, HDZ, 
has reasserted itself. However, it still lost the race for the Croat seat in 
the Presidency, which went to the incumbent, the Social-Democrat Zeljko Komsic.

The Son Also Rises

The elections were most dramatic among the country’s Muslims. Haris Silajdzic, 
Muslim member of the Presidency for the past four years and a fixture in every 
government since 1992, came third in the presidential vote. His party was also 
trounced in races for the state and Federation parliaments. The principal 
beneficiary of Silajdzic’s demise was Fahrudin Radoncic, overleveraged media 
tycoon who sought to save his fortunes by founding a political party. 
Radoncic’s Better Future Party (SBB) won some seats in various parliaments, and 
he himself came in second in the Muslim leg of the Presidency race. For a party 
that didn’t exist a year ago, these are spectacular results — but for the 
opportunists who crossed over from Silajdzic’s camp, they won’t be good enough.

In the end, the Muslim Presidency seat went to Bakir Izetbegovic, son of the 
wartime Muslim leader 
<http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2003/10/23/the-real-izetbegovic/> , Alija. 
The Western media have praised him 
<http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2023347,00.html>  as a 
"moderate"; but in comparison with Silajdzic, that isn’t exactly hard. Compared 
to the current party leader, Sulejman Tihic, the younger Izetbegovic is an 
outright extremist. He commands the loyalty of the party’s "old guard" — 
Izetbegovic the Elder’s fellow Islamic revolutionaries — and has already called 
Turkey 
<http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/news-223564-100-izetbegovic-asksturkey-to-continueits-role-in-balkans.html>
  a "powerful and wise big brother," and asked for its continued involvement 
<http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2010/04/30/stirring-the-bosnian-pot/>  in 
Bosnia.

Other than Izetbegovic’s victory, however, the SDA had little to celebrate. In 
all but one of the six Muslim-majority cantons in the Federation, they lost to 
the Social-Democrats (SDP).

A Bitter Victory

On paper, the SDP has much cause for celebration. In addition to their 
near-sweep in the cantons, they should have the most seats both in the 
Federation and the state parliaments. Their man in the Presidency was 
re-elected by an overwhelming margin. Yet the fruits of this victory may turn 
into the seeds of SDP’s undoing.

To actually govern, the SDP will have to form a coalition with someone. Trouble 
is, all of their choices are bad. Irrespective of electoral math, a coalition 
with Radoncic is unthinkable for a legion of reasons; he represents everything 
the SDP have campaigned against, from kleptocracy and opportunism to corruption 
and crass chauvinism. The HDZ is already sore that the SDP won the Croat seat 
in the Presidency with Muslim votes. But if they ally with the SDA, which now 
appears likely, the SDP would have to compromise their principles (social 
democracy, anti-nationalism) for the sake of power. They’ve done it once 
before, in 2000, when they allied with Silajdzic at Washington’s urging. That 
"Alliance for Change" was a fiasco from which the SDP took 8 years to recover.

To make matters worse, the SDP have a horrible relationship with the social 
democrats (Dodik’s SNSD) in the Serb Republic, whom they consider to be nothing 
more than nationalists. The SNSD, for their part, think of the SDP as yet 
another Muslim ethnic party, whose vision of Bosnia doesn’t differ 
significantly from that of Izetbegovic — father or son. An alliance with the 
SDA, however motivated by pragmatism, will only reinforce that perception.

Empire’s Dream

Bosnia’s fundamental problem 
<http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2008/07/31/bosnias-problem/>  is that its 
ethnic communities cannot agree on whether the country should exist at all, let 
alone how. Left to their own devices, it is possible the three communities 
could perhaps find some way to either live together, or go their separate ways. 
The Empire, however, has other plans.

Washington has already expressed a desire 
<http://www.rferl.org/content/US_Urges_Bosnias_Leaders_To_Find_Common_Ground/2176663.html>
  for a government "committed to tackling the outstanding constitutional and 
other issues needed to place the country on a firm path to Euro-Atlantic 
integration" (emphasis added). Translated from State Department-speak, this 
means a regime willing and able to amend the country’s Constitution (thus 
revising the 1995 peace treaty) in order to create a centralized government, 
for the ostensible purpose of joining the EU and NATO.

Why does the Empire continue to insist on a Bosnia that cannot realistically 
exist? There are several explanations, overlapping to an extent. To the U.S. 
foreign policy establishment, Bosnia is more than just a small, landlocked 
Balkans backwater. It is a founding myth 
<http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php?/site/article/5494/>  of Empire, a 
nexus of symbols that underpin everything that came after, from Kosovo to 
Afghanistan.

It is a symbol of Empire’s power to declare that the multiethnic Yugoslavia 
must and shall fracture along ethnic lines, but a multiethnic Bosnia cannot. 
For some, it is also a shining example of U.S. benevolence towards the Muslim 
world, for which Washington expects gratitude 
<http://grayfalcon.blogspot.com/2007/04/jihadists-take-note.html> . After a 
decade of bloody, costly and dubious wars in the Middle East, the restored 
Clinton gang needs the Balkans 
<http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2008/12/18/there-they-go-again/>  as a 
contrasting example of "successful" liberal interventionism. Between all this, 
nobody is willing to accept that Bosnia is a fiasco 
<http://nationalinterest.org/node/4190> , even though that is the obvious truth 
<http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2010/03/28/whither-bosnia/> .


Read more by Nebojsa Malic


*       After Empire 
<http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2010/09/24/after-empire/>  – September 24th, 
2010
*       Capitulation, Not Compromise 
<http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2010/09/10/capitulation-not-compromise/>  – 
September 10th, 2010
*       Westerwelle’s Big Adventure 
<http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2010/08/27/westerwelles-big-adventure/>  – 
August 27th, 2010
*       The Sorrow of Empire 
<http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2010/08/06/the-sorrow-of-empire/>  – August 
6th, 2010
*       Cry Havoc <http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2010/07/22/cry-havoc/>  – 
July 22nd, 2010

http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2010/10/08/the-bosnian-standoff/

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