KOSTUNICA'S CHOICE

"We cannot all be masters, Nor all masters cannot truly be follow'd."
~ Shakespeare, Othello, 1.1

It has been two weeks since Zoran Djindjic officially overthrew the
federal government in Belgrade, and plunged the fragile union of Serbia
and Montenegro into near-anarchy. Djukanovic's separatist regime in
Montenegro has been boycotting the federal government to begin with, and
only their poor showing in the April elections had given the federation
a reprieve. Montenegro's government has now restarted the efforts to
organize a referendum on secession.

President Kostunica reacted to the June 28 abduction of Slobodan
Milosevic with harsh words, but little action. The ensuing political
vacuum has been rapidly filled by pro-Djindjic politicians, academics
and media. To hear the Belgrade press tell it, Kostunica's inaction is
proof that Djindjic's action was fully justified; that principles and
law ought to take the back seat to money and the good graces of the
International Community. In the Western media, this is a foregone
conclusion. No one even mentions Kostunica any more, as Djindjic and his
allies fill the press with chest-thumping defiance to the man on whose
coattails they rode to power.
With Djukanovic's Montenegro on American life-support for years, and
Djindjic kept in power by Kostunica's inaction and American blood money,
it is but a matter of time before the now empty shell of Yugoslavia will
pass away. Djindjic and Djukanovic will then become rulers of the ruins
- always beholden to powers that made them, of course.
A malaise of servitude thus takes hold over the last portion of the
Balkans yet unconquered. Only tiny Macedonia still holds out, though
given the amount of Imperial pressure on its indecisive leadership, that
resistance may soon become a memory as well. The people, driven to the
brink of insanity by wars, sanctions and mass migrations, are too busy
scraping up the bare necessities to raise their voices. When they do, it
is to cry out for leaders who would bring deliverance from misery. As
always, they should be careful what they wish for.

 "RICHARD III" REIGNS

There is little doubt that the once widely despised Zoran Djindjic is
now firmly in charge of Serbia. The entire ruling coalition in Serbia
sided with his decision to suspend the federal Constitution and turn
Milosevic over to the Hague Inquisition. Only two parties have refused
to play along - Kostunica's DSS and Velimir Ilic's Nova Srbija. Ilic,
the mayor of central Serbian city of Cacak, is staunchly pro-Kostunica
and played a major part in last October's revolt. Yet neither party has
officially left the coalition. They have merely formed separate voting
blocs in the Parliament.
Collapse of the federal government also gave impetus to Djindjic's
associates in G17, a group of neo-liberal economists determined to drag
Serbia into the orbit of statist capitalism (not to be confused with
free-market capitalism). One of their leaders, former federal Treasury
head Miroljub
Labus, is now busily mocking federal institutions in the media.
Djindjic's appetite for power is growing. Last weekend, he met with
Prince Alexandar Karajordjevic, vowing to restore the royal family's
property expropriated by the Communists in 1945. The meeting, of course,
was much less about property rights and much more of an opportunity for
the Prince to endorse Djindjic, saying he did "good things for the
people of Serbia." Though he is an unprincipled Marxist, Djindjic
understands well the propaganda value of royalty.
Another proposal by Djindjic, which sounds very reasonable on the
surface, is that the question of Serb-Montenegrin relations should be
resolved by the end of 2001, and "not a day later." Yet Montenegro
president Djukanovic - a friend of Djindjics, coincidentally - is
planning a referendum in early 2002. If Djindjic is true to his word, by
then a referendum will not be necessary.
Yet the six-month deadline could mean more than meets the eye.
Interviewed by Serbia's top news magazine, Djindjic said last Thursday
that he "needed" Kostunica, for without him, Serbia would be divided
into two opposing, irreconcilable factions - "like it is in Montenegro."
This amounts to surprising candor, since the general agreement is that
Montenegro has not seceded only because its government is deadlocked,
lacking a clear mandate. Djindjic can do whatever he desires and use
Kostunica's popularity as a shield, counting on the fact that Kostunica
either does not wish to, or is not capable of, stopping him.

SILENT RUNNING

President Kostunica, meanwhile, seems perfectly aware that Djindjic's
actions in L'Affair Milosevic have shaken the very foundation of the
country. Apart from several strongly worded statements, however, he has
done nothing to prevent the country's slide into anarchy. Even his own
party is worried about Djinjic's apparent triumph.
This lack of action on Kostunica's part is alternately deplorable and
frustrating. Even his enemies know that Kostunica stands for things they
vehemently oppose - freedom, patriotism, integrity and principle. (For
example, Serbia's premier quisling, Sonja Biserko, called Kostunica a
"fascist" in September of last year, only a few short months after her
organization praised Djindjic as Serbia's only possible savior.) But how
can Kostunica build a state based on his ideas, when he allows Djindjic
to run rampant doing the exact opposite of what Kostunica advocates?
Kostunica's track record in handling Djindjic is about as successful as
Othello's handling of lago. As early as last November, before Djindjic
became Prime Minister by using Kostunica's name to get elected,
Kostunica's advisor Aleksandar Tijanic claimed Djindjic was nothing but
trouble. Since then, Djindjic has traveled around the world making
"business deals," encroaching on the power of the federal government
through tax codes and strangling the prospects of a free market through
government monopolies. In March, he flouted the law by "arresting"
Milosevic, again without suffering any consequences. And all that was
just the prelude to June 28, 2001.
What is an observer forced to conclude, based on these facts? Either
that Kostunica is a lousy judge of character when it comes to Djindjic,
or that he is afraid that actions against Djindjic would precipitate
civil war and foreign intervention, or that he knows something the rest
of us do not.

SHADOWS OF THE EMPIRE

Indeed, the power struggle in Belgrade is taking place in an extremely
charged atmosphere. NATO still occupies Kosovo. Macedonia is under
tremendous pressure to surrender to Albanian demands and allow partial
NATO occupation itself. The newest imperial weapon against Macedonia is
a campaign of vicious attacks on the country's leaders - a weapon once
used exclusively against Slobodan Milosevic.
Kostunica knows how much the Empire's verbal support - whether of
Macedonia's integrity or his presidency - is really worth. He could not
have missed the fact that Sonja Biserko is now a Senior Fellow for the
government-sponsored "U.S. Institute of Peace" in Washington DC.
If all that were not enough, the Hague Inquisition's process against
Milosevic, who has been assigned the role of avatar for the entire
Serbian nation, is the darkest shadow over Belgrade yet.

THE PRISONER OF SCHEVENINGEN

A well-organized campaign for Slobodamnation of Serbs is already taking
place. Spearheaded by blatantly false reports, the Western media are
eager to exploit the "Milosevic myth." Such fictitious renditions of
recent Balkans history, casting Milosevic "as a supposedly brutal
Serbian nationalist-conqueror," says a commentary in Belgrade daily Glas
Javnosti this Wednesday, "is the ideal justification for the new
militant interventionism, motivated by the need of Western capital to
move freely across national borders. The Milosevic Myth, thus
embellished and richly illustrated, is also important because it
embodies all the racist stereotypes of Balkans denizens as retarded
untermenschen, incapable of living in peace without foreign intervention
and permanent outside tutelage." (Misha Djurkovic, Slobo Myth A Creation
of Western Media, July 11, 2001.)
Milosevic is thus tasked with defending not only himself but his entire
people, in a "court" whose reason for existence guarantees he will never
get a fair trial. The only "rule" the court recognizes is "we win, you
lose." Just this week, they
Toppled a loyal vassal government in Croatia, seizing two Croat generals
simply to undermine Milosevic's criticism. No wonder he is refusing to
play. And he is right.

A TIME TO LEAD

It may seem absurd, ironic and almost surreal that Milosevic is now
exhibiting more leadership than Kostunica. Faced with impossible odds,
completely at the mercy of his tormentors, Milosevic is standing tall
and scoffing right in their faces. Kostunica hesitates, even though he
has both the power and the obligation to stop Djindjic's tyrannical
rampage.
It all comes down to a simple equation. Serbia is too small to have two
masters, too weak right now to be run by two opposing ideologies. Which
one will prevail will be decided by a contest of deeds, not words.
People will follow those who are willing and able to lead. They rally
behind the most assertive, most vocal idea, not necessarily the best. If
the current trend continues, the battle for Serbs' hearts and minds will
be won by Djindjic's neo-liberal statism, not Kostunica's libertarian
market nationalism.
Those who do not stand on principles, stand not at all. Rather, they
kneel like slaves in the mud of self-abasement, cowering before
arbitrary power.
Kostunica is running out of one thing he never had in abundance: time.
Every day, Djindjic and his cohorts seize more power. If something is
not done immediately to establish and maintain a constitutional order in
Serbia and Yugoslavia, a month from now it might be too late to try.
Kostunica's choice will determine his people's future. By voting for him
last year, and taking to the streets afterwards, the people of Serbia
entrusted Kostunica with that heavy burden of responsibility. It is time
he justified that trust.

ANTIWAR.COM

http://english.pravda.ru/main/2001/07/13/10062.html

Miroslav Antic,
http://www.antic.org/ 

                                       Serbian News Network - SNN
                                           [EMAIL PROTECTED]
                                        http://www.antic.org/

Reply via email to