http://www.antiwar.com/malic/pf/p-m072502.html
Balkan Express
by Nebojsa Malic
Antiwar.com
July 25, 2002
Snapshots Of A Nightmare
"There is evil there that does not sleep."
Perhaps this description of Mordor from the film version of Tolkien's classic is too harsh on the Balkans. After all,
the peninsula is not a fountainhead of evil, merely a victim of its ravages and possession. A more apt comparison in
this vein would be Moria: a crossroads once full of wealth and splendor, now dark, desolate and taken over by all
manners of foul creatures. Either way, in this southern corner of Europe evil truly does not sleep, though it
occasionally seems otherwise.
Though many have fled the Balkans in the past decade, those who remain - out of pride, stubbornness, or folly -
face a "nasty, brutish and short" life in what Hobbes described as a "state of nature." Only in this case, the
Leviathan is its cause, not its solution.
Despite all their disputes, hatreds, conflicts and misunderstandings, people of the Balkans share the same
nightmare. And unlike the evil that has possessed them, there is no sign of anyone waking up.
The Bosnian Bungle
Imperial occupation and incessant meddling in the region are so self-evidently destructive they need no further
expounding. Next to it, however, the worst enemies of the Balkans people are their own politicians.
Take for example the parliament of the Muslim-Croat Federation in Bosnia. By their very nature, governments
take money from enterprising citizens and spend it on themselves and those they favor, often under the marquee of
"common good" or "public services." Most governments realize that their subjects need to have money before it can
be taken away from them. And though Bosnia has successfully defied all logic for years, this law of physics and
economics simply cannot be circumvented.
BBC reported this week that the Federation parliament has launched an initiative to increase veterans' benefits for
those who fought for the Muslim regime in the 1992-95 war. Given that general elections are coming up in
October, and that Muslim nationalists in both the government and the opposition are hoping to seize power, this
move is but a naked attempt to buy votes of a large constituency. Only trouble is, the money isn't there.
The Federation already spends a quarter of its annual budget, some $140 million, to pay veterans' benefits. Most of
that money seems to be coming from the IMF and the World Bank, in form of "favorable" loans. Now these
institutions are threatening to stop further loans - as well they should. Financing social policy from national debt is
a recipe for certain disaster, but no wonder the Bosnian politicians are spending frivolously. They see the loans as
"free money" that someone else will have to repay down the road. This is a common problem in all democracies,
but more so in those plagued by criminal stupidity.
On top of it all, the politicos also want to raise their salaries. Except for a handful of representatives who actually
work for a living and have to lose pay when they attend lengthy and pointless debates in the Parliament, most of
the members are professionals, living large on the backs of an impoverished, desperate populace (sounds familiar?).
The more they talk, the more they waste everyone's time, and the more frivolous and repressive legislation they
pass, the more money they can take - money that comes either from plundering the Bosnians who work, or from
mortgaging the future of their children.
Most of them deserve to be hung on lampposts long before the October election, but the likelihood of that is slim.
Come October, a new gang of thieves will inherit Ali Baba's den, and the looting will begin anew. Even Viceroy
Ashdown, who sits so high and mighty in his white tower in downtown Sarajevo, does not dare challenge this
madness. He knows better than to disturb the very nature of the game called power.
Same Old Story
While the Croatian economy stumbles and the country's population shrinks, the government is yet again falling
upon itself. Three weeks ago, Prime Minister Ivica Racan disbanded his cabinet and resigned over disputes within
the ruling coalition. Within a week, President Mesic appointed a new Prime Minister: Ivica Racan.
Now a dysfunctional government should be a good thing, since then it can hardly do much harm to the people it
normally plunders. But like everywhere else in the Balkans, the government controls just about every aspect of life
and society. As usual, there is a sea of rules, laws and regulations designed to "help" the citizens and provide "law
and order." In reality, they make it impossible to do business at all, let alone make a profit. Only organized
criminals prosper, relying either on brute force or government connections (which sort of comes out the same).
The rest are paralyzed by fear of government's power.
Croatia thus languishes in the shadowland of stagnant or decaying economy, widespread crime, and poverty,
waiting for a new government to "save" it from itself and "take it to Europe." This is causal confusion on two levels:
first, in the na�ve and dangerous belief that salvation comes through a government program; and second, in
mistakenly believing that prosperity follows, rather than precedes, entry into the EU or NATO. How any country
can believe that supporting a European bureaucracy and a tributary military force armed with expensive US
weaponry would make it richer instead of poorer is anybody's guess.
Ironically, Croatia fared the best of all combatants in the 1991-95 Succession Wars. It suffered very little war
damage compared to Bosnia, and it was not under international embargoes like Serbia. Quite the contrary, it
profited handsomely from Empire's financial and military aid aimed to bolster an anti-Serb alliance. Despite all
those advantages, it finds itself in the same economic basket as the rest of the peninsula. Given its statist frame of
mind, that is hardly surprising.
Say "Stupid!"
But the worst-of-the-lot award should certainly go to the rulers of Serbia and Montenegro, who in less than two
years managed to destroy what little survived after a decade of sanctions and war, and actually boast of this as an
accomplishment! They've even managed to destroy their joint country, which now languishes in undead existence
until a new Constitution can be put together.
As elsewhere, government is the be-all and end-all of existence in both Serbia and Montenegro. Its form is not as
important as its function. Parliaments, presidents and prime ministers can come and go, but the plunder must
continue unabated. For example, the state-owned Serbian Power Co. is mercilessly fleecing the people through fees
and tariffs even its superior, the Energy Minister, could not understand. Every protest is met with a declaration that
power is "too cheap," and needs to be charged at "European levels," for the power system to be profitable. Yet
Americans, with far more appliances that hog electricity - such as laundry dryers and air-conditioners - pay far
less for it than the tax slaves in Serbia.
But never fear, stalwart Serbs, the people who brought you the wonders of "freedom and democracy" (the way
they see it) have far more important things on their mind - such as the upcoming elections. Just two days ago,
Prime Minister Djindjic put forth his candidate for Serbian presidency, economist Miroljub Labus. He is expected to
face the current president of undead Yugoslavia, Vojislav Kostunica, who true to his style has not yet decided if he'll
run. The choice between a dawdling lawyer and a quack economist is almost obscene under current circumstances.
Better to vote for a guy in a monkey suit or someone who's dead.
Meanwhile, Djindjic is securing Imperial support by shipping every member of the former government to the
Hague Inquisition, which hopes for one final push to convict Slobodan Milosevic of war crimes. Even that is not
going too well, as one of the witnesses refuses to testify without protection, another offers nothing but hearsay, and
the third has refused to say anything for over a year.
If true, a recent story in a Serbian paper - quoted by the London Times - claiming that Milosevic's daughter has
joined the Montenegrin separatist movement must be the final proof of Serbia's complete slide into insanity.
Brilliant Deduction
However na�ve, stupid, corrupt, hateful or avaricious the locals might be, their foreign "protectors" are much worse
- if nothing, because they claim they know better and are better. That's what gave them the "right" to intervene,
murder and occupy to begin with, right?
After a decade of intervention, occupation and "humanitarian aid" to the region, the UN and OSCE have now
come up with a brilliant deduction: the presence of international troops and civilians creates a demand for
prostitution and slave trafficking. Really? Before the Empire came, prostitution in the former Yugoslavia was
much less of a problem than elsewhere in the former Socialist countries. For that matter, so were corruption,
smuggling, drug- and gun-running, and the slave trade, which the Imperials hide under the euphemism "human
trafficking." Come the wars, interventions and occupation, and - bam! - all these forms of "enterprise" spring up
and thrive. Since the impoverished locals can hardly afford food, they obviously won't be paying for sex they can
get for free. But who does, then? Enter the UN's amazing powers of deduction.
One would have to be pretty thick to ignore the obvious - too thick. And though stupidity is sometimes mistaken
for evil, it's pretty clear that in this case, they march together.
Kosovo Iniquities
Kosovo is already such a den of depravity that it cannot possibly get worse. Yet it does. Last week, Albanian
villagers attacked and burned the monastery of St. Cosma and Damian in Zociste, just after the church service held
under KFOR armed guard. Despite repeated requests and pleas by the Serbian clergy in Kosovo - whose
cooperation the Empire has repeatedly used to legitimize the occupation - German and Turkish troops prevented
the monks from visiting the ruined monastery. It does not take a genius to see that iniquities of this sort will
continue as long as Kosovo is occupied, and as long as the remaining Serbs continue to support the occupation in
na�ve belief it might help their predicament.
Values, Or Lack Thereof
Just as they created a market for prostitution and slavery, Imperial interventions and occupation have made the
Balkans fertile for all sorts of malice: warfare, to begin with, followed by mass murder, plunder, economic and
cultural destruction. Nothing is safe from the greedy, hateful claws of Empire's servants, even if it survived the
Empire itself.
After 25 years of fascism, 45 years of socialism, and 10 years of warfare and Imperial occupation, there are hardly
any values left in Balkans societies except avarice and hatred. The system in existence ensures that only those in
whom these "values" run the strongest can rise to the top. If any cultural, economic and political heritage survived
from that age before the great disasters of the 20th century, the talk of "human rights" and "democracy" is now
wiping it out. There is already no one left alive who remembers anything resembling a life in freedom.
Death to Despair!
As long as Imperial occupation endures, this dreadful state of affairs will endure as well. Yes, much of the evil that
plagues the Balkans is local in origin; Empire's retreat will not end hatred and avarice by itself. But while it lasts,
the occupation will continue to feed on them and nurture them at the same time, a malignant grip on the hearts
and souls of all.
Fortunately, surrendering to despair is not an option. Though it seems the human mind and body can withstand
more torture than one believes, even they must snap eventually and say "No more!" Depending on how stupid,
lethargic, apathetic, misguided or deceived people are, they will continue to live the nightmare until they cannot
stand it any longer, until the continuation of servitude becomes untenable. Then they will wake up.
There is no other choice.
Is there?
Balkan Express
by Nebojsa Malic
Antiwar.com
July 25, 2002
Snapshots Of A Nightmare
"There is evil there that does not sleep."
Perhaps this description of Mordor from the film version of Tolkien's classic is too harsh on the Balkans. After all,
the peninsula is not a fountainhead of evil, merely a victim of its ravages and possession. A more apt comparison in
this vein would be Moria: a crossroads once full of wealth and splendor, now dark, desolate and taken over by all
manners of foul creatures. Either way, in this southern corner of Europe evil truly does not sleep, though it
occasionally seems otherwise.
Though many have fled the Balkans in the past decade, those who remain - out of pride, stubbornness, or folly -
face a "nasty, brutish and short" life in what Hobbes described as a "state of nature." Only in this case, the
Leviathan is its cause, not its solution.
Despite all their disputes, hatreds, conflicts and misunderstandings, people of the Balkans share the same
nightmare. And unlike the evil that has possessed them, there is no sign of anyone waking up.
The Bosnian Bungle
Imperial occupation and incessant meddling in the region are so self-evidently destructive they need no further
expounding. Next to it, however, the worst enemies of the Balkans people are their own politicians.
Take for example the parliament of the Muslim-Croat Federation in Bosnia. By their very nature, governments
take money from enterprising citizens and spend it on themselves and those they favor, often under the marquee of
"common good" or "public services." Most governments realize that their subjects need to have money before it can
be taken away from them. And though Bosnia has successfully defied all logic for years, this law of physics and
economics simply cannot be circumvented.
BBC reported this week that the Federation parliament has launched an initiative to increase veterans' benefits for
those who fought for the Muslim regime in the 1992-95 war. Given that general elections are coming up in
October, and that Muslim nationalists in both the government and the opposition are hoping to seize power, this
move is but a naked attempt to buy votes of a large constituency. Only trouble is, the money isn't there.
The Federation already spends a quarter of its annual budget, some $140 million, to pay veterans' benefits. Most of
that money seems to be coming from the IMF and the World Bank, in form of "favorable" loans. Now these
institutions are threatening to stop further loans - as well they should. Financing social policy from national debt is
a recipe for certain disaster, but no wonder the Bosnian politicians are spending frivolously. They see the loans as
"free money" that someone else will have to repay down the road. This is a common problem in all democracies,
but more so in those plagued by criminal stupidity.
On top of it all, the politicos also want to raise their salaries. Except for a handful of representatives who actually
work for a living and have to lose pay when they attend lengthy and pointless debates in the Parliament, most of
the members are professionals, living large on the backs of an impoverished, desperate populace (sounds familiar?).
The more they talk, the more they waste everyone's time, and the more frivolous and repressive legislation they
pass, the more money they can take - money that comes either from plundering the Bosnians who work, or from
mortgaging the future of their children.
Most of them deserve to be hung on lampposts long before the October election, but the likelihood of that is slim.
Come October, a new gang of thieves will inherit Ali Baba's den, and the looting will begin anew. Even Viceroy
Ashdown, who sits so high and mighty in his white tower in downtown Sarajevo, does not dare challenge this
madness. He knows better than to disturb the very nature of the game called power.
Same Old Story
While the Croatian economy stumbles and the country's population shrinks, the government is yet again falling
upon itself. Three weeks ago, Prime Minister Ivica Racan disbanded his cabinet and resigned over disputes within
the ruling coalition. Within a week, President Mesic appointed a new Prime Minister: Ivica Racan.
Now a dysfunctional government should be a good thing, since then it can hardly do much harm to the people it
normally plunders. But like everywhere else in the Balkans, the government controls just about every aspect of life
and society. As usual, there is a sea of rules, laws and regulations designed to "help" the citizens and provide "law
and order." In reality, they make it impossible to do business at all, let alone make a profit. Only organized
criminals prosper, relying either on brute force or government connections (which sort of comes out the same).
The rest are paralyzed by fear of government's power.
Croatia thus languishes in the shadowland of stagnant or decaying economy, widespread crime, and poverty,
waiting for a new government to "save" it from itself and "take it to Europe." This is causal confusion on two levels:
first, in the na�ve and dangerous belief that salvation comes through a government program; and second, in
mistakenly believing that prosperity follows, rather than precedes, entry into the EU or NATO. How any country
can believe that supporting a European bureaucracy and a tributary military force armed with expensive US
weaponry would make it richer instead of poorer is anybody's guess.
Ironically, Croatia fared the best of all combatants in the 1991-95 Succession Wars. It suffered very little war
damage compared to Bosnia, and it was not under international embargoes like Serbia. Quite the contrary, it
profited handsomely from Empire's financial and military aid aimed to bolster an anti-Serb alliance. Despite all
those advantages, it finds itself in the same economic basket as the rest of the peninsula. Given its statist frame of
mind, that is hardly surprising.
Say "Stupid!"
But the worst-of-the-lot award should certainly go to the rulers of Serbia and Montenegro, who in less than two
years managed to destroy what little survived after a decade of sanctions and war, and actually boast of this as an
accomplishment! They've even managed to destroy their joint country, which now languishes in undead existence
until a new Constitution can be put together.
As elsewhere, government is the be-all and end-all of existence in both Serbia and Montenegro. Its form is not as
important as its function. Parliaments, presidents and prime ministers can come and go, but the plunder must
continue unabated. For example, the state-owned Serbian Power Co. is mercilessly fleecing the people through fees
and tariffs even its superior, the Energy Minister, could not understand. Every protest is met with a declaration that
power is "too cheap," and needs to be charged at "European levels," for the power system to be profitable. Yet
Americans, with far more appliances that hog electricity - such as laundry dryers and air-conditioners - pay far
less for it than the tax slaves in Serbia.
But never fear, stalwart Serbs, the people who brought you the wonders of "freedom and democracy" (the way
they see it) have far more important things on their mind - such as the upcoming elections. Just two days ago,
Prime Minister Djindjic put forth his candidate for Serbian presidency, economist Miroljub Labus. He is expected to
face the current president of undead Yugoslavia, Vojislav Kostunica, who true to his style has not yet decided if he'll
run. The choice between a dawdling lawyer and a quack economist is almost obscene under current circumstances.
Better to vote for a guy in a monkey suit or someone who's dead.
Meanwhile, Djindjic is securing Imperial support by shipping every member of the former government to the
Hague Inquisition, which hopes for one final push to convict Slobodan Milosevic of war crimes. Even that is not
going too well, as one of the witnesses refuses to testify without protection, another offers nothing but hearsay, and
the third has refused to say anything for over a year.
If true, a recent story in a Serbian paper - quoted by the London Times - claiming that Milosevic's daughter has
joined the Montenegrin separatist movement must be the final proof of Serbia's complete slide into insanity.
Brilliant Deduction
However na�ve, stupid, corrupt, hateful or avaricious the locals might be, their foreign "protectors" are much worse
- if nothing, because they claim they know better and are better. That's what gave them the "right" to intervene,
murder and occupy to begin with, right?
After a decade of intervention, occupation and "humanitarian aid" to the region, the UN and OSCE have now
come up with a brilliant deduction: the presence of international troops and civilians creates a demand for
prostitution and slave trafficking. Really? Before the Empire came, prostitution in the former Yugoslavia was
much less of a problem than elsewhere in the former Socialist countries. For that matter, so were corruption,
smuggling, drug- and gun-running, and the slave trade, which the Imperials hide under the euphemism "human
trafficking." Come the wars, interventions and occupation, and - bam! - all these forms of "enterprise" spring up
and thrive. Since the impoverished locals can hardly afford food, they obviously won't be paying for sex they can
get for free. But who does, then? Enter the UN's amazing powers of deduction.
One would have to be pretty thick to ignore the obvious - too thick. And though stupidity is sometimes mistaken
for evil, it's pretty clear that in this case, they march together.
Kosovo Iniquities
Kosovo is already such a den of depravity that it cannot possibly get worse. Yet it does. Last week, Albanian
villagers attacked and burned the monastery of St. Cosma and Damian in Zociste, just after the church service held
under KFOR armed guard. Despite repeated requests and pleas by the Serbian clergy in Kosovo - whose
cooperation the Empire has repeatedly used to legitimize the occupation - German and Turkish troops prevented
the monks from visiting the ruined monastery. It does not take a genius to see that iniquities of this sort will
continue as long as Kosovo is occupied, and as long as the remaining Serbs continue to support the occupation in
na�ve belief it might help their predicament.
Values, Or Lack Thereof
Just as they created a market for prostitution and slavery, Imperial interventions and occupation have made the
Balkans fertile for all sorts of malice: warfare, to begin with, followed by mass murder, plunder, economic and
cultural destruction. Nothing is safe from the greedy, hateful claws of Empire's servants, even if it survived the
Empire itself.
After 25 years of fascism, 45 years of socialism, and 10 years of warfare and Imperial occupation, there are hardly
any values left in Balkans societies except avarice and hatred. The system in existence ensures that only those in
whom these "values" run the strongest can rise to the top. If any cultural, economic and political heritage survived
from that age before the great disasters of the 20th century, the talk of "human rights" and "democracy" is now
wiping it out. There is already no one left alive who remembers anything resembling a life in freedom.
Death to Despair!
As long as Imperial occupation endures, this dreadful state of affairs will endure as well. Yes, much of the evil that
plagues the Balkans is local in origin; Empire's retreat will not end hatred and avarice by itself. But while it lasts,
the occupation will continue to feed on them and nurture them at the same time, a malignant grip on the hearts
and souls of all.
Fortunately, surrendering to despair is not an option. Though it seems the human mind and body can withstand
more torture than one believes, even they must snap eventually and say "No more!" Depending on how stupid,
lethargic, apathetic, misguided or deceived people are, they will continue to live the nightmare until they cannot
stand it any longer, until the continuation of servitude becomes untenable. Then they will wake up.
There is no other choice.
Is there?
