"Croatia has been obsessed with the desire to become the “regional leader”, 
.."

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http://www.tni.org/detail_page.phtml?act_id=18105
Five theses on Kosovo
Feral Tribune, 1 April 2008 
Croatia’s recognition of Kosovo has more to do with a desire to please 
Washington than responsible regional politics, writes Marinko Èuliæ.

In less than the two months since Kosovo became independent, Croatia has been 
flooded with so many wrong conclusions and theses that they have already 
started to create a false parallel reality. This is not to say that 
unforgettable political statements have not been made before, especially during 
Tudjman’s time, when, for example, the thesis of Croatia as the ‘bulwark of 
Christianity’ shook the western part of ex-Yugoslavia, and almost the country 
itself. We thought we had left this behind, and few could have imagined that 
this dirty package once thrown out of the door would return through the window.

This is exactly what has happened. In the effort to please Washington it is as 
though Croatia’s politicians adopted the logic of George Bush, who solemnly 
proclaimed the end of war on the occasion of the US army’s entry into Baghdad, 
while the war has kept raging for the next five years, and nobody knows for how 
much longer. It is in a similar manner that many in Croatia see the 
independence of Kosovo. It took only a few weeks for the unsophisticated 
simplifications of a serious problem to produce several firm, but completely 
wrong theses about it. Here they are.

Stability. The dumbest statement about Kosovo’s independence is that it will 
bring stability to the region, since, as anyone can see, quite the opposite is 
true. In no time, the governments in four of six former Yugoslav states have 
been seriously shaken. One of them, Serbia, has already collapsed, Macedonia 
has barely avoided the same fate, while crisis struck the government of Bosnia 
and Herzegovina (which is Bosnia’s permanent state to tell the truth) and also 
Croatia. This was to be expected, of course. In each of these countries lives a 
sizeable community of an opposing side, either Serbs or Albanians, and, since 
its collapse, never has the crisis spilled so rapidly from one end of the 
former Yugoslavia to another. If this is stability, then what would instability 
look like?!

End of Yugoslavia. The favorite thesis in Croatian politics and media is that 
the independence of Kosovo is the last act of Yugoslavia’s breakdown, which is 
to say that it was something inevitable and would finally put an end to the 
story. But it might rather be the beginning of something: that Yugoslavia, 
after it has been broken down along the borders of the former federal 
republics, could now continue breaking down along ethnic lines. The most 
affected state would again be Serbia (more specifically its regions of 
Vojvodina, Sandzak and the Presevo valley), but also other countries, 
particularly Bosnia and Herzegovina, Macedonia, and somewhat less Montenegro 
and Croatia. Only Slovenia seems to escape the meltdown. Those other countries 
have learnt their lessons, however, and thus none of them has so far recognized 
an independent Kosovo, except Croatia, which seems to believe that the best 
place from which to look at the regional problems is not
 Zagreb, Sarajevo or Podgorica, but Washington.

NATO. Croatia has its own specific reasons for so obediently adhering to the 
views from Washington because it knows that it could never become part of NATO 
if it does not recognise Kosovo. But this is not the whole truth. Prime 
Minister Ivo Sanader also had his own reasons for his speedy recognition of 
Kosovo. Demands from Washington came as a welcome excuse. The Kosovo crisis has 
resolved one of his biggest old problems: the fact that for years popular 
support for NATO membership was stuck between 30 and 40 percent, while now it 
has skyrocketed to 60 percent.

Prime Minister Sanader, of course, is a responsible enough politician not to 
openly pour oil on the Kosovo fire, unlike some pro-government newspapers that 
reported the alleged arrival of Russian missiles on the Croatian border. But he 
also doesn’t mind if recognition of Kosovo causes some tension on the other 
side, nor even among Serbs in Croatia itself. He is obviously not very 
concerned about the effect on the situation in the region, especially when 
consider that this is the first recognition of statehood for one ethnic group 
within the borders of a former Yugoslav republic. Not even Milosevic and 
Tudjman ever thought of recognizing the independence of the para-states they 
themselves had created (two self-proclaimed Serbian states in BiH and Croatia, 
and one Croatian in BiH). Petty local tyrants seem to have been better than big 
ones, at least in this issue.

Independent Democratic Serbian Party (SDSS). The party that represents the 
interests of Serbs in Croatia embarrassed itself by making empty threats that 
it would leave the coalition government if Croatia recognized Kosovo. This has 
created the impression that SDSS only trades with government posts, while 
Sanader did nothing to disprove this largely overblown accusation. Quite to the 
contrary, he only strengthened it by offering Slobodan Uzelac of the SDSS a 
post in the state privatization fund.

By so doing, he legitimised the worst among the critics of SDSS. He knows full 
well, but prefers to keep quite, that the SDSS is a modern party that has done 
a great deal to defuse Serbian-Croatian tensions in Croatia. SDSS was wrong to 
ignore the plan made by Marti Ahtisaari, however, which guarantees great 
autonomy to the Kosovo Serbs, even double citizenship, while its rejection 
might leave them with almost nothing. Still, too much defamation against SDSS 
has been heard these days, including that they are the tool of the Serbian 
state in Croatia, while some even went so far as to accuse them of being the 
tool of the Serbian extreme nationalist Radical party.

All this reveals how little Milorad Pupovac, the President of SDSS, is 
understood. He has been a loyal ally of Serbia’s liberal President Boris Tadiæ. 
He has no hesitation about defending his position on Serbian State Television, 
in front of the anchors who do not hide that they fiercely sympathize with the 
Radical party of Tomislav Nikoliæ. But it seems that nobody in Croatia wants to 
know this, and without knowing it, it is impossible to understand why SDSS 
opposed the fast recognition of Kosovo. Such recognition benefits the Serbian 
nationalistic parties, and that is why SDSS asked for recognition to be 
postponed at least until the parliamentary elections in Serbia in May.

Regional leader. Croatia has been obsessed with the desire to become the 
“regional leader”, which is childish and narcissist, but would not be too hard 
to bear had it not been for one other thing. This title is expected to be 
bestowed by major international offices, but not by the countries in the region 
itself, while, bearing in mind all the bad moves thus far, it is quite obvious 
that none of the countries in the region would want to give Croatia this title …
 except maybe Kosovo. And the lesson? You cannot keep your feet here and your 
head in Washington and expect that suspicious neighbors will take you as one of 
their own, let alone respect you.

This article appeared in Feral Tribune on 27 March 2008

Translated by Aleksej Šæira and Tena Erceg

Copyright © 2008 Feral Tribune.


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