Editorial
Serbia’s Strategy suffers defeat
By Sonja Biserko
Recent acquittals of two Croatian generals, Ante
Gotovina and Mladen Markac, and of Kosovo leader Ramush Haradinaj by
ICTY Appeal Chamber opened up a major issue Serbia has neglected for
long: the issue of nature of ex-Yugoslav wars.
Reactions by governmental institutions, the media and
even the civil sector revealed again how deep-seated the theories of
Serbs’ victimization are and how little Belgrade is ready to face up its
responsibility for the cruellest conflict in Europe after WWII. Speaking
as one, the state and the media claimed that Serbs were again victims of
global injustice and homogenized the public.
Acquittals were interpreted as new testimonies of ICTY
anti-Serb activity and used as strong arguments against its overall work
and role. Officials seized the opportunity to reaffirm their negative
stances about the Tribunal. “If they wanted us to quarrel with one
another, they certainly found a way to do it,” President Nikolic
messaged the region. “How possibly could we have the same relations with
our neighbours after this?” he added. Rasim Ljajic, member of all
cabinets since 2000 and a key person of Serbia’s cooperation with ICTY,
was “shocked” with the decision and said, “People in Serbia have the
right to be angry and furious, because this is all about selective
justice and injustice.”
The extreme right strongly responded with protests,
releases and agile propaganda of anti-Hague sentiments. Democratic Party
of Serbia /DSS/, Serb Radical Party /SRS/, movements such as Dveri, Nasi
and 1389 and individuals and circles close to them sharpened their
demands for the establishment of a strong nation-state and abandonment
of EU integration.
With few exceptions, the anti-war civil sector sided
with the government. So Dubravka Stojanovic, outstanding historian,
wrote, “Acquittals /of the accused/ of the ‘Storm’ operation negate the
key motive of the war or the ideology behind it. At least when it comes
to Croatia’s role in it, the war has now become defensive and a
liberation war only.” She emphasizes the mainstream thesis and says,
“The problem is that the Yugoslav case cannot be compared with any case
of a state going to war with another state. First of all, this war was
wagged within a common state* and its purpose was
to disintegrate it, occupy territories and establish nation-states
ethnically clean as much as possible. It all happened at a special
historical moment that followed on the fall of the Berlin Wall and the
end of bipolar world.” For her part, Vesna Pesic, former leader of Civic
Alliance and former official of Liberal Democratic Party, holds that the
Tribunal made this “scandalous decision that destroyed its credibility”
under outside influence. “Some cases have not been influenced from the
outside, some were, including this one,” she says. And Vladimir
Kecmanovic, younger generation writer, claims, “Not a single ICTY
decision carried legal or, God forbid, moral weight. They have all been
politically hued. This is why Serb representatives have the right and
obligation to protest.”
On the whole, these reactions only laid bare how
things stand when it comes to ICTY and probably more to Belgrade’s and
Serb elites’ attitude towards the recent past. Namely, Serbia hoped that
the decisions on the “joint criminal enterprise” would relativize – to
certain extent at least – their own responsibility. As the outcome was
contrary to their expectations, the decisions equal fiascos of Serbia’s
strategy based on relativized responsibility for the war but also a
debacle of a part of the international community.
To clarify any dilemma about these decisions one
should re-examine the policy behind the indictments. This was a policy
of having people from all ethnic groups sentenced: actually the policy
of equalizing the criminal responsibilities of all sides. The ICTY
Prosecution raised four indictments meant to relativize the
responsibility: against Croatian generals, Gotovina and Markac, against
Ramush Haradinaj, against Naser Oric and against Bosniak General Rasim
Delic. All the four indictments were raised for the same crime – “joint
criminal enterprise.” This was meant to equalize the accused with
Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic.
This was in line with a school of thought in some of
Europe’s political and intellectual circles. Equal responsibility of all
sides, held the school, would facilitate the process of regional
reconciliation. This is why no indictment was raised against, say,
people responsible for the crimes committed in Eastern Slavonia and
Vukovar (except for the Ovcara case) or against rump Yugoslavia’s army
commanders and Presidency – precisely, against Veljko Kadijevic,
minister of defence, and Borislav Jovic, president of the Presidency in
early 1990s.
Sir Geoffrey Nice, deputy prosecutor at the trial of
Slobodan Milosevic, said, “Qualified lawyers have suggested that the
evidence was insufficient.” According to him, Carla Del Ponte
nevertheless “instructed” three jurists with no experience in courtroom
to raise the above-mentioned indictments. “Anyway, these jurists were
not to represent the Prosecution before the court.”
One should bear in mind that when to comes to, say,
Serbs, the ICTY Appeals Chamber has made decisions on acquittals. For
instance, it has acquitted Milan Milutinovic, Serbia’s president at the
time of NATO intervention and Miroslav Radic, standing trial in the case
of “Vukovar troika,” as well as ruled early releases of Veselin
Sljivancanin and several other convicted prisoners. “Should everyone
accused be sentenced should be a reason for concern. For, either due to
insufficient evidence or procedural problems every court of law acquits
a certain number of the accused. Courts are not there to sentence
everyone. Should this be the case, all courts would just stamp the
actions taken by prosecutors,” says Geoffrey Nice.
Following on what “happened” in Srebrenica and Zepa,
and at the time when the same fate loomed over Bihac in
Bosnia-Herzegovina, the “Storm” operation, launched to liberate the
occupied Croatian territories, was a prelude to the end of the war. The
“Storm” established a new balance of military power in the region: it
marked the end of years-long supremacy of Serb armies, which then
withdrew from Croatia and West Bosnia-Herzegovina. Prepared together
with retired American officers, it was over in four days only. The Croat
army was marching into empty towns.
That was just implementation of the agreement the then
President of Croatia, Franjo Tudjman, and his Serbian counterpart,
Dobrica Cosic, made back in 1993. Serb ethnic territory, the two agreed
on, shall consolidate through occupation of protected zones in
Bosnia-Herzegovina. Further on, Serbs from Krajina shall be moved either
to Republika Srpska or Serbia, or maybe to Kosovo as well. Cosic was
personally engaged in the arrangements for moving Croats from Hrtkovci
(Vojvodina) to Croatia and settling Serbs from West Slavonia (the
village of Kula) in their stead.
Three months before the “Storm,” in May 1995, Belgrade
sent three officers of Yugoslav Army to Knin to make preparations for
evacuation of Serbs. Only a handful of “chosen” citizens were informed
about the plan. Unfortunately, the great majority were not. So they were
sacrificed. In early 1995 Serbs in Croatia was offered the so-called
plan Z-4. Belgrade convinced them to turn the plan down. Had they
accepted the offer Krajina would have been granted the status of “the
state within the state.”
During the “Storm” and in its aftermath,
Belgrade-seated media were reporting exodus of Serbs: a true tragedy of
ex-Yugoslav wars. Everything was even more tragic since Belgrade and
Zagreb alike have obstructed return to their homesteads later on.
The international community (the so-called Contact
Group) nodded to all these agreements, taking that that establishment of
ethnic states in the Balkans was in process and that return of refugees
was an unrealistic option. Killing of several hundreds of elderly people
in the “Storm” put across a cruel message: there will be no return. For
its part, Belgrade planningly settled Serbs from Krajina in minority
communities (Hungarian and, especially, Croat). So, for instance,
newcomers from Krajina in Stara Pazova, where Slovakians used to make
the majority population, completely changed the ethnic structure of the
town. This is how once prominently multiethnic Vojvodina was ethnically
consolidated: a fact confirmed by last year’s census.
In such circumstances it was hard to expect ICTY not
to reflect all these contradictions. But regardless of all its
shortcomings, ICTY role and significance in the region are invaluable.
Its proceedings and effects are still to be discussed by legal experts.
And the latest acquittals may be a prelude to a deeper insight into this
institution. No doubt that the legacy of ICTY will be crucial to all
future researchers and scholars exploring the history of ex-Yugoslavia
and its brutal death.
* What is overlooked in
Serbia is the fact that the war was wagged in the territories of Croatia
and Bosnia-Herzegovina, internationally recognized as independent states
following on the opinions of Badinter Arbitration Committee. From the
point of view of the international community Yugoslavia ceased to exist
on October 8, 1991. This means – and this is what ICTY holds – that the
character of the war was international.
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