DOBRICA COSIC AND THE LAST
DEFENCE OF SERB NATIONALISM
Sonja Biserko
On the occasion of recent publications by the 'father of the Serb
nation', the director of Belgrade's Helsinki Committee for Human Rights analyses his
contribution to an unreconstructed version of Serbia's recent past that continues to hold
sway
On the eve of this year's annual Belgrade book fair, Dobrica Cosic
addressed Serbian public opinion on several fronts, in order to present once again - in
the closing stage of his life - his own interpretation of Yugoslavia's break-up and 'the
Bosnian war', an interpretation that is based solely on lies; and also in order to defend
himself and his role during the preparation and conduct of the war. In addition to
appearing according to tradition in NIN, Vecernje novosti and Politika - which has
serialised his introduction to Nikola Koljevic's diaries, edited by him - he has also
published two books: the latest instalment of Pišcevi zapisi ["Writer's
remarks"], and Vreme zmija ["Snake times"]. His habit of sounding off in
the principal media began at the time of the preparation for war, and continued during the
1990s whenever key situations arose that required aims to be redefined in accordance with
new circumstances.
As the literary critic Zlatko Pakovic notes in Politika, Dobrica Cosic's
literary, journalistic and political work 'is defined by the domination of an idea and the
teleological stereotypes that derive from it'. His chauvinism, which has cemented our
[Serbian] stereotypes about our neighbours, is perhaps most evident when he writes about
Albanians, of whom he says:
'These social, political and moral dregs of the tribal, barbaric Balkans
chose as their allies the United States and the European Union, in their struggle against
the most democratic, civilised and enlightened of the Balkan nations - the Serbs.' [who
invaded them four times and tried to exterminate them thrice in less than a century]
One would not bother with trying to interpret Dobrica Cosic's work, were
it not mainstream and had it not become the general credo of the Serbian elite. It
represents the official truth about our recent past, which has been adopted with minor
modifications by the university, the media and the dominant cultural elite. It is tied to
Koštunica's failed Commission for Truth and Reconciliation, and to the so-called third
way advocated by the group around Vesna Ristanovic (an imaginary mid-point between the
Helsinki Committee and the Radicals). These people favour the drawing up of a 'ledger of
crimes', without examining what caused them. In order as far as possible to equalise the
tally of victims, the number of Serb casualties in Srebrenica, Sarajevo and elsewhere is
multiplied. The initiators of the war were the Croats and Muslims, of course, who
exploited 'immanent religious and national intolerance and exclusivity, or existential
insecurity based on collective memory of the past'. Responsibility for this lay with the
'sticky fraternal embrace', and naturally with Tito and Communism. Tito is the central
personality of Cosic's showdown with Yugoslavia, or rather the Yugoslavia that came into
being with the 1974 constitution, which in Cosic's view 'caused the constitutional-legal
disintegration of Yugoslavia and the Serb people'. Nikola Koljevic's diaries, says Cosic,
unmask the motives and aims of 'Markale-isation and Srebrenica-isation of the Bosnian war,
in the Muslim struggle for a unified Bosnia, a first Islamic state in Europe, on the
platform of Izetbegovic's Islamic Declaration'.
The Serbian strategists would not have begun the war in the 1990s so
easily had they not believed that Russia would side with Serbia and ultimately ensure that
the war would end in Serbia's favour. This is why for the past twenty years they have been
waiting for the world constellation to change, when amid general international chaos they
would be able to extort 're-configuration of the Balkans', i.e. the partition of Bosnia
and Kosovo. This also provides the key to the Serbian elite's attitude to the recent past,
i.e. to their interpretation of it. Cosic thus says that the Serb people has been
defeated, but that 'defeats are not final'. At the same time, however, he stresses that
the Serbs have achieved some historic victories, such as Republika Srpska. According to
him, thanks to all the soldiers and commanders of the RS army, to the people and the
leaders of the Serb liberation movement in Bosnia, Republika Srpska is the first Serb
state on the far side of the Drina [a belated admission that Bosnia has never belonged to
Serbia]. Cosic slides over the fact that Radovan Karadžic is in The Hague, charged with
gravest crimes. Notwithstanding this, for Cosic he is 'not a war criminal but the
political leader of the people of Republika Srpska'. He insists that Bosnia is 'a land of
hate', and sees it as a 'launching pad' for the Islamic fundamentalists' drive towards the
north and the west, deep into Europe where they are awaited by 'their Islamic brethren,
now fragmented but determined in their jihadist faith'.
Cosic is most upset about NATO intervention, for which 'the Macbeth from
Požarevac' was responsible. He says that the motives for the [NATO] aggression were of a
vulgarly Nazi kind, and that Serb greatness at that time lay in the scale of the absurdity
- a hopeless war and resistance against the greatest military power in the world led by
the United States.
Forgetting his odes to Miloševic, whom he used to describe as the
greatest Serb politician since Nikola Pašic, Cosic in his books avoids mentioning his own
role and transfers the responsibility to 'the Macbeth from Požarevac', or as he puts it
'a Montenegrin from Požarevac' and 'petty banker', 'without any of Tito's achievements or
ability' [Tito who imposed the 1974 Constitution based on the draft by Serbian liberals
Marko Nikezic and Latinka Perovic]. It was Cosic, however, who in preparation for war
sought allies among the Serbs in Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina and Kosovo. He believed in
'the inevitability of war between Serbs and Croats, Serbs and Muslims, Serbs and
Albanians' (Pišcevi zapisi 1981-1991). War demands the establishment of priorities, which
according to Cosic meant concentration of will and forces around a single aim: 'in order
to win against so many enemies, we must mobilise our total mental, moral and physical
forces'. The mobilisation and homogenisation of the Serb people in Yugoslavia was carried
out for this reason. Cosic argues that 'all those who fight against Serb nationalism fight
against human freedom'. This approach permits one to understand the campaign waged during
the past two months (and before that) against the annual report for 2007 of the Helsinki
Committee for Human Rights.
Dobrica Cosic has spent all his life in politics, and has managed to
acquire a unique position on the Serbian political scene. He never forgave Miloševic for
removing him f rom the position of president of FRY. 'The Serb people might have had a
different fate, had it accepted my political views', he complains in one of his books. He
complains also because the world did not support him: 'The West did not support me as
president of FRY, because I was more of a Serb than I was supposed to be.' The phenomenon
of his influence and power certainly deserves attention, because that phenomenon explains
the force of the non-transparent, informal centre of power [the Caršija] that acts from
the shadows and prevents forward movement by anyone (formerly Dindic, now Tadic) until
what they consider to be Serb priorities are achieved: the unification of 'Serb lands' at
any price.
Why did Cosic participate in that historical chaos and with what idea?
He argued even before the war that the Serbs should unite in order to defend their ethnic
and historical identity; in order to rid themselves of the frustration born of disunity;
in order to heal themselves politically and acquire the self-confidence and self-respect
that a democratic and creative existence demands. For, according to him, 'the unification
of all Serb differences will enrich the Serb national, social and spiritual being. Are not
the aims of Serb unification into a single state - the unification of ethnic wholes and
majorities rather than of all Serbs - basic human rights? Was this right not made use of
by the great and powerful Germans? Why should not we small Serbs make use of it likewise?
Now, however, when the Serbs as a people have been broken up and ruined,
now it is the fault of 'the Macbeth from Požarevac'. Before the war, Cosic headed the
Committee for Human Rights and Freedoms; but today he insists that human rights negate the
Serb identity. He argues today that the Serbs accepted great sacrifices in defence of this
identity. Yet he does appeal to human rights when it comes to the fate of Radovan
Karadžic. He explains this contradiction in the following manner
'Only great nations respect the human individuality. This is not
possible in small nations, because of taboo and myth, because of the people. In small
nations, only the nation can be great. In small nations, the first moral duty is
subjugation of the individual to the community, the people, the state. A Serb is a man who
is not a man if he is not a Serb, if he is not aware of the nation, whether to praise it
or to curse it.' (Promene)
It must be admitted, on the other hand, that thanks to the degree of
consensus that has been achieved on this kind of 'interpretive model' of the recent past,
Belgrade has succeeded in watering down the effects of the Hague tribunal and the
International Court of Justice. Florence Hartmann, former spokesperson of the Tribunal's
prosecutor, has been charged with contempt of court for publishing documents that revealed
the Tribunal's decision to protect [Serbia's] 'national security interests'. This refers
to the minutes of meetings of the Supreme Defence Council that might have played a
decisive role in the ICJ's decision in the case of Bosnia-Herzegovina's suit against the
FRY for aggression and genocide. The key question, however, is how it was possible for
Carla Del Ponte to agree to blacking out parts of these documents. The proceedings against
Florence Hartmann are consequently to be welcomed, so that international institutions and
certain individuals may be called to account for making, in this case, amoral decisions.
Until the international community truly completes the process of
creating new states in the Balkans - currently those of Bosnia-Herzegovina and Kosovo -
Serbia will continue with its destructive strategy of undermining regional stability. For,
as Biljana Plavšic once said:
'We Serbs shall be brazen, determined, inflexible, and never agree to or
recognise anything. The world will get tired and give up on us, and we shall achieve our
aim. |