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Title: A War Nearby Author: Lope Vargas Date: 1999 Language: en Topics: Diavolo in corpo, war, history Source: Retrieved on June 17, 2012 from http://feartosleep.espivblogs.net/2012/06/16/a-war-nearby-by-lope-vargas-diavolo-in-corpo/
In the years that followed the decomposition of the bureaucratic regimes
of eastern Europe, several âeulogizersâ of our civilization coined the
description of the latest collective illusion to mark Western life. That
descriptionâand who remembers anything else?âwas the end of History. Not
just the victory of liberal capitalism over state capitalism, wrongly
called communism, but the idea that a world definitively pacified, a
world forgetful of past horrors, wars and massacres, would be born from
this victory. A happy world, perhaps just a bit boring, the planetary
advent of civilization after centuries of blood. This idea has
experienced alternating destinies for some time, to the detriment of
those few who still see the horror precisely in this civilization and
those many who have seen the daily horror of civilization tattoo itself
forever on their skin. While the more ingenuous among the parties
interested in the maintenance of the world order slept tranquilly on the
end of History,a not very small part of those who wanted to put history
back in motion slept just as placidly.
Most untimely descendents of positivism, the latter were still convinced
at bottom of the inevitability of civil progress. One still had to
struggle hard to change the world, but the opponent wasnât as
bloodthirsty as it once was: several insurmountable limits of
correctness, if not humanity, had been set. And the worst beasts of the
past, those hidden in the corner of the consciousness of every one of
usâand not only in that of our adversaryâpromised not to reappear
anymore. The exploiters, civil; the exploited, irreproachable. But a
single word was sufficient to mark the funeral rites of these two brief
modern illusions. Try saying âBosniaâ, and everything that one believed
to be buried forever reappears beyond the hedge of our gardens. Bosnia
is the measure of how much blood capital demands, while it tells us
again what we did not want to know: whether History advances or has
stopped, we still live on the edge of horror.
As was predictable, after Bosnia, Kosovo followed, and maybe after
Kosovo, Macedonia will follow, in a tight sequence of massacres that
will make us wring our hands. From Sarajevo on, those who have been
responsible for the Yugoslav carnage have sought to hide their role in
the events; time after time, they have unloaded all guilt on the
bloodthirsty Balkan commanders, and now they have successfully defined
the NATO bombing as humanitarian intervention. On the other hand
however, everyone has sought a safe port against the storm of their
conscience, and all this shouting of âNo to the war!â until one is
exhausted has only served to hide powerlessness in the face of such
frighteningly close and incomprehensible events. In search of any
certainty, so many have given heed to the orphans of Viet Nam and
Nicaragua, that they came to depict the Serbs as a small nation under
attack, determined to defend what is left of socialism with gun in hand.
From this one gets the unpresentable anti-imperialist slogans on the
walls and the posthumous elegies to Tito. Others have invoked diplomacy
and politics, that is to say, war by other means. Still others have
thought to escape from the horrors by taking refuge in the churches to
pray to the god in whose name the worst misdeeds have been committed.
These positions are not only the fruit of the fertile encounter between
stalinism and christianity; they are ways like others of keeping
Yugoslavia distant from our homes.
From the moment it began, our paid interpreters and commentators on
international politics have been revealing the particular reasons for
the latest Yugoslav war and for the western intervention. The elements
of the conflictâgeopolitical and economicâhave been patiently
enumerated. No one has been forced by counter-information to uncover
hidden and decisive truth. Everything is said about this war except the
essential, that which no further list of data can succeed in telling us.
If we want to try to achieve an understanding of the gangrene spreading
throughout the Balkans in recent years, we should not lose sight of the
social question: the history, on the one hand, of those who try to
accumulate wealth and power without many scruples and, on the other
hand, those who suffer conditions of life that are imposed on them and
at times try to rebel. The recent history of Yugoslavia creates a new
awareness. The clash that is born from social division does not
necessarily lead toward new and free worlds. Neither through the
superimposition of small changes which mold reality little by little in
the image of our dreams nor through the accumulation of the conditions
that will determine a definitive future explosion of the reality that
displeases us. The unfolding of this clash can only provoke those social
breaks in which everything finally becomes possible. And this everything
includes freedom, but also the worst of oppressions. It is only in light
of the social question that the ensemble of data that they have spewed
in our face about the current Balkan war can assume a certain,
frightening, coherence. If there is social division here as there is in
Yugoslavia; if the specific forms that the social struggle has assumed
in Yugoslavia was determined largely by necessities ripened in our
Westâthen we are already at warâŠyes, we, as well. And if this is not
enough for us, we would do well to be aware that nothing guarantees that
the mechanisms that drive so many Yugoslav exploited to participate in
this horror could not appear tomorrow precisely in the heart of our
civilized world. Now, Yugoslavia is not so far away.
Heading in the opposite direction to that taken by Theseus, in the end,
we follow the thread of social struggle to the center of the Balkan
labyrinth in order to get to know the Minotaur. Outside the labyrinth is
the Europe of the beginning of the 20^(th) century, the totality of
interests that outlined the present border of Albania in 1912 and led to
the organization of the territorial power that would take the name of
Yugoslavia around the Serbian state at the end of the first world war.
The Balkans never underwent that long historical process characteristic
of western Europe through which the borders of different kingdoms came
to approximately coincide with the idea of as many nations. The very
idea of a national state only appeared a short time ago in this
peninsula, which had been subdivided between the Hapsburg and Ottoman
empires until recently. Thus, the territory of the old Yugoslav
federation was actually the area in the Balkans where several different
populations mingled in the era of the great empires. Macedonians,
Bulgarians, Albanians, Croatians, Serbians and others populated this
region without giving it any national homogeneity. Just as the Italian
Renaissance carried in itself the prospects for the social changes that
rendered it possible, so the struggle of the Balkan populations against
Austrian and Turkish domination had social characteristics. But not
solely. If in western Europe the concept of the nation now rests on the
continuity of a power over a given territory, in the Balkans the
mythological element prevails: the darkness of foreign domination and
suffering followed a supposed âage of goldâ, giving a mystical, almost
messianic, significance to the redemption of each ethnicity. Every
single national mythology has survived the collapse of two great
Empires, being exalted or repressed from time to time according to the
interests of different western powers that have sought to control the
region.
The Albanian national identity experienced a formidable thrust beginning
in 1910âwhen the Italian and Austrian chancelleries began to construct
an Albanian state under their protection in order guarantee their
hegemony over the Adriatic. It reached its peak with the annexation of
Kosovo, Cianaria and some Bulgarian territoriesâthe great Albaniaâunder
the guidance of the fascists of Galeazzo Ciano.
The Yugoslav political borders, like those of much of eastern Europe,
have the particularity of not having been outlined as a consequence of
conflicts between the different states that compose the Balkans, but
rather of being imposed according to the power relations between the
victors of the two world wars. Thus, these borders express the
successive balances between various powers and are meaningful only as
long as these balances last. The foundation of Yugoslavia does not
spring directly from the demands made along these lines by different
minority strata of the Slav populations of the Balkansâdemands that were
expressed in the efforts to give body to a Serbo-Croatian literary
language among other things. Above all, it responds to two vital needs
of the victors of the first world war. First, that of creating a
sufficiently solid state around the Serb realm by adding the Slav
regions confiscated from the Austro-Hungarian Empire to it in order to
make it into a barrier to German expansionism toward the Mediterranean.
And, equally important, that of insuring an allied military presence in
the heart of the Balkans that would be in a position to give some
stability to the entire region. These same strategic options were
retained at the end of the second world war with the supplementary
guarantee of a prospect for internal stability that was much more
convincing than in the past, thanks to the federal organization of the
new state. Besides, for the first time in the brief history of
Yugoslavia, a real and powerful popular outburst identified its
interests with those of the state. To the nationalist mythologies
already present in the area, an artificial one was addedâthat of
Yugoslavia. If the previous mythologies brought their force to past
struggles against the Turks and the Austrians, this new one caused the
populations to participate together in a single national consciousness
through the founding myth of resistance to fascism and the war of
liberation from the Germans, creating a patriotic ideology that had not
existed until that time.
Here we are then before the entrance of a labyrinth in which the paths
of the social clash and those of nationalism run parallel. Hundreds of
years of suffering for the exploited of the Balkans are re-elaborated in
favor of the ruling classes who present themselves as heirs of the
heroes of past struggles, under the watchful eyes of the western
chancelleries and the Comintern. Nationalist discourse is used
permanently in Albania like it is in Yugoslavia in order to maintain a
minimal level of social cohesion, and as soon as any turbulence appears
on the horizon, the ethnic myths are expanded to the point of
exasperation. The regime of Enver Hoxha, more backward and less flexible
than that of Tito, would come to build a good part of its stability on a
permanent anti-Yugoslav and anti-Greek mobilization. Hoxha re-elaborates
and updates the traditional Albanian codes; he presents himself as
continuing the work of Scanderbeg, âfather of the fatherlandâ of
Albania, and tries to substitute the cult of âAlbanietyâ for the three
religions present in the territoryâorthodoxy, catholicism and islam. The
supposed ethnic primacy of the Albanians as the only people in a
position to establish communism is combined with the myth of proletarian
internationalism. Even the vicissitudes of international politics are
read through the filter of an ethnic standard. For example, the break
with Moscow after Stalinâs death is explained in terms of the character
of the Slavic people who supposedly lean intrinsically toward despotism
and barbarism. Then, after the break between Tito and Hoxha in 1948, the
heart of the nationalist discourse becomes the âliberationâ of Kosovo
where the Albanian population has to live together with Slavs who are
inevitably barbarians.
If the Albanian bureaucracy entrusted its stability to this ceaseless
cultural and ideological nationalist productionâas well as fierce
repression and a few social concessionsâfor forty years, the bureaucracy
that ruled Yugoslavia would combine a federalist discourse with the
nationalist one.
The âmiracleâ of Tito, praised so highly by the stalinists of our day,
consists of developing bureaucracies from ethnic foundations for every
Yugoslav region in perpetual rivalry among themselves and in presenting
himself as the only figure in a position to make them live together.
Behind the official federalist ideology derived from the Resistance, the
ensemble of national particularisms has been meticulously cultivated and
the very threat of nationalist explosion used as an element of stability
by the regime. Few political regimes in the world can boast of an
attention to the question of âcultural libertiesâ and ârespect for
minoritiesâ equal to that of the Yugoslav regime. All of the ethnicities
present in Yugoslavia received instruction in their own language, read
their own newspapers and watched their own television channels. All
official documents were translated into the main languages. In this way,
the national problem became an integral part of the mode of social
division and management of the Yugoslav system. However, the technique
of fomenting nationalisms in order to strengthen the Federation could
not be applied in Kosovo. Since the idea of a Balkan federation that
would have included the Albania of Hoxha was tabled by force of
circumstances, granting Kosovo the status of a republic would have meant
facilitating the expansionist goals of Tirana. Thus, in flagrant
contradiction with the official federalist ideology, Kosovo has remained
a mere territory of Serbia for forty years. This choice found
justification in the Serbian nationalist mythology that sees Albanians
as traitors in the struggle against the Turks and Kosovo as the cradle
of the nation. The concessions and revocations of autonomous status to
Kosovo have, therefore, been conditioned on the varying necessity of
Belgrade to blow on the nationalist fire in order to reunite the Serbian
population.
Thus, while the Croatian, Slovenian and Serbian nationalist ideologies
were supported more or less openly by the bureaucrats of the League of
Yugoslav Communists, that of Kosovo was reinforced under the table in
part by the government of Tirana. The Kosovo Liberation Army itself was
born through the fusion of several old clandestine Enverist groups, and
the entire history of Kosovar independence ideology becomes entwined
with the designs for a great Albania advanced by still more recent
Albanian governments, in particular that of Sali Berisha.
We advance into the labyrinth and already the presence of the Minotaur
is impending. We will meet it shortly when class hatred reaches its peak
and is exchanged much too quickly for its contrary, ethnic hatred, and
when this precarious balance among the Balkan nationalist ideologies is
dissolved. There is no precise turning point in this Balkan history of
ours. A series of converging processes of a varying nature exists,
causing explosions that in themselves could open the door to some new
scenario.
During the 1980âs the federal structure of the Yugoslavian state
demonstrated that it was no longer in a position to control the social
situation. The international organizations bound the granting of
loansâwithout which the Yugoslav economy would suffocateâto the
application of the prescription for reorganization formulated by the
International Monetary Fund (IMF). But the attempts to restructure the
heavy industrial sectors of the economy met with an ever-rising wave
ever resistance among the exploited, and long strikes followed one after
another in all parts of the federation. Thus the Yugoslav bureaucracy
began to lose all international credibility, because it was unable to
efficiently reorganize the economy. In the face of this breakdown of the
economic machinery, the interests of various bureaucratic factions
suddenly came into competition, due to major imbalances existing in the
industrial development of the federation. Slovenia and Croatiaâboth
relatively industrialized and modernâopposed the more backwards
republics of the south. The wealthier republics, at that time, were
bound to the others by ties of obligatory solidarity that were realized
through the financing of consistent federal funds.
Up to that time, as we have seen, the bureaucracy put forth a double
discourse, superimposing the official cult of federalism and Yugoslav
unity onto a constant call to national identity. At this point, however,
the federalist discourse ceased to be useful or meaningful since, in
order to survive, each republic had to renegotiate the bonds of
solidarity that tied it to the others. In order to accomplish this,
there was no alternative but nationalism to mobilize the population,
convincing it that its troubles were caused by the rival republics. The
discourse in fashion among the bureaucrats of each republic became, in
summary: âWorkers, we are with you and against the others!â Obviously,
the Slovenian and Croatian bureaucrats added that the economic
scarcities of this period were due to the excessive amount of federal
funds confiscated by the backward Serbia. On the other hand, the Serbian
bureaucrats tried to convince the exploited of their republic that all
responsibility lay with the Croatians and Slovenians.
These maneuvers are not new in Yugoslav history, but in the past they
have never brought about decisive transformations, always being
successful at reestablishing the social discipline necessary for making
the economic machinery start again after a period of negotiation and a
few reciprocal concessions. The ruling groups that managed this process
during the â80âs did not realize quickly enough that international
economic pressures left only a minimal margin for maneuvering in order
to renegotiate a new internal balance. At a certain point, no one was
able to concede anything any more. Besides, Tito had left a series of
decision making procedures as an inheritance that were sufficiently
complex that they prevented each regional interest from imposing itself
through institutional tools. Thus the struggles of the exploited were
able to break each attempt to put the economy back in motion and the
harmony of the federation was reduced to impotence.
Throughout the 1980âs, the discourse on which the Yugoslavian
bureaucracies based their power progressively lost credibility.
As we have seen, the system of values that held the country together was
crushed by its own contradictions. The unitary mythology born from the
Resistance crumbled under the renewed weight of nationalist propagandas,
and its official heir, the armed forces, lined up openly behind the
Serbian faction of the central power. Attempts at economic restructuring
placed those few âsecuritiesâ that had been offered to the exploited
during the last forty years into crisis, goading them into struggle. One
is not dealing with a mere social or economic involution; an entire
world is collapsing.
Thus, social tension continues to grow, but those who are struggling no
longer has anything to which to cling. The memory of the façade of
âproletarian internationalismâ imposed by the bureaucrats for forty
years stands in the way of the idea that the exploited of different
nationalities could achieve solidarity among themselves against the
common masters. It is the very awareness that common masters exist that
is weak. The enemy is not located with clarity.
In this situation the use of nationalism assumes a new importance.
Embellishing the interests of every faction of the Yugoslavian
bureaucracy with those of past history, all the sleeping grudges of
Balkan history are awakened. The exploited much too consistently react
to the collapse of the certainties of the past by clinging to the last
of these, nationalist propaganda, rediscovering values to share and
masters to obey; discovering a community and a history of which they can
feel a part and for which they can spend the enormous energies
accumulated over so many years.
During these same years, a process similar to the one in Yugoslavia was
set in motion in Albania. Here we can see the moves that were able to
influence the situation in Kosovo that is so very interesting in this
sense.
With the death of Enver Hoxha, the Albanian leaders found themselves
facing a series of thorny problems. Since the time of the rupture with
Beijing, the country lived in almost absolute isolation. As we have seen
this isolation found a justification in Albanian particularism, but with
the passing of years it finally led to the irreversible freezing of the
entire industrial apparatus. The enormous installations that were
imported first from the Soviet Union and then from Chinaâalready
obsolete due to a lack of maintenance and spare partsâspin uselessly.
Inside the factories, the workers continue to work in order to produce
nothing, and the regime cannot afford dismissal, because one of its
boasts is still that of full employment. In order to survive, the only
passable road that presents itself to Ramiz Alia, Hoxhaâs protĂ©gĂ© is to
place industrial restructuring together with a complete turnaround in
relations with foreign powers. For a certain period, Albanian propaganda
has to tune down the nationalistic melodies in order to be able to
reopen relations with bordering nations, particularly with Serbia.
Thus, in the second half of the 1980âs, the Kosovar problem, around
which the Albanian collective identity had been constructed, suddenly
became a mere internal Yugoslav question. Meanwhile, the prospects of
economic liberalization opened by the Alia regime caused the enmity
toward the west to collapse in the Albanian imaginary. Hoxhaâs heir
himself is, thus, the one to undermine the ideological basis of a regime
that until then had tried to construct its identity completely in the
negative, claiming to be surrounded by Slav âbarbarismâ on the one side
and western âimmoralityâ on the other.
In a matter of a few years, the Albanian exploited find themselves in a
vast desert. No economic securitiesânot even the miseries of the pastâno
collective values exist to reassure them anymore; the only time they can
still comprehend is that of the Kanan, the codes of the ancient clannish
structures. Insurrections without leaders or demands follow one after
the other, culminating in the uprising of 1997 and the subsequent
western intervention that returned Albania to its old status as an
Italian protectorate. The person who succeeded in controlling the
situation for a short time before the arrival of the Italian military
was Hoxhaâs former doctor, Sali Berisha.
His government, which was swept away by the insurrection of 1997,
rebuilt a system of strong values for the Albanians, reelaborating those
of the past in positive and in negative, blending Kanan, nationalism,
vicious economic liberalization and violent âanti-communismâ. This is
how the âliberationâ of the Kosovar cousins would become a national
problem, how a good part of the arms pillaged from the barracks during
the insurrection would end up in the hands of the KLA and how the north
of Albania would be transformed into the logistic base for anti-Serbian
independence guerrillas.
And here we are, at last, at the center of the labyrinth. On the one
hand, we have the unknown, all the immense possibilities opened by a
situation in which no certainties or values suffocate the exploited
anymore, in which an entire world seems to need just one last push to
collapse. On the other hand, there is the Minotaur bellowing from its
throat. It is a monster that the world has known much too well, which is
called ethnic war in the Balkans today. For capital, first the threat of
war and later war itself are emergency tools for reestablishing social
peace. When it can no longer produce any certainties, all that is left
for it to do is ride some Minotaur. Itâs not a matter of returning to a
past that was worse, as we may have believed. The new Balkan wars are a
sign of modernity. This friendship between capital and the monster is
not a great discovery. And us? We try to keep quiet for a moment, to act
in such a way that the words that may possibly have been with us for our
entire life do not continue to delude us. No peaceful and orderly
revolution announces itself on the horizon, no sun of the future rising;
when all the checks collapse, when collective myths and certainties have
no more place in the heart of the exploited, when accumulated rancor
explodes, nothing an be guaranteed anymore. And this can only frighten
us, timid civilized beings that we are. Perhaps we are more fearful of
that lack of guarantees than of the Minotaur. So then, which do we,
ourselves, choose? When Yugoslavia arrives on our shores, are we really
certain that we will face this fear at last, or will we, like the
Yugoslavs, find the terrible embrace of the Minotaur in the passageway
sweet?
The river of social struggle, that of the bankruptcy of two states and
that of the collapse of every value have already mixed their waters.
Only one stream is missing in order for these rivers to merge and
transform this flood into a bloodbath; it will arrive from the West.
The crisis of the Yugoslav state in the 1980âs coincided with the
necessity of rearranging the European balance. The existence of
Yugoslavia itself no longer responded to the interests of the powers
that had favored its constitution. German expansionism toward the
Mediterranean, now being carried out in the context of the united
Europe, no longer needs to be blocked. The federal system shows itself
to be unable to guarantee the functioning of Yugoslav commerce any more
and runs the risk of social explosion much too close to the tranquil
western shores. Necessarily, the European Economic Community (EEC) has
to promote the creation of new state entities that could replace the now
useless Federation, marking the passage that opened from the internal
Yugoslav crisisâa crisis studded with threats, repression and police
extortionâto the military crisis. Up until a few weeks before Sloveniaâs
declaration of independence, in fact, the threat of secession was
considered an extreme means of pressure more than a real possibility in
the nationalist game of prominence carried out by the Yugoslav
bureaucracy. But the guarantee to recognize this new stateâagreed to
more or less discreetly by the EECâpermitted the military solution and,
in the end, imposed it. At that time, the European union seized the
occasion to officially confirm that the union of Slovenia and Croatia
into one state in order to control German expansion toward the
Mediterranean was historically superceded, granting to Germany what it
had not been able to conquer in two world wars.
The behavior adopted by the âCommunity of Nationsâ during the conflicts
in the former Yugoslavia is understood starting from the coherence of
its actions and not as a function of the contradictory positions put
forth in order to serve as a screen. Contrary to the claims of those who
try to lend credence to the crocodile tears spilled regularly in public,
this behavior is quite far from lacking objectives. The military drift
that followed from Sloveniaâs declaration of independence and still
continues today was inevitable from the perspective of Western power
since, with the exception of Slovenia, there are no borders that can be
determined on a national basis. Therefore, it is impossible to build a
new state without resorting to ethnic cleansing, and it was this
international strategy that actually outlined the necessity for it. The
images of this flood are todayâs history.
All the evidence for this Western strategy can be found in the case of
Bosnia. Ever since the first Vance-Owen plan, the pseudo-response to the
Bosnian crisis has not been based on the historical reality of this
region, but on an ideological reality created artificially by the clash
of bureaucratic interests. This is how the partition of this territory
between the three nationalist currents that have blown it to bits was
determined. The reorganization of Bosnia hides the double objective of
the division of the zones of influence in the former Yugoslavia and the
reorganization of the Balkans. The policy of the great powers favored
the deportation of populations which served to reduce the breadth of the
social contradictions that the new regional powers would have had to
face and, thus, the risks of the extension of the Balkan conflict beyond
the borders of the former Yugoslavia. There is not a chance that the
great powers would have been accused of openly of favoring the Serbian
armed forces in besieged Sarajevo. The only real efforts of the West at
this time were those of secret diplomacy, pledged to mitigate the
tensions between Serbia, Macedonia and their five neighbors (Hungary,
Romania, Bulgaria, Greece and Albania) at all costs.
From this point on, all the international initiatives would ineptly
pursue three objectives, independently of the internal contradictions of
the West. First, they would organize a security zone between the former
Yugoslavia and the borders of Western Europe. This role of buffer-state
is assigned to Slovenia, the internal conditions of which lend
themselves perfectly to this function: it is an industrialized and
westernized region that is ethnically coherent and small enough that the
volume of investment necessary for maintaining its stability is
relatively modest. The other two objectives are verified by the effort
to subdivide Yugoslavia around two entities that seem to have the broad
shoulders necessary for this task. Control of the Adriatic coast and the
Adriatic-European axis is entrusted to Croatia, control of the Balkans
to Serbia.
With the Bosnian problem temporarily suppressed, it was possible to
contain that of Macedonia, repress those of Vojvodina and Montenegro and
militarily liquidate the problem of Krajina during these years. If
Croatia was able to keep its promises to the West, this was not possible
for Serbia as was made clear in the past few years. The original point
of explosion in the old Yugoslav federalist ideology has come back on
the scene with all its drama, revealing how poorly considered the
Western choice to entrust the control of the Balkans to Milosevic was.
The latest war, which saw the entire West engaged against Serbia,
pursued the objective of pushing out an old ally who proved to be
completely untrustworthy, while still attempting to preserve the
territorial integrity of the country in order to avoid extending the
conflict to the neighboring regions: Albania, Macedonia, Bulgaria and
Greece. Up to now no one has actually recognized the right of the
Kosovar Albanians to self-determination, and the Rambouillet accords
have indicated the mere autonomy of this region as the only feasible
solution. The West used the two factions of the Kosovar independence
movement, Rugovaâs group and the KLA, in turn in anti-Serb functions
without ever underwriting their more or less obvious political project
of the great Albania. The Kosovar population itself was used as a
logistical element in the conflict.
The only significant about-face in Western strategy that distinguished
this latest war was the desire to no longer delegate control of the
Balkans to anyone. For now, the armies of NATO will manage it directly
until new, capable and reliable allies can be found in Belgrade or
elsewhere.
Crossroads for a thousand different civilizations, the Balkans possess
an enormous cultural wealth, traditions that come together and mix. This
is one of the reasons for their instability. They present a field for
maneuvering favorable to the promotion of greedy politicians, but as the
history of the last hundred years shows, they or simply an insoluble
puzzle for every state that wants to assert its power here. The
economic, social and cultural processes experienced in Yugoslavia and
Albania over the last twenty years are common, to a lesser degree, to
all parts of the Balkans and to that immense and desolate land that is
todayâs Russia.
In the Balkans, the Minotaur has been called ethnic war. In the Arab
world, its strict parent gallops, the religious integralism that has
found its best pastures in Algeria. But this does not mark a return to
the past with its murmuring; it was ridden in on a form most modernâthat
of capital. And when our turn comes, what will our Minotaur be?
Cruel smirk of history, the monster has always taken root in the speech
of the exploitedâwhom it transforms into executionersâwhile the
exploiters merely use it as an approved political weapon with an
awareness that is more terrifying than the slaughters themselves. A
correspondent of the BBC furnishes an eloquent example of this in his
book, reporting a conversation between the Serbian general Mladic and
the Croatian Minister of the Interior: agreeing on the return of the
bodies of soldiers killed in the name of ethnic hatred that they
themselves fomented, the two exchanged the most sincere wishes for their
respective families. In the years to come, when they have found an
acceptable balance, the representatives of the former Yugoslav
bureaucracy will be good friends once more. On the other hand, the
exploited will continue to hate each other, to feel the breath of the
beast in the air. It is no longer a question of knowing whether History
has come to an end or continues to march on. We must know how to read
the questions that events raise even when they mix dreams and nightmares
together. Meanwhile, the Yugoslav history of the past twenty years is
the history of a failed social tempest, of a potential revolt that
mutated into a horrible gangrenous sore. It is the very energy that
could have sustained the conflict opened between the exploited and the
exploiters that has been kept busy on the worst war fronts. The
protagonists of social struggle have become the laborers of the terror.
Of course, sooner or later, the threads of social conflict will retie
themselves, and ethnic hatred will cease to play the lead role in the
Balkan tragedy. But from our side, how many will still have bloodstained
hands? So goodbye forever to tranquil sleep.