Pyotr ISKENDEROV

Balkan Shadow of Berlin Celebration

The celebration of the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall is over. 
Tens of high-ranking foreign visitors, many of whom had nothing to do with the 
historical development at the time it took place, spoke about the enormous 
importance of the German unification and the symbolic significance of the event 
which put the final dot in the history of the Cold War. The truth, however, is 
that there are parts of Europe where the fall of the Berlin Wall is not 
regarded as a totally positive change since immediately upon the alleged 
completion of the bloodless Cold War Europe had to face a proliferation of real 
armed conflicts. 

The widely held view is that the 1989 German unification opened the era of the 
demise of totalitarian regimes across the continent and ultimately made the 
creation of the united Europe possible. Numerous private conversations with the 
residents of the Balkans actually led me to a different conclusion. The 
disintegration of Yugoslavia — a process that cost thousands of lives - 
commenced only a year after the demolition of the Berlin Wall, notably, the 
unified and extremely powerful Germany was one of its drivers. Germany was 
behind the urgent declaration of independence by Slovenia and Croatia, as well 
as behind their snap recognition by the international community regardless of 
the fact that the latter clearly lacked a viable model of coexistence of its 
Serbian and Croatian populations. Besides, the origin of the ethnic conflict 
that erupted in Bosnia and Herzegovina in the spring of 1992 can only be 
grasped if the activity of outside forces is taken into account. 

Why did Germany, a country just rebuilt after the traumatic partition imposed 
on it after World War II, take the active role in the Balkan geopolitical 
overhaul? Napoleon used to say that every nation's politics stems from its 
geography. The concept applies perfectly to the late 1980ies — early 1990ies 
situation in Europe on the whole and at the Balkans in particular. 

It should be realized that following the collapse of the eastern bloc and the 
unification of the two Germanies Berlin saw itself as the strongest player in 
Europe and actively sought European leadership over which it traditionally 
competed with France. US military bases that Germany continued to host in the 
framework of its international obligations after the withdrawal of the Soviet 
forces presented the main obstacle in the way of the country's aspirations. 
There were indications that Germany hoped to have the problem resolved by 
shifting the bases to the Balkans, where their existence could be based not on 
Soviet-era international agreements but on a NATO mandate, and where Germany 
could be guaranteed a place among the key players. What it needed to make the 
plan materialize was a serious pretext for the Balkan expansion, and the 
process including the break-up of Yugoslavia and the emergence of several 
protracted ethnic conflicts spread over its former territory conveniently 
provided one. The implementation of the scenario began in Slovenia and Croatia, 
where, due to historic reasons, the German influence was deeply rooted. Already 
in the 1980ies the German intelligence service had strong positions in Slovenia 
and especially in Croatia as various émigré nationalist and extremist groups it 
sponsored gradually made inroads into the administrations. German advisers and 
NGO envoys flocked to Croatia in numbers in 1989-1990. It was due to their 
activity that eventually the republic became the scene of the first armed 
clashes in the former Yugoslavia, which scared even the no less active US 
representatives. 

In May, 1990 Croatia's First President Fanjo Tudman introduced a new 
constitution (put together largely under German advisers' supervision) via the 
parliament dominated by pro-independence forces. It proclaimed that Croatia was 
a national state of the Croats and other peoples inhabiting it rather than, as 
formulated previously, the state of the Croatian and Serbian peoples as well as 
of others inhabiting it. The legal subtlety automatically left Serbs who used 
to be a state-forming nation in the position of a minority. Discontent with the 
downgrade, Serbs launched a referendum of their own in August 1990, during 
which, however, their response was limited to asserting their right to 
sovereignty and autonomy within Croatia. Secession was not on the agenda, but 
the Croatian government nevertheless resorted to force to prevent the 
referendum from taking place, and the moment marked the onset of the armed 
conflict in the republic. 

Serbs of Croatia offered a political solution even after the incident. On 
September 30, 1990 the Serbian National Council proclaimed the autonomy of the 
Serbian people on the ethnic and historical territories they inhabited within 
Croatia as a member of Yugoslavia, but Zagreb's course agreed with German 
advisers remained unchanged. The new Croatian constitution entered into force 
on December 22, and the very next day the neighboring Slovenia called an 
independence referendum during which 94% of the ballots were cast in favor of 
separation from Yugoslavia. Interestingly, over the weeks preceding the 
enactment of Tudman's constitution Washington kept calling the Croatian leaders 
to exercise restraint and to avoid steps prone with an armed escalation. Still, 
Berlin's influence prevailed, and German advisers managed to convince their 
Croatian protégées to act resolutely. On May 19, 1991 the Croatian 
administration held a referendum with over 94% of those who went to the polling 
booths opting for immediate secession. The Serbs of Croatia did not attend, and 
Germany assisted by Vatican promptly ensured the European recognition of the 
two new independent countries. Soon Sarajevo followed the suit, massive 
fighting swept across the Balkans, NATO got the desired pretext for 
intervention, and Germany emerged as the key force in the new European 
geopolitical architecture. 

Praising the German unification, we should not forget how the fall of the 
Berlin Wall cast a shadow over other countries and their peoples.

 

 

http://en.fondsk.ru/article.php?id=2584

 

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