http://www.balkanstudies.org/articles/unfinished-story
 
*AN UNFINISHED STORY*
** 
*by James Bissett*
** 
*A review of/ The Krajina Chronicle <http://www.balkanstudies.org/books> 
/by Srdja Trifkovic, **published * 
<http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/2010/08/23/an-unfinished-story%20in>* 
in the September 2010 issue of /Chronicles/*

Srdja Trifkovic is no stranger to /Chronicles/ readers, many of whom 
have found his articles commenting on foreign affairs, with particular 
attention to the Balkans, to be insightful, penetrating, and written 
with authority. His latest book, /The Krajina Chronicle/, provides 
further confirmation of his extraordinary talent.

The book is a history of the Serbian warrior-farmers who formed the 
first line of defense against Islamic invasions into the Habsburg 
Empire. It is a story of heroism and tragedy that reaches far beyond the 
old military frontier of the western Balkans. It is also a story that 
touches on some of the most eventful periods of European history. It 
ends tragically with the mass expulsion of the Krajina Serbs from their 
ancestral lands by Croatian military forces in August 1995, during 
Operation Storm. These forces, trained and equipped by the United 
States, drove out almost all of the Serbs from Croatia in a matter of 
days. The operation was made easier because the Krajina Serbs were 
ordered not to resist by their supposed ally, Serbian President Slobodan 
Milošević.

The /Krajina Chronicle/ begins by tracing the early Slav settlements in 
the western Balkans in the sixth century and describes how, over time, 
the antipathies that developed between Croats and Serbs were intensified 
by religious and cultural differences, the Croats becoming Roman 
Catholic and the Serbs adopting the Orthodox Faith of the Byzantine 
Empire. By the Middle Ages, Trifkovic documents, Serbian settlements 
were well established in a number of regions in territory that was later 
to become Croatia—a fact that is denied by some Croat revisionists. 
These settlements were strengthened over the years by influxes of 
Serbian refugees fleeing the march of the Ottoman Turks. These hardy 
settlers eventually were transformed by their Austrian hosts into the 
warrior-farmers of the Krajina. And warriors indeed they were! Quite 
apart from resisting Islam’s encroachment into Central Europe, these 
Serbs fought in almost all of the wars entered into by the Habsburg 
monarchy from the 17th to the 20th century.

Used primarily as light cavalry and infantry, they played an important 
role in all of the many battles in which they were engaged. In the Seven 
Years’ War, for example, the Serbs contributed 88,000 troops to the 
Habsburg armies, and during the Napoleonic Wars they sent 11 regiments 
against Napoleon’s forces. (In World War I, when Austria invaded Serbia 
in 1914, the Krajina Serbs fought against their fellow Serbs.) In return 
for military service, the Serbs were given land and special privileges 
exempting them from local taxes and laws. They owed their loyalty to 
Vienna, not to the Croatian or Hungarian nobility. The special status 
afforded the Serbs was deeply resented by their Croatian neighbors.

As Croatian nationalism became increasingly prominent in the 19th 
century, the existence of a Serbian population with special privileges, 
a different religion, and different loyalties complicated and impeded 
the ability of Croatian leaders to deal with their Hungarian and 
Austrian rulers. As Trifkovic explains, this led to extreme antagonism, 
bordering on a “morbid obsession,” toward the minority Serbian 
population. This hatred of the Serbs was exemplified by speeches and 
writings of the Croatian political activist Ante Starčević (1823-96), 
who was ahead of his time in advocating genocide against the Serbs. 
Starcevic wrote that the Serbs are “the race of slaves, beasts worse 
than any other,” fit for extermination. Trifkovic points out that there 
is hardly a town in today’s Croatia that does not have a street, square, 
or institution named for Starčević, who is often referred to as the 
Father of the Nation.

Notwithstanding Croatia’s almost pathological hatred of the Serbs, it 
was Serbia that saved Croatia from being carved up at the end of World 
War I. Having been on the losing side of that conflict, Croatia, under 
the terms of the Treaty of London, risked losing much of her territory 
to Italy and Serbia. She would have been reduced to four counties around 
Zagreb and lost much of her coastline. Serbia rejected the Treaty of 
London, however, opting instead to incorporate Croatia into the new 
Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, thus uniting all of the 
South Slavs in one state that was to become Yugoslavia. While uniting 
all of the South Slavs may have been seen as a logical step in the 
spirit of Slavic self-determination, the new state soon ran into the 
same old difficulties. No sooner had it been proclaimed than Croatian 
politicians began agitating to break it apart.

In fact, Trifkovic argues, the bitter legacy of Serb-Croat relations 
seems to have been accentuated by the union:

 From the moment of its creation at the end of the Great War until its 
disintegration just over seven decades later, Yugoslavia was constantly 
beset by national problems. . . . [P]roblems which proved impossible to 
solve, in the first royalist Yugoslavia [1918-41] were no less difficult 
in the second, communist one [1945-91].

/The Krajina Chronicle /provides a stirring narrative of the events that 
followed the formation of the first Yugoslavia until its abrupt and 
violent breakup after the Nazi invasion in April 1941. Hitler quickly 
gave control of Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina to Ante Pavelić, the 
leader of the Croatian fascist Ustasha movement. The Ustashe immediately 
embarked on a murderous campaign against the Serbs in Croatia. The 
policy was explicitly proclaimed: Kill one third, convert one third to 
Catholicism, and expel the remaining third from Croatia.

Trifkovic’s story of this mass murder spares no ghastly detail of the 
insane slaughter that took place in that spring and summer of 1941. Most 
of the killing was done by cutting victims’ throats or by smashing their 
heads with a mallet or an ax. Later, when camps were set up to deal with 
the large numbers of the dispossessed—mainly Serbs, but also Jews and 
gypsies—the killing methods remained the same. How many lost their lives 
is not known, but estimates by holocaust historians range from 500,000 
to 530,000. (Almost all of the author’s sources are senior German and 
Italian military or diplomatic personnel. When senior SS officers 
complain to Berlin about the killings, the reader is left with no doubt 
about the horrors inflicted upon the Serbs of the Krajina.)

The book also deals with the intricacies of wartime Yugoslavia and with 
the factional disputes and battles between Tito’s Partisans and Draža 
Mihailović’s royalist Chetniks. Although both were engaged in a 
ferocious resistance against German and Italian occupiers, their real 
struggle was against each other in a bloody civil war.

Here again, Trifkovic presents a perceptive analysis of the forces at 
play in wartime Yugoslavia and of the eventual decision by Churchill to 
back Tito and to stop further military support to the Mihailović forces. 
The Soviet army’s entry into Yugoslavia in the fall of 1944 decided the 
fate of the anticommunist forces, including thousands of Krajina Serbs. 
Although many found their way into Austria, hoping to be welcomed by the 
Western allies, they were betrayed by the British and Americans at the 
Yalta conference in February 1945, when Churchill and Roosevelt acceded 
to Stalin’s demand that all Soviet citizens be returned to the Soviet 
Union. Unfortunately, anticommunist Serbs were included in this category.

In May 1945 the British army returned to Yugoslavia several thousand 
anticommunist Serbs who, upon arrival, were summarily shot. Fortunately, 
14,000 Serbs, most of them from the Krajina, managed to find their way 
to Italy, where U.S. authorities refused to hand them over to Tito. Many 
of them ended up in the United States, Britain, Canada, and Australia.

In Tito’s communist Yugoslavia, the Krajina Serbs were not granted any 
favors by the new regime. Their dreadful suffering at the hands of the 
Ustashe was not formally acknowledged, and the survivors were, in 
effect, denied the right to mourn and had to accept the new regime’s 
slogan of “Brotherhood and Unity.” Thousands of homeless and refugee 
Krajina Serbs were denied permission to return to Croatia and were 
resettled instead in the northern region of Vojvodina, on the Hungarian 
border. Throughout the Tito years the Serbian areas of Croatia remained 
economically underdeveloped and without a clearly defined political 
identity.

In the concluding chapters of the Krajina Chronicle, Trifkovic recounts 
the futile attempt by the Krajina Serbs to remain a part of what was 
left of the disintegrating Yugoslav Federation. When Franjo Tudj­man’s 
right-wing nationalist party came to power in 1990 with the undisguised 
aim of separating Croatia from Yugoslavia, the Serbs, determined to 
remain with Yugoslavia, formed an autonomous region and took up arms.

Croatia’s declaration of independence in May 1991 led to bitter fighting 
between the secessionist Croats and the Serbian minority. The conflict 
continued until a cease-fire was arranged in January 1992, which lasted 
with some exceptions until the devastating assault in August 1995 of 
Operation Storm, described by Carl Bildt, the U.N. special envoy to the 
former Yugoslavia, as “the most efficient ethnic cleansing we’ve seen in 
the Balkans.” Abandoned and betrayed by Milošević and left to the mercy 
of a cowardly European Union and a vengeful Croatia supported by U.S. 
and NATO forces, the Krajina Serbs had come to the end of the line.

It is a credit to Srdja Trifkovic that his book will stand as a fitting, 
if perhaps the sole, testimony to a brave and extraordinary people—a 
compelling story, recounted in a stimulating and incisive narrative that 
covers a broad canvas without losing the attention to detail that brings 
life to historic events. The book also reveals the disturbing truth that 
the weak, however righteous their cause, remain at the mercy of the 
powerful.
 

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