In the spring of 1991, as the reborn Croatian state
emerged from the rubble of the collapsed edifice of post-Tito
Yugoslavia, it was only natural that unbridled optimism should
attend the rampant nationalistic fervor of a newly liberated
people. With the ancient unicameral Sabor firmly
reconstituted, with 94 percent of voters supporting independence in
a May 19 referendum, and with the “Proclamation of the Sovereign
and Independent Republic of Croatia” proudly issued to the world
around a month later, it seemed to be time for the Republika
Hrvatska to leave behind the “palanka,” or
parochialism, of the Balkan Peninsula. As the first Speaker of the
Sabor, Žarko Domljan, boldly proclaimed, it
was “with the victory of democracy and
the transition to a parliamentary system [that] the final step was
taken in the return of the Croatian nation to the political,
cultural, and economic area of Europe.”
It would not be long before Domljan and his fellow Croats
discovered that independence was the first, not the last, step
towards European integration. Over the next two decades, Croatia
would experience the horrors of internecine conflict, the
vicissitudes of the falangist domestic politics of strongman
Franjo Tuđman, and the challenges inherent in making the
reforms necessary to satisfy the 35 policy chapters of the European
Union’s acquis communautaire. Only on January 22, 2012 —
after nearly two million Croatians had made their way
to 6,750 polling booths to cast their ballots in a referendum on
European Union membership, voting roughly two-to-one in favor of
the proposition — would that final step seemingly be taken. With
European Union accession scheduled for July 1, 2013, the Croat
populace could at last be confident of an official return to the
European fold.
The morning after the referendum, Austria’s Vice
Chancellor and Foreign Minister, Michael Spindelegger, became the
first foreign official to congratulate the Croats on their
collective decision. “The Croatian nation demonstrated the maturity
and foresight to recognize the historic opportunity presented by
the European unification process,” Spindelegger said, adding
somewhat patronizingly that the “for” vote was “the most beautiful
gift the men and women of Croatia could give themselves.” For those
Croats inclined towards ever-closer ties with the West, the
Austrian minister’s official “welcome to the European family” could
hardly have been more felicitous. It has, after all, been a
centuries-old preoccupation on the part of the Croat people to exit
what the novelist Miroslav Krleža dubbed “the Balkan
pot-house.” Membership in the “European family” is therefore of
considerable symbolic, as well as practical, importance for the
Croatian body politic.
Perilously suspended between West and East, between Rome
and Byzantium, between the Habsburgs and Ottomans, and between
Vienna and Budapest, the western Balkans was long viewed by
outsiders with incomprehension at best, and with derision at worst.
In 1776, Edward Gibbon famously described Dalmatia as an “obscure”
land “infested by tribes of barbarians, whose savage independence
irregularly marks the doubtful limit of the Christian and Mahometan
power.” Thirty years later, Madame de Staël wrote of a “land
formerly inhabited by a very warlike people, [which] still retains
something wild about it,” where residents “know so little of what
has happened for fifteen centuries that they still call the Romans
the all-powerful.” Of the centers of humanistic activity
in cities like Zagreb,
Šibenik, Trogir, Split and Dubrovnik, little
mention was made. Of the cultural contributions of artists
like Juraj Julije Klović and Andrija Medulić, or the
political contributions of statesmen like Fran Krsto
Frankopan and Nikola Jurišić, even less was made.
Croats could insist that they had, over the centuries,
“acquired the honest title antemurale
christianitatis — the outer
battlements of Western European Christian culture” (as one Croatian
editorialist argued in late 1991, at the height of the 87- day
siege of Vukovar), but this sanguinary past did not necessarily
confer “European” status in the eyes of policymakers to the north
and west.
The course of the Balkan 20th century, with its exploding
powder kegs, fratricidal partisan campaigns, and genocidal civil
wars, would do little to erase any preconceived notions about the
peninsula and its inhabitants. Franjo Tuđman, in a
1991 televised address, may have described his country’s struggles
as part of “the fight for normal conditions
when Croatia can join Europe, where she historically
belongs,” but Croat-perpetrated massacres taking place
that very year, for instance in Sisak and Gospić,
tended to undermine the notion that Croatia was destined for an
immediate future in a liberal, irenic post-Cold War Europe. Given
that the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
would find that Tuđman “was a key member of the joint
criminal enterprise…to repopulate the Krajina with Croats” through
“force or threat of force, which amounted to and involved
deportation, forcible transfer, and persecution through the
imposition of restrictive and discriminatory measures, unlawful
attacks against civilians and civilian objects, deportation, and
forcible transfer,” the 1997 electoral motto of
“Tuđman, not the Balkans” rang altogether
hollow.
As Nicole Lindstrom later observed, “the political agenda
of division and exclusion pursued by Tuđman in the 1990s ultimately
contributed to Croatia being (re)assigned to precisely the same
Balkan category it had defined itself against.” Instead,
neighboring Slovenia managed to cast itself as Europe’s nec
plus ultra, playing its cards rather adroitly by emphasizing,
in mid-1990s promotional literature, its historical predecessor
Carantania’s supposed “democratic institutions, strong
legal system, popular elections of the ruling dukes, and
progressive legal rights for women,” as opposed
to its martial prowess upon the bulwarks of European civilization.
In 1997, with Tuđman’s Croatia failing to make the sort of headway
predicted by Žarko Domljan in the early
days of the republic, and with European and American policymakers
urging membership in the nebulous Southeast European
Cooperative Initiative rather than the European Union,
tempers flared. Dalibor Foretić,
writing for Novi List in 1997, complained that
“the world would like to push us into some kind of
Balkan hole but we will not allow them. We want to be
everything — Central European, Mediterranean,
Transcarpathian — and not just a Balkan country. The
West is constantly inventing some kind of initiative to push
us where we do not belong. But we will not let them!”
To Foretić’s chagrin, the long-awaited
return to Europe was indefinitely postponed.
In the European halls of power, historical Croatian
opposition to the infamous “five Bs” — Balkanism,
Barbarism, Byzantinism, Bolshevism, and Balvanism (the last
referring to the erection of street barricades, from the Croat word
balvan, or “beam”) — counted for little. It was only
after Tuđman’s demise in 1999, a round of
constitutional reforms two years later, and a gradual increase in
cooperation between Croatia and the International
Criminal Tribunal in The Hague that European Union accession became
a distinct possibility. Official European Union candidacy began
only in early 2004, with Croatian authorities aiming for a dubious
accession date of 2007. Lingering border disputes with Slovenia
held up the overall process, as did Italian concerns about land
ownership laws, while Brussels mandarins concentrated on obstacles
involving fisheries, environmental policies, and endemic
corruption. Widespread post facto skepticism regarding the
appropriateness of Romanian and Bulgarian accession likewise slowed
Croatia’s elongated return to Europe.
Croatian popular support for European Union accession
inevitably wavered as the lengthy process was drawn out further,
ranging from as high as 80 percent to as low as 26 percent,
depending on the survey. As the January 2012 referendum approached,
the Croatian government spared no expense in convincing the
populace of the value of European integration. State television and
radio airwaves were suffused with tens of thousands of pro-European
Union advertisements, Zagreb trams were bedecked with positive
endorsements of the referendum, and the Croatian Post delivered —
gratis — millions of government leaflets. Government
tactics bordered on scaremongering, as campaigners warned of a loss
of some €1.8 billion in funding from Brussels over the
next three years, while Vesna Pusić, head of the
Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs, warned more than a
million Croatian pensioners that their livelihoods would be at risk
following a “no” vote. Too many years, and too many
man-hours, had been spent in the quest for European integration for
the referendum to be anything other than a fait
accompli.
Those of a more Euroskeptic bent, like Marjan
Bošnjak of the rather obscure Only Croatia party, were quick to
bemoan the referendum’s unequal playing field. For Bošnjak, the
circumstances of the vote were “blatantly undemocratic,”
making it “impossible for the Croatian People to make an informed
decision,” and leading to “a swindle which did not meet even the
most basic democratic criteria, and whose sole purpose was to
elicit an affirmative vote.” Yet the die was cast long ago, when
both an official and a symbolic Croatian return to the European
fold became a distinct possibility by dint of European Union
accession. Under Tuđman, Croatia’s foreign
policy was preoccupied with the country’s emancipation from the
“the Balkan darkness of the so-called
Yugoslavia,” and his successors followed suit. No warnings of
the dangers of becoming “meek and
hopelessly networked subjects of the big Orwellian
Europe,” as one Croatian Party of Rights leader put it back in
2000, could dissuade Croatian elites from pursuing this deeply
ingrained goal.
In the unstable geopolitical patchwork of Central
Europe, Stanisław Vincenz once posited,
“each one of its parts will of necessity become the dependency of a
greater unit.” For Croatia, this has meant membership in
multinational polities based in Rome, Constantinople, Venice,
Vienna, Budapest, and Belgrade. More often than not this membership
has been imposed rather than chosen. One exception was in the
aftermath of the First World War, when the Croats, despite having a
newly formed national government of their own, opted for membership
in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. The peasant leader
Stjepan Radić objected that the Yugoslav
“kingdom was proclaimed other than by the Croatian
Sabor and without any mandate of the Croatian People,” and
that his fellow delegates were rushing into a
supranational arrangement “like drunken
geese in the fog,” but he was ignored (and later
arrested). “The tragedy and irony of the whole
thing,” August Košutić later wrote about this brief
flicker of independence, “lie in the fact that the
Croats, after having preserved for centuries their own national and
State rights, should have these wrested from them just after the
proclamation by the Allies of the principle of self-determination.”
In 2012, only two decades after independence was once again
regained, history again repeats itself, and Croatia once again
finds itself on the way to becoming a “dependency of a greater
unit,” this time one headquartered in distant Belgium, all due to
the pursuit of that unchanging European goal.
The 2012 referendum, according to Croatian
President Ivo Josipović, was “a turning
point in our history,” as the “European family” opened its arms and
the Croatian people accepted the continental embrace. Perceived
economic self-interest, and the power of symbolic politics,
ultimately won out. But it had only won out with 28 percent of the
electorate actually casting an affirmative vote. In a country so
enamored of Europeanness, there is little room for outright
Euroskepticism, except at the nationalist fringe, but there is
undoubtedly a nagging sense in Croatia that the European Union is
anything but a political and economic panacea. As Viseslav Raos, an
analyst at Zagreb’s Political Science Research Center, noted in the
run-up to the referendum: “Croatian citizens see what’s happening
in Greece and Ireland” and “know that the European Union is not a
remedy to all economic and social problems. So the EU itself is in
a sort of crisis, and that reflects on Croatia’s accession.” Hence
the lukewarm results of the referendum, notwithstanding careful
engineering by the country’s elites.
Miroslav Krleža, in his 1938 masterpiece On the Edge
of Reason, responded to “overheated and arbitrary” Croatian
discussions of Europe with a series of exasperated questions: “What
‘Europe’? I would like just once to hear what Europe is in reality.
Where is that Europe situated? What does that Europe want? And in
what special relationship with that Europe are you?” Thanks to the
transformational nature of the European Union, a Croatian could now
provide a series of answers: “the European Union, headquartered in
the Leopold Quarter of Brussels,” “an ever closer union,” “the
privileges and obligations of member status,” and so on.
Nevertheless, the coming years may cause many in the Croatian body
politic to renew Krleža’s line of questioning, as the European
Union is wracked with economic uncertainties and neutered by an
ineffective common foreign and security policy. In another irony of
history, one so familiar to the Balkans, the European Union is
taking on something of a Yugoslavian aspect just as the nations of
the peninsula shed their palanka and begin the process of
integration. In the words of the Serbian journalist
Momčilo Pantelić, “at a time when the EU is
attempting to reinforce centralized control of its periphery, its
foundations are being threatened by excessive nationalism and
accumulated incompatibilities between member states. This is a
situation that is strongly reminiscent of the golden age of
Yugoslavia (1981-1986), a period when it came close to joining the
European Economic Community (EEC).”
As the Yugoslav Wars of the 1990s raged on, Croatian
correspondents expressed dismay at complacent Western European
politicians “for whom the butter and cheese surplus
are a more serious problem than destroyed Croatian cities and
villages.” Surprisingly, this did not sour Croatians on official
membership in Europe; rather, it reinforced the need for the
Republika Hrvatska to be recognized as
a valued member of the European community, just as it was
officially recognized as the antemurale
christianitatis by Pope Leo X in 1519. That
long-pursued recognition will soon be given, and has even been
provided a date certain: July 1, 2013. From that point on, Croatia
can no longer be dismissed as the “doubtful limit” of Europe. But
if Pantelić is right, and the balkanization of
Europe continues apace, then even the recent referendum and
resulting accession will not be the “final step” Croatian
authorities envisioned two decades ago. In fact, it may be that
extrication from the “Balkan hole” is simply not a matter of
referenda or fiat.
Kenny| 2.9.12 @ 7:00AM
Fascists.
Brian Mc| 2.9.12 @ 7:38AM
Ah...the Balkans; right up there with Burma and countries in Central Africa never to visit if you care to live. I attempted to follow along, but the terms and names were just too convoluted and found myself shaking my head all the way through. I wish them all the best as a few amongst the many attempt to make determinations on which direction the country should take.
POST American| 2.9.12 @ 8:18AM
----Political and cultural EUGENOCIDE
---right on its CFR-Rockefeller schedule.
No more ---no less.
----------------HUAC/ Nuremberg 2012-------------
Dave Williams| 2.9.12 @ 12:55PM
There will never be peace in that part of the world until the severe vowel shortage is addressed. I mean, if you woke up every morning with a name like "Szlmr Grszmlslks," wouldn't you be upset with the world too?
Audace| 2.10.12 @ 3:20PM
Why were the comments here (not the two you see now by a Mr. Williams and Constantine -- that can attest to NOT placing their remarks under mine), why were those comments -- 3 of them removed? Two were from the author of this article, correct? ASO staff?
Maybe two of those comments were more telling and revealing than the article itself?
Please share here why the censorship was done.
Matthew Omolesky| 2.11.12 @ 9:01PM
Because we could get away with it, that's why.
We plan to make this site even more interactive in the near future. Bear with us while we improve the way irrelevant comments will be processed.
Bob K.| 2.12.12 @ 9:55AM
If you are really Matthew Omolesky that would not be a good idea because the few readers you now have here who have returned to this article would not read anything you write in the future.
The success of this site is because it allows many comments that are disagreeable to the authors of the articles and many that are completely inane or commercial. The last can be removed and the second kind should be ignored but none that are not obscene or libelous should be subject to the authors editing. This magazine is not owned or published by you.
Bob K.| 2.9.12 @ 7:00PM
Great trout fishing in Slovenia and Croatia but read this little anecdote.
About 25 years ago or a little more I was talking to a guy who had been there about his fishing experience. Then we talked about how much it cost. That was when he brought this up.
Somehow it, had been pre-arranged that he bring in an ammunition magazine for a rifle. It was illegal to own fire arms there in what was then Yugoslavia but it seems that thousands of Rifles were buried in the earth all over the country wrapped in plastic sheeting for use when they were needed. The magazine was looked upon as a very generous part of the fishing trip's overall cost!
Risky business for sure, but he swore it was true!
I'll bet not much has changed since.
POST American| 2.9.12 @ 10:26PM
AS right here
-----our sitting President presides at the
foreign, unelected, PRIVATE EUGENICS
banking borg 'UN'
-----------while Nancy Pelosi calls for
relentless, full spectrum monitoring of
'every aspect' of our lives during her
recent visit to the world capital of
GENOCIDE ---RED China
----------------------------and NOW
sitting Justuce Ginzburg's call for
dumping the very codified basis for
this republic --the Costitution.
Fun's over.
ONE AND ALL must NOW decide,
"WHICH side of NATION-cide
----------------IS MY SIDE?"
As we fly headlong into full blown
police state TREASON, RED China
handover, and ever more 'aggressive'
---------------EUGENICS----------------
ALLLLLL else is DIS---traction.
DeaN| 2.9.12 @ 10:56PM
Many Croatians settled in Chicago,especially in Bridgeport and on the far SE side. One even became mayor,Michael Bilandic,who was the last of the Daley machine.
Some also settled on islands off the Lousiana coast and were fishermen.
Tito was Croatian. So was Tony Kukoc and Pistol Pete Maravich,I think.
That's all I know about Croats.
Marc Jeric| 2.10.12 @ 12:45AM
Well - it's the Versailles Conference that gave Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia, Montenegro, Kosovo, Metohija, Macedonia to the Serbian Kingdom. That kingdom was, and still is as a republic, a former satrapy of the Ottoman Empire for about 450 years - and the Serbs are still affected by its cruelty, high self-opimion, primitivism, sense of entitlement, and unearned pride. For example, the Serbs are firmly convinced that they won both World Wars; that Jesus was a Serb; that "Everywhere there is a Serb it is Serbia".
It was the resistance against the Ottomans for 450 years that earned the Croats the papal designation of "The Shield of Christianity".
After two generations under the Serbian Communist rule there will be at least two new generations to cleanse the body politic of corruption, lies, thefts, injustice, etc. - all the fruits of communism. Just look at what is happening in Russia - the Russian will need 3 generations to become a normal, healthy body politic.
Balkan| 2.10.12 @ 7:45AM
^ Finally, a sane response to this unobjective and emotion-fueled mess of an article carefully tailored for "objective western readers".