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In
recent interviews both Vojislav Koštunica and Tomislav Nikolić have tried to
persuade foreign investors that they have nothing to fear if they come to
power. The general argument is that political differences and poor diplomatic
relations are not good reasons for businessmen from those countries which ‘are
not our friends’ to avoid
Serbia.
A quite specific and interesting argument was advanced by Koštunica in
rejecting the charge that his policy and that of the Radicals were leading to
self-isolation: no state conducts such a policy, and the concept does not
appear in any political dictionary; only an individual can isolate himself,
never a state.
The
concept does exist, of course: it is autarchy. There are also many examples of
it in practice - we need only recall the socialist world in all its variants,
including Hoxha’s
Albania
and Ceauşescu’s
Romania.
As for autarchic collectivism and individualism, the latter is practically
impossible, as those who like Robinson Crusoe know well, while the former is
possible, since a community may indeed be self-sufficient. So these arguments
make no sense.
What
is important, however, is that both Koštunica and Nikolić realise that
self-isolation is bad for
Serbia.
Also that severing economic ties with the countries that have recognised Kosovo,
or will do so, is not in
Serbia’s
interest. But the question that is avoided in these generalised arguments, and
excursions into political theory and history, is as follows: will political
hostilities affect economic cooperation? Is it possible, for example, to kill
members of peace-keeping troops in Kosovo and at the same time make profitable
deals with foreign businessmen? Or, more generally, does justification of the
use of violence brings economic consequences?
A
direct reply is avoided, just as at the time of Slobodan Milošević’s rise some
twenty years ago. He promised both: political hostilities against our
neighbours and the Western world, and Serbian economic growth. There was talk
of advantageous economic relations with the
Soviet Union,
later with both
Russia
and
China.
Also, as Nikolić now repeats, with the
Third World,
the non-aligned countries. Yet it was clear already then, at the time when
Milošević refused to talk to the American ambassador for over a year, that
Serbia’s key partners were the very countries that were being accused of
political enmity: Germany in particular, Serbia’s most important economic
partner by far, a country whose currency - the Deutschmark - was in Serbia a
synonym for money.
Why
should economic cooperation not suffer because of political hostilities? The
argument openly made at that time is only alluded to today. The idea is that
foreign investors, in other words capitalists, are interested only in profit
and do not give a damn whether soldiers from the UN peacekeeping force were
being tied to trees, which is what happened then, or being killed like today.
Why should Western capitalists care about the torching of embassies and UN
vehicles, not to speak of vehicles belonging to NATO forces, when they can make
profits? If we make it possible for them to make money, then we can both go to
war and be economically strong and reach the Swedish (or whichever) standard of
living. It was so then and it is now.
The
only problem is that political hostilities increase the risks of investment,
and of economic enterprise in general. This has two consequences: economic
cooperation declines, while the profit must be greater for those investors who
incline to risky enterprise. Or, as one can see in the case of even friendly
economic exchange with
Russia,
the price of property must be low enough to ensure a profit in line with the
increased risk. This was true in Milošević’s era and is true now too, precisely
because capitalists all over the world have profit in mind, not friendship.
It
would be useful to go back here to the practicability of a policy of
self-isolation. It is understandable that the Socialists and the Radicals
reject this idea, because they wish to say that at the time when they were in -
or supporting - the government,
Serbia’s
isolation did not come about by its own will, but by the will of the
international community which imposed sanctions on
Serbia. The DSS says the same,
albeit not so loudly.
Serbia’s
recourse to violent methods does not mean that it is seeking self-isolation:
isolation is the policy of its enemies in the international community. If
Serbia suffers
because of this and its citizens grow poorer, this will be as a result of the
policy of these enemies, not because
Serbia has used legitimate means to
protect its own political interests.
Serbia’s economic collapse in the
1990s thus has nothing to do with the bombardment of
Dubrovnik and
Sarajevo, or with the ethnic cleansing and
genocide in Srebrenica, but with a hostile policy on the part of NATO and its
political leaders.
This
rhetoric aims to prevent the public from realising why violence is today being
used against the international forces in Kosovo. The reason is the same as
under Milošević: it is a matter of electoral tactics and a strategy for
retaining political power. In order somehow to remain involved in government,
the DSS uses violence in order to secure some success for itself in the
elections. And in order to survive as a political party, the DSS must prevent
Serbia’s
integration into the European Union. For, tactically speaking, failure in the
coming elections would open up the question of the very political purpose of
this party, while
Serbia’s
integration into
Europe, from a strategic
point of view, would make its existence unnecessary. As a result, and in the
absence of other means, there remains only violence, since there is nothing to
lose.
The
Radicals’ political position is the same. Although this is a much larger party,
it finds itself in the same blind alley. If the violent means now being used
fail, and
Serbia
does opt for
Europe, the Radicals face at
least a change of leadership. Whether the party would survive such a
reorganisation without losing much of its influence remains to be seen. It is
very likely that it would follow the fate of the Socialists, and would at all
events lose its current political weight.
This,
then, is the purpose of all the glorification and use of violence and all the
demagogy about a cynical and pragmatic West, with its politicians and
capitalists. Given that Milošević already tried out all of this, it is to be
hoped that the Serbian public has learnt something about the relationship
between political hostilities and economic cooperation. If not, it will be
necessary again to confront the ultimate consequences of the use of violence,
and to test Koštunica’s assertions that states do not incline to
self-destruction. Which is false, of course, and which this country with its
experience of civil wars and conflicts - its own and others - ought to know.
For
Serbia’s
realistic perspective is not autarky but anarchy. At the beginning of
Milošević’s ascendancy, there was a belief that violence in Kosovo would not
lead to violence in
Belgrade.
This illusion was of short duration. The same is true for today. Those who today
hail the use of violence against international forces will tomorrow justify the
use of violence against domestic traitors. Who, as Nikolić has told us, should
not be pitied. Or, as a Russian commentator might say, have got and will get
what they deserve.
This is the ultimate prospect of the use of
violence for electoral purposes. The elections, therefore, will not determine
merely which parties will form the government, and
Serbia’s economic outlook, but
whether violent means to solve political conflicts will finally be discarded.
This is no longer a matter of some other country, town or ethnic group, but of
Serbia’s own
internal life. If the right choice is not made, self-isolation or autarky will
not be so great a problem as the other that
Serbia will be facing:
Belgrade tomorrow could
look like Kosovska Mitrovica today.
Pescanik.net, 19.03.2008.
Translation from Bosnian Institute |