The Bombing of Yugoslavia
will Fail to Achieve its Goals
by Ichak Adizes Ph.D.*, April 2, 1999
According to the media, the bombing of Yugoslavia
has three goals: 1) to stop the atrocities; 2) to weaken Milosevic
and, if possible, to remove him from power, and 3) to prevent
a war that could be wider than Kosovo.
All three goals will fail. The bombing will aggravate
the problems it is supposed to solve.
Goal #1: Stop the atrocities:
I know from personal exposure what Milosevic thinks. It is his
goal to expel the Albanians from Kosovo, whom he considers unwelcome
and often illegal occupants of his Serbian homeland. He could
not do it on a wholesale scale until now because world opinion
was against it. Now with the war on, he can accomplish his mission
without interference. NATO is in the air, while the ethnic cleansing
is carried out on the ground. To accelerate the Kosovar exodus
he needs to scare the population with atrocities. Thus, the net
effect of the bombing is to increase rather than stop the atrocities.
Goal #2: Weaken Milosevic:
Just the opposite is resulting from the bombing. Milosevic uses
the war to eliminate any opposition. He now has a legitimate excuse
to expel any foreign journalists, which he did promptly. He closed
opposition newspapers as soon as the threat of attack was announced.
Under the umbrella of war readiness, he broadcasts only material
favorable to him. His rule is now absolute and the population,
bombarded and brainwashed, naturally supports its leader.
There is a mistaken belief that the bombing will
be so severe that it will bring Milosevic to the negotiating table.
They rely on the Bosnian precedent in which the bombing did bring
him to sign the peace agreement. They assume he will do the same
now. Wrong! People do not understand his motives. Milosevic cares
only about one thing: remaining in power. He signed in Dayton,
after the bombing, because they were not bombing Serbia. The bombing
was hurting Karadjic and that worked in Milosevic's favor. Karadjic,
the leader of the Bosnian Serbs, threatened him politically by
becoming more popular than he was. So Milosevic did not oppose
the bombing. He gave up he land without a fight, created thousands
of refugees from Bosnia, but succeeded in destroying Karadjic,
who is now a sought after war criminal.
The Kosovo bombing is a totally different matter.
This bombing increases his political power. The Serbian people
are uniting behind him. Anyone who thinks that President Clinton's
speech to the Serbian nation will make them switch loyalties as
the bombs are falling is either naïve or just plain stupid.
Milosevic won't yield. The more the bombing, the stronger he is
politically. It is making him a hero in his people's eyes. Serbian
culture values adversity. Serbs create heroes when they are attacked;
it invigorates them. They believe that the world wants to eliminate
them. First it was the Turks, than the Germans, now the Americans.
This bombing confirms their belief structure and strengthens their
resolve. They survived the Turks and the Germans. Now it is up
to them to prove to themselves that they will survive NATO. They
will die and not yield. The've done this in the past, and they
will do it now. The fiercer the battle, the more popular Milosevic
will be. Granted, this can not last forever. Even Hitler eventually
experienced an uprising. Howver, for that level of despair to
be achieved among the Serbs, it might require the death of many
thousands of innocent people.
Goal # 3: The bombing will contain the
war to Kosovo and prevent its spreading.
When there is war, there are refugees, and these refugees will
seek shelter in a country that has not been yet been involved
in the war. This is especially true in the Balkans. The Kosovars
will try to move into Macedonia first, where 40% of the population
is Albanian, and where they have strong family connections. It
will be inhumane to stop them crossing the border because they
will be escaping real or anticipated atrocities. Moreover, it
will be difficult to stop the movement of population across the
border because of the nature of the terrain. I know it from personal
experience. I crossed those mountains during the Second World
War escaping the holocaust. The Albanians know every nook and
cranny on that terrain. They will pass through no matter how many
troops are put on the border. The inflow of a million or more
Albanians into Macedonia will destabilize that country. It might
bring joy to Greece because they would like to see a Slavic Macedonia
disappear, but it will not be something about which Bulgaria will
be passive. Add to it that Albania itself is a tinder box, with
Moslems, Catholics and Greek Orthodox Albanians. An inflow of
a million or more Albanian Moslems from Kosovo will threaten this
precarious balance. Moreover, the Albanians have strong tribal
affiliations, and an inflow from Kosovo will seriously aggravate
the situation. One can not help imagine a civil war in Albania.
Where will the new refugees go? Traditionally, they have tried
to slip across the Adriatic Sea into Italy. One can see that the
whole region will be engulfed by a deadly turmoil. This bombing
will not contain the war. It will widen it.
How will NATO exit this war, especially if one
assumes that Milosevic will not get down on his knees? How many
people will have to die for NATO to realize the futility of this
war?
Should atrocities end? Absolutely! How? Announce
the sovereignty of Kosovo. The Kosovars will never be able to
live within Yugoslavia. Especially not after this war. Give them
arms to fight for themselves. It will become a civil war within
Yugoslavia. Civil wars are never popular. That will topple Milosevic.
It will be a useless war for Serbia, and they will have to pull
out of Kosovo like the Russians pulled out of Afghanistan, or
the Israelis will have to pull out of South Lebanon. The Russians
did not withdrawn from Afghanistan because of bombing. The Serbs
have developed national pride for hundreds of years fighting real
and imaginary enemies.
Stop the bombing now. Spare the loss of more lives
-- Serbs, Americans, and especially the Kosovars', whom the war
was intended to save.
*Dr. Adizes is a consultant to corporations and governments and
has been a consultant to the Prime Ministers of Macedonia and
Greece. In 1991 he was invited by Milosevic in 1991 to consult
about the breakup of the Yugoslav Federation. He has published
seven books translated into twenty-two languages on conflict resolution
and management of change.
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