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The Dayton Accord, Or Design Of Protectorates

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  • The Dayton Accord, Or Design Of Protectorates

    THE DAYTON ACCORD, OR DESIGN OF PROTECTORATES
    Elena Ponomareva

    en.fondsk.ru
    26.11.2008

    Thirteen years ago, on 21st November, 1995, there was signed the
    General Framework Agreement for Peace in Bosnia and Herzegovina (B&H),
    also known as the Dayton Accords. Since then the world witnessed many
    conflicts, and the mechanisms first applied at Wright-Patterson Air
    Force Base near Dayton, Ohio, were used more than once to settle some
    of them.

    In the 1980s the notorious peace-building became an integral part of
    the international peace-keeping operations. First this strategy was
    used in Angola in late 1980s. According to the former UN Secretary
    General Boutros Ghali, "peace-building was aimed at establishing new
    formal institutions to peacefully settle political, social, national
    and religious conflicts". Then Ghali did not mention the most crucial
    thing: those "new formal institutions" were established and controlled
    not by the peoples. The United States, the major player of the world's
    capitalist system, did this under cover of UN, EU and NATO.

    *** B&H within its present-day borders appeared on the world map
    in 1946. Then it became one of the six constituent republics of the
    Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia, which in 1963 changed its
    name for the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY). B&H was
    the central republic of SFRY with mixed Slavic population. According
    to the last census in Yugoslavia in 1991, the Muslims made up
    43,7% of the population, while the Serbs and the Croats - 31,4%
    and 17,3% respectively. The whole population of the republic was
    4 360,000 people, 240,000 (or 5,5%) of whom identified themselves
    before the civil war as Yugoslavians. According to the reports
    from the Parliamentary Group for Population and Development of B&H,
    from 1996 to 2006 more than 120,000 people, mainly youth, left the
    country. There are no official statistics on the number and structure
    of the population of B&H.

    But in accordance with unofficial data, 3,6 million people are
    currently living in the republic, which is 82,6% from the prewar
    population (2,2 million in the Federation of B&H and 1,4 million in
    the Republika Srpska).

    The war of 1992-1995 took lives of 160,000 Muslims, leaving more than
    a million without shelter. The Croats lost 30,000 in dead (400,000
    became refugees), and 25,000 were dead in Serbia with 300,000 people
    becoming refugees there.

    I did no mistake when I said that Slavic people lived in B&H. According
    to the census, the term "Muslim" first appeared there in 1961 to
    describe not religious but ethnic origin. Some people wrote in the
    forms they were atheists but of Muslim origin. In the 1971 census
    people used the word "Muslim" to mean their belonging to an exact
    ethnic group. That mutation of a national identity began during
    Ottoman ru le, when ethnic Serbs of B&H lived through mild economic
    Islamization. Under Socialism, the leadership of Yugoslavia placed its
    stake on internationalism and announced that each nation had the right
    for self-determination. They deliberately encouraged people from other
    ethnic groups to live on the originally Serbian territories. After
    the WW II Serbian refugees were banned from returning to Kosovo and
    northern Macedonia. In B&H there appeared a new ethnic group which
    members identified themselves as a separate nation in early 1990s. The
    situation with Bosnian Muslims shows us how within 30-40 years the
    foundations of historical unity and responsibility for the security
    of future generation may be eliminated.

    A cruel civil war between three nationalities- Serbs, Croats
    and Muslims- was caused mainly by the Communist regime in
    Belgrade. Firstly, the borders were artificial (B&H not as a state
    but as a geographic name). Secondly, under Socialism the whole system
    of education and religious upbringing was aimed at making the Serbs,
    who then felt strong Turkish influence, identify themselves as Muslims
    and non-Serbs.

    Thanks to the decentralization of the federal power in 1970s, when many
    issues were under jurisdiction of republican institutions, Yugoslavia
    saw the revival of Islam. Belgrade actively developed cooperation with
    the Arab world and its close ties with some radical Arab movements
    affected the situation in the Muslim enclaves- in Bosnia and Kosovo. In
    1980s B&H saw a real mosque building boom. Each year 250 young Bosnian
    men received higher Islamic education in the Middle East and then most
    of them came back home inspired by the laws of radical Islam. Iran
    also actively implemented its policies in Yugoslavia (Tehran provided
    financial support to the first president of B&H, Alija Izetbegovic).

    Interests of the West and the Muslim world collided in B&H, when
    Yugoslavia faced the crisis of federalism. Bosnia turned into a 'firing
    ground' where the protectorate model could be tested. The alternate
    coexistence of peoples, who were taught to hate former neighbors,
    resulted in a civil war.

    Both the West and the Islamic states actively supported the
    Croatian-Muslim federation in their fight against Bosnian Serbs, and
    when the victory of the Republika Srpska (RS) was obvious, the peace
    builders openly interfered in the process. After bombing the Serbian
    territories and forcing Belgrade not to accept help from the RS, the
    US suggested a plan to "freeze" the conflict and leave the borders of
    B&H intact. The Dayton constitution, adopted without participation
    of the Bosnian Serbs actually turned B&H into a protectorate. Later
    on the same thing happened in Kosovo: stirring up national hatred,
    escalation of conflict, military operation, deployment of NATO bases
    and peacekeeping forces, the adoption of a 'peace' plan as the basis
    of future20Constitution. As a result- the total control over economic,
    political and military strategic spheres of the region.

    *** The modern B&H consists of two entities- Federation of
    Bosnia and Herzegovina and Republika Srpska, with its own
    governing institutions. There is also the Bosnian Presidium and
    Parliament. However, the Dayton Agreement suggests that the UN Security
    Council appointed a High Representative for Bosnia. An Office of
    the High Representative (HR) deals with the major legislative and
    executive procedures and takes measures if the implementation of the
    Dayton Accord is not satisfactory (Appendix 10).

    The Bonn ministerial conference, which had been convened in 2003 to
    review specifically the implementation of the Dayton peace accord in
    Bosnia, extended the authorities of the HR. Now the HR envoy (on 30
    June, 2007, Miroslav Lajcak took office as the envoy) is authorized to
    dismiss officials, whose view on this or that issue differs from that
    of the international mediator, and replace those holding elected posts
    with his own candidates. If the sides fail to achieve a compromise, the
    HR envoy can introduce temporary legal measures. Apart from this, there
    is also a rule how to arrange political, economical and other kind of
    decisions, which is obligatory even for the ambassadors working in B&H.

    The "peace builders" expect Miroslav Lajcak, who replaced a German
    diplomat Christian Schwartz-Schilling, to make all the20preparations
    to start the revision of the Dayton constitution: "Now Bosnia should
    seek EU membership, but with the present-day constitution it appears
    to be quite difficult. For me it is important that the Constitution
    was unanimously adopted by all political groups".

    The main idea here is to establish a new unitary state that would
    be however ruled from abroad instead of the federation with strong
    Serbian influence.

    The revision of the Bosnian constitutions is closely linked to the
    Kosovo issue. Unlike Kosovo's Albanians, Bosnian Serbs, of course,
    have more reasons for proclaiming independence. The question is how to
    persuade Bosnian Serbs to renounce this little independence they have.

    First of all, it is necessary to dissolve (the peace builders say
    "reform") the police, the army and the security agencies. Secondly,
    to influence the population psychologically and form a steady sense
    of guilt (remember Karadzic arrest and his handover to the war crimes
    tribunal in The Hague, the search for Mladic, Muslim genocide charges,
    etc). Thirdly, to break all ties between the Serbs in Bosnia and
    Belgrade, so that the former thought they were fighting for freedom
    and treated the latter as traitors, who agreed to cooperate with
    the West for "hoping to benefit from it", as the famous Serbian
    novelist Milorad Pavic put it. Fourthly, to form a "fifth column"
    among the Bosnian Ser bs. As Joseph Brodsky said, "to buy is easier
    than kill". And, finally, to make Republika Srpska economically weak.

    Guided by the research published in the "Modern Political Atlas"1,
    we now may define the so-called "national identity index", which
    depends on the following factors:

    - foreign share in national GDP

    - the way inner conflicts influence the country's political regime

    - external debt; sovereign nationhood and its time frameworks

    - scale of inner conflicts and number of victims

    - the way the conflicts affect territorial division

    - presence of foreign military contingents on the territory

    - national currency anchor regime

    - the role of dominating ethnos in the country

    So, taking into consideration these factors, the authors of the Atlas
    placed B&H at the 174th position, close to the Solomon and Marshall
    Islands, Armenia and the Republic of Equatorial Guinea (the whole
    list features 192 countries).

    When I watch the way the international relations are developing and
    analyze the evolution of the political system in the Balkans, when
    I see how people of the former Yugoslavia change their social and
    political priorities, I have no illusions about the future of B&H. The
    "peace builders", who yet have no opponents, insist that B&H must be
    a unitary territory, with no attributes of autonomy. Time will show
    what will come of it.
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