Source: http://www.wsws.org/polemics/1995/dec1995/balkan.shtml
Accessed 08 May 1999
Imperialist war in the Balkans
and the decay of the petty-bourgeois left
Statement of the International Committee of the Fourth International
14 December 1995
Fifty years after the end of World War II, the great powers are once again embarked on
a violent redivision of the world. This is the significance of the intervention by the
United States and Western Europe into the four-year-old conflict caused by the dissolution
of Yugoslavia. The NATO occupation of Bosnia marks more than a military turning point in
the Balkan war. This, the first major coordinated military action by the imperialist
powers since the breakup of the Soviet Union, is the working out of their so-called new
world order. It bears a remarkable resemblance to the old world order--the era of wars and
revolutions which erupted with the emergence of imperialism at the beginning of the
century. As in the period preceding the First World War, the Balkans have become an arena
of intense conflict between the major powers for economic, political and military
dominance.
The Pax Americana in Bosnia is aimed at completing the process of ethnic partition
which has already cost the lives of more than 200,000 people and turned millions more into
refugees. By spearheading the introduction of imperialist troops into the Balkans for the
first time since the defeat of Hitler's armies, the US is assuring the eruption of new and
wider conflicts. The Clinton administration used military force, both US warplanes and
Washington's proxy armies in the region, to create the conditions for this settlement.
American air strikes last September involved 3,200 sorties, more than one ton of bombs and
the firing of cruise missiles from US warships in the Adriatic. Towns and villages
throughout Bosnia were targeted and many hundreds of civilians were killed and wounded.
The immediate aim of these bombings was to inflict overwhelming damage on the
telecommunications and transportation links of the Bosnian Serb army, allowing the regular
army of Croatia, together with Bosnian Moslem and Croat forces, to overrun Serb regions in
northwest Bosnia. This ground offensive killed and wounded thousands and turned another
125,000 people into refugees. They joined the quarter of a million Serb civilians who last
August were driven out of the Krajina by the Croatian army, in an operation backed by the
United States.
In the space of two months the US oversaw the most massive acts of ethnic cleansing to
occur in the entire course of the Bosnian civil war. Thus the stage was set for the
US-brokered talks in Dayton, Ohio.
After years of blocking European-initiated settlements on the grounds that they
rewarded "ethnic cleansing" and failed to preserve an independent and
multi-ethnic Bosnia, Washington unilaterally imposed its own carveup. Muscling its
European allies aside, the US has dictated internal borders separating Bosnia into Moslem,
Serb and Croat enclaves and even drafted a new constitution for the former Yugoslav
republic. To enforce this division, and evict those ethnic populations who find themselves
on the wrong side of the new borders, 60,000 NATO troops are being sent to Bosnia. Clinton
administration spokesmen have sanctioned the use of overwhelming force against anyone who
opposes the US plan.
Slobodan Milosevic of Serbia, Croatia's Franjo Tudjman and Bosnian President Alija
Izetbegovic were brought to the US Air Force base in Dayton to ratify the settlement.
After denouncing Milosevic for the last three years as the equivalent of a Balkan Hitler,
Washington embraced him in Dayton as a stalwart for peace. Milosevic bears a principal
responsibility for the Bosnian war, having consolidated his power by fomenting Serb
chauvinism and encouraging the most fanatical communalist elements among the Bosnian
Serbs. In Dayton, however, he handed back Serb-held territory in exchange for promised
economic concessions to Belgrade.
Tudjman came to the talks as the war's principal victor. Thanks to extensive US aid in
driving out the Serbs, he largely succeeded in his goal of creating an ethnically
homogeneous Croatia. He also seized control of a large swath of Bosnian territory, turning
it into a de facto Croatian province.
For years, Washington based its intervention in the Balkans on its supposed defense of
an independent and multi-ethnic Bosnia. The fictitious character of the Bosnian regime's
independence was demonstrated by a negotiating team controlled lock, stock and barrel by
the US government. Its chief consultant was Richard Perle, the undersecretary of defense
in charge of nuclear arms policy in the Reagan administration. Another American, Chris
Spirou, the former head of the Democratic Party of New Hampshire, participated directly in
the talks as a Bosnian representative. He joined Muhamed Sacirbey, a US citizen who is
serving as Bosnia's foreign minister under a special State Department dispensation. The
makeup of the Bosnian delegation, like every other aspect of the Dayton talks, revealed
the essential character of the so-called peace agreement. It is a classic imperialist
carveup.
Twenty years after the end of the Vietnam War, American imperialism is headed for
another debacle. Washington's bullying diplomacy in Bosnia has already created
unprecedented US-European tensions, bringing the NATO alliance to the point of a split.
This intervention is the latest in a long line of military actions undertaken by the
United States over the past 15 years. Washington has repeatedly resorted to armed force in
pursuing US global interests, all the while proclaiming its actions a defense of peace,
democracy and human rights.
Since 1980 the world has witnessed the invasions of Grenada and Panama, the bombing of
Libya, the CIA-directed dirty wars in Nicaragua and El Salvador, military occupations in
Lebanon, Somalia and Haiti and, of course, the war in the Persian Gulf. Far greater
eruptions of American militarism are in the offing. Contained within the ongoing campaign
of anti-Chinese propaganda, as well as the protracted trade conflicts with Japan, are the
seeds of future wars in Asia.
Having lost the economic hegemony which it acquired following the Second World War, US
imperialism with ever greater frequency falls back on its residual military might to
achieve its aims. The moribund bureaucracies which dominate the workers movement in the
United States and all over the world have neither the ability nor the inclination to
oppose any actions by the imperialists. They are primarily responsible for politically
disorienting the masses of workers, creating a crisis of social consciousness of such
proportions that the vast majority of people are blinded to the catastrophic dangers
inherent in these developments.
Bosnia and the left
For a broad social layer which became politically radicalized in the 1960s and early
1970s, the events in Bosnia have been the occasion for a sharp lurch to the right. Many of
those who were active in the old protest movements against the military interventions and
oppressive actions of imperialism have today helped prepare its entry into the Bosnian
war. In an earlier period, some of them joined organizations with revolutionary-sounding
names and adopted pseudo-Marxist phraseology, while others became pacifists and liberal
humanitarians. They denounced the most egregious crimes of imperialism, while advocating
such remedies as student power, women's liberation and various forms of nationalism. They
all failed to base their politics on the class struggle and shared a profound skepticism
toward the revolutionary role of the working class. Now they have been swept along by
powerful class forces which they themselves do not comprehend.
Liberal pundits such as Anthony Lewis, atoning for their opposition to the war in
Vietnam, have written column after column demanding that Washington and the other
imperialist powers carry out military strikes. They argued that in the post-Cold War era
imperialist policy must be driven by a moral imperative--in this case, to punish the
Serbs. Figures like the author Susan Sontag and the actress Vanessa Redgrave have made
pilgrimages to Sarajevo to support imperialist intervention, much as they and those like
them, in an earlier period, made visits to Hanoi or Beirut to oppose it. They do not even
stop to consider the significance of their own evolution.
Others have found in Bosnia the opportunity to complete a protracted turn to the right.
In the United States, Tim Wohlforth, who broke with the Trotskyist movement more than two
decades ago, announced his support for US military action in Bosnia in an article entitled
"Give War a Chance." Addressing himself to a wide layer of former antiwar
protesters who are now supporting imperialist intervention, he declared: "We must put
on our marching shoes, unfurl our banners and raise our fists in the air, demanding
military action when it is morally required." Adriano Sofri, the former leader of the
Italian radical group Lotta Continua, called for immediate military action against the
Serbs. "I would bomb them, just bomb them," he told the press.
Nowhere has the question of Bosnia provoked such an intense political catharsis as in
Germany. In 1945, after its complicity in the most horrific crimes in human history, the
German petty bourgeoisie took off its swastikas and adopted the posture of pacifism. A
mass protest movement built along these lines survived well into the 1980s and is
continued to this day in the form of the Green party. Since the fall of the Berlin Wall
and German reunification, however, the lineup of political and class forces has shifted
dramatically. The German bourgeoisie, its political and economic power substantially
strengthened, is once again venturing onto the world stage. The former protesters have
been swept along in the wake of German capital. Yesterday's Green party flower children
are disavowing pacifism and demonstrating their loyalty to the German nation by advocating
NATO air strikes and calling for the military to retrace the World War II path of the
Wehrmacht in the Balkans. Daniel Cohn-Bendit, the former firebrand of student protest in
1968, has emerged as an advocate of a "humanitarian" imperialist intervention,
while Jurgen Habermas, leading figure in the Frankfurt School, announced that "with
trembling hand" he was compelled to back military action. On an international scale,
the same people who protested against imperialist aggression in an earlier period now
support ethnochauvinist warfare, NATO bombing raids and US occupation, all in the name of
human rights and national self-determination.
The term "left," if applied uncritically to describe these elements, serves
to obscure rather than clarify, because it fails to take into account their evolution. It
would perhaps be more accurate to refer to this social and political tendency as the camp
of petty-bourgeois ex-radicals.
Behind the turn to imperialism
Representatives of this tendency give revulsion over Serbian atrocities as the reason
for their swing into the imperialist camp. This is hardly a satisfying explanation for
such a sweeping political realignment. There is no question that the Serb nationalist
forces have carried out the most widespread atrocities. But Croat army troops and militias
are guilty of similar outrages against Serbs in Croatia and both Serbs and Moslems in
Bosnia. Moslem forces have launched such attacks on Serbs and Croats in Bosnia. All of
these nationalist factions are led by political scoundrels, ex-Stalinist bureaucrats and
communalist politicians attempting to carve out states based on the reactionary principle
of ethnicity. In the final analysis, all of them function as the agents of one or another
imperialist faction seeking a new redivision of the Balkans.
If one were to accept the claim that a political approach to the former Yugoslavia must
involve choosing sides between contending nationalist factions, based on the relative
brutality of the actions taken against them, then one could make a compelling case for the
Serbs of Krajina, expelled en masse from their homeland. Yet the suffering of the Krajina
Serbs has evoked no sympathy whatsoever from those who demanded "humanitarian"
intervention in Bosnia. On the contrary, not a few of them hailed the anti-Serb offensive
as a victory for Croatian "self-determination." Behind their morality campaign,
they have seized on Bosnia as an opportunity to align their politics with those of
imperialism. This is not a matter of the political evolution of individuals, but rather
the outcome of deep-going social processes.
The collapse of Stalinism
Great events have produced this stampede into the camp of imperialism. The collapse of
the Stalinist bureaucracies in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe has removed an
essential prop for those who engaged in protest politics in a previous period. This social
layer based its leftism not on the independent struggle of the working class, but on the
apparent strength of Stalinism. It long ago abandoned revolutionary socialist politics and
grew increasingly cynical over the prospects for a genuinely progressive transformation of
society. Thus, it readily accepted the claims of the bourgeoisie that the USSR's
dissolution represented the end of any socialist alternative.
The relationship of this section of the petty bourgeoisie to the working class has,
moreover, been fundamentally altered by the decay of the old Stalinist, social democratic
and trade union bureaucracies, which constituted the official labor movements in country
after country. The workers movement no longer provides the petty-bourgeois left with the
same sources of employment or paths to political influence. Moreover, welfare state
systems which tied its fate at least partially to the well-being of the working class are
being systematically dismantled.
The representatives of this layer have undergone a definite social evolution. Many came
initially from privileged upper middle class families. Over time, they have been drawn
back by personal, social and cultural ties to their old milieu. Their way of life, their
income level, their social connections link them more closely to the wealthy upper middle
class and the bourgeoisie itself than to the broad masses of working people, from whom
they are ever more distant and alienated.
This shift is part of a social polarization that has widened over the past two decades.
For the working class and growing sections of middle class people, sweeping changes in the
forms of capitalist production have meant the "downsizing" of jobs, living
standards and social conditions. But a section of the former radicals have found
comfortable berths as university professors, union bureaucrats, parliamentary politicians
or in similar pursuits, and have seen their own share of the wealth increase. Others less
fortunate bitterly regret their previous political activities and blame them for blocking
their elevation to a more privileged financial status. This provides an even more powerful
impulse to make amends. Bosnia became a way for this layer to announce its return to the
official consensus of bourgeois politics.
The WRP: from "revolutionary morality" to imperialist
morality
The most shameless expression of this general turn to pro-imperialist politics is to be
found in the British Workers Revolutionary Party led by Cliff Slaughter. It is 10 years
since an internal crisis erupted in the WRP, culminating in its split from the
International Committee of the Fourth International in February 1986. A decade after
severing its formal ties with Trotskyism, Slaughter's WRP has placed itself squarely in
the camp of imperialism. For the past three years this party's principal political
activity has been organizing aid convoys to the Bosnian city of Tuzla through its
pseudohumanitarian front, "Workers Aid for Bosnia." It has used these convoys to
agitate for the "opening of the northern route," a militarily strategic
corridor, which has been the focus of a triangular struggle between Serb, Croat and Moslem
forces.
Now the WRP's efforts are to find fulfillment. The US Army is preparing to send tens of
thousands of soldiers and tanks down this route and into Tuzla, where it will set up its
headquarters. Slaughter and Co. have every right to demand that their next "aid"
convoy be given a place of honor in NATO's baggage train. The WRP's political
interventions have helped pave the way for this imperialist occupation.
In the months leading up to the NATO intervention, the WRP sponsored a "Nonstop
picket for Bosnia" on Downing Street. While London's Whitehall has seen its share of
protests, this is perhaps the first time an organization identifying itself as part of the
left has taken to the streets to denounce a British prime minister for failure to take
military action.
When Croatia carried out its US-backed invasion of Krajina, the WRP responded in what
can only be described as a pogromist manner. An article published in the August 12 issue
of its newspaper Workers Press hailed the Croatian military's mass expulsion of Serb
civilians in terms indistinguishable from those used by Croat right-wing extremists.
The article applauded "the Croatian army's smashing of the Serb Chetnik gangster
statelet in the ... Krajina." It enthusiastically described how "Croatia
celebrated its triumph in Knin, the Krajina Serb Ôcapital'" and proclaimed the
Bosnian people's "gratitude for the Croat soldiers' bold victory."
The Croatian army carried out its offensive with direct and substantial backing from
Washington and Bonn. Germany bankrolled the right-wing regime of Franjo Tudjman in turning
his force of Ustashe thugs into one of the most well-equipped armies in all of Europe.
High-ranking US military officers, including the former army chief of staff, were brought
in under the cover of a private corporation, licensed by the US State Department, to
organize the offensive. None of this dampened the WRP's joy over Croatia's "bold
victory."
When NATO bombing began a month later, the WRP voiced support. Citing Bosnian praise
for the NATO intervention, Workers Press wrote: "We have every sympathy with this
understandable, natural response. We have none whatsoever for the whingeing [sic]
Ôlefts', Christian pacifists and Stalinists who have rushed into print to protest on
behalf of poor General Mladic and his men, after refusing to do anything for Bosnia or its
people in three and a half years of war."
The WRP's reservations about the US bombing of Serb towns and villages were strictly
tactical: "If NATO airpower was really being used on the side of the Bosnians ...
military logic would mean that Bosnian forces be allowed to follow up on the ground."
The WRP's concerns proved ill-founded. As events quickly proved, the NATO bombing was
employed as air cover for the actions taken "on the ground" by the Croatian and
Bosnian armies--the overrunning of most of northwest Bosnia.
The reactionary political line and provocative practices of this party have thus
established its position as a bit player in the government and media campaign promoting
US-NATO intervention in the Balkans on the pretext of defending Bosnia.
The split which took place in 1985-86 in the International Committee foreshadowed the
broad international regroupment of the middle class left with imperialism. Confronted with
a raging crisis inside the WRP, Cliff Slaughter explicitly rejected any attempt to deal
with the political roots of the party's degeneration. Instead he insisted that all of its
problems were the result of the monstrous behavior of one man, Gerry Healy, and declared
that the real issue was one of "revolutionary morality." In this way, Slaughter
worked deliberately to refound the WRP on the basis of reactionary, subjectivist politics
and middle class hysteria.
"Revolutionary morality" became the battle cry of those who felt that they
had wasted their lives in the attempt to build a revolutionary party in the working class
and had been cheated by history. They didn't want to deal with questions of program,
perspective and theory; they just wanted a villain they could blame for all their
troubles. Who could be bothered with politics and a class analysis when confronting a
supposed monster like Healy? Slaughter proved a master at cultivating and manipulating
these demoralized sentiments.
On the basis of such a method, it is impossible to prepare the working class for the
great struggles which it confronts. Petty-bourgeois moralism only serves to hand the
working class over to imperialism. Karl Marx's great achievement, based on a philosophical
revolution, was to introduce the method of historical materialism, raising politics above
the level of moralizing and revealing the class struggle to be the motor force of history.
The WRP, like broad sections of the left, has abandoned even the pretense of a historical
materialist and class standpoint.
The moods which seized the WRP in the mid-1980s have found an unmistakable echo in the
approach taken by most middle class ex-radicals to the Bosnian crisis. Disdainful of a
scientific and historical approach to the complex questions surrounding Yugoslavia's
breakup, they too sought villains to hate and readily accepted those proffered by the
bourgeois media--the Serbs. This "revolutionary morality" has revealed itself to
be the morality of NATO, the US State Department and the British Foreign Office.
Attila Hoare
The WRP based its Bosnian intervention on a line elaborated by Attila Hoare, a Croat
nationalist student at Cambridge University. Hoare developed the thesis that the struggle
in the former Yugoslavia centered on the right of Croatia and Bosnia to "national
self-determination." The realization of this "right," he said, was bound up
with the development of "modern, industrialized Yugoslav capitalism."
Hoare's last major contribution to the WRP's pseudotheoretical justifications for its
operations in the former Yugoslavia was a reply issued in the summer of 1994 to the
International Committee of the Fourth International's statement Marxism, Opportunism &
the Balkan Crisis. This IC statement exposed the reactionary politics of the WRP in the
context of a historical examination of the national question and its particular
development in the Balkans.
In his reply, Hoare expanded on his chauvinist theory of history, describing the
partisan struggle against the Nazis and their local collaborators as a fight for "the
individual liberation of each Yugoslav nation" ... from each other. He proclaimed as
the main achievement of the Tito regime the creation of a state apparatus in which
"Croats, Slovenes, Bosnians and Macedonians could now fill bureaucratic posts at both
the republican and federal level. This was what gave substance to the republics
established by the revolution; it also allowed these new bureaucracies to crystallize into
new bourgeoisies over the course of the next 45 years."
According to this thesis, the historic contribution of the Yugoslav revolution was the
"crystallization" of a Croatian bourgeoisie under the leadership of Franjo
Tudjman! Hoare concluded his reply with an overview of the Yugoslav and world situation:
"In Bosnia the working class has been largely physically destroyed; in Serbia and
Croatia we have virtually no workers opposition; in Western Europe the workers movement is
greatly demoralized, with many of its leaders and groups supporting imperialism in the
Balkans. We are still at the stage of trying to rebuild working class internationalism
through rallying support for the Bosnian national-liberation struggle. It is highly
likely, if not probable, that we shall not get past this stage. Yet to be honest about the
position we are in, and to develop our strategy accordingly, is worth infinitely more than
any amount of sectarian ranting."
This sums up the outlook of the broad spectrum of the left as it renounces any pretense
of basing its politics on the working class and the struggle for socialism: the working
class is defeated; socialism is off of the historic agenda and there is nothing more to be
done than line up with one or another ethnocommun-alist movement. Hoare has gone on to
contribute his nationalist tracts to other anti-Marxist organizations, including the
motley alliance of revisionists and state capitalists in the US which publishes the
misnamed journal Against the Current.
Since Hoare's departure, the WRP has done nothing to deepen its conception of the
"right to self-determination." Objective events, however, have further
illustrated the reactionary character of this demand in the present epoch. Croatia's
realization of its "national self-determination" has found expression in the
expulsion of a quarter of a million people from their land, with the full support of the
WRP.
Slaughter has made no attempt to square his attitude toward Bosnia with the perspective
of Marxism or with a historical materialist analysis of the rise and fall of Yugoslavia.
The WRP contents itself with the conceptions and terminology of imperialist diplomacy,
proclaiming its defense of "multi-ethnic" Bosnia against "Serb
aggression," without bothering to spell out the origins of either the one or the
other.
Bosnia and the disintegration of Yugoslavia
Bosnia's origins as a formally independent state are bound up with Yugoslavia's
dissolution. The WRP has repeatedly declared its support for this development, hailing the
formation of independent states of Slovenia, Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina as victories
for "national liberation movements" and part of the "great revolutions
which swept Europe in the period 1989-91." It is indifferent to the lessons drawn by
the Marxist movement on the development of the national question in the Balkans, a region
in which imperialist powers have repeatedly sought to manipulate conflicts between small
nations in order to assert their own dominance. This policy gave rise to the term
"Balkanization." Today, as imperialism intervenes once again by instigating and
exploiting the conflicts between Croat, Moslem and Serb, the WRP paints Balkanization in
the rosy colors of "national liberation."
The historic problem of the national question in the Balkans is the overlapping of
territorial boundaries and ethnic populations. As a result of the region's subjugation by
rival empires--Ottoman Turkish and Austro-Hungarian--and the movement of populations, both
forced and voluntary, various peoples, most particularly the Serbs, found themselves
divided by a number of different state borders. The Marxist movement sought to answer this
problem by fighting for the unification of the working class throughout the region on the
basis of the strategic demand for a socialist federation of the Balkans. Slaughter and the
WRP have dismissed this program as "irrelevant" to the "real struggle"
in the former Yugoslavia. Instead, they have promoted Bosnian Moslem and Croat nationalism
against Serb nationalism.
On the eve of the Balkan wars which preceded World War I, Leon Trotsky spelled out the
economic and political necessity for breaking down the patchwork of statelets in the
Balkan peninsula in order to establish a viable state. He warned, in words which seem
prophetic more than 80 years later, that this would be achieved "either from above,
by expanding one Balkan state, whichever proves strongest, at the expense of weaker
ones--this is the road of wars of extermination and oppression of weak nations, a road
that consolidates monarchism and militarism; or from below, through the peoples themselves
coming together--this is the road of revolution, the road that means overthrowing the
Balkan dynasties."
After the Second World War the Tito regime attempted to overcome these divisions
through a complex constitutional arrangement aimed at assuring security to Yugoslavia's
various national minorities. The Bosnian war is the end result of this arrangement's
disintegration under the combined impact of a deep economic and social crisis and the
intervention of foreign capitalist powers.
The international context
The development of Yugoslavia's crisis can be understood only within its historical and
international context. In the decades following the Second World War, the regime founded
by Josip Broz (Marshall Tito) played a pivotal role in the conflict between the Soviet
bloc and Western imperialism. In 1944, as the war was drawing to a close, Churchill and
Stalin met to divide up spheres of influence in the Balkans. According to the crude
formula proposed by Stalin, influence in Yugoslavia would be split "50-50"
between East and West. After initial conflicts with imperialism over Trieste and the Greek
civil war and the subsequent break with Stalin in 1948, Tito adapted his regime to the
framework imposed by this deal between Stalinism and imperialism.
With the Truman Doctrine of 1947, Washington took over the failing British empire's
interests in the Balkans and forged a special relationship with Yugoslavia. Despite the
Tito regime's socialist pretensions, Washington provided it with military aid, economic
assistance, trade and credit. In return, Yugoslavia became a key factor in NATO's
containment strategy toward the Soviet bloc, particularly in the Mediterranean. Tito was a
principal sponsor of the Movement of Nonaligned Countries, which promoted the posture of
neutrality in the conflict between the imperialist powers and the Soviet Union,
particularly for the countries of Asia, Africa and Latin America. This standpoint suited
the interests of bourgeois nationalist regimes like those of Nehru, Nasser and Sukharno,
which were seeking to improve their bargaining position by playing Moscow off against
Washington.
The Tito regime was a master at this international balancing act. It used its unique
geopolitical position to obtain favorable economic relations with the West, the Soviet
bloc and the so-called developing countries. This in turn played a substantial role in the
initial successes of Yugoslavia's system of "market socialism." At the same
time, however, it made the Tito regime extremely vulnerable to the sweeping changes in
international relations which began in the 1980s.
The turn of the Eastern European and Soviet Stalinist bureaucracies toward capitalist
restoration spelled the end of US imperialism's special relationship with the Yugoslav
state. It no longer needed the regime in Belgrade as a military bulwark against the Soviet
Union. Washington began to view the federal Yugoslav state as an obstacle to completing
the privatization of the country's economy for the benefit of the multinational banks and
corporations. In a bid to speed up the process of capitalist economic "reform,"
the US and the other major powers threw their support to those who claimed to be
dismantling the old Titoist structure, many of them by promoting ethnocommunalism. Among
them was Slobodan Milosevic, a longtime favorite of the American foreign policy
establishment, who sought to consolidate his own political grip by backing the retrograde
nationalist demand for a "Greater Serbia."
German imperialism, anxious to flex its political muscles after reunification, promoted
secessionism in Slovenia and Croatia and rushed to extend full recognition once these
republics broke with the Yugoslav federation in 1991. The Kohl government dismissed
warnings that the Croatian regime's abuse of its Serb minority and the failure of either
regime to negotiate an agreement with the rest of Yugoslavia would result in civil war.
Bonn insisted that the "right to self-determination"--a formula which it had
invoked to justify Germany's own reunification--overrode all other issues.
While both the US and the other Western European powers initially opposed recognition,
they ultimately bowed to Germany's position. The US was attempting to shift the costs of
economic development in Eastern Europe onto German capitalism and was not in a position
unilaterally to dictate political terms in the region. The Western European powers were
preoccupied with the completion of the Maastricht treaty on economic union and with tying
the newly reunified Germany to all-European institutions. Recognition for Croatia and
Slovenia in the end became a bargaining chip in the final negotiations on Maastricht.
After initially opposing recognition of the first two secessionist republics,
Washington aggressively promoted the independence of Bosnia, seeing it as a means of
regaining the initiative in the unfolding Balkan crisis. Once again there were warnings
that secession by this republic, where the Serbs constituted an even larger minority and
where the Yugoslav army maintained the bulk of its troops and military assets, would
provoke civil war. Once again they were ignored, as each of the imperialist powers pursued
its own interests.
From the outset, the different states seeking to found themselves on the ruins of
Yugoslavia have conducted their affairs with the essential aim of drawing support from one
or another of these powers. These external interventions accelerated and intensified the
crisis of the Yugoslav state and contributed greatly to the savagery of the civil wars
which attended its dissolution.
The contradictions of the Titoist state
The state form which collapsed in Yugoslavia was the product of the Communist Party-led
partisan victory over Nazi occupation and local reactionary forces at the end of the
Second World War. Under the leadership of Tito, the Yugoslav CP developed new state
structures with the aim of overcoming the petty nationalisms which had repeatedly plunged
the Balkans into fratricidal warfare. The bitter experience with national chauvinism in
the Second World War resulted in substantial popular support for the Tito regime's call
for "Brotherhood and Unity" in a single Yugoslavia, which guaranteed equality
for all of its peoples.
Modeled on the Soviet Stalinist bureaucracy and based on an acceptance of the national
divisions which imperialism had imposed in the Balkans, the Tito regime proved unable to
fulfill this promise. While it sought to establish a modicum of national independence by
balancing between Washington and Moscow, it came under increasing economic and political
pressure from Western capitalism. Internally, this state sought to control the eruption of
national strife through a federal structure made up of six constituent republics and two
autonomous provinces. Extensive guarantees for the rights of minorities within each of
these territories were written into the country's constitution and enforced by the central
government.
In practice, the regime's bureaucratic character combined with the region's legacy of
economic backwardness to generate powerful centrifugal tendencies. The ruling
bureaucracies in each of the republics functioned increasingly as separate economic
entities, developing their industries and infrastructures in an irrationally autarkic
fashion in order to strengthen their own power and privileges. In the end, each of the
republics established wider economic links with foreign capitalism than with each other.
The central state under Tito drew its power from its control of a national army and its
mediation of conflicts between the different republics, particularly Croatia and Serbia.
It alternately repressed expressions of nationalism in one republic and then in the other,
with the result of encouraging separatist tendencies in both. All-Yugoslav nationalism,
which had animated the partisan struggle of the Second World War, became a hollow dogma.
The Tito regime made no real attempt to unite Yugoslavia's separate peoples.
Extraordinarily, it never established a single national university, drawing students from
the different republics. Croat youth went to Zagreb and Serbs to Belgrade. The
bureaucracy's failure to combat particularism was no accident. Its greatest fear was the
emergence of a united struggle of the working class cutting across republican boundaries.
Tito used the full weight of his considerable security apparatus to quash any such
movement.
The role of IMF austerity
Yugoslavia's breakdown was accelerated by a succession of austerity programs dictated
by the foreign banks and the International Monetary Fund from the end of the 1970s onward.
The aim was to extract payments on the country's ballooning foreign debt by slashing
domestic consumption. The IMF measures had a devastating impact. By the mid-1980s
unemployment reached depression levels, while inflation and wage controls sent real
incomes plummeting to their lowest level in two decades. The result was growing social
polarization throughout Yugoslavia between those with access to hard currency and those
without, as well as between the wealthier republics--Slovenia and Croatia--and the rest of
the country.
Slovene and Croatian party leaders and bureaucrats argued in the language of Reagan and
Thatcher for a kind of Yugoslav "trickle down" economy. They demanded that firms
in Croatia and Slovenia be allowed to keep all of the income from their more extensive
export economies rather than contributing a portion to the development of the less
advanced areas to the south. They charged that taxation for this purpose amounted to a
form of "national exploitation." With increasing access to foreign capital from
Austria and Germany, they were able to defy the demands of the central government in
Belgrade.
Having previously encouraged economic decentralization, the IMF now demanded that the
central government assume greater powers to impose strict fiscal and monetary discipline
over the different republics. Deprived of any means of ameliorating the social crisis, the
Belgrade government took on the role of a collection agency for the foreign banks. The
bureaucracies in the different republics saw no interest in supporting this central
government and instead sought to increase their economic and political autonomy.
A prerevolutionary situation
As Susan Woodward, the author of the insightful study of Yugoslavia's disintegration,
Balkan Tragedy, notes:
"By 1985-86 the preconditions of a revolutionary situation were apparent. The
increasing rate of unemployment was above 20 percent in all republics except Slovenia and
Croatia. Inflation was at 50 percent a year and climbing. The household savings of
approximately 80 percent of the population were depleted. Western currencies such as the
Deutschemark and the US dollar were given preference in domestic exchange. Allocation
decisions increasingly became stark questions of survival. Attempts to alleviate the
pressures made inflation worse and undermined economic management. This economic
polarization led to social polarization" (Susan L. Woodward, Balkan Tragedy: Chaos
and Dissolution After the Cold War [Washington, D.C.: The Brookings Institution, 1995], p.
73).
The working class of Yugoslavia proved unable to take advantage of this
prerevolutionary situation by putting forward its own independent political alternative to
the rotting bureaucratic state. Instead, the ruling bureaucrats, joining forces with
extreme nationalist and outright fascist opposition and emigre groups, were able to
channel this prerevolutionary situation into a fratricidal struggle to carve out new
ethnically homogeneous territories.
It was not for a lack of working class struggle. In response to the first round of IMF
austerity programs, work stoppages rose by 80 percent from 1982 to 1983. By 1987 the
government officially reported 1,570 strikes involving 365,000 workers. And in 1988 the
number of strikes rose to 2,000. By the fall of 1988--less than three years before the
outbreak of war--mass delegations of workers from Croatia, Vojvodina and Serbia were
taking their protests for the first time in the postwar period to the steps of the federal
parliament in Belgrade.
Nor did the overwhelming majority of the population throw its support to national
particularism. Repeated demonstrations against the drive to war expressed broad opposition
to Yugoslavia's dismemberment. What the working class lacked, however, was a perspective
and a leadership capable of uniting it in an independent struggle against the alliance of
ex-Stalinist bureaucracies and communalist politicians. Substantial sections of workers
and, in particular, the youth were disoriented as a result of the destructive policies of
Stalinism and the attempt of the Yugoslav bureaucracy, like its counterparts throughout
Eastern Europe, to identify its own rule and privileges with "socialism."
Yugoslavia has provided one of the sharpest manifestations of the crisis of leadership
confronting the working class on a world scale. The bureaucracies which have dominated the
workers movement--Stalinist, social democratic and trade union--either opposed from their
origins or long ago rejected the struggle for the international unity of the working class
against capitalism. All of them have adopted policies based on nationalism and support for
the profit system. Given this political vacuum, the emerging bourgeoisie was able to
divert the immense discontent with the social conditions prevailing in Yugoslavia into
right-wing and chauvinist channels.
Figures who in another period would have been shunned as criminals and psychopaths were
elevated to the status of national heroes and political leaders. Unemployed youth, school
graduates without any prospect of finding work and other oppressed layers, rather than
finding a revolutionary road, were recruited to slaughter one another in ethnically-based
armies and militias. The type of fratricidal civil war taking place in the former
Yugoslavia did not fall from the sky. It is the price paid by the Yugoslav working class
for the absence of a revolutionary leadership and perspective. This is what makes so
reactionary the attempts by the WRP and other self-proclaimed "socialists" to
dress up this retrograde development as a struggle for "national
self-determination."
Slovenia was the first of the Yugoslav republics to take the road of national
separatism. It claimed independence for the old republic on the basis of the right of
self-determination of the Slovene ethnic nation. Croatia followed Slovenia's example. In
Croatia, however, the matter was more complex. The republic contained a Serb minority
which, before Yugoslavia's breakup, amounted to 12.2 percent of the population. This
minority suddenly found itself dragged, against its will, into a newly independent
Croatia. The last time this had happened, in World War II, the Serbs of Croatia had been
herded into concentration camps and slaughtered by the hundreds of thousands.
The Tito-era constitution of the Croatian republic had sought to overcome Serb fears by
declaring the republic to be a community of "the Croatian people in brotherly unity
with the Serbs of Croatia." The document drafted by the nationalist politicians led
by Tudjman, however, proclaimed an independent Croatia to be the state of the Croatian
nation, linking citizenship to ethnicity and relegating Serbs to a status of inferiority
in a country they had inhabited for several hundred years.
The Tudjman regime accompanied the resurgence of ethnic nationalism with discrimination
against the Serbs. It revived the symbols of the World War II-era Ustashe regime and
sought to rehabilitate its politics. In response, Serb nationalist elements asserted their
own right to self-determination, also guaranteed under the Yugoslav constitution. They
demanded a break with Croatia and unity with Serbia. War was the inevitable result.
In Bosnia the rise of ethnic nationalism posed the gravest threat. Here there was no
ethnic majority and the three constituent populations were largely intermingled. The
Moslems constituted a bare plurality with less than 40 percent of the population, while
the Serbs accounted for more than 30 percent and the Croats 17 percent.
Here as well ethnic nationalist parties gained the upper hand. To understand this, one
has to consider the political context--the disintegration of Yugoslavia, the rise of
virulent nationalist movements in Slovenia, Croatia and Serbia, and, above all, the
absence of revolutionary leadership in the working class. Three parties--the Moslem SDA of
Izetbegovic, the Croat HDZ and the Serb SDS--together won 80 percent of the votes in the
1990 elections, each gaining a share of votes roughly equivalent to the population of the
ethnic communities they claimed to represent. Each of these parties appealed for votes on
the basis of ethnic identity and all of them were explicitly anticommunist. Moreover, all
three directed their ethnocommunalist appeals across the old republican borders.
The SDS sought to carve out Serb enclaves in both Croatia and Bosnia, resurrecting the
old demand for the unification of the Serbs in one state. The HDZ, which calls itself the
"Party of all Croats in the World," took control of western Herzegovina, making
no secret that its goal was annexation to Croatia. Finally, Izetbegovic's SDA sought
support in the Sandzak area of Serbia and Montenegro, insisting that its Moslem population
be united with that of Bosnia. Despite the obvious conflict between their different
nationalist projects, these three parties formed a grand coalition, excluding from the
government all parties which appealed in any way across ethnic lines.
The Bosnian Serb and Croat nationalists supported Bosnia's partition and the
unification of their own ethnic territories respectively with Serbia and Croatia. The
Moslem nationalists, however, could look to no such patron outside of Bosnia-Herzegovina.
They, therefore, insisted on the sanctity of the borders of the old republic of
Bosnia-Herzogovina. Holding the plurality, they could still hope to dominate the
territory. This was the basis of the SDA's supposed support for multi-ethnicity.
Bosnia's independence
In October 1991 the Moslem SDA and the Croat HDZ united to push through a resolution
declaring Bosnia-Herzegovina an independent state. This was not a reaction to some mass
movement for Bosnian national independence. None existed. The SDA had at first opposed
independence. Izetbe-govic lobbied Western European leaders to deny recognition to Croatia
out of fear that it would provoke civil war in Bosnia. After Slovenia and Croatia went
ahead with secession, however, the SDA decided to follow suit, hoping to win imperialist
backing for its own nationalist project. As for the HDZ, it saw the move merely as a
transition to partition and unification with Croatia.
The Serb SDS responded to the declaration of independence by walking out of the
government, denouncing the measure as a violation of the constitution's demand for
consensus between the three groups on any such decision. On February 29-March 1, 1992 the
Moslem-Croat bloc staged its referendum on independence, hastily called in an attempt to
win recognition from the EC. Fully one-third of the population, the majority of the Serbs,
boycotted the vote.
Despite previous assurances that the Western powers would consider a referendum
legitimate only if it attracted the participation of all three communities, Western Europe
and the United States granted formal recognition. By then the civil war between Serbs,
Croats and Moslems was already well under way. Bosnian Serb army units from the old
Yugoslav People's Army represented the most powerful military force in Bosnia, backed by
extreme nationalist militias and criminal gangs from Serbia. Croatia also sent regular
army units into Bosnia which operated alongside fascist and nationalist militias. The
principal fire of both of these forces was directed against the Moslem civilian
population, which bore the overwhelming share of the casualties in the Bosnian conflict.
The fighting force of the Moslem-dominated Bosnian government was initially drawn from
the gangster elements of Sarajevo. Their defense of the city was inextricably bound up
with their control of its lucrative black markets.
As the fighting continued, with each side attempting to carve out defensible
territories, the Izetbegovic government increasingly joined its claim to represent all of
Bosnia with steps aimed at carving out a Moslem enclave. By 1993, SDA politicians and
Moslem militias were largely abandoning the pretense of Bosnian national identity and
openly working to create a Moslem state. Non-Moslems were expelled from villages and
towns, while government officials publicly denounced intermarriage and sought the
introduction of religious instruction in school. In 1994 the Izetbegovic regime
effectively accepted partition and the status of a Moslem state, by joining in a
federation with the Bosnian Croats, brokered by Washington, in which the Croats claimed
full national rights. This is the reality of the "multi-ethnic" Bosnian state
which the WRP claims socialists are obliged to defend.
Large sections of the population in Bosnia, as throughout the former Yugoslavia, oppose
ethnic nationalism. The SDS no more represents all Serbs than the SDA does all Moslems or
the HDZ all Croats. As late as July 1991, more than 50,000 people marched in Sarajevo
against war and in support of a united Yugoslavia. There are many reports of Serbs, Croats
and Moslems protecting one another against the ethnic militias and armies ravaging Bosnia.
Yet the WRP equates these genuine sentiments of the masses with the cynical calculations
of the Croat and Moslem nationalist politicians and misrepresents them as support for
"Bosnian self-determination." It thereby helps poison the political atmosphere
and block any attempt to unite the working people of Bosnia and the Balkans as a whole
across ethnic lines.
The Krajina offensive and "multi-ethnicity"
The real content of the WRP's "multi-ethnic" politics found expression in a
statement issued by its front organization Workers Aid for Bosnia in the midst of the NATO
bombing campaign. Extolling the "growing movement in defense of multi-cultural
society and the right of all people to live together in peace," the WRP declared,
"This movement was recently given a tremendous boost by the defeat of the Chetniks in
Croatia."
According to the WRP, the "right of all people to live together in peace" was
"given a tremendous boost" by a military operation in which nearly 200,000
people--the Serbs of the Krajina--were sent fleeing in terror from the Croatian army. Such
is the logic of a party which has rejected Marxism in favor of ethnic chauvinism and
imperialist politics.
The UN issued a report recently on this "boost" for multicultural society. It
cited the ongoing discovery of corpses of Serb civilians in the Krajina region two months
after the cessation of last August's military actions. Among the dead was a 90-year-old
woman. These were the people too old, sick or weak to escape.
The report states: "Evidence of atrocities, an average of six corpses per day,
continues to emerge ... the corpses, some fresh, some decomposed, are mainly of old men.
Many have been shot in the back of the head or had throats slit, others have been
mutilated.... Serbian homes and lands continue to be torched and looted."
The report continues: "The crimes have been committed by the Croatian army, the
Croatian police and Croatian civilians. There have been no observed attempts to stop it
and the indications point to a scorched-earth policy."
The Guardian newspaper cites a similar report issued by European Union monitors in
Croatia. It states: "It is unclear whether the EU intends to make its findings
public. Croatia is seen as a potential partner and is expected to join the Council of
Europe next year."
One European diplomat stated, "I think that at the end of the day, there's enough
of an understanding with Croatia to let sleeping dogs lie. It does leave a bad taste in
peoples' mouths, but if one of the prices of a peaceful settlement will be closer
relations between the EU, Croatia and the others, then so be it."
The US State Department has worked to cover up the Zagreb regime's responsibility for
these atrocities, carried out with the sanction of imperialism.
The WRP hails Croatia
Following the lead of the EU and the US State Department, the WRP has dismissed all
reports of atrocities against Serb civilians. It has attacked those who equate the
Croatian regime's ethnic cleansing operations with the crimes of the Serb forces in
Bosnia.
Last May, following a previous Croat offensive which forced 15,000 Serb civilians to
flee their homes in Western Slavonia, Workers Press denounced those making "hasty
allegations of Croat atrocities." In that operation hundreds were killed in tank,
artillery and aerial bombardments, their bodies thrown into mass graves. Thousands more
were arrested and those who sought to remain were subjected to terror at the hands of
marauding Croat militiamen.
There is ample evidence of Croatian atrocities against Serbs in Croatia and against
both Moslems and Serbs in Bosnia. By dismissing allegations of Croatian crimes out of
hand, the WRP brands itself as a political accomplice in these murderous acts. In the
September 23, 1995 issue of Workers Press the WRP went so far as to excuse atrocities in
advance, publishing an article on the Moslem-Croat offensive in northwest Bosnia which
stated:
"We hope that the Bosnia and Herzegovina armed forces can keep the moral high
ground as well as their military gains, by preventing reprisals and atrocities from their
side. But we will not give any ground to those morally bankrupt ÔLefts' and Stalinists
waiting to pounce on such lapses as proof that Ôall sides do it.'"
Many such "lapses" had already taken place by the time the article was
printed. Bosnian Moslem officers have made no secret of their order to summarily execute
Serb prisoners of war. Serb civilians have been subjected to massacres in the towns and
villages which have been overrun.
Thus the WRP's outrage over ethnic cleansing and other atrocities, like that of the
bourgeois politicians and media, is guided by political expediency. It is highly selective
and enormously cynical. It has nothing to do with defending the working masses of the
region. Rather, it is calculated to boost one nationalist clique over another and provide
a pretext for imperialist intervention.
Trotsky and selective outrage
Leon Trotsky, a war correspondent during the Balkan wars of 1912-13, passionately
condemned Russia's bourgeois press and liberals like Miliukov for taking precisely such a
position. They protested loudly against Turkish atrocities, while hushing up or denying
the outrages committed by Serbian and Bulgarian troops against Moslem civilians.
While Trotsky recognized a progressive element in the war waged by the Serbs and
Bulgarians to break the grip of the Ottoman empire over the Balkans, he denounced this
selective outrage over atrocities. He insisted that the liberals' exposure of Turkish
atrocities stemmed "not from the general principles of culture and humanity but from
naked calculations of imperialist greed."
He added: "An individual, a group, a party, or a class that is capable of
Ôobjectively' picking its nose while it watches men drunk with blood, and incited from
above, massacring defenseless people is condemned by history to rot and become worm-eaten
while it is still alive."
The WRP and its leader Cliff Slaughter are just such worm-eaten figures. Convinced that
there is no possibility of a socialist solution to the crisis, they are driven to express
their hatred of the working class. The imperialist-inspired campaign on Bosnia provided
them with just such an opportunity. They were swept up by it and transformed into nothing
more than a minor instrument of imperialist policy.
Even if, for the sake of argument, one accepted the WRP's false claims that the Serbs
bore exclusive responsibility for atrocities and that the war itself was caused solely by
Serb aggression--this would not alter the reactionary character of the WRP's intervention.
Even under these conditions, socialists could not ally themselves with the bourgeois
regimes of Tudjman and Izetbegovic. There are, moreover, no conditions that could justify
the WRP's support for imperialist intervention. Such a policy represents a renunciation of
principled politics, an abandonment of the independent standpoint of the working class,
and a moral and political capitulation to the imperialist bourgeoisie.
Marxists have never based their attitude toward war on such issues as who fired the
first shot or which side was responsible for the greatest atrocities. Military aggression
has always been understood as merely one link in a complex chain of events. Wars are not
accidental. They are prepared by the social, economic and political developments which
precede them.
In World War I, there was never any doubt that Germany provoked the conflict. The
ruling classes of France, Britain and Russia, however, used German aggression against
"little Belgium" to promote their own war aims. Socialists opposed not only
Germany, but all the imperialist powers. Under Lenin's leadership, they fought for the
international unification of the working class to turn imperialist war into civil war;
i.e., the revolutionary mobilization of the working class of every country against its
"own" bourgeoisie.
In 1914 the Serbian socialists opposed their own government, even though Serbia had
been invaded by the Austria-Hungarian empire and faced foreign subjugation. They placed no
confidence in the reactionary objectives of the Serbian state and recognized that the war
in the Balkans was part of a global struggle in which rival imperialist interests were at
play.
In World War II, the aggression and atrocities carried out by Nazi Germany were even
more overwhelming. Within the working class there existed a deep hatred for the Nazi
regime. Yet the Marxists of the Fourth International fought, against the Stalinists and
Social Democrats, to distinguish the opposition of the working class to Hitler from
collaboration with imperialism. They insisted that the struggle against fascism was the
task of the working class and could not be entrusted to any section of the imperialists.
On this basis they refused to support any bourgeois governments, including the regime in
Czechoslovakia and others which faced destruction at the hands of German imperialism.
The WRP has broken with this basic Marxist attitude to the problem of war. At the end
of the twentieth century, a century traumatized by war and genocide, the WRP would have
people believe that imperialism can play a progressive role. What possible facts can be
advanced to justify the assumption that the solution to the horrors of ethnic cleansing in
Bosnia lies in the victory of one or another nationalist clique or in the intervention of
the imperialist powers? The WRP does not bother to address this question. It simply echoes
the American and European ruling classes and their portrayal of the great powers as agents
of peace.
The continuation of politics by other means
Marxists have long cited the perceptive thesis of Clausewitz that war is merely the
continuation of politics by other means. They judge the character of a given conflict not
on the basis of moral revulsion over the crimes carried out by one or another of the
combatants or superficial impressions over which side represents the
"aggressor." Rather they seek to make a scientific analysis of the social forces
underlying the conflict, the class nature of the contending regimes and the class
significance of the politics which have preceded the war and determined its general form.
What are the politics which are pursued through NATO air strikes, massacres and forced
expulsions of whole populations in the former Yugoslavia? Within the former republics, the
present political leaderships consist of narrow cliques of ex-Stalinist bureaucrats,
anticommunist politicians and aspiring capitalists who are seeking to expand their own
power and wealth and obtain a more advantageous relationship with foreign capital by
promoting ethnic nationalism and separatism. As for the foreign powers, each is pursuing,
behind a smokescreen of moral posturing, its own definite interests in the Balkans. The
scramble for economic, political and military influence in the region is part of an
increasingly bitter interimperialist struggle for domination of world markets.
A major aim of Washington's intervention is the preservation of its dominant position
in a NATO alliance which has lost its raison d'etre following the Warsaw Pact's
dissolution. Having fallen behind Germany in the drive to exploit the newly opened markets
to the east, American capitalism seeks to use its supremacy within NATO to assure itself a
continued grip over European affairs. Moreover, by unleashing its bombers and cruise
missiles on the Bosnian Serbs, the US has set an example for the smaller nations of the
world: this is the fate awaiting those who defy American dictates.
US military actions are driven by definite geopolitical considerations. These were
spelled out in a Pentagon document which first came to light in 1992. Charting strategic
policy in the wake of the Soviet Union's collapse, the document stated that Washington's
main concern was to maintain its military predominance and prevent the emergence of any
potential rivals, either global or regional. Among the latter it cited the danger of an
expanded Serb state, potentially in alliance with Russia.
In a lead editorial announcing its support for Clinton's Bosnian intervention, the Wall
Street Journal made no secret of these strategic considerations. "Bosnia," it
wrote, "is properly seen as a training run for how we react if, or when, Russia uses
ethnic excuses to lunge at one of its neighbors--a Baltic port, for example."
Germany intervenes
Germany has played a leading role in the Yugoslav crisis since well before the outbreak
of armed conflict. Its economic and political weight enhanced by reunification, it has
chosen the Balkans as the arena to openly pursue Weltpolitik for the first time in 50
years. It provided political and economic support for the separatist political movements
which emerged in Slovenia and Croatia, promoting the independence of these ministates in
order to bring them back under the wing of German imperialism.
Bosnia has provided Germany with the pretext for abolishing its constitutional ban on
using military forces abroad, thereby shedding the pacifist pretensions of the postwar
period. The government of Chancellor Helmut Kohl sent German Tornado warplanes to support
the NATO air strikes. Their entry into the conflict came on the fifty-sixth anniversary of
the German blitzkrieg against Poland.
French and British imperialism entered the Balkans with the two largest UN troop
contingents to assert their own military power within the newly unified Europe. In both
countries, sharp divisions have emerged in the ruling class over whether to orient towards
Serbia or Croatia. Both, however, view Germany's renewed strength with apprehension and
are attempting to demonstrate in Bosnia that they can handle Europe's military problems.
France has combined its "peace-keeping" function in Bosnia with the ostentatious
testing of nuclear weapons in the South Pacific.
A spokesman for the Paris-based Institut Francais des Relations Internationales
recently spelled out the militarist calculations of the French bourgeoisie, stressing
"the important role that the French nuclear weapon can play in helping to reinforce
German security at a time when the US's presence and guarantee in Europe cannot be relied
on to last indefinitely." Against what threat such nuclear weapons are required the
author does not bother to say. France's missiles may be aimed at Moscow, Washington,
Berlin or all three.
Finally there is the role of Russia. Having subordinated itself to imperialist foreign
policy, the capitalist restorationist regime of Boris Yeltsin finds itself excluded from
the Balkan carveup and threatened by the extension of the NATO alliance to Russia's very
borders. American officials dismissed Yeltsin's denunciations of the NATO bombings in
Bosnia and his warning of a "return to two armed camps that are at war with one
another" as a matter of domestic politics. One could just as easily attribute the US
decision to intervene to Clinton's concerns over the 1996 election campaign. Such motives,
however, can only be secondary.
Russia has played a decisive role in Balkan affairs for centuries, both before and
after the October 1917 Revolution. Whatever the fate of Boris Yeltsin, history and
geography--the Dardanelles outlet from the Black Sea, for example--dictate that it will
continue to assert its interests in the region, including by military means.
Global tensions have broken to the surface in the conflicts arising from the
dissolution of the former Yugoslavia. The present conflagration, just as the Balkan wars
of more than 80 years ago, can emerge as the antechamber of a world imperialist war. Once
again the world is being redivided, beginning in the Balkans.
Bosnia and Spain
The WRP has made its central demand the lifting of the UN arms embargo on the former
Yugoslavia. In recent months it has attempted to equate the war in Bosnia with the Spanish
Civil War of 1936-39, comparing the official ban on arms shipments to Bosnia with the
nonintervention pact signed by the British and French governments in 1936. In its August
12 article, Workers Press made an odd reference to Spain in the course of an attack on
Britain's Defense Secretary Michael Portillo. The WRP criticized Portillo for calling the
Krajina offensive an example of "ethnic cleansing."
"Ironically," it stated, "if it hadn't been for the British and French
governments' arms embargo against Republican Spain during the Civil War, Portillo's father
might not have had to leave his home as a refugee."
There are definite and very reactionary political conceptions behind this remark, which
has the character of a moral appeal to a right-wing Tory minister. The attempt to equate
the Spanish Civil War with the Bosnian conflict is fraudulent. In Spain, war broke out as
the result of an attempt of the bourgeoisie to suppress a proletarian revolution by means
of fascist reaction. In Bosnia, war resulted from the disintegration of the state of
Yugoslavia and the strivings of rival nationalist cliques to carve out successor states by
fomenting nationalism and winning the aid of the imperialist powers.
But more is involved here than a historically flawed analogy. The WRP is implying that
the crucial issue in the defeat of the Spanish revolution and the triumph of Franco was a
lack of arms on the loyalist side resulting from the nonintervention pact. One can search
the writings of Trotsky in vain for a statement attributing the fascist victory in Spain
to the failure of the British and French to provide the Spanish Republican government with
arms.
This was, in fact, the line put forward at the time by the Kremlin regime and its
satellite "Communist" parties around the world. It served two interconnected
purposes: to cover for the Commintern and the Spanish Communist Party and their role in
crushing the revolutionary movement of the Spanish working class; and to further the
foreign policy of the Kremlin, which at that time was focused on securing a
"collective security" agreement with Britain and France against Germany. To this
day the Stalinists and their apologists maintain that British and French
"nonintervention" was the major factor in the victory of Franco.
Trotsky heaped scorn on those centrists who echoed the Stalinist line and promoted
illusions in the "democracies" coming to the aid of the Spanish revolution. He
took it as a matter of course that British and French imperialism would do everything in
their power to ensure the victory of the Spanish bourgeoisie and fascist reaction. The
Fourth International fought not for the lifting of arms embargoes, but against the
treacherous policy of the Kremlin-backed popular front, which subordinated the working
class to the bourgeoisie by means of an alliance between the workers parties and the
capitalist state. The FI fought for a revolutionary policy of defeating fascism by
mobilizing the working class for the overthrow of the capitalist state and the carrying
out of radical social measures. The key issues, Trotsky insisted, were not military, but
political.
The WRP's Bosnia campaign has never advanced an independent policy for the workers of
the former Yugoslavia, nor proposed any social measures. Rather it insists that the
working class has been destroyed and the class struggle has ceased. Its policy is that of
uncritical support for Bosnia's bourgeois government, while appealing to the imperialist
"democracies" to give it military support.
The WRP's invocation of Spain has a definite political purpose: reviving popular front
politics, only in an even more debased form. It is aimed at rallying support for
imperialist intervention in the Balkans and promoting the illusion that the British
bourgeoisie--and most particularly its Laborite representatives--can be won to the cause
of "democracy."
Alibis for Tudjman
One of the most sinister features of the WRP's attitude toward the former Yugoslavia is
its sympathy for Croatia's right-wing strongman, Franjo Tudjman. In its August 12 article
hailing the Croat offensive in the Krajina, Workers Press declared that despite their
"gratitude" to Croatia for the recent expulsion of Serbs from the Krajina,
"most Bosnians (and many Croats) remain distrustful of Croatia's President
Tudjman." Workers Press sought to allay these suspicions. Referring to a
well-publicized incident in London in which Tudjman, asked of his plans for Bosnia, drew a
map on the back of a menu showing how the territory would be carved up between his regime
and that of Slobodan Milosevic in Serbia, the WRP declared, "there are doubts on the
significance of this."
No one who has studied Tudjman's political trajectory has any such doubts. He has
repeatedly declared his support for a "Greater Croatia" through the annexation
of Bosnian territory. Even his American patrons complain that his pathological hatred for
Moslems has made it more difficult for Washington to impose its settlement. The ethnic
carveup envisioned by Tudjman is already a de facto reality in Herzegovina, where Croat
troops and fascist militias like the HOS and Black Legion slaughtered and expelled Serbs
and Moslems in order to set up an ethnically homogeneous statelet of Herzeg-Bosnia.
Residents of this ostensibly Bosnian territory use Croatian currency, obey Croatian laws
and even voted for legislative representatives in the recent Croatian elections.
Workers Press went on to state: "It is the lines drawn by the British and other
imperialist statesmen on maps in Geneva that have proved more dangerous for Bosnia!...
Behind nationalist gangsters like Karadzic and Milosevic, the biggest enemies of the
Bosnian people (and ultimately of Croats and Serbs) are the great powers intent on carving
up the Balkans."
The WRP found the maps drawn in Washington and Bonn--backed up by Croat offensives,
NATO air raids and US occupation--more to its liking. Tudjman is not on its list of
enemies. Slaughter and the WRP have developed a peculiar affinity for this particular
nationalist gangster.
Tudjman became Croatia's president thanks largely to generous financial backing from
right-wing nationalist and Ustashe exile groups. In his election campaign he called for
"reconciliation" with Ustashe and the freeing of Croatia from what he termed the
"Jasenovac complex," named for the concentration camp run by the fascist regime
of Ante Pavelic during World War II. More than 700,000 Serbs and 30,000 Jews were
slaughtered by the Croat fascists at this camp, the only one in Europe not run directly by
the Nazis. He described the Ustashe regime itself as "an expression of the historical
aspirations of the Croatian people."
Tudjman's appeal was analogous to a candidate in Germany running on the promise to
reconcile Germans with the positive contributions of Nazism and help rid them of their
complex over Auschwitz. Tudjman rose to prominence within Croatian nationalist circles by
insisting that the Serb death toll was greatly exaggerated and that "only"
70,000 were exterminated at the Jasenovac camp. He likewise denied that 6 million Jews
were put to death in the Nazi Holocaust, claiming that a "mere" 900,000 were
slaughtered.
Tudjman's "Wilderness"
His major work, Wilderness, published in Zagreb in 1989, is a rabidly anti-Semitic
tract which blames the Jews for the Holocaust, while justifying Hitler's "final
solution." Thus he writes:
"Whenever a movement, people, state, alliance, or ideology faces an adversary that
threatens its survival or the establishment of its supremacy, everything possible will be
done, and all means available used, to subdue or destroy the opponent. In such
confrontations, nothing but the risk of self-destruction precludes a resort to
genocide."
And on the Nazi regime: "The idea of the world mission of the German
ÔHerrenvolk,' seen as the highest race, was also based on the assumption of a Ôfinal
solution' of the Jewish question, meaning that Jews were meant to disappear definitively
from German and European history. An explanation of this should be sought--in addition to
historical roots--in the fact that German imperialism, for geopolitical reasons, was
primarily directed towards the domination of Europe. As such, Hitler's Ônew European
order' could be justified by the need both to remove Jews (more or less undesirable in all
European countries) as well as to correct the Versailles (French-English) wrong." He
goes on to note with approval an early Nazi scheme to send the Jews of Europe to
Madagascar, declaring that "gradual extermination" was later made necessary by
the protracted military campaign in Russia.
He cites the Old Testament to prove that for the Jews "genocidal violence is a
natural apparition, in line with man and his social nature.... Violence is not only
permissible, it is advisable; moreover it is in accord with mighty Jehovah's words; it is
to be used whenever necessary for the revival or renewal of the kingdom of the chosen
people." Finally he makes the outrageous claim that the Ustashe concentration camp at
Jasenovac, where tens of thousands of Jews were exterminated, was run by the Jews
themselves.
The WRP makes political alibis for this man and hails his military victories. It has
denounced those within its own ranks who have dared question this orientation. This
support for Tudjman is not merely some sick platonic infatuation on the part of Cliff
Slaughter. The WRP's sympathy for the Croatian right has found expression in definite
practical activities.
Workers Aid for Bosnia
In 1993 the WRP acknowledged that it developed its Workers Aid for Bosnia campaign,
consisting of truck convoys to the Bosnian city of Tuzla, in direct collaboration with the
Croatian regime. As Dot Gibson, the central organizer of the convoys, stated, the party
coordinated the campaign through meetings with "representatives of the Croatian
foreign ministry and ... the Bosnia Herzegovina government, where we discussed opening of
aid routes."
She revealed that "the Croatian foreign ministry proposed that we go from Zagreb
to Zupanja, in order to travel out of Croatia and to go to Tuzla through the northern
corridor" (Workers Press, November 6, 1993). The Croatian foreign ministry suggested
this "northern corridor" to further its own military objectives, now realized in
the overrunning of the Krajina. Domination of the northern corridor by the Bosnian Serbs
allowed the resupply of the Krajina region, and ending Serb control was, therefore, a key
military objective of the Zagreb regime. When the WRP was unable to send its trucks by
this route, Gibson addressed a direct appeal to Gojko Susak, Croatia's defense minister.
This man is a former Canadian pizza magnate who returned to his homeland in the late 1980s
and used his fortune to bankroll Tudjman's election and pursue his twin obsessions:
anticommunism and the pursuit of a "Greater Croatia." He is well known as the
leader of the most fascistic wing of Tudjman's Croatian Democratic Union, based in the
Croat enclave of Herzegovina.
In her letter, dated January 10, 1994, Gibson called upon Susak to order "the HVO
forces [the Croat nationalist militia in Bosnia-Herzegovina, whose leaders are indicted
war criminals] to clear the way" for the WRP's "humanitarian aid convoy" to
Tuzla. This constituted a direct appeal to the Croatian regime to launch an offensive
against the Bosnian Serbs. It predated by one year the deal forged by the US State
Department with Zagreb to carry out just such an attack.
Now Tuzla is to become the headquarters of the American army. It is hardly a
coincidence that the WRP and the US military both chose this city as the focus of their
activities. The WRP's orientation to Tuzla arose as a byproduct of its relations with the
Croat regime, US imperialism's principal agent in the region. Will the WRP now wage a
campaign for the working class to resist US occupation and fight for the expulsion of
imperialist forces? No one should hold his breath. Even if it chose to pay lip service to
such a slogan, it would be meaningless. The entire content of the WRP's political
intervention over the past three years has been to prepare the way for the US tanks
rolling into Tuzla.
Slaughter's "real solution"
The WRP's uncritical support for Croatian chauvinism apparently provoked misgivings
even in the reactionary political milieu which it inhabits. The Workers Press carried a
prominent editorial entitled "A real political solution for Balkan peoples."
Slaughter later announced, in response to internal criticism of this editorial, that the
piece was "largely based on notes written by me." This claim to the authorship
of the WRP's right-wing line is an exceedingly rare occurrence for the party's secretary.
Anyone familiar with Slaughter's modus operandi knows that he normally works behind the
scenes, letting others do his dirty work, while he preserves an air of political
ambiguity.
Now Slaughter is claiming personal responsibility for the WRP's line. To whom is this
announcement directed? Certainly not to the working class. He wants it known in ruling
class circles that, in time of war, Cliff Slaughter can be counted on. Slaughter endorsed
Workers Press's view of the Krajina offensive declaring: "There is no doubt that the
military offensive of Tudjman's Croatian forces has created a more favorable military
situation for the fight of Bosnia." He added, however, that "it is of even
greater importance to recognize that in the final analysis there are no military solutions
to the crisis in the Balkans. The only solution is a political one."
Certainly Clinton and Kohl would both accept that "in the final analysis" the
military offensive which they sponsored in Krajina and the NATO air assault in Bosnia are
merely means to a definite political end: an agreement which divides the Balkans into new
spheres of influence. It was to this end that the Clinton administration sequestered
Milosevic, Tudjman and Izetbegovic at Wright-Patterson Air Force base in Dayton, Ohio.
The Workers Press editorial goes on to state that this solution "involves the
establishment of political independence on the part of the working class in
Bosnia-Herzegovina, in Serbia and in Croatia." That is, the independence of the
working class is to emerge not in united opposition to, but as a byproduct of, the carveup
of Yugoslavia into ethnically-based statelets. This "independence," to be
achieved with the support of NATO, would chain the working class to the separatist
projects of ruling cliques of ex-Stalinist bureaucrats and bourgeois nationalists in each
of the former Yugoslav republics.
"Lining up with the British ruling class"
Having advanced this reactionary political solution, Slaughter reiterates the WRP's
support for the ongoing military actions on the part of Croatia and its foreign backers.
Declaring the necessity to "take sides in the war in the Balkans," he claims
that failure to do so would mean "lining up with the British ruling class."
Slaughter found himself lined up with this ruling class when British warplanes joined the
NATO bombardment of the Bosnian Serbs. He not only supported this imperialist
intervention, he and the WRP had publicly demanded it.
The editorial cites as a "break in the situation in Britain" the holding of
"two large demonstrations in defense of Bosnia" and the "nonstop
picket" on Downing Street. The political purpose of these protests was to demand that
Britain and the other imperialist powers take military action against the Serbs. Slaughter
continues, "Unlike many on the left who are content to invoke empty abstractions such
as Ôonly the working class can resolve the crisis' we have set out a definite and
concrete line of advance on the crisis in the former Yugoslavia."
The conception that the working class alone "can resolve the crisis" is the
whole strategic orientation of the Marxist movement--that war and reaction cannot be
defeated outside of the struggle to achieve the political independence and unity of the
working class in order to put an end to capitalism. For Slaughter this perspective has
become an "empty abstraction." His WRP supports more "concrete"
methods involving Croatian troops and NATO bombers.
The political logic of the WRP's line
In splitting with the International Committee a decade ago, Slaughter and his
supporters refused to examine the political issues at stake or make a critical evaluation
of the WRP's own record. They sought to suppress any such analysis by attributing the
party's crisis entirely to the actions of one man, Gerry Healy. While Slaughter rejected a
political analysis, there is a clear political logic to the subsequent leap by the WRP
into the camp of imperialism. A definite line of continuity exists between the
degeneration of the WRP in the 1970s and 1980s and its support for NATO in 1995.
In the period preceding the split, the WRP's politics were dominated by an opportunist
adaptation to various bourgeois nationalist movements and regimes, particularly in the
Middle East. The glorification of the Palestine Liberation Organization, the Libyan regime
of Col. Gaddafi and others--as well as the mercenary relations which the WRP leadership
pursued with them--laid the basis for a shift in the party's class axis and an opportunist
orientation on many other questions.
The WRP endowed these movements with a revolutionary potential which they never
possessed, while writing off the independent struggle of the working class. It effectively
repudiated the Trotskyist theory of permanent revolution, which established that, in the
epoch of imperialism, the national question can be resolved only within the framework of
the socialist revolution of the international proletariat.
Slaughter's Bosnian adventure is essentially a continuation of this perspective, albeit
a more advanced expression of the same disease. The intervening decade has seen a
qualitative degeneration both of the national movements and the WRP itself. In an earlier
period, the PLO and similar movements sought to imbue their demand for "the right to
national self-determination" with a certain anti-imperialist content, and declared
this right could be won only through armed struggle.
With the collapse of the Soviet Union and the Stalinist regimes in Eastern Europe,
these movements cast aside their revolutionary pretensions and established themselves as
junior partners and outright police agencies in the imposition of imperialist settlements.
New movements, which in no way embody the universalist and anti-imperialist strivings
which characterized the revolutionary nationalist movements in an earlier period, have
emerged as champions of the "right to self-determination." From the former
Yugoslavia, to Quebec, to India, these movements base themselves on ethnic or linguistic
divisions, seeking to win the support of imperialism in carving out new states for the
benefit of local bourgeois cliques.
The WRP has attached itself to just such movements, applying a previous political
position which has been overtaken by events. There is nothing inherently progressive about
the demand for national self- determination in the Balkans or anywhere else. Where it is
invoked as a byproduct of the inability of the old leaderships in the workers movement to
find a way out of the crisis created by capitalism, it is reactionary. This is most
certainly the case in the former Yugoslavia. Even in the 1970s, when the WRP began its
opportunist adaptation to the nationalist movements in the Middle East, the slogan of
self-determination served as a cover for an adaptation to a section of the bourgeoisie.
Now it has become a means to align this party's practice directly with the needs of
imperialism.
Shachtman and Slaughter
In its May 1994 statement Marxism, Opportunism & the Balkan Crisis, the
International Committee warned that given the WRP's support for imperialism and the
nationalist forces in the Balkans, it could well play a similar role in Britain itself.
The statement said of the WRP: "At some point in the future, it may well become part
of a bourgeois coalition government of national salvation."
In its reply to this document, the WRP dismissed the IC's warning as
"bizarre." Little more than a year later, Slaughter and his followers are
providing direct support to a classic imperialist carveup of the Balkans, in which the
fate of the peoples of this region is viewed as so much small change. Everything in the
WRP's policy has made it complicit in a plan which will have tragic consequences for years
to come.
Ten years after his own break with the Fourth International, Max Shachtman publicly
supported US imperialism's war against Korea. This marked his definitive entry into the
camp of imperialism, from which he never looked back. The tendency which Shachtman led
evolved along extreme anticommunist lines, producing a host of advisers for the US State
Department and the AFL-CIO bureaucracy. Ultimately, Shachtmanism spawned the principal
ideological pointmen of the Reagan administration. With his Bosnian campaign, Slaughter
has embarked on a similar path.
Just as Shachtman's politics of petty-bourgeois moralism led him to support
"democracy" against Stalinism in Korea 45 years ago, so Slaughter's policy of
"revolutionary morality" has led him, together with an entire layer of the
petty-bourgeois left, to rally behind NATO in the Balkans. The movement to the right by
this tendency is the harbinger of immense social struggles. It represents a clearing of
the decks for revolutionary confrontation between the bourgeoisie and proletariat all over
the world.
The dividing line between Marxism on the one hand and the politically diseased
offspring of petty- bourgeois radicalism and protest politics on the other has never been
more stark. The International Committee will spare no effort in exposing the significance
of this political evolution and thereby further the development of a genuinely socialist
and internationalist leadership in the working class. It is crucial that the working class
assimilate the lessons of the Yugoslav crisis. A new international party must be built
capable of making an appeal to the class interests of all those exploited by capitalism,
and in this way overcoming the attempts to divide them along national, ethnic, racial or
religious lines. Only the International Committee of the Fourth International undertakes
this task. |