 |
You are in: Home :: News Story |
NEWS STORY
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
Back to the future: Milosevic prepares
for life after Kosovo.
|  |
 |
 |
 |
By International Crisis Group, 28 June 1999.
On 28 June 1989, Slobodan Milosevic stood on the site of
the ancient Serb battleground of Kosovo Polje and delivered the
speech that was to propel him to prominence and the leadership of
Yugoslavia. Ten years on, Milosevic remains firmly entrenched in
power. He has survived three Balkan wars in Croatia, Bosnia and
Kosovo, economic sanctions, 78 days of NATO air strikes, and an
indictment on charges of crimes against humanity and war crimes.
Milosevic managed to survive the recent NATO onslaught in part by
parlaying resentment against NATO into a wave of public support for
his dictatorship. Adept at manipulating popular culture, the regime
used such fortuitous events as the timing of the NATO action, coming
only weeks before the anniversary of the Nazi bombing of Belgrade in
the Second World War, to link the Western alliance with fascism in
the public mind. Television programming gave prominence to heroic
tales of WW2 partisan fighters, suggesting to the public how they
might interpret NATO action. Any Western popular culture, from film
to music to television, that degraded Western values or painted the
West in a negative light also received wide play, and was clearly
aimed at showing the decadence of the Alliance.
Now with the war over, Milosevic continues to use the media to his
advantage. While the rest of the world learns about the appalling
atrocities committed in Kosovo against ethnic Albanians and recoils
at images of torture dungeons and mass graves, the Serbian media
continue to play up stories claiming that the Serbs were the real
victims, brutalised as they were by both NATO aggression and Kosovo
Liberation Army (KLA) terrorism.
The Yugoslav leader uses the media not simply to promote his spin on
the Kosovo war, but also to splinter public support for potential
right-wing rivals. To keep the ultra-nationalist Serbian Radical
Party and its leader, Vojislav Seselj from sweeping the right, that
segment of the electorate is now being urged to consider the
alternative – Vojislav Kostunica and his Democratic Party of Serbia.
Western observers ought not to be surprised if upcoming elections
give the DSS a marked boost.
Milosevic’s "divide and conquer" technique and his skillful
manipulation of the media are directed toward entrenching himself in
a permanent position of power in Belgrade. While he may formally
leave office when his current presidential term is up as the FRY
constitution prescribes, he clearly intends to remain a player,
perhaps as an elder statesman and power behind the throne.
Milosevic's clear intention to retain his grip on the FRY, in or out
of office, guarantees the continuation of a highly destabilizing,
siege atmosphere in Belgrade, with or without the officially
declared "state of war." He has already signaled that he may turn
against the democratically elected Montenegrin government of
President Milo Djukanovic. Further crises, confrontations, and
possible conflict lie ahead. Given all of the aforementioned, ICG
recommends the following:
1) That the international community continue to offer unmitigated
support for the democratic opposition now led by Milo Djukanovic and
Democratic Party leader Zoran Djindjic;
2) That the international community grasp the opportunity to make
use of the windfall of NATO’s presence in Kosovo. With the Kosovo
Force (KFOR) firmly on the ground and in principle committed to
providing security for the inhabitants of Kosovo, directed efforts
must be made to bring in or support the recreation of surrogate
media there which could also be aimed at the Serbian market.
Broadcasting should not simply take the form of news and
informational programming, which would be seized upon by Milosevic’s
state-run media and discredited as transparent Western propaganda.
Instead, Milosevic’s control of the collective public consciousness
through his manipulation of popular culture must be fought on equal
terms, with an entertaining media campaign aimed at the tastes of
the population which could evolve into a forum where objective news
and information might be introduced;
3) Milosevic’s moves must be carefully tracked. As long as he
remains in office or in power, he may undertake a variety of means
for upsetting regional security. He may use his own paramilitaries
and interior ministry forces not only, as argued in this paper, to
spearhead a campaign in Montenegro, but also to undermine the
precarious peace in Kosovo. He may also rely on allies and
confidantes in Moscow or Beijing to offer up diplomatic and
political stumbling blocks as the international community goes about
creating the conditions for a lasting peace.
story url
|
 |