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- <text id=92TT1285>
- <title>
- June 08, 1992: The Butcher of The Balkans
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- June 08, 1992 The Balkans
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 37
- THE BALKANS
- The Butcher of the Balkans
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Sly, intelligent and ruthless, Slobodan Milosevic is acting
- out a fantasy of power in Yugoslavia that so far knows no bounds
- </p>
- <p>By JAMES L. GRAFF/BELGRADE -- With reporting by William Mader/
- London and J.F.O. McAllister/Washington, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> From a leather chair in his spacious office in Belgrade,
- with a tin of his beloved cigarillos within reach, Serbian
- President Slobodan Milosevic strives to keep the war at arm's
- length. In a rare interview, perhaps granted to deflect the
- blame for the carnage in Bosnia-Herzegovina, he contended that
- Yugoslavia's bloody dissolution stems solely from the
- secessionist demands of the other republics. "All processes in
- the contemporary world tend toward integration," he said.
- "Nationalistic tendencies are against that general flow, that
- big river, that Mississippi." Confused? There is this clarifying
- coda: "In Serbia nationalists are not in power."
- </p>
- <p> That is just double-talk. Of course nationalists are in
- power in Serbia, embodied in this pudgy-faced man with a
- belligerent jaw who has seized on generations of ethnic hatreds
- and resentments to turn what was Yugoslavia into a
- slaughterhouse. There are, as Milosevic rightly insists, "no
- innocent sides" in the civil war, nor is he the only unsavory
- populist who has emerged from more than four decades of
- communism. But he is far and away the most destructive. More
- than any other single person, Milosevic is responsible for the
- bloodshed by his unyielding determination to see all Serbs
- united in one country carved from territory the communists left
- -- fairly or unfairly -- to other republics. He is the power
- behind Radovan Karadzic, the militant leader of Bosnia's Serbs,
- and he has effective command of the old Yugoslav army; he could
- cool their operations if he were so disposed. But, says a
- European Community diplomat who has dealt with Milosevic
- intensively, "nothing interests him but Serbian success, even if
- it means tens of thousands of dead and dispossessed."
- </p>
- <p> There is not a flinch or a scruple when Milosevic talks --
- which is how he continues to pursue his dream against a rising
- tide of international opprobrium and opposition in Serbia. In
- his view, it is neither the thundering artillery of the
- Serb-dominated Yugoslav army nor the process of "ethnic
- cleansing" of Serbian regions in Croatia and Bosnia that has
- earned him the world's outrage. "Vested interests are behind
- this, and of course a very well-organized and well-paid media
- war," he says. "Today in Europe it is normal for the Vatican or
- Austria and Germany to support Croats. It's not normal if Serbs
- are supporting Serbs." This is the same sense of grievance that
- makes many Serbs portray themselves as victims encircled by
- foreign enemies, be it the Pope, an ascendant Fourth Reich or
- the hand of Islam.
- </p>
- <p> Milosevic is a throwback to the kind of violent
- nationalism that regularly rearranged Europe's borders in
- centuries past. But he is also a harbinger of what may happen
- elsewhere as the constraints of communism give way to
- long-suppressed emotions. His animating passion seems to be
- power, first and foremost, with national pride as a useful
- adjunct. Though a proven master of the art of communist
- careermaking, Milosevic has never been a slave to ideology. "All
- this talk of his Bolshevism is rubbish," says Slavoljub Djukic,
- author of a critical biography of Milosevic titled How the
- Leader Happened, which was published in Belgrade last month. "He
- is simply a man who loves power." Even his adoption of Serbian
- nationalism came only after he recognized its potential for
- personal advancement. Says Milos Vasic, a journalist for the
- Belgrade weekly Vreme: "If tomorrow he found it fit to be a
- Freemason, he'd be the grand master of the first Serbian lodge."
- </p>
- <p> Until five years ago, his life read like a Bolshevik
- parable, though shadowed by personal tragedy. He was born in
- 1941 in the town of Pozarevac, near Belgrade, where he still
- keeps a modest weekend home. His father was a seminary-trained
- teacher of religion from Montenegro and his mother a fervent
- communist; the two quarreled incessantly over ideological
- issues. Early on, his father abandoned the family, went back to
- Montenegro and later committed suicide. An uncle, a general in
- the army, died by his own hand as well. When Slobodan's mother
- killed herself in 1974, she reportedly left her devoted son
- distraught.
- </p>
- <p> While still in high school, Milosevic met his wife, the
- ambitious and intense Mirjana Markovic, whose family ranked
- among the most prominent communists in Serbia. When she was only
- a year old, her mother was killed by Tito's partisans after
- revealing information about underground communists to
- Nazi-backed police in Belgrade. Today Mirjana remains a powerful
- member of the hard-line League of Communists-Movement for
- Yugoslavia, which enjoys strong support within the army. She
- wields considerable influence over her husband. She zealously
- safeguards him by watching for any signs of disloyalty, real or
- imagined.
- </p>
- <p> The cleverest move Milosevic made in his years as an
- ambitious apparatchik was to hitch his star to Ivan Stambolic,
- a nephew of one of the most powerful Serbian communist leaders.
- For more than 20 years, Milosevic moved up the communist
- hierarchy in Stambolic's wake, succeeding him as director of the
- state-owned industrial gas conglomerate Tehnogas, as Belgrade
- chief of the Communist Party and eventually as boss of the
- Serbian Communist Party. When the time came to slough off his
- mentor in late 1987, he did so with ruthless precision. By 1989
- he was the unchallenged president of Serbia and today presides
- over what is left of Yugoslavia: Serbia, Montenegro and the two
- provinces of Kosovo and Vojvodina.
- </p>
- <p> Milosevic, says a European diplomat who knows him well,
- "is a brigand and a fanatic, but a sly, intelligent and
- sophisticated one." His ruthlessness has always been paired with
- competence and superficial charm. "He will convince you that he
- is a most reasonable and sympathetic individual," says a U.S.
- analyst, and his political instincts are remarkably shrewd. His
- arrival as head of the Belgrade party in 1984 ended a rudderless
- period of creeping liberalization, when the communists needed
- to solidify their grip on power after the death of Tito."What
- I liked most about him was that his desk was always empty -- he
- knew how to work," says Jurij Bajec, an economist now fiercely
- critical of Milosevic who once worked under him at Belgrade's
- largest bank and later followed him into politics. Although
- Milosevic talked about economic reform, he slapped bans on
- writers and gradually purged dissenting voices from TV Belgrade
- and the influential Belgrade daily Politika. "The party leaders
- had been in a panic over signs of liberalization," says Djukic.
- "Milosevic understood this, knew which card to play and
- succeeded in getting them behind him."
- </p>
- <p> The same unerring sense of where power lay served him
- again in late 1986, when a major fracas erupted over a secret
- memo drafted by members of the Serbian Academy of Arts and
- Sciences. These intellectuals articulated long-festering
- resentments over Tito's systematic undermining of Serbia's
- power, culminating in the 1974 constitution that gave
- far-reaching autonomy to Albanian-dominated Kosovo and to
- Vojvodina, which has a significant Hungarian minority. While
- other party leaders publicly condemned the nationalist tract,
- Milosevic remained silent, indicating that he shared its views.
- </p>
- <p> Less than a year later, he grabbed the opportunity to put
- his populism to work. He was dispatched to Kosovo, the southern
- province Serbs view as the cradle of their nationhood, where
- their complaints about mistreatment by the ethnic Albanian
- majority were on the boil. As angry Serbs tussled with police
- to enter a small meeting hall in Kosovo Polje, Milosevic emerged
- on a balcony to address the crowd with words that resounded
- throughout Yugoslavia: "No one has the right to beat the
- people!" In a show of personal courage, he strode out into the
- crowds to repeat the message, and the Serbs were galvanized.
- </p>
- <p> "From that day, the balance changed," says Bajec, who was
- then a member of the Serbian party's leadership. . "He knew how
- to touch the Serbs' national feelings. That became his main
- winning card, and he knew it would make millions come to hear
- him speak." He was a formidable presence at rallies throughout
- Serbia. "In less than a year," says Djukic, "he moved from being
- a second-rate politician to almost a god." And in the process,
- he purged the party of all opposition, turned television into
- an instrument of personal power and abolished the autonomy of
- Kosovo and Vojvodina.
- </p>
- <p> The prospect of Serbian domination under the intolerant
- Milosevic helped speed the secession of Slovenia and Croatia,
- whose own fanatically nationalist leader fueled fears among the
- Serb minority there. It was as the savior of the Serbs who live
- outside Serbia's borders -- nearly one-third of the community
- -- that Milosevic entered the fray. His strategy has been simple
- -- and effective. He stirs up Serbs with talk of imminent
- genocide, then sets his proxies loose to "protect" them, with
- fatal consequences for Croats and Muslims. Yet he insists that
- his aim is not the creation of a Greater Serbia, only the
- preservation of Yugoslavia. "We don't want to be a puppet regime
- of any foreign force -- unlike some others in Yugoslavia," he
- says, referring to Croatia's close ties with Germany. "Our
- people want to be independent and free, nothing else."
- </p>
- <p> Few believe him. In August 1991 he openly declared his
- desire to secure under his control all parts of Yugoslavia
- populated by Serbs. His recent demurrals fly in the face of hard
- evidence that Serbia has orchestrated aggression first in
- Croatia and now in Bosnia. While Milosevic was insisting that
- no irregulars from Serbia proper were involved in the fighting,
- a local newspaper published photographs of the Belgrade
- guerrilla fighter known as Arkan in the war-torn Bosnian town
- of Bijelinja. "This whole business is far too organized just to
- be happening," says a Western diplomat in Belgrade. "Milosevic
- has proved time and again that he will lie when cornered."
- </p>
- <p> Though his own people are more and more dismayed over the
- war, Milosevic remains unshaken by the world's gathering wrath.
- "It is the totally wrong approach to pressure Yugoslavia to
- solve problems outside of Yugoslavia, in a situation in which
- we don't want to be involved," he says. His line is that since
- the newly constituted rump Yugoslavia has ordered its army out
- of Bosnia and turned the fight over to ethnic Serbs there, it
- is no longer Serbia's problem. But discouraged diplomats warn
- that nothing is likely to deter Milosevic from his goal of
- Greater Serbia. Says a U.S. analyst: "Where we're interested in
- peace, he wants to win."
- </p>
- <p> As Milosevic absolves himself of responsibility, how many
- more must die? Says a U.S. State Department official: "For him,
- the word compromise is a dirty word, meaning treason and
- surrender." Indeed, he appears to have hunkered down, convinced
- of his own righteousness. "We rejected the abolition of our
- country," he says. "If we have to be blamed for that, I am proud
- to be blamed for loyalty to my country." As hundreds die,
- thousands flee and Serbia faces international isolation,
- Milosevic's blame goes far beyond that.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-