NATO
Twenty
years ago I lived in Sarajevo. I was a journalist and had covered the
war in Bosnia and Herzegovina. I had witnessed the first Serb attacks in
1992 that hit most Bosniaks unaware. I had written about the killings,
rapes and deportations carried out by Serb forces to “cleanse” the
territories they occupied of Bosniaks and Croats. I had reported on the
Croat-Bosniak war within a war, when Croatia under President Tudjman
supported the creation of a Bosnian-Croat statelet. I wrote about people
who lived under shelling, with only sporadic electricity, who were cold
during winter and sometimes had hardly enough to eat. There was
tremendous grief when loved ones were killed, but also heroism and
belief in a better future.
Sarajevans push and carry sacks of supplies as they across the main Sarajevo cemetary, July 7, 1995. © REUTERS
When
on Tuesday afternoon, 21 November 1995, news of a peace agreement
reached in Dayton, Ohio, spread through the snow-covered streets of
Sarajevo, it put a smile on most faces. “It’s wonderful,” declared
38-year old Dragana Zametica, a dental technician who was out shopping
for food. “No more war, no shelling. Bosnia will develop now. Soon I
will start receiving a real salary and be able to offer something to my
two children." Like most Sarajevans, who had upheld the notion of a
unified multi-ethnic country, Ms Zametica found the peace deal “unjust”.
It divided Bosnia into two “Entities” – Republika Srpska and the
Bosniak-Croat Federation – with a high degree of autonomy.
A few people were outright gloomy. "Nothing has
been solved with this agreement,” said Merhudin Dizdarevic, a 46-year
soldier making some money as a taxi driver. “I can guarantee you that
there will be another war when the NATO troops leave."
President
Slobodan Milosevic of Serbia (L) shakes the hand of President Franjo
Tudjman of Croatia (R) as President Alija Izetbegovic of
Bosnia-Herzegovina (C) looks on prior to the initialing of a peace
accord at the Hope Hotel inside Wright-Patterson Air Force Base,
November 21, 1995. The peace accord ends the 43 month old war in Bosnia
which claimed 250,000 lives. © REUTERS
He
was wrong, fortunately. NATO did an outstanding job in Bosnia, creating
lasting peace. Numbering almost 60,000 at deployment, NATO-led troops
oversaw the envisaged separation of forces, transfers of territory, and
demilitarisation. Later on they supported refugee return and detained
indicted war criminals. No NATO soldier died in a hostile act. When NATO
left in 2004, it had reduced its force to 7,000 troops. They were
replaced by an EU military mission with currently 600 troops.
Yet other hopes of Bosnians have not been fulfilled.
The downside
Bosnia’s
economy has been developing at a snail’s pace. Its GDP per capita is 28
percent of the EU average (in the EU, the poorest country is Bulgaria
with 45 percent). Unemployment runs at 28 percent, and the average
monthly salary is 425 Euro.
Apart from Kosovo, Bosnia is the only ex-Yugoslav
country that has not been able to apply for EU membership. Its NATO
membership action plan has been dormant, even though Bosnia’s 2005
Defence Law stipulates NATO accession as a goal.
Politics are divisive and inefficient, with
political leaders frequently blocking each other. In recent years, the
acrimonious rhetoric and obstruction of State-level institutions by
Milorad Dodik, currently the president of Republika Srpska and for many
years its prime minister, has poisoned the political process.
Refik
Nuhanovic and his wife Zemila load a car trunk with bags of coal from
the conveyor of a coal mine in Zivinice near Tuzla February 10, 2014.
Under socialist Yugoslavia, Tuzla in northeastern Bosnia was a hub for
the metals and chemical industries. Today, the city's industrial zone is
a wasteland and home to one in five of Bosnia's 27 percent registered
unemployed. © REUTERS
Bosnia
is regularly called “dysfunctional”, sometimes even “a failed state”.
It is accused of corruption, an expansive bureaucracy and unbridgeable
ethnic divisions. My friends in Bosnia are disillusioned and frustrated.
In a 2013 survey,
half of the respondents chose out of 10 options the word “lethargic” to
describe their state of mind. Only 14 percent used positive words such
“optimistic” and “content”.
Twenty years ago, I imagined a better future for Bosnia.
The upside
However,
I do not think that the situation is as bleak as usually described.
Among the West’s interventions, Bosnia stands out as a remarkable
success. There is stable peace. Refugees have been able to repossess
their apartments and houses, and many have returned to their homes.
Among them are those who fled or were expelled because of their ethnic
background: one-third of Bosniak and Croat refugees have gone back to
Republika Srpska, and the rate of minority return is similar in the
Federation. There are high rates after the ethnic cleansing campaigns of
the war. There is freedom of movement. Elections take place regularly
and fulfil democratic standards.
Yes, there is corruption, but it is not crippling.
Despite many levels of government, governance structures are not
sprawling – Switzerland with 2,805 parliamentarians has twice as many
per capita as Bosnia with 613. There are also no deep ethnic divisions.
People from all communities mingle, talk to each other, trade with each
other, and in many places still live with each other.
New biometric passports introduced for the citizens of Bosnia and Herzegovina between 2009 and 2010. © REUTERS
On
some issues, Bosnia’s leaders have achieved amazing successes. Between
2009 and 2010, they put aside all differences and fulfilled a demanding
set of EU conditions to qualify for visa-free travel with the EU’s
Schengen zone. They introduced new biometric passports, improved border
control, set up an asylum system, stepped up the fight against organised
crime and corruption, and established close cooperation with the EU on
security issues.
Another major achievement has been the creation,
with NATO’s help, of Joint Armed Forces - a small professional army of
10,000 soldiers and 5,000 reservists under a single unified chain of
command with a Joint Staff and two commands (operational and support).
The Armed Forces replaced the three war-time armies, which totalled more
than 400,000 troops at the end of the war. In 2006, Bosnia joined the
Partnership for Peace programme. Bosnia’s Armed Forces have contributed
military personnel to NATO’s ISAF mission in Afghanistan and Operation
Enduring Freedom in Iraq, as well as many UN peacekeeping missions such
as South Sudan, Liberia, Cyprus and Congo.
A country in many transitions
Things
have not been easy for Bosnians. They have been undergoing a shock
transition from peace to war to peace again, from a planned economy to a
market economy, from a socialist one-party system to a democracy. Many
people still long for Yugoslavia, which offered decent living standards,
freedom to travel, and cushy jobs. Unlike countries in eastern Europe,
Bosnia did not want to get rid of socialism – it lost it. Many people do
not identify with the current state. It is a compromise, not what they
or their parents fought for in the 1990s, and it does not deliver what
they expect.
The international community has often complicated
things, due to opposing views on what needs to be done. Some advocate an
imposition of a Dayton II – a new state structure – or at least forcing
the Bosnians to change the Dayton constitution. This usually comes with
calls to re-establish a powerful “High Representative”. This position
was created under Dayton to implement the civilian parts of the peace
accords and later endowed with extensive powers. Between 1998 and 2005,
successive High Representatives dismissed hundreds of public officials
and imposed many important laws – not really an exercise in democratic
decision-making.
Many
people still long for Yugoslavia, which offered decent living standards,
freedom to travel, and cushy jobs. Unlike countries in eastern Europe,
Bosnia did not want to get rid of socialism – it lost it
Others,
including myself, believe that change has to come from within to ensure
ownership, but also because the enforcement of a new state organisation
would take years and require resources that nobody is willing to
commit. The path to EU membership provides enough orientation to
gradually turn Bosnia into a functioning country. What makes any
structure work or leads to its change is political will.
The challenge of conditionality
Conditionality
has also not always been applied to Bosnia’s benefit. In 2009, a ruling
by the European Court of Human Rights demanded a re-organisation of the
tri-partite Presidency and the upper parliament, both of which are
composed of equal numbers of Bosniaks, Serbs and Croats. The aim was to
ensure that “Others” – all those that do not define themselves as
members of one of these three communities – can serve in these
institutions without having to declare affiliation to one of the three
groups. The EU made this a condition for accepting a membership
application from Bosnia. As a result, this became the main point on the
political agenda. Close to 200 meetings were held and other important
issues, such as the economy, were neglected. Last year, the EU wisely
decided to decouple this demand from the membership application.
NATO’s condition for putting the NATO membership
action plan (MAP) into force also appears increasingly misguided. It is
the official registration of 63 immovable defence properties, mainly
barracks and buildings used by the Ministry of Defence. Some of them
were not registered at all during socialist times, or are still
registered in the name of late Yugoslavia.
This issue has been lingering since a 2001
Agreement on Succession Issues between the successor states to former
Yugoslavia. It has not been resolved due to disagreement whether
ownership belongs to the Entities or the State. In 2010, NATO foreign
ministers set the condition that Bosnia would join the MAP only when all
immovable defence properties are registered as state property of
Bosnia, for use by Bosnia’s Ministry of Defence.
Dr. Dragan Covic, Chairman of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina during the bilateral meeting
with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg. © NATO
with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg. © NATO
Today,
more than five years later, the defence property issue has still not
been resolved, and Bosnia still has no MAP, while Russia has stepped up
interference in the Western Balkans, trying to prevent the countries
from Euro-Atlantic integration. Has the registration issue been worth
this delay? I do not think so.
The registration is held up by Republika Srpska where support for NATO membership is low anyway. According to a 2012 survey, support across Bosnia is 65 percent, but it is only 38 per cent in Republika Srpska, and 82 per cent in the Federation.
Thanks to a 2012 ruling by the Constitutional Court
of Bosnia, which has allocated ownership of state property to the
State, there has been recent progress. Using this ruling, the Defence
Ministry has been able, through lengthy legal procedures, to register 23
of 63 defence properties. However, the completion of the process is not
yet a done deal. Republika Srpska has appealed against it to the State
Court, claiming the property on its territory for itself. Unless the
court dismisses the appeal and the registration process continues, NATO
Allies should try to find a way to activate the MAP without the
registration of all the defence properties.
This year, there has also been progress on the EU
path. In July 2015, all levels of government adopted a comprehensive
economic and social Reform Agenda. Implementation of this agenda has
begun. If it continues, the EU has promised to accept a membership
application from Bosnia. This would put it firmly on the EU accession
path and intensify interaction with EU institutions.
It is not the first time Bosnia is making progress.
In the past, it has always stagnated again, usually because of its own
doing, but sometimes also due to unreasonable demands of the
international community. However, there will be a time when it will
continue to move forward, and it could be now.
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