Hiding Genocide; Croatia has 
resumed its "liquidation" of Serbs, while arguing that "ethnic cleansing" is a 
Serbian creation
December 31, 1992 - International Strategic Studies 
Association
"The Big Lie" technique is alive and well. Croatia has used the media and skilful image manipulation to hide its renewed genocide against the Serbs while at the same time ensuring that Serbs are themselves wrongly accused of the same type of crime, and more.
Editor-in-Chief Gregory 
Copley reports from the Balkans. Twice before in this 
Century there have been well-documented attempts by the Croats to destroy the 
Serbian people, and to obliterate their culture, religion and memory. It first 
began, during the upheaval of the Austro-Hungarian Empire — of which Croatia, 
but not Serbia, was part — with World War I. Then, after a period of apparent 
Balkan harmony under the first Yugoslavia — the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and 
Slovenes — it resurfaced with the invasion and occupation of Yugoslavia by Italy 
and Germany. Nazi Germany of April 10, 1941, proclaimed Croatia an independent 
state for the first time in its history, and installed a neo-nazi puppet 
Government of the Independent State of Croatia (known in Serbo-Croatian as 
Nezavisna Drzava Hrvatska: NDH).
Between 1941 and 1945, the Ustaše NDH Government of Poglavnik 
(leader) Ante Pavelic systematically killed as many as one-million Serb men, 
women and children. Serbian historians claim that as many as two-million Serbs 
have been killed by Croatia in this century. Population figures over this 
century give credence to the latter claim. Documented evidence confirms the 
approximate accuracy of the World War II deaths. From the beginning, the Pavelic 
Government repeated: "There can be no Serbs or Orthodoxy in Croatia." NDH 
official Dr Milovan Zanic said at a meeting in Nova Gradiska on June 2, 1941: 
"This will be a country of Croats and none other, and we as Ustaše will 
use every possible method to make this country truly Croat and purge it of the 
Serbs. We are not hiding this, it is the policy of the state and when it is 
carried out, we will be carrying out what is written down in the Ustaše 
principles."
Today, the newly-independent State of Croatia has adopted the same symbols as 
the Ustaše puppet nazi state. In many instances its military and para-military 
units have adopted the same uniforms of the 1941-45 Ustaše Black Legions. 
And the killing has begun again. The dispossession has begun again. The NDH 
puppet Government, with the full support of the nazi German occupying Army, 
destroyed some 450 Serbian Orthodox churches in World War II. The 
newly-independent State of Croatia has either directly or indirectly supported 
the destruction of more than 300 Serbian Orthodox churches — many of which had 
been rebuilt on the rubble of the World War II sites — in Croatia and 
Bosnia-Herzegovina. Between 600,000 and 800,000 ethnic Serbs have fled from 
Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina to Serbia to come under the protection of the 
Yugoslav National Army (JNA).
Austrian historian Freidrich Heer noted in 1968 that what happened in NDH 
Croatia was the result of "archaic fanaticism and pre-historic times". Pavelic, 
he said, was "a singular murderer of the 20th Century". Pavelic is today lauded 
as a hero of modern Croatia; his picture (and that of 19th Century Ustaše 
ideologue Ante Starcevic) adorns the T-shirts of a generation of Croatians who 
were unborn at the end of World War II.
Pavelic had noted: "The Slavoserbs are the rubbish of a nation, the type of 
people who will sell themselves to anyone and at any price, and to every buyer . 
. ." By June 12, 1941, the movement of all Jews and Serbs in Croatia had been 
restricted, but by then the mass killings had already begun.
Croat writer Mile Budak declared in Gospic on July 22, 1941: ". . . We shall 
slay one third of the Serbian population, drive away another [third], and the 
rest we shall convert to the Roman Catholic faith and thus assimilate into 
Croats. Thus we will destroy every trace of theirs, and all that which will be 
left, will be an evil memory of them. . . . " The Roman Catholic Church, far 
more zealous in Croatia than elsewhere in the world, did not fight the nazis as 
they did in Poland, but embraced them and the Ustaše. Croat catholic 
priests, in clerical garbs and out of it, joined in personally as killers in the 
concentration camps of Croatia.
Today, it is with more than a hint of concern that Serbs see the Catholic church 
offering apparently unlimited support to the new Croatian Government and its 
Ustaše principles, despite the 1963 apology of the Roman Catholic church in 
Croatia for the atrocities of World War II. "It is actually in this country that 
many of our Orthodox brothers were killed in the last war because they were 
Orthodox," said Alfred Pihler, Catholic Bishop of Banja Luka in his 1963 
Christmas pastoral letter to Roman Catholics. "And those Christians were killed 
because they were not Croats and Catholics. We admit painfully such a terrible 
fallacy of those people who had gone astray, and beg our brothers of orthodox 
faith to forgive us, the same as Christ forgave us all on the cross."
It is significant that, in the 1991-1992 conflict, there has been no similar 
flood of Croatian refugees from Serbia (Yugoslavia) to Croatia, as a 
counterbalance to those Serbs (and others) who have been fleeing from Croatia. 
Indeed, so many Croatians have fled to Serbia after opposing the new Ustaše 
juggernaut of the Franjo Tudjman Government of Croatia that organizations such 
as the Association of Croatian Journalists have been set up in exile in 
Belgrade. And yet the world has not heard anything of this.
Croatia, in two world wars, fought on the side of Germany against the Western 
Allies (while on both occasions Serbia fought with the Allies). Today, modern 
Croatia is regarded as a creature of the West, while what is left of Yugoslavia 
(Serbia and Montenegro) is regarded as a hostile vestige of Tito's communist 
administration. Why, or how, can such a massive thing as the attempted genocide 
of a whole people, be misrepresented so that the victims, rather than the 
oppressors, are called the criminals? Can such a misrepresentation be the result 
solely of accidental misinterpretation of the facts? It is not possible.
There is no doubt that the genocide against Serbs in Croatia and 
Bosnia-Herzegovina resumed immediately after Germany forced the European 
Community, in 1991, into the premature recognition of what is now Croatia. 
Defense & Foreign Affairs correspondents have seen irrefutable evidence of 
the facts. It is precisely because of the renewed genocide against the Serbs 
that those ethnic Serbs whose ancestors lived for centuries in 
Bosnia-Herzegovina, rebelled and began protecting their villages and their 
lives, rather than once again face slaughter or deprivation of their lands.
Defense & Foreign Affairs has had the opportunity to match many of the 
photographs and videotape of the war dead which have gone out on the news 
networks worldwide during the past 18 months. In virtually every instance, the 
Western media has captioned the pictures of dead as being Croatian, or Muslims 
from Bosnia-Herzegovina. In many instances, families of the dead have come 
forward to identify the victims as ethnic Serbs slaughtered by Croats, or 
sometimes by Muslims.
Virtually every piece of news footage and photography which emerges from the 
conflict zone comes out through the Croatian capital, Zagreb, or 
Muslim-controlled Bosnian outlets. Western media chiefs have been warned off 
accepting "propaganda" from what is purported to be the "vile, neo-communist 
authorities" of Belgrade, the capital of both Serbia and Yugoslavia. Western 
television, including the Eurovision exchange, has consistently refused to 
accept anything emanating from Belgrade. Defense & Foreign Affairs has 
seen the evidence of this, too.
It is significant that the only television satellite uplink in Yugoslavia when 
the state was prematurely broken up was in Zagreb, so it was Croatia which was 
able to corner the outflow of television pictures. Belgrade's links into the 
European satellite system were then relegated to second status, and so today it 
must switch frequencies constantly in order to broadcast. As a result, 
Serbian-speaking audiences and listeners in Western Europe generally cannot find 
the Serbian or Yugoslav broadcasts, and, on top of that, there seems fairly good 
evidence that Germany is attempting to jam, or interfere with, the broadcasting 
which does find an occasional channel.
Croatian expatriates have had a long time to establish themselves in the West, 
and gain a good grasp on some levers of power. The exiled Serbs, many of whom 
fled Yugoslavia after World War II because of their opposition to Tito's 
communism, were harried by Tito's intelligence services wherever they went, even 
in Australia. Croatian exiles, however, were left largely undisturbed by the 
communist intelligence services, largely because Tito himself was a Croat. 
Today, as a result, Croat nationalists find themselves in respected posts in 
respected Western organizations.
Christopher Cviic is a classic example, supposedly an impartial Balkan expert in 
the Royal Institute of International Affairs. From this vantage point he is 
invited onto BBC programs to give the Institute view on the Balkans, only to 
reinforce a rabidly anti-Serb, anti-(new) Yugoslav viewpoint. The fact that the 
prestigious institute was used in 1991 to publish Cviic's tract, Remaking the 
Balkans, is testament to the subversion of respected bodies to achieve 
pro-Croatian aims.
Edward Gibbon, in his Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, noted: 
"Diligence and accuracy are the only merits which an historical writer may 
ascribe to himself; if any merit can be assumed from the performance of an 
indispensable duty." Diligence, accuracy and balance have been removed from the 
current writings on the historic events now underway in the Balkans. Part of 
this is due to the fact that journalists have a natural tendency to report 
mostly that to which they can have easy access; believe most readily that which 
has been laid out for them in forms, and through channels, with which they feel 
comfortable. Traditionally, when one journalist, or only a small number, works 
harder, takes more risks, strives more to understand the broader picture, and 
reports a view contrary to that of his editorial cousins, he is not hailed for 
his achievement. He is castigated for breaking ranks with the accepted line, the 
accepted truth. A journalist who admits (in the light of later-discovered 
truths) that his work may not have been all that it should fears most and first 
the wrath of his editor. The editor himself rejects correction (for fear of 
losing credibility, a news medium's only asset), unless the laws of libel force 
such apology or correction. And in war there is no libel. Better to sustain a 
lie than to lose circulation, viewers or listeners, by a revision of the view.
Perhaps this accounts for the apparently consistent effort to ensure that the 
Serbian and Yugoslav message is not allowed to compete with that of other vested 
interests?
It is clear that Croatian strategic aims have been considerably advanced by the 
increasing persecution of Serbs, Serbia and Yugoslavia in the current Balkan 
conflict. Indeed, Croatia's grand strategy is considerably advanced by ensuring 
that a confused image appears in the minds of the international policymaking 
audience (and the media which influences it) as to the differences between 
Bosnian Serbs, Serbia and Yugoslavia.
To begin with, Croatian strategic objectives have been historically stated, and 
are today re-stated, to include the elimination of all Serbs from what the 
Croatian leadership believes to be its territory. Croatia's territorial 
objectives are stated, whenever possible, as the recreation of the boundaries of 
the 1941-1945 so-called Independent State of Croatia, which subsumes virtually 
all of Bosnia-Herzegovina and much of Serbia. Additionally, modern Croatia will 
not abandon the gift which Yugoslavia's communist Croatian leader gave it: 
virtually all of the Dalmatian coastline and key ports. The World War II 
division of spoils gave this to Italy; today, with no historic precedent to 
justify it, the land has been recognized as Croatian.
The propaganda to remove Bosnian Serbs from Bosnia-Herzegovina enables Croatian 
forces to consolidate their hold over as much of that newly-independent state as 
possible. The militias of Croatian Bosnians together with some 40,000 Croatian 
Armed Forces personnel have been consolidating their control over much of 
Bosnia-Herzegovina at the expense not only of the Bosnian Serbs, but also of the 
Bosnian Muslims who are themselves ethnically and linguistically Serb.
The campaign of genocide and terror against the Bosnian and Croatian Serbs helps 
reduce the Serbian populations of those two states, helping to ensure Croatian 
dominance. The campaign to claim that the genocide is Serbian in origin and that 
the victims are Croats or Muslims puts the Serbs on the defensive and builds the 
case for Croatia to have the international community guarantee Croatia's 
status quo and its expansion in the Balkans.
The late 1991 battle for
Vukovar was portrayed in the Western media as a battle between heroic 
Croatian defenders against overwhelming Yugoslav (ie: Serbian) modern military 
might. Significantly, as in World War II Germany when the concentration camp 
ovens kept burning as the Allied forces swept toward them, Croats in
Vukovar from June 1 to November 23, 1991, were busy exterminating those 
Serb families who had not been able to flee. It was for this reason that the JNA 
— the Yugoslav Army — fought back into
Vukovar.
At least 1,000 Serbs, mostly women, old people and children, were shot, knifed, 
axed or bludgeoned to death systematically, one-by-one, in two main centers; one 
the Borovo Footwear Factory, the other the Rowing Club of
Vukovar. Many of the bodies were dumped into the Danube, left to float 
down to Belgrade. And in many instances, the Croats took pictures, or recorded 
the deaths. One visiting Croat female journalist, during the
Vukovar fighting, unfamiliar with firearms, asked one of the young gunmen 
to cock a pistol for her so that she could feel what it was like to kill a Serb. 
She shot, indiscriminately, an old Serb woman who was standing under Croat 
guard.
One Serb, Branko Stankovic, was captured after being wounded in the leg by Croat 
forces. He was taken to a hospital where he was forced to make a television 
broadcast for Croatian television, saying how well he and other prisoners were 
being treated. He was then taken out and killed. Photographs of his tortured, 
mutilated body were subsequently found. So, too, were a significant variety of 
specially made implements for torturing and killing.
Vukovar has seen it before: Between August 8 and September 16, 1942, some 
10,000 Serbs were killed and scores of thousands more were tortured by their 
Croat captors.
But the
Vukovar tragedy of 1991 is but one of thousands of new killings which 
have occurred during the past year or so of independence in Croatia and 
Bosnia-Herzegovina. There were similar atrocities in the Croatian town of Gospic 
in mid-October 1991. And in Glina, another World War II massacre site revisited 
by Ustaše in December 1991. And Kupres. There, 1,036 Serbs were killed in 
World War II under the orders of the Ustaše (who killed 889 of the 
Serbs), by Italian troops and by German troops. A still unknown number of Serbs 
were butchered by several Croatian military formations, the HOS, ZNG and foreign 
mercenaries, in early April 1992.
What is significant is that the slogans of the Croats are those of the Ustaše 
of World War II and pre-World War II. The weapons used for ritual killing are 
also, symbolically, virtually the same. The knife is a favorite, and many 
special knives were made during the
Vukovar killings. These, along with the Serb victims, were found later.
Many Serbian villages and towns were razed during the past 18 months in Croatia 
and Croatian-held parts of Bosnia-Herzegovina. Even in Zagreb, where no fighting 
officially took place, more than 100 Serbs had been killed in 1991 alone, and 
the Orthodox churches there damaged or destroyed.
Journalists and analysts looking at the overall situation in the Balkans today 
must ask why in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina hundreds of orthodox churches 
have been destroyed, while in Orthodox Serbia no Croatian institutions or 
Catholic churches have been attacked. The answer is that in Croatia — as has 
been historically documented — there is widespread Croatian Catholic xenophobia 
aimed at the Orthodox church and Serbs, whereas there has been no such 
xenophobia against Croats or Catholics in Serbia or Montenegro.
More than 40 percent of the population of Serbia is non-Serbian, and there has 
been a history of multi-ethnic, multi-religious, multi-cultural cooperation 
which has not prevailed in Croatia. Indeed, where Croatia's Government today 
intimates that there were excesses in Croatia during World War II, it also says 
that there were similar excesses by Serbs in Serbia at the same time. The truth 
is that Croatia, when it greeted its German "liberators" with open arms on 
September 10, 1941, began its own campaign of extermination of Serbs, Jews and 
Gypsies. On the other hand, the extermination of Jews and Gypsies in Serbia was 
carried out virtually entirely by Germans or Yugoslavs of German background.
Today, the bodies of Serbs still float down the Danube into Serbia. Today, 
Serbians and Yugoslavs are ending their 50 years of silence — demanded and 
enforced by Tito — about the World War II anti-Serb genocide. A project to 
record "Genocide Against the Serbs, 1991/92" was began by Miss Bojana Isakovic. 
The project, currently a massive display of documents, photographs and 
artifacts, has become a tragic focal point for displaced Croatian and Bosnian 
Serbs, who bring photographs or reports of missing family members to the Museum 
of Applied Arts in Belgrade, hoping to find news of their kin. Many burned 
corpses have, through painstaking forensic research, been identified as a result 
of information brought to the center.
On more than one occasion, Serbs living outside the Balkans, some in Germany, 
have seen television of "Croats (or Muslims) butchered by Serbs and have 
recognized their own (Serbian) family members wrongly labeled as Croats or 
Muslims. The pattern has been too consistent to have been accidental. Similarly, 
the many stories alleging rapes by Bosnian Serbs of Muslim women in 
Bosnia-Herzegovina have clearly involved carefully staged performances by 
non-Muslims dressed up as Muslims. Rape (on all sides) is one of the byproducts 
of all conflicts, but the clear staging of these events by Croats has been 
significant.
The United Nations has already said that now, after proper research, it knows 
that several major incidents were staged by Bosnian Muslims or Croats so that 
they could be blamed on Serbs. These include the famous (televised) mortaring of 
a Muslim bread queue in Sarajevo, undertaken by Muslim forces against their own 
people when television cameramen had been alerted. The attack was blamed on 
Serbian forces (now disproved) and, despite the UN findings, has never been 
refuted by Western news media. Another, similar incident occurred (as verified 
by the UN), when Muslim snipers shot at mourners attending a Muslim funeral in 
Sarajevo, for the benefit of specially-placed TV Cameramen. The UN has also said 
that the shooting down of the Italian Air Force G-222 supply aircraft near 
Sarajevo was the work of Coats, not Serbs as originally blamed. The Western 
media has not corrected the story.
Today, trucks bearing United Nations relief supplies rumble down through Hungary 
and across Yugoslavia (in safety) and then into Bosnia-Herzegovina. It is only 
there that they come under fire and then mostly from Muslim forces. Ironically, 
the Muslims counted on Croatian military support during their conflict to gain 
supremacy over the Bosnian Serbs. Time and again, Croatian forces helped the 
Muslims right up to the point that direct conflict was initiated against the 
Bosnian Serbs, and then Croatian forces withdrew to leave the Muslims exposed. 
And this despite the many occasions (World War II included) that Muslims helped 
the Croatian genocide against the Serbs.
The accounts of Croatian genocide against Serbs in World War II, assisted by 
both local Muslim leaders and by many Catholic priests, have been absolutely 
verified by international observers and acknowledged by the Vatican. When Dr 
Franjo Tudjman proclaimed the new Croatian state in 1990, it was a new Ustaše 
state, with all the old symbols (including the red-and-white Ustaše 
chequerboard shield), and in the presence of a papal representative and Muslim 
leadership. Tudjman, at the first convention of the Croatian Democratic Union (Hrvatska 
Demokratska Zajednica: HDZ), on February 26, 1990, said, in the presence of 
more than 100 Ustaše war criminals who had escaped the law courts and 
fled to international havens after World War II: "The Independent State of 
Croatia [ie: the World War II state] was not only a mere Quisling creation, but 
also an expression of the historical aspirations of the Croatian people for an 
independent state of their own and recognition of international factors — the 
Government of Hitler's Germany in this case."
The use of Ustaše symbols and slogans had the same effect on modern Serbs 
as if, today, German Chancellor Helmut Kohl had used swastikas and the red, 
white and black of the nazis to proclaim the new unified Germany. And yet the 
Western world, ignorant of the Balkan history, paid no attention to this 
highly-charged local symbolism.
Indeed, Bavarian German Catholics, while indignant and upset at the rise of neo-nazism 
in Germany, have sent massive monetary aid to the new Croatian Ustaše, 
who have openly proclaimed their identity with the Ustaše Administration 
of 1941-1945 and its fervent support for Hitler.
Tudjman delivered a speech to the Croatian Sabor (parliament) on the 
occasion of the proclamation of the Republic of Croatia on December 22, 1990. In 
the Constitution he proposed, and which was adopted, the Serbs lost their nation 
status within Croatia, and were relegated to the status of a national minority. 
The official war against the Serbs had been resumed.
Even before Croatia became independent, the Croatian Minister of Internal 
Affairs, Martin Spegelj, advised his colleagues: "We are in the war with [ie: 
against] the Army [Yugoslav Army: JNA]. Should anything happen, kill them all in 
the streets, in their homes, through hand grenades, fire pistols into their 
bellies, women, children . . . We will deal with [the Croatian Serb town of] 
Knin by butchering."
The premature recognition of Croatia's independence by Germany, without 
consultation with the other EC state, also saw the fact that a substantial 
Croatian Army had been created well in advance, fully equipped with 
German-supplied uniforms and weapons. The suddenness of the situation deprived 
all the states of the old Yugoslavia the opportunity to negotiate their 
separation and to define their boundaries along proper historical, geographic 
and, if necessary, ethnic lines. The Croatian militias (there are several) 
attacked the JNA, the Yugoslav Army, which was still in its barracks in Croatia, 
ensuring that there could be no orderly withdrawal from Croatia.
That was not the case in the former Yugoslav state of Macedonia, where consensus 
allowed an orderly and peaceful withdrawal of the JNA back into the new Yugoslav 
borders.
But in Croatia, the new leadership wanted (a) to initiate conflict against 
Belgrade and therefore the Serbs, (b) to begin the process of rolling Serbian 
and Bosnia-Herzegovina borders back to the World War II borders, and (c) to 
seize JNA military assets. At least two brigades of main battle tanks and two 
brigades worth of armored personnel carriers were successfully seized by the 
Croats through this stratagem of unilaterally declaring war on the rump 
Yugoslavia and the Serb peoples (both in and out of Serbia). Today, the impact 
of "The Big Lie" which accuses the Serbs of Genocide in the current Balkan war 
is the equivalent of looking back at 1939 and demanding sanctions against the 
worldwide Jewish population because "German Jews had begun a campaign of 
genocide against the German people". History will show that the massive 
deception against the Serbs was not only unjust; it also helped allow the wholly 
avoidable genocide which has occurred against the Serbian people for the third 
time this century. And it also was the major cause for the conflict which rages 
today.
Croats, Serbs and the Bosnian Muslims are ethnically indistinguishable; they are 
all of the same Slavic stock. This highlights the irony of one people, the 
Croats (sometimes aided in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina by the Muslims), 
setting out to annihilate its twin, the Serbs. The most outstanding difference 
to which most observers would point today would be the fact that Croatians 
define themselves by their Roman Catholicism; Serbs by their adherence to the 
Serbian Orthodox Church. But that is too simple. The two peoples were raised in 
different, albeit adjacent, territories, Serbia being traditionally independent, 
and Croatia for many centuries part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Croatians 
have also nurtured for much of this time a dream of a greater Croatia, extending 
well into lands held by Serbs and the Serbs who had been converted to Islam 
under the Turkish invasions. This has created a Croatian mentality which is 
widespread and which resents the very existence of the Serbs.
It is significant, and proven repeatedly through history, that Serbs have not 
been raised with similar nationalistic or territorial ambitions. It was in this 
Century always the Serbs who were prepared to surrender land and prestige (not 
to mention power) for the good of the greater Yugoslavia. But, during the 
Kingdom and then the post-World War II republic, Croats always referred to 
themselves as Croatians first and Yugoslavs second. Serbian culture held, during 
the Yugoslav era, that it would have been in poor taste to boast first of being 
Serbian and to relegate Yugoslav status to second place. The Serbs have not 
sought geographic or cultural dominance within Yugoslavia. Most Serbs within the 
Republic of Serbia and within the new Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro) are not 
seeking to embrace the ethnically Serbian areas of Bosnia-Herzegovina into 
Serbia or Yugoslavia, even though they are almost universally reluctant to turn 
their backs on their co-ethnic brother across the border.
And yet the JNA cannot go into Bosnia-Herzegovina or Croatia to protect Serbs 
from the attacks which were started respectively by the Croatians and Bosnian 
Muslims and Bosnian Croatians. Today, Croatia admits having its troops [40,000 
of the] in Bosnia-Herzegovina, alongside the Bosnia-Herzegovina Croat militias. 
All three so-called ethnic groups (Muslims, Serbs and Croats) in 
Bosnia-Herzegovina drifted into what is now, for the first time, an independent 
state, artificially created by Austro-Hungarian cartographers and by Josip Broz 
Tito, the late Croatian head of Yugoslavia. And, save for the barbarities which 
came alive in World Wars I and II and in 1991-92, all lived and shared the land 
with reasonable equanimity.
Croatia's leaders, and Croatian warlords who roam freely with their militias 
throughout Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina, are today given complete power by the 
West and particular by Western media.
The story is bigger than this, and more complex. The tragedy of the genocide 
which continues against the Serbs is bigger and more vulgar than there is scope 
here to indicate. The reversal of the blame for the state of affairs is more 
than tragedy. It is of strategic importance on a near global scale.
A micro-state, Croatia, is dragging much of the world into what could be a 
major, protracted conflict, by making the United Nations an ignorant party to 
its strategic objectives. The geopolitical aspects are of significance: 
Germany's reluctance to recognize that Croatia's new leaders and body politic 
are a throwback to an era for which Germany has itself had to atone for a 
half-century is because Germany does not wish to surrender this "open route to 
the Mediterranean" which can pass through Croatia. Russia itself sees long-term 
geopolitical gain in supporting Serbia as a stalking horse to the South (and 
Yugoslav leaders are most reluctant to invoke Russian support for fear of 
attracting the unwanted em-brace of Moscow, resisted for so long even when 
Yugoslavia was, under the Croatian leadership of Tito, a Western from of 
communist state).
Perhaps the most ironic image which Franjo Tudjman invokes is that he, and the 
new Republic of Croatia, are "part of the West, part of Europe". Tudjman's 
"democratic" nation is becoming a one-party state, in a reversal of trends in 
Eastern and Western Europe. It has become a neo-nazi Ustaše state, 
harkening back to the last division (rather than the new unification) of Europe. 
And it stiffly resists tendencies to move toward a market economy; less than 10 
percent of the GNP is generated by private industry. It is overwhelmingly a 
nationalist-socialist state, while blindly pointing at what is the new 
Yugoslavia as the rump of a sort-of communist state. Indeed, in Yugoslavia today 
there is considerable momentum toward a broadly-based mixed economy in a 
pluralistic society, the reverse of trends in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina.
But the greatest deception perpetrated on the international media is the fact 
that the Croatian Administration has purged all of the Croatian media of any 
opposition (let alone Serbian) elements, at the same time that the Western media 
were led to believe that the Serbian media were universally controlled by 
Serbian President Slobodan Miloševic. And yet in Serbia most television and 
press would consider itself to be freely in opposition to, or at least critical 
of, the current leadership.
Will the prevailing official and media views of the Balkan crisis ever 
come into balance? Will this information war create a major conflict?
Attached Illustrations on Original printed version of this story: Cover 
Photo, A Serbian victim of today's campaign of genocide by the Croatians. Mira 
Kalanj, a Serb economist from Gospic, Croatia. Killed and burned by Croatians in 
the raid of October 16-18, 1991. Pictures 1 and 2, The remains of some of the 
218 Serb victims of Ustaše "pit murders" of July 30, 1941. The victims, 
from the town of Rujan, were mostly women and children, and were thrown into the 
Ravni Dolac pit in the Dinara Mountains. Fourteen victims survived the 50m fall 
and were saved after spending 45 days without food or water. Branimir Milosevic-Milic, 
a Serb boy of 11, was killed with two bullets to the brain, when Croatians began 
rounding up and killing Serbs in
Vukovar in late 1991.
Original URL:
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Copyright 1992 Strategic Studies Institute
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