РефератыИностранный языкYuYugoslavia Essay Research Paper Recently there has

Yugoslavia Essay Research Paper Recently there has

Yugoslavia Essay, Research Paper


Recently, there has been much fighting


in the former country of Yugoslavia, involving all ethnicities and religious


groups and without making a difference between military or civilians. Diplomats


have been hard at work to attempt to resolve the differences that led to


conflict and bloodshed, but it has proven to be a very difficult thing


to do with extremely limited success. To understand the situation, it has


to be realized that a big part of the problem lies in the geography of


the region and its demography. These factors have contributed to conflicts


in the past and do so now.


Yugoslavia covers mountainous territory.


The backbone of the region is made up of the Balkans, a mountain range


that runs north-south. Continental plate movement from the south has created


an intricate landscape of plains, valleys and mountains. This led to intensive


compartmentalization of the region. As a result, there were few low-level


routes and those that existed became very important strategically. Most


notable are the Varda-Morava corridor, which connected the Aegean Sea and


the Danube, and the Iron Gates of the Danube, linking Central Europe and


the Black Sea, that controlled much of the trade between the Mediterranean


and Central Europe since ancient times. Most of the populations have lived


separated from each other geographically and culturally, developing very


strong national and tribal allegiances. This region is a frontier between


Eastern and Western European civilizations and has also been influnced


by Islam during the Turkish invasion.


The roots of the conflict in the Balkans


go back hundreds of years. Farther than recent events in the region indicate.


Dating back to Roman times, this area was part of the Roman Empire. It


was here that the divide between Eastern and Western Roman Empires was


made when it split under the Roman emperor Diocletian in A.D. 293. Along


with the split, the religions divided also into Roman Catholic and Eastern


Orthodox. This line still divides Catholic Croatians and Hungarians and


Orthodox Montengrins, Serbs, and Romanians. The Romans left behind them


excellent roads, cities that are still important political or economic


centers, like Belgrade, Cluj, or Ljubljana, and the Latin language, which


is preserved in Romanian.


The period of Turkish dominance during


the middle ages left a much diffferent imprint on the region. An alien


religion, Islam, was introduced, adding to already volatile mixture of


geography, politics, religion, and nationalism. The administration of the


Ottoman Empire was very different from that of the Romans. The Turks did


not encourage economic development of areas like Albania, Montenegro and


Romania that promised little in producing riches. They didn’t invest in


building roads or creating an infrastructure. Greeks controlled most of


the commerce and Sephadic Jews, expelled from Spain, had influence as well.


The diversity of Yugoslavia can best be


captured in this capsule recitation: “One state, two alphabets, three religions,


four official languages, five nations, six republics, seven hostile neighbors,


and eight separate countries.” This had more than a little truth. Yugoslavia


employed Latin and Cyrillic alphabets; it was home to Roman Catholics,


Eastern Orthodox, and Muslims; it’s Slavic groups spoke Serbian, Croatian,


Slovenian and Macedonian; they identified themselves as Serbs, Montenegrins,


Croats, Slovenes, and Macedonians; each had its own republic, with an additional


Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina for a mixed population of Serbs, Croats,


and Serbo-Croatian-speaking Muslims; Yugoslavia was bordered by Italy,


Austria, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Greece, and Albania, all of whom harbored


some grievances against it; and the “autonomous regions” of Hungarian Vojvodina


and Albanian Kosovo within Serbia functioned until 1990 in an independent


manner comparable to that of the six formal republics. This indeed was


a diverse state. Yugoslavia had been “a geographic impossibility, tied


together by railroads, highways, and a Serbian-dominated army.” (Poulsen,


118-9) This country is a patchwork of complicated, interconnected ethnic


and religious entities that intertwined so densely that it is probably


impossible to separate them and make everybody happy.


It was a witness to two bloody Balkan wars


that took place in 1912 and that contributed to the outbreak of World War


I. The conflict seems intrinsic to the region, with painful fragmentation


after the fall of the Hapsburg empire and further discord during and after


World War II. In fact, there was hardly any time when there was little


or no conflict.


The events that started the most recent


escalation of conflict took place in 1991. The first republic to express


anti-Serbian sentiments was Slovenia. They felt that although they and


Croats had prospered the most in Communist Yugoslavia, they were lagging


behind Austria, Italy, and even Hungary. They saw the transfer of their


profits to the southern republics as the reason behind it. During the

1980s


many started calling for separation from Yugoslavia. Serbia boycotted Slovenian


products in 1990 and this only intensified the hostilities. In 1991, Slovenians


declared their independence. The federal army attempted to suppress the


Slovenians, but was humiliated by Slovenian militia forces. From there,


it spread to Croatia, who resented the Serb domination in government and


the economy. All the previous conflicts, from Serbian-led atrocities committed


at the end of World War II that surfaced in the 1980s to Croatian support


of the former Ottoman lands in Yugoslavia that came to the fore in the


1970s, and others, greatly contributed to the Croatian resentment of the


Serbs and led to their declaration of independence in the summer of 1991


(Poulsen, 123).


But this was only beginning. Croatia had


a Serbian minority that made up 11% of its population. The strong feelings


of nationalism didn’t escape them either. An attempt was made in 1990 to


declare autonomy of the mostly Serbian regions in the southwestern parts


of Croatia. It was rejected by the Croatian government and as a result,


the Serbs ignited a rebellion. They were supported by the Yugoslavian army.


Bitter fighting ensued, with sieges and a massive flow of Serbian refugees


eastward. Like cancer, the conflict kept spreading and by 1992 nearby Bosnia-Herzegovina


was engulfed by it. It is no surprise because Bosnia-Herzegovina is a patchwork


of Christian and Muslim, Croat, Serb, and Bosnian, Orthodox and Catholic.


The only way for the government to preserve its territorial integrity with


so many groups pulling in different directions was to declare independence.


The Serb and Yugoslav army moved in to drive out the Croats and Muslim


and attempt annex Bosnia to Serbia. The Croat army moved in to protect


its Croats there. With all these different ethnic and religious groups


so tightly intertwined in Bosnia, it would be nearly impossible to negotiate


a treaty that would pacify all sides.


The grief and damages of Croatia, Serbia


and Bosnia-Herzegovina were not the only ones suffered in this volatile


region. Another province of former Yugoslavia was experiencing unrest.


In a southern part of Yugoslavia called Kosovo, that was bordering Albania,


irredentist movement was taking place. Kosovo is 90% ethnic Albanian and


following the suit of the other republics, Albanians started asserting


their rights in Kosovo. They wanted autonomy, independence and annexation


to Albania. Serbia was not willing to let Kosovo go and disagreements between


the opposing sides began escalating. A major reason Serbia was so unyielding


is the fact that Serbs view Kosovo as a core area for their culture and


its development. It is also a site of a tragic defeat by Muslim Turks in


the medieval times.


The other regions of former Yugoslavia


that are experiencing problems are the regions of Vojvodina and Macedonia.


Like other parts of Yugoslavia, Vojvodina had a lot of different ethnicities


living side by side. Serbs, Hungarians, Croats, Slovaks, and Romanians


all share thi region. As they were becoming polarized in other republics,


it spread to Vojvodina also. Macedonia is having problems with its Albanian


minority, who are sympathizing with their brethren in the nearby Kosovo


and for a time there was with the Greek government over the use of the


name ‘Macedonia’ and Macedonia’s flag, which were Greek in origin. That


was settled with an agreement that Macedonia will change its flag, but


not its name.


Given the geography and demography of Yugoslavia,


it is hard to imagine real, long-lasting peace coming to the region anytime


soon. It is virtually impossible to strike any deal that would please all


sides, since virtually everywhere there will be pockets of minorities with


long-running hostilities towards the majority that could not be cut out


of the territory and would have to be incorporated somehow, whether it


be Bosnia, Croatia, Kosovo or Macedonia. These differences led to much


suffering and bloodshed over the last several hundred years and no solution


has been found yet. The nearby future does not seem to be any different.


The Dayton Accords, that were struck in 1995 in Ohio, were supposed to


have resolved some of the differences and stopped the fighting, but just


opening a newspaper today proves to be on the contrary. There have been


rather prolonged moments of peace, as when the country was united under


the rule of Josip Bronze Tito after World War II, so it is possible. One


keeps hoping that there will be more to come, no matter how hard they are


to achieve.


BIBILIOGRAPHY


BASS, WARREN, “The Triage of Dayton”,


Foreign Affairs, vol.77, No.5, 1998, pp.95-108


CONNOR, MIKE, “Kosovo Rebels Gain


Ground Under NATO Threat”, The New York Times, December 4, 1998, vol.CXLVIII


No.51, 361


PERRY, DUNCAN, “Destiny on Hold:


Macedonia and the Dangers of Ethnic Discord”, Current History, March 1998,


vol.97 No.617 pp.119-126


POULSEN, T.M., Nations and States,


Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1995

Сохранить в соц. сетях:
Обсуждение:
comments powered by Disqus

Название реферата: Yugoslavia Essay Research Paper Recently there has

Слов:1744
Символов:12195
Размер:23.82 Кб.