Diana Johnstone
The
war was launched to protect an oppressed ethnic minority, to punish a massacre,
and to secure a New World Order. Which war was that? Why, Hitler’s war of
course, which came to be known as World War II. The ostensibly oppressed ethnic
minority was the Germans in Slavic countries, the aggression was a fake Polish
incursion into Germany denounced as a "massacre," and the "New
World Order" was the declared goal of Nazi Germany. These pretexts or aims
of Hitler’s war of conquest are largely forgotten in the United States. They are
never cited by politicians or media drawing parallels between then and now.
However, everyone remembers the Holocaust, Hitler and Munich. Reduced to these
three elements, the standard "lesson" of World War II goes like this:
There was an evil man, Hitler, who wanted to kill all the Jews. At Munich, the
West failed to stop him. The result was the Holocaust.
Therefore
we must "stand up" to whatever "new Hitler" comes along.
This simplistic formula discredits diplomacy and justifies the use of military
force. To call out the hounds of war, all that is needed is to identify the
latest adversary as a new "Hitler" and to dismiss any attempt to find
a reasonable compromise as "Munich." >From the beginning of the
Yugoslav crisis in 1991, the media took the easy way of reporting on an
extremely complex and unfamiliar situation by resorting to analogy. The
Washington public relations firm, Ruder Finn, on contract to Croatia and the
Kosovo Albanians, took shrewd advantage of this tendency by likening Serb
relocation camps in Bosnia–horrific places such as exist in conflicts around
the world, and indeed existed in Bosnia under Muslim and Croat control as
well–to "Auschwitz." Suddenly, Milosevic was "the new
Hitler." A journalist who might challenge such exaggeration not only risked
missing the "big story" but could be accused of
"revisionism" or "Auschwitz denial." More recently, a number
of American journalists have indeed managed to produce excellent and balanced
articles from Yugoslavia. Steven Erlanger’s reports from Kosovo for the New York
Times reflect the complexities and ambiguities of a province devastated by NATO
bombing, obscure combat, crime, intimidation and panic. Such serious reporting
has a long way to go to counteract years of simplified analogies, distorted and
inaccurate facts and outright propaganda by editorialists, columnists and
cartoonists echoing each other in endless variations on the "new
Hitler" theme.
The
tragic-comic fate of mankind seems to be to fail to see the next trap in the
effort to avoid the last one. By constantly recalling Auschwitz, the collective
imagination has projected it onto much more ordinary human disasters. At
present, the truly successful "revisionism" is not denial of Auschwitz
but its relativization, by seeing it where it isn’t.
The
dangers of analogy construction Analogies should be employed with care,
especially with such emotion-laden subjects as Hitler and the Holocaust. When
applied to unfamiliar situations, they can create a powerful semi-fictional
version that actually masks reality. Faced with a "new Hitler" and
alleged "genocide," there can be no inquiry as to the real motives and
interests of the various parties. Instead, the issue is reduced to identifying
the "bad guy" and "standing up" to him. This mindset
virtually precludes serious efforts to grasp why people are acting as they do.
It has even helped to obscure the causes and motives of Nazi aggression. In
reality, Hitler’s vicious anti-Semitism could not in itself have led Germany
into a war of conquest stretching from North Africa to Norway to the Volga. The
military, financial and industrial elites of Germany were motivated by
geo-strategic goals: a German-dominated Europe known as the "New World
Order."
The
propaganda that incited Germans to fight told them that they were on a mission
to bring good German "Western" order to the world. To achieve such
order, elements of disorder had to be identified and eliminated. Here is where
Hitler’s anti-Semitism came in: For Hitler, disorder in the form of both
communism and capitalism was caused primarily by Jews and secondarily by Slavs
(considered an incompetent sub-race), as well as by minor trouble-makers such as
Gypsies and homosexuals. If parallels are to be drawn between the present NATO
war and the Nazi blitzkreig, some of them could be extremely embarrassing to the
NATO allies. But American media have never cared to dwell on the fact that the
"New World Order" was a Nazi slogan resurrected by President Bush once
the Soviet Union collapsed, nor on the fact that Hitler ordered the bombing of
Belgrade to punish it for opposing that "Order," while rewarding
Croatian and Albanian secessionist nationalists with enlarged states from which
they proceeded to drive out Serbian inhabitants.
These,
however, are the parallels seen by most Serbs, whether they support or detest
Slobodan Milosevic. If this is not understood, the Serbs cannot be understood.
Condemning the Serbian "race" As the NATO bombing inevitably fails to
win the hearts of the Serbian people, they themselves increasingly have become
the target not only of the bombing but also of the propaganda campaign. Their
resistance is attributed to perverse stubbornness, or to complicity in the
presumed crimes of "the new Hitler."
The
demonstrable fact that the Serbian people strongly favor a multi-ethnic society,
the fact that Serbia is indeed the closest thing to a genuine multi-ethnic state
in the region–this is ignored, or denied, by constant reference to the new
invisible phantom haunting Europe, "Serbian nationalism." President
Clinton’s claim to be destroying Yugoslavia in order to achieve what has long
existed–a multi-ethnic society–while the United States supports an armed
ethnic Albanian movement fighting to establish an ethnically pure Greater
Albania, raises ignorance, or dishonesty, to new levels of absurdity. Since they
refuse to respond to NATO bombing by overthrowing Milosevic, the conclusion
drawn by the NATO propagandists is that the Serbian people themselves are the
"new Nazis." In mid-May, the BBC posed its question of the week: Could
Serbia reform itself? No, said a British academic, Mark Wheeler, who was of the
opinion that Serbia would have to be occupied militarily, like Germany after
World War II, and "denazified." An individual citizen can sue a
publication for libel. There is no such recourse for the population of a country
that finds itself targeted by NATO.
Anything
goes when it comes to insulting "the Serbs." The April 12 Newsweek did
not hesitate to characterize the Serbs as a "race" displaying uniquely
negative qualities, in an article by Rod Nordland entitled "Vengeance of a
Victim Race." "Serbs," readers were told, "are expert
haters."
Malicious
generalizations alternate with lies. "This is the nation that invented the
term ‘ethnic cleansing’–as a wartime boast in 1991 when they were kicking
Croats out of Croatia," wrote Nordland. This is not true. As Jim Naureckas
points out (Extra!, 5 6/99), the term was appearing in U.S. newspapers a decade
earlier to describe Albanians’ treatment of Serbs in Kosovo. The practice is
age-old. It has been repeatedly practiced in the Balkan region as a forcible way
of ending border disputes, most dramatically in the huge population exchanges
between Greece and Turkey in the first part of the 20th Century. As for the war
in Croatia in 1991, the practice was mutual, as part of the dispute over
boundaries in a fragmented Yugoslavia. This was the inevitable result of Western
approval of a hasty and unnegotiated dismantling of Yugoslavia. Newsweek
presumes to delve into the Serb psyche. It finds a "sense of
victimization"–a convenient element to disparage and dismiss preemptively
in a people selected to be victims of NATO bombing.
Anything
that we do to them is only in their minds. "The other critical element of
the Serb psyche: inat, which means ‘spite’ but also includes the idea of revenge
no matter what the cost. A taste for revenge mixed with self-pity is a dangerous
combination." As it happens, "inat" is a word that also exists in
the Albanian language, with exactly the same meaning. In fact, "inat"
is a Turkish word, which was adopted in all the languages of the region from the
ruling Ottoman Turks. If the existence of the term in the national vocabulary is
a key to the national "psyche," it applies just as much to the
Albanians, and perhaps most of all to the Turks. But they are our allies, and
thus do not require such scrutiny. Such an article is nothing but propaganda,
which can serve only to justify subjecting a whole people to pariah treatment
and even eventual destruction. The subtitle of Nordland’s article is: "The
Serbs are Europe’s outsiders, seasoned haters raised on self-pity. Even the
‘democrats’ are questionable characters." Substitute "Jews" for
"Serbs", and you have a sample of the sort of rhetoric the Nazis
applied prior to "the final solution." If parallels are to be drawn
with World War II, it is high time to explore all the angles.