The apocalyptic conflict in Bosnia-Hercegovina can no longer be explained by one-sided
judgements or conspiracy theories. Bosnia means a different thing to each of its three
contestants as well as to the international community who pursue their own utopian aims,
turning in never ending circles. As in a conflict of this nature, there cannot be rational
argument, force has been argument by different means. If this scenario is to be properly
understood, one has to test these utopian aims as ideological and political hypotheses fuelling
this war in order to establish their plausibility and also to uncover the hidden agendas pursued
by all sides involved in this conflict.
The realisation of the utopian aim of a Great Serbia, which would include Bosnia-
Hercegovina, has been tested in fire for the past four years and found to be unachievable, due
to the strong reaction of the opposing forces.
Tough resistance from the Croats initially and the Muslims subsequently, coupled with
encouragement by the US to the Sarajevo Government in the rejection of the EU- brokered
plans, reduced the Serbian conquest in practice to less than 50% of the Bosnian-Hercegovinian
territory with the ultimate aim of unification with Serbia after a stage-managed referendum.
However, such unification would lead inevitably to continuous wars and thus the utopian cycle
would continue.
The utopian plan for the realisation of a Great Croatia within its historical borders, i.e.,
including the territory of Bosnia-Hercegovina, stems from the memories that this territory
belonged, de facto, to the ethnic and statehood sphere of the Croatian medieval fiefdoms.
Thus, there is an enormous difference between the Croatian and the Serbian claim on Bosnia.
The Croats in Bosnia are almost 100% indigenous, unlike the Muslims and even less like the
Serbs. President Izetbegovic (of Turkish origin) and Vice President Ganic (of Serbian origin)
are very good examples of this phenomenon. Due to numerical weakness after appalling
annihilation from 1463 to 1995, as a Western Christian people, by all the laws of logic, the
Croats in Bosnia-Hercegovina should be the greatest concern of the Western Powers. In the
course of only the last 4 years, the Croats in Bosnia-Hercegovina have lost half of their total
population of 750,000 (census 1991). Yet the West, and particularly the US, the home to 3
million Croats, for their own political ends, has directed its concern solely towards the
Muslims.
Thus the realisation of a Great Croatia obviously remains a utopian aim, due to the Serbian
and Muslim opposition and, most importantly, due to strong opposition within Croatia itself.
The last attempt at such a Croatia was tested between the years 1941 and 1945 and ended
tragically. Yet the spectre of Great Croatia is used by the Serbs and the Muslims for their own
propaganda purposes. On the other hand, the Croats in Bosnia-Hercegovina have created a
respectable military force for their own protection. In my opinion this is the limit of how far
the Croats there wish to go. Any departure from this point, in the direction of the utopian
historical conquest, would lead to continuous war.
‘Izetbegovic possesses a consistent vision (for the future Bosnia-Hercegovina) which,
however, will not be so easy to realise’ stated the President of the Czech Republic, Vaclav
Havel, in an interview to the newspaper Ljiljan (25th October 1995, p.6).
The quasi-religious connotation of this utopian statement is a riddle that begs clarification in
order to enable us to make some progress in the resolution of this conflict. Izetbegovic’s lack
of inhibition in spelling out that vision was displayed at the meeting of the Executive
Committee of the SDA in Fojnica on 20th October 1995, where he formulated his utopian aim
for the sovereign, integral, centralist and unitary state of Bosnia-Hercegovina. Defence,
foreign affairs, currency, customs, foreign trade, budget and the exchequer, topped up by the
presidency, central government, constitutional court and the central bank, would be in the
service of this vision. Yet, ignoring the reality of Serbian and Croatian opposition to this
vision leads, inevitably, to continuous war and the eventual destruction of the state.
Izetbegovic himself acknowledges this fact by stating ‘Pregovaracemo gdje god mozemo, a I
ratovati ako moramo. Zahvaljujuci nasoj vojsci imamo jaku pregovaracku poziciju . . ’(We
shall negotiate where we can, and fight if we have to. Thanks to our army we have a strong
negotiating base . . .’) (Oslobodjenje, 26th October to 2nd November 1995, p.3. But
Izetbegovic’s ‘consistent vision’ does not stop at a centralist state. His utopian aim is to
create a ‘Bosnian Nation’ (Bosnyaks, the term to which he was violently opposed in 1992) and
a bizarre ‘Bosnian’ language (officially acknowledged in the Dayton Agreement Document!)
The identification of the Bosnian State with the Muslims is another of his ambitions. It is no
secret that the generals of Izetbegovic’s army see the possibility of any peace now as an
obstacle to that utopian aim but, at the moment, the US is curbing their worst ambitions.
Izetbegovic’s Minister of Culture went even further when he stated: ‘For the Muslims in
Europe there is no future until they have their own state.’ (Glasgow Herald, 12th September
1995). This may be a parody of Milosevic’s notorious slogan, but the utopian aim, that all the
Muslims in Europe should live in one state (in Bosnia-Hercegovina?), has now been clearly
spelled out.
Although Milosevic’s war for the creation of a Great Serbia was the main cause of the conflict
in Bosnia-Hercegovina, the fact that the US have, for their own ends, encouraged the Muslims
to reject the EU plans (utopian as they were) and egged them on to obtain a better bargain
under its own auspices (as Clinton badly needs a quick international success) has added fuel to
the fire.
Multi-ethnic tolerance (suzivot) is a utopian aim that cannot be realised in the centralist
Bosnian state, as the present war is fought against such an aim. Bosnia-Hercegovina is not an
old nation state with a dominant nationality, established democratic institutions and relatively
small minorities willing to integrate into such a state (as in Britain and France). Nor is it a
melting pot state with relatively new immigrants, such as the US. In fact, Bosnia-Hercegovina
is a compound state, a relic of history, and not a nation. Even if such a utopian centralist state
in Bosnia-Hercegovina were possible, its fate would be the fate of the former Yugoslavia.
Zehrudin Isakovic asked the President of the Czech Republic, Vaclav Havel, ‘Why was the
break-up of Yugoslavia so bloody in comparison with the peaceful break-up of Czecho-
slovakia?’ (Interview, Ljiljan, 25th October, 1995, p.6). Havel’s reply was ‘The Czechs and
Slovaks are not so mixed as are those (national groups) in Bosnia-Hercegovina. Czechs and
Slovaks, from time immemorial, have had their own clearly defined territories’. Thus, the
refutation of the hypothesis of a territorially and administratively centralist state, with
intricately mixed population, spelled out by the most democratic European statesman, is a
warning to all those who are inviting more bloodshed. Izetbegovic’s right-hand man, Ejup
Ganic, put it in a nutshell: ‘It is immaterial to us if 200,000 or even 300,000 more of our
compatriots lose their lives in the realisation of our final solution’.
The peace plans for Bosnia-Hercegovina, put forward by the EU, were initiated at the
International Conference on the former Yugoslavia in Geneva on 3rd September 1992.
Firstly, the Carrington/Cutilero plan for a Con-federation, before the war in Bosnia-
Hercegovina started, was supported by all the three contestants, but Izetbegovic later
withdrew his support.
The second plan was the Vance-Owen plan, which was jettisoned at the US State
Department’s briefing in Washington on 20th May 1993. This plan was also rejected by the
Bosnian Serb Assembly, after an initial acceptance thereof, at the Conference in Athens in
1993.
The third proposed settlement, for the Union of Three Republics, was rejected by the Muslim
Assembly in September 1994, probably with a push from the US.
A characteristic of all these plans was their highly utopian content, whereby the international
powers insisted that any solution must obtain and hold three party-agreement, which gave a
virtual veto to any one of the contestants in the conflict. Thus, international diplomacy
exacerbated the utopian visions of the future Bosnian-Hercegovinian state which led to the
Croato-Muslim war during 1993, in addition to the Serbian aggression against both sides. The
US Administration assumed this gave them the ‘moral right’ to take the side of the Muslims,
which, in fact, was only an excuse to take over the leadership from the European powers in
this conflict.
Fortunately, in my opinion, no international power was prepared to use force to back any of
these utopian plans. The gap between the US and Europe in these proceedings is best
illustrated in the statement by Lord Owen that ‘the US had given up on Bosnia-Hercegovina
and would not intervene in any way’. (My meeting with Lord Owen in London on 16th
November 1993, ironically enough, just before the US actually took over “the management of
this conflict”.)
The Washington Agreement and the Dayton Agreement on implementing
the Federation of Bosnia-Hercegovina of 10th November 1995.
(Two-way Break-up of Bosnia-Hercegovina as a utopian aim)
In March 1994, the US fathered the Washington Agreement between the Croats and the
Muslims in Bosnia-Hercegovina, but according to the State Department ‘this was just the
beginning of the critical period’. The Agreement established formally a Muslim-Croat
Federation, an Arcadia, (the boundaries of which shall ultimately be defined in the Peace
settlement for Bosnia-Hercegovina) in which both contestants declared wholehearted
adherence to this new utopian construct, which has not, after a year, produced any substantial
agreement about the fundamental principles from which it should proceed. This is
acknowledged in the Dayton Agreement Document of 10th November 1995 ; ‘20 months
after the adoption of the Federation Constitution the process of strengthening the Federation
and building trust between its constituent peoples has still not produced satisfactory results.’
At the Third General Assembly of the HDZ of Bosnia-Hercegovina, President of the
Federation Zubak (a Croat) expressed ‘uncertainty’ in respect of the intentions of the political
partners in the Federation (i.e., the Muslims), and articulated the ‘necessity of the link between
Croatia and the Bosnian-Hercegovinian Federation’. So this utopian aim (Federation) is
nebulous (in spite of the present ‘radical steps’ taken in Dayton) because the question of
Muslim-Croat relations in Bosnia-Hercegovina (apart from stopping the recent fighting)
cannot be the subject of a cheap and cobbled-together compromise produced by the US State
Department bureaucracy, as it affects the very existence of both protagonists. Paradoxically, a
condition of the Washington Agreement, that the Federation be linked in future to Croatia in a
con-federation in order to protect the Bosnian-Hercegovinian Croats, has had the opposite
effect: it gives the Serbs the ‘moral’ right to link with Serbia, thereby resulting in the break-up
of Bosnia-Hercegovina. So, the search for the realisation of the utopian Washington Plan
takes place in the fantasy world of Dayton without taking into account the Bosnian-
Hercegovinian Serbs who, under present conditions, plainly wish to break up with the Croats
and the Muslims. Neither does it take into account the Croats in Bosnia-Hercegovina as a
constituent nation (however small) who also, if asked, do not wish to be dumped into a
Federation in which the Muslims, who outnumber them by at least 4:1, will sooner or later
monopolise all the levers of power. This, for sure, will lead to a further conflict. The utopian
cycle will, thus, be completed.
As the Clinton administration needs a quick-fix solution in order to show Europe who is the
boss, the rough justice partition, based on the inherited Washington Agreement and the
Contact Group Plan of 51:49 ratio between the Muslim-Croat and Serbian entities that,
hopefully, might exist next to each other, has been forcefully pushed forward by Richard
Holbrooke of the State Department, using the carrot and stick method of diplomacy.
The creation of the two entities means, de facto, the break-up of the state, because the
Bosnian-Hercegovinian Serbs know instinctively that, on the basis of this Agreement, no-one
can stop them joining Serbia. The Dayton Agreement is, de facto, a Milosevic plan, which
proves again that utopian plans imposed under international pressure are the cheapest kind of
deception leading to future wars.
As far as the Muslim Government in Sarajevo (defined in the Dayton Agreement Document of
10th November 1995 as "The Government of the Republic (which must retain only those
functions that enable it to act as the Government of the internationally recognised state of
Bosnia-Hercegovina") is concerned, it is a government without a state and without people,
recognised by considerably less than 50% of the total population of Bosnia-Hercegovina.
A signature on the Dayton Agreement by this Government amounts to treason.
For the imposition of the Dayton Agreement considerable force is necessary to ensure that
such a crude division will hold on the ground. The question is, what will happen after 18
months or so when this force leaves?
The other problem for Clinton is that he has promised 25,000 US troops to police this
arrangement, if he pretends that he is now in charge. But, should there be the possibility of
casualties, it may threaten his re-election next year. Congress will accept nothing less than an
absolute victory, and yet any likely prospect of victory for Clinton would put a stop, by the
Republican Congress majority, to funds for US military participation in this venture.
What is curious about all the above international community peace proposals is not just the
contradiction between their words and deeds, i.e., their highly utopian content, but also their
insistence that there are no other alternatives to these plans.
The plan that I published in 1993 was based, first and foremost, on the premise that the
preservation of the state of Bosnia-Hercegovina is desirable, realistic and is in the long-term
interest of all three parties, as well as for peace in that part of Europe. To prove that this is
both desirable and the best of all the worst solutions, we have to dispose of the utopian
solutions previously analysed. What we are left with then is a process of elimination of these
impurities from present political and military thinking on the subject on the Bosnian-
Hercegovinian conflict.
The most creative way to approach this subject is to look at what is worth retaining in this
process. The essential element of any just solution, which must be either accepted in full or
partly imposed, is that the ethnic map of Bosnia-Hercegovina must be retained as the ‘status
quo ante’ the census of the year 1991. This includes the return of all the refugees to their
homes and lands.
Apart from the fact that this prerequisite is essential for the future membership of the
European Union, it is also the most pragmatic way of approaching the peace: to each his own.
It is apparent from the analysis of the previous utopian plans that the primary aim of all of
them was (theoretically or factually) the imposition of political and military control and
acquisition of territory, and only the secondary aim was the shifting, or extermination, of the
population for the purpose of this aim. Utopian aims and programmes, by their very nature,
recede and are very often forgotten by the protagonists half-way along the path to their
unachievable end. In this case, the utopian aim of occupying and holding territories was
bogged down in the impossible effort to divide Bosnia ethnically by force when really this was
a secondary issue. Protracted cartography actually prolonged the war.
If we further pursue the creative idea that a just peace here can be achieved only if all the
contestants both win and lose in equal proportions, then we come to the apparently
contradictory conclusion that, in order to preserve the wholeness of Bosnia-Hercegovina, it is
imperative to divide it.
The next question is how to achieve this division? When we consider the territorial division,
the best possible option is not to indulge in re-inventing the wheel, i.e., re-inventing the
regions, but to stick to the historical provinces (e.g., Hum, Vrhbosna, Podrinje, etc.) which
developed organically, having taken into account historical, geopolitical and economical
factors. The next step is the division of political control of these provinces between the
Muslims, Croats and Serbs, and how to allocate it.
On the principle that all win and, at the same time, all lose, the obvious solution is that the
territory of these provinces is divided equally, or almost equally, between the three
contestants, a kind of Alexandrian cut of the Gordian knot. The reason that this should be
acceptable, or nearly acceptable to all three sides, is again the use of creative and rational
thinking rather than a utopian aim. The secret lies in the nature of that political control, which
should be only an administrative and not a sovereign exercise of political power.
The final objective of this proposal would be the establishment of the Con-federation of
Bosnia-Hercegovina on the cantonal pattern, as in Switzerland. However, as the wounds of
this war, and fear and mistrust, will take a long time to heal, I propose a 50-year long EU
protectorate with all sovereign powers, though with defence placed under the NATO military
umbrella (see details in the attached Memorandum). 50 years of the Protectorate should be
long enough for the stability and establishment of democratic institutions, and for the diffusion
of this stability from the Bosnian epicentre to the rest of the Balkans. Only thus can the
international intervention be justified and legitimised.
FINAL OBJECTIVE
The Confederation of the cantons of Bosnia-Hercegovina (Muslim, Croatian and Serbian).
After 50 years as an EU Protectorate, the state to be called ‘Confederation of Bosnia-
Hercegovina’.
b) Establishment of administrative cantons of approximately equal total superficial areas
without political sovereignty and without the right of secession. The administrative cantons
will be as follows:
2. Serbian - (2 cantons) historical provinces of Donji Kraji, Usora (with Bos. Novi and Bos.
Dubica) and Travunja.
Total area - 15,685 km2. Total Population - 646,538
Serbian
450,881
Muslim
133,700
Croatian
61,957
3. Muslim - (2 cantons) Bihac (without Bos. Novi and Bos Dubica), Podrinje and Soli
(without Odzak, Bos. Samac, Orasje and Bos. Brod).
Total area - 18,366 km2.
Total Population - 1,780,418
Muslim
1,063,420
Croatian
159,192
Serbian
557,806
4. Sarajevo - (confederal area) 2,049 km2.
Total Population - 382,418
Muslim
224,391
Serbian
127,002
Croatian
31,025
c) Each of the cantons to be administered by the Muslim, Croatian and Serbian adminis-
tration respectively, under the supervision of a European Union Protector. Cantonal
administrations will be developed on the basis of the political and cultural traditions of each
national group (as in Switzerland), but not to the detriment to each of the others. They will
include education, culture, media, social services, planning, energy, judiciary, civil and public
services. Finance and development, local defence corps (under NATO supervision), police
and tourism. Each of the cantons will be headed by a Governor (Zupan) and the Protectorate
by the EU Protector (Ban).
The Sovereignty of the Protectorate will be within the EU for 50 years. During that time, the
foreign policy of Bosnia-Hercegovina will be in the domain of the EU council, and the defence
by the Home Defence corps under NATO supervision. The Sarajevo Government, the Herceg
Bosnian and Republika Serbska governments will be extinguished. The Bosnia-Hercegovina
Army, HVO and Serbian forces will be disbanded.
After 50 years as an EU Protectorate, the final constitution of the Bosnian-Hercegovinian
Confederation will be agreed on the basis that there is the State of Bosnia-Herzegovina but
that there is no Bosnian Nation.
d) All the cantons to have a mixed population, according to the census of 1991, in order to
balance out the unequal numbers of the three national groups.
a) Solving finally the national problem of Bosnia-Hercegovina, the root cause of this
conflict.
Paul Tvrtkovic, London, U.K.
From March 1992 to October 1993 Paul Tvrtkovic acted as the Spokesman for the
Government of the Republic of Bosnia-Hercegovina in London. He is a descendent of the
mediaeval ruling family of Bosnia (whose family’s coat of arms have now been appropriated
by the Government of the Republic of Bosnia-Herzegovina as the state emblem, without
permission). He was born in Sarajevo in 1927, and settled in London in 1955 where he
continued to practice as an architect and lecturer. He has published a booklet “Bosnia-
Hercegovina - Back to the Future” (London, 1993) and over the past 30 years has written
many essays and articles on the Croato-Serbian conflict and related subjects in various
international publications.
Utopia and Conflict
Great Serbia
(The primitive conquest as a utopian aim)
Great Croatia
(Historical reconquest as a utopian aim)
Integral Bosnia
(Muslim religious-cultural conquest as a utopian aim)
The International Peace Plans
(The ethnic break-up of Bosnia-Hercegovina as a utopian aim)
PROPOSAL FOR A JUST PEACE FOR BOSNIA-HERCEGOVINA
MEMORANDUM FOR A JUST PEACE FOR BOSNIA-HERCEGOVINA
PROCEDURE
By the setting up of a European Conference on Bosnia-Hercegovina, to include the USA and
Russia.
DECISIONS OF THE CONFERENCE:
a) Imposition of a 50-year long European Union Protectorate in Bosnia-Hercegovina
(precedent - Congress of Berlin 1878).
1. Croatian - (2 cantons) historical provinces of Vrhbosna and Hum with municipalities of
Odzak, Bos. Samac, Orasje and Bos. Brod.
Total area - 15,029 km2 .
Total Population - 1,139,911
Croatian
497,223
Muslim
460,273
Serbian
182,415
MEANS OF ENFORCEMENT
NATO troops initially, with a continuous review of the security situation.
METHOD OF ENFORCEMENT
a) NATO to take control of the Serbian occupied areas and the territory under the Bosnian-
Hercegovinian Government and HVO control.
b) NATO to train and control a well-paid voluntary Home Defence Corps made up of
volunteers from all three Bosnia-Hercegovina nationalities, each to be stationed in their
respective administrative territory, thereby reducing the number of NATO troops to an
absolute minimum - estimated total number of militia 100,000.
c) Large economic aid financed mainly by the USA (in lieu of having their troops stationed
in Bosnia-Hercegovina).
GAINS
b) Creating a democratic state and institutions in the heart of the Balkans.
c) Using the above for the control and stability of the Balkans and stopping future wars.
d) Eliminating the causes that can be used by Serbia as an excuse for future expansion (i.e.
Great Serbia).
e) Preserving minority populations (Croat, Muslim, Serbian) in the cantons other than under
their own administration.
f) Creating good co-operation with the neighbouring states of Croatia and Serbia.
g) Cultural, traditional and religious links between the Croatian cantons and the Republic of
Croatia, the Serbian cantons and the Republic of Serbia and the Muslim cantons and the
Islamic world will be guaranteed.