CROATIA AND THE CROATIANS
Croatia emerged as a unified nation state in 925 A.D., and, through a personal union
under a single king, joined what would become the Austro-Hungarian Empire in the twelfth
century. Throughout the history of the Empire, Croatia maintained varying degrees of
autonomy with its Ban or Viceroy and Sabor or Parliament which first met in 679 A.D.
Following World War I, Croatia was absorbed into the new artificial state that would
become Yugoslavia. The first Yugoslavia, from 1918-1941 was little more than an extension
of Serbia with a Serbian king, ruling from the Serbian capital of Belgrade with Serbian
laws. This marked the first time in history that the Serbs, Croats, Slovenes, Montenegrins
and Macedonians had lived together in a single state. The history of royalist Yugoslavia
was marked by the brutal suppression of Croatian political, human and civil rights. The
Croatian nation rallied around the Croatian Peasant Party and Stjepan Radic, its elderly,
nearly blind, pacifist leader. Radic, along with four other Croatian leaders, was gunned
down by a Serbian Deputy on the floor of Parliament in 1928. King Alexander Karageorgevic
followed this blow by declaring himself dictator and banning all political parties.
Croatian Parliamentary Deputy Ante Pavelic then formed the Ustase or "Insurgent"
Croatian Liberation Movement to gain Croatian independence by force. Alexander was
assassinated in 1934 and was succeeded by his cousin Prince Regent Paul, an Oxford
educated half-Russian who cared little about politics or Yugoslavia.
World War II
Between 1934 and 1941 Yugoslavia moved closer and closer to Hitler under the leadership
of Milan Stojadinovic who formed his own storm troops and adopted the title Vodja or
Fuhrer. Later Premier Dragisa Cvetkovic would lead Yugoslavia into the Axis fold with
Mussolini and Hitler on March 24, 1941. Almost immediately a military coup was staged by
two Serbian air force generals assisted by the British Special Operations Executive.
Finding instability on his southern flank unacceptable on the eve of the invasion of
the Soviet Union, Hitler ordered the immediate conquest of Yugoslavia. The
Serbian-dominated army surrendered without a fight. The Government and Serbian royal
family fled to Britain with millions in gold and established the Yugoslav
Government-in-Exile which laid the entire blame for the war and defeat on the Croatians.
Pavelic's Ustase immediately took control of Croatia including Bosnia and Hercegovina.
The new Croatian state was divided into German and Italian occupation zones while Italy
annexed large parts of Dalmatian Croatia outright. Croatia joined the Axis, sent troops to
the Eastern front and enacted anti- Semitic and anti-Serbian legislation. Serbia became a
Nazi puppet state under General Milan Nedic who intensified the persecution of Jews,
Gypsies and Croatians that had begun under the royalist regime before the War. Tens of
thousands perished in the multi-faceted war among Communist Partisans, German, Italian,
Croatian, Serbian and even Russian Cossack forces. In the end, it would be the
Communist-backed Partisan army led by a Croatian, Marshal Josip Broz Tito, with the
backing of the Red Army which would emerge victorious.
The Second Yugoslavia
After World War II, Yugoslavia was reconstituted as a Communist federal republic with
the promise of equality for all its nations and peoples. As in most Communist states,
promises were not fulfilled. A ruthless secret police compounded by the economic and
political exploitation of Croatia led hundreds of thousands of young Croatians to seek
freedom and prosperity abroad. After the purge of secret police chief Aleksander Rankovic
in 1966, a new air of freedom developed in Croatia known as "The Croatian
Spring". Less known in the West than the "Prague Spring", this great
liberalization was crushed by the Communists in late 1971. One target of the new round of
repression was a dissident former Partisan hero and Yugoslav Army general, Franjo Tudjman.
The events of 1971 put into motion events twenty years later that would result in Croatian
independence.
The death of Tito in 1980 led to increased demands for democracy and a market-based
economy as well as for greater autonomy by Croatia and Slovenia from the
Serbian-controlled central government. As Western-oriented Slovenia and Croatia moved
quickly toward democratic reform, Eastern-oriented Serbia struggled to maintain Communist
authoritarianism and a centralised government. In 1990, Dr. Franjo Tudjman became the
first freely elected President of Croatia in over half a century.
Free and democratic elections in Croatia and Slovenia demonstrated a commitment to the
democratic process, the protection of human rights, and the development of a free market
economy in those Republics. Croatia immediately began negotiations in mid-1990 toward the
formation of a loose confederation of nations that would have granted national autonomy
while preserving Yugoslavia in some form.
The Republic of Serbia refused all attempts at negotiation and engaged in massive human
rights violations against the Albanian majority in the province of Kosovo, dismantling its
Parliament and purging its government, media, and educational system of Muslims and
non-Communists. The Serbian leader, Slobodan Milosevic, remained committed to a single
party, totalitarian regime in Serbia and throughout Yugoslavia.
Spurred on by Milosevic, Serbs in Croatia launched a well- planned armed insurrection
on August 17, 1990, attacking police stations and blockading the main highway south of the
Croatian capital of Zagreb. When Croatian police attempted to stop the violence, the
central government dispatched the Serbian-controlled air force and army to "restore
order". In 1991, after months of fruitless negotiations and increased violence by the
Serbian minority in Croatia, fuelled by the Serbian government and military, the Croatians
voted for independence. On June 25, 1991, Croatia and Slovenia declared themselves to be
free and independent of Serbia and Yugoslavia.
Independence and Aggression
Under the pretence of protecting the Serbian minority in Croatia, a full-scale war was
launched against Croatia by the Serbian-Yugoslav armed forces and Serbian militias.
Croatia abided by over a dozen cease fires only to see the army regroup and attack again.
By the end of 1991, over one-third of Croatia's territory had been seized, the city of
Vukovar and others totally destroyed and thousands of Croatians had been killed. In
December 1991, the Serbian government openly admitted that it aimed to annex territory in
Croatia and Bosnia-Hercegovina in order to form a new "Greater Serbia".
On January 14, 1992 the European Community recognized the independence of Croatia and
most of the world's major powers followed suit. Notably, the United States government
headed by George Bush held back on recognition of Croatia and Slovenia until after the
United Nations peacekeeping forces had been moved into Croatia. Bush's Deputy Secretary of
State and chief advisor on what was Yugoslavia was Lawrence Eagleburger whom the press
dubbed "Lawrence of Serbia". Eagleburger had close personal and financial ties
with the Communist leadership of Serbia as well as Yugoslav banks and arms industries.
Despite Eagleburger's friendship with Communist Serbia, even the United States was
eventually forced to condemn Serbia's expansionist aggression and recognize Croatia in
April of 1992.
On April 26, 1992, Serbia declared the birth of a new Federal Yugoslavia and became the
last nation in Europe to remove the red star from its flag. The history of the three
Yugoslavias has been filled with mythology, but no myth was greater than the myth that
Yugoslavia ever really existed.