Issue Date: www.insight-report.com
- Nov. 5-12, 2007
Croatia betrayed - The lies of Ivo Sanader
Commentary by Jeffrey T. Kuhner
http://www.insight-report.com/2007/071105/kuhner.html

On November 25, Croatia is facing an historic watershed. Voters
in the nation’s parliamentary elections will answer the
central question confronting this small Balkan country: should
they punish leaders who openly break their promises and betray
the electorate’s trust?
This is not a theoretical issue. Political accountability and
public integrity lie at the core of a functioning democracy.
During the bloody break-up of Yugoslavia in the 1990s, Croatia
paid a terrible price in order to liberate itself from decades
of Serb-dominated, communist rule. Over 20,000 people were killed
and hundreds of thousands ethnically cleansed. Yet following
independence, Croatia has struggled to make the transition to
a Western-style free-market society.
The current
government led by Prime Minister Ivo Sanader and the conservative
Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) has been a dismal failure. Sanader
has proven to be an incorrigible liar: he has deliberately deceived
the Croatian people in order to mask his government’s
incompetence. His administration is full of spin and little
substance.
Sanader
and his HDZ came to power in 2003 promising to enact tough economic
reforms, propel Croatia into the European Union and NATO, and
defend the country’s leading generals from politicized
indictments by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former
Yugoslavia (ICTY). He failed on all three counts.
Rather than
tackling Croatia’s bloated public sector and anemic economy,
Sanader has implemented superficial reforms. The result is that
unemployment hovers at 14 percent, government spending is worth
52 percent of the country’s gross domestic product, and
corruption remains rampant. During the 1990s, the HDZ ruling
elite plundered state assets in shady privatization deals, in
which billions of dollars were stolen. It was precisely this
kind of cronyism and economic malfeasance that disgusted voters.
This enabled the former Communists, led by the Social Democratic
Party (SDP), to sweep into power in 2000. Following the HDZ’s
comeback in 2003, Sanader vowed to clean up corruption and “modernize”
his party. Instead, he brought with him many of the kleptocrats
who had bled Croatia white. The most notorious of these was
the former Croatian ambassador to the U.S., Miomir Zuzul, who
was eventually forced to resign as Sanader’s foreign minister
following allegations of influence peddling and bribery.
Yet Sanader
refuses to aggressively confront Croatia’s culture of
corruption. In fact, he is part of the problem. A 2006 European
Union progress report criticized the government for having "no
overall strategic framework" for reform. The report went
on to state that Zagreb lacks "clear and transparent rules
and procedures with regard to elections and the forming of governments
at the local level." It is "still some way from enjoying
an independent, impartial, transparent and efficient judicial
system." And, "[m]any allegations of corruption remain
uninvestigated and corrupt practices usually go unpunished."
Instead of doing the hard, tedious work of dismantling Croatia’s
old communist structures and entrenched vested interests, Sanader
resorted to his usual practice: he lied. The prime minister
told the Croatian public the EU had “praised” his
government for “progress . . . when it comes to reforms."
This prompted The Wall Street Journal to denounce him for “playing
spin doctor.”
Sanader
is a fantasist. Vain, self-absorbed and shallow, he believes,
as he once told me, that politics is the art of “marketing.”
It is not. Politics is the art of delivering concrete results
to one’s constituents—results that advance the nation’s
economic and strategic interests. The Heritage Foundation and
The Wall Street Journal's 2007 Index of Economic Freedom rates
Croatia 109th out of 157 countries worldwide—a dismal
37th out of 41 nations in Europe. In matters of property rights,
the rule of law, corruption and freedom from government, the
index called Croatia “repressed.” On most indicators,
Croatia scored considerably lower than neighbors Slovenia and
Hungary. No amount of spin can obscure Zagreb’s weak economic
record.
Sanader’s
mendacity extends to foreign policy as well. Having promised
to use all “legal and political means” to protect
the dignity of Croatia’s war for independence from the
assaults of the ICTY, Sanader capitulated—but not before
telling the Croatian public that he “had no choice”
since cooperation with The Hague-based war crimes tribunal is
a precondition for EU membership. The problem, however, is that
Sanader never had any intention of standing up to the ICTY,
especially to its rabid and amateurish chief prosecutor Carla
Del Ponte. Prior to his election in 2003, the HDZ leader vowed
to defend Croatian war hero, Gen. Ante Gotovina, from the ICTY’s
judicial witch hunt. State Department sources at the time, however,
confirmed to me that Sanader (and Zuzul) had already given their
assurances that, if elected, they would hand him over to The
Hague. This is precisely what happened. The fix was in.
As a result
of Sanader’s power-lust, an innocent man was sold down
the river. Ante Gotovina was forsaken in order to satisfy the
ICTY’s liberal globalist agenda. The tribunal is determined
to equalize guilt on all sides of the Yugoslav wars of succession—rather
than pin the blame squarely where it belongs: Slobodan Milosevic’s
genocidal project of a “Great Serbia” and his attempt
to forge an ethnically pure state from the Danube to the Adriatic.
More importantly,
the Gotovina case has never been about simply the innocence
or guilt of one man; it is about preserving the international
legal legitimacy of the Croatian state in its current borders.
The Gotovina indictment calls into question the very basis of
Croatia’s successful efforts to militarily retake lands
seized by Serb rebels. Already, Serbia’s leading opposition
party, the ultra-nationalist Radicals, are claiming that the
Gotovina case will give Belgrade the legal and moral justification
to re-annex large swaths of Croatian territory.
By not defending
Gen. Gotovina, Zagreb engaged in a Faustian bargain. It betrayed
not only its finest general but the country’s very national
honor—and all for the empty promise of joining the EU
at some distant date and under conditions that will most likely
harm Croatia’s economic, fishing and agricultural interests.
Rather than following the Rwanda model—whose government
succeeded in having Del Ponte removed from the Rwandan U.N.
war crimes tribunal for her prosecutorial negligence—and
wage a bruising diplomatic campaign on behalf of the general
(as he had promised), Sanader took the easy road: He caved and
then presented it as a “great victory” in Croatia’s
march toward EU membership.
When Boro
Gotovina personally protested to Sanader about the shameful
betrayal of his brother, the prime minister responded: “In
politics, one says one thing, does a second and thinks a third.”
It is this kind of moral depravity that has led Sanader to the
brink of defeat. Polls now show the HDZ is trailing the SDP,
and that a liberal-left ruling coalition is likely. The SDP
and its allies will continue to follow Sanader’s policies
of phony reform and EU entry at all costs—and Croatians
will continue to pay the price.
Clearly,
there is a vacuum in Croatia’s political landscape for
a center-right populist coalition that champions real market-based
reforms, Catholic social conservatism and a Croatia-first foreign
policy. The HDZ could have spearheaded that coalition; instead,
under Sanader’s Machiavellian leadership, this once-great
party has been drained of all conservative and patriotic content.
It has become nothing more than a vast patronage machine, dispensing
jobs and doling out government contracts in the service of its
smug, lazy and venal ruling elite.
In the end,
Sanader will have no one to blame for his loss but himself.
He betrayed his supporters, his party and ultimately, his country.
It is time Croatia’s voters do to him what he has done
to others: dump him swiftly, immediately and without remorse.
-Jeffrey
T. Kuhner is the editor of Insight (www.insight-report.com).