Not long ago, Serbian troops were notorious for nationalism, aggression and even war crimes. Now they want to be known as international guardians of peace.
In the 1990s, under the regime of Slobodan Milosevic, they shelled towns in Croatia and Bosnia and supported Serb rebels when they attacked civilians in those newly independent nations. U.N. peacekeepers were sent to the Balkans to protect people from the Serb-led attacks.
Now Serbia’s pro-Western government is bent on improving the army’s tarnished image. Its primary tactic — participating in overseas peacekeeping missions, turning yesterday’s attackers into the protectors of today. At the same army center on the outskirts of Belgrade where troops once trained for the wars in Croatia, Bosnia and Kosovo, dozens of local and foreign instructors are teaching soldiers to be guardians of the peace in places like Chad, Cyprus, Lebanon and Somalia.
The trainers include advisers from the United States and other members of NATO — the military alliance that bombed Serbia in 1999 to halt its military crackdown on the secessionist province of Kosovo, which has since become an independent nation.
Several dozen soldiers from Serbia already are serving in U.N. units in Congo, Chad, Liberia, Ivory Coast, Cyprus and Lebanon. The effort will be eventually expanded to 40-member platoons, to be followed by companies of 180 soldiers and even larger units.
“We are the first soldiers from our country. We hope that after this mission the image of Serbia will be better,” said Staff Sgt. Alexander Beocanin, part of a seven-man Serb unit serving with the U.N. force on the divided island of Cyprus.
He and his colleagues patrol the U.N.-controlled buffer zone separating the Greek Cypriot south from the Turkish Cypriot north. The soldiers’ duties involve monitoring and observing the zone and preventing anyone from straying into it.
“We have so much experience in war; now we want peace,” Beocanin said.
Beyond expanding its existing deployments, Serbia also hopes to deploy a battalion to join the 12,500-strong U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon, or UNIFIL, which has monitored the border with Israel for the past 32 years.
Peacekeeping represents a marked turnaround for the Serbian military. After the Balkan wars of the 1990s, more than 40 Serbian politicians, generals and other officials were indicted by the U.N. war crimes tribunal in The Hague for war crimes. Dozens more have faced trial either in Serbia or in other countries that once formed the Yugoslav federation.
Milosevic’s military also sheltered war crimes suspects, including fugitive Gen. Ratko Mladic, who remains at large despite his 1995 indictment for the massacre of 8,000 Muslims in Srebrenica.
Milosevic himself was accused of genocide, and died in a prison cell in The Hague, Netherlands, while still on trial.
The focus on peacekeeping is part of President Boris Tadic’s effort to improve Serbia’s international standing. The country’s bid to join the European Union recently received a major boost when the bloc agreed to review Serbia’s candidacy.
Plans for international peacekeeping missions originated in 2003, as part of broad reform of the armed forces. Troop levels were slashed from nearly 100,000 to just 35,000, and a group of young officers was promoted to the senior ranks to replace the generals discredited in Milosevic’s wars.
Since then the military has established close contacts with the armed forces of Britain, Norway and the United States, which initiated a partnership between the Serbian army and the National Guard of Ohio — home to a large Serbian immigrant community.
As a result, the military has become the country’s most avid proponent of closer ties with NATO, despite the alliance’s bombing of Serbia a decade ago, said Daniel Sunter, editor of Belgrade-based Balkan Intelligence monthly.
He noted that this represented a return to the military ties Yugoslavia had with the West during the Cold War, when it was very active in peacekeeping operations in Africa and Asia.
In 1956, Yugoslavia contributed a battalion to the first modern U.N. peacekeeping force, which patrolled a buffer zone between the Egyptian and Israeli armies in the Sinai.
“It is high time that our country rejoined the international community by sending troops to assist those peoples unfortunate enough to be caught up in conflicts,” said Miobor Stosic, who served as a junior officer in the U.N. force in Sinai during the 1967 Arab-Israeli war.
But it remains unlikely that Serbia will join most of its European neighbors in committing troops to the NATO mission in Afghanistan.
“Despite the constant improvement in ties … membership in NATO still stirs too many passions and is therefore a distant prospect,” said Mirjana Vasovic, a lecturer in political science at Belgrade University.
Tim Judah, a London-based Balkan analyst and author, said it was important for Serbia to be seen as “a security provider, rather than a security consumer.”
“The tragedy is that in a way it’s back to the future for Serbia, because the Yugoslav military were quite big providers of peacekeeping troops,” he said. “It’s a modest return to where the country was before.”
January 16, 2011
Associated Press
Associated Press Writer Menelaos Hadjicostis in Nicosia, Cyprus, and Dusan Stojanovic in Belgrade contributed to this report.
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