Is this the end for Milosevic?By Massimo Calabresi/Skopje
June 14, 1999
Web posted at: 12:00 p.m. EDT (1600 GMT)
To hear Slobodan Milosevic tell it, his surrender to NATO was
the happy ending to a fairy tale. Appearing before his
bombed-out, beleaguered nation on TV last Thursday, he said,
"The aggression ended. Peace prevailed. Dear citizens, happy
peace to us all!" It's hard to know how any rational Serb could
stand it. After starting and losing four wars in eight years,
Milosevic was calling on his people to rejoice. Some bought it,
singing along to the government tune. But once the Serbs wake up
from their agitprop reverie, they will discover a country in
ruins. Some were already awakening: "It's clear now that
Milosevic is selling one by one pieces of [Serbian] territory,"
said Ruza Radovanovic, 57, who weathered the bombing in her
Belgrade home.
So does this spell the end for "the Butcher of the Balkans"? It's
unlikely, at least in the short term. Nobody holds on to power as
mercilessly as Milosevic. In the dictator's best-case scenario,
he can hope for continuing control, thanks to a paucity of
opponents and the postwar inertia of a beaten population. But if
there are uprisings against him at home, he is more than ready to
crush them. And while his indictment by the Hague war-crimes
tribunal means he can't hope for a cushy retirement in any
U.N.-compliant country, there are some nice mountain resorts in
Serbia where he could take up hiking.
Disgruntled Serbs may have other ideas. By bringing the Balkan
wars to Belgrade, Milosevic and his wife Mira Markovic may have
pushed their people too far. In their hearts, many Serbs secretly
hope Milosevic will go the way of his brutal Romanian neighbor,
Nicolae Ceausescu, who was overthrown and executed in 1989. For
many in the Balkans, that ending is the only happy one for this
miserable fairy tale gone bad.
--Reported by Gillian
Sandford/Pristina
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Cover Date: June 21, 1999
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