THE AUTHORS:



Mirjana Maleska,
Denko Maleski,
Macedonia
Macedonia's Road to the European Union
I.
A decade and a half after declaring independence in 1991, the Republic of Macedonia is a candidate for membership to the European Union.1 Measured solely through financial, economical or cultural criteria, the EU could very well place Macedonia together with the other countries of the Western Balkans "on hold" for quite some time. That is why the decision of the European Union to grant Macedonia a candidate status is an act of vision on part of its political leadership. Namely, the admission of the countries of the Western Balkans will mean further implementation of the idea of an integrated Europe, a peace-plan contemplated, for a long time, by distinguished Europeans that became a way of controlling malignant European nationalisms causing two wars and the tragedy of the holocaust in the twentieth century. After the last Balkan wars, European integration became essential for the stability and the progress of the Balkan region and the European continent as a whole.
The contemporary Macedonian state was established at the end of the Second World War, as part of the federal project of six constitutive states of the Yugoslav federation. Thus, apart from Serbs, Croats, Slovenians, Montenegrins and the peoples of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Macedonians acquired their own nation-state. This nation-state was the result of the fight of the Macedonian partisan movement that was part of the Yugoslav and the global anti-fascist coalition. Established in 1944, the concept of the state was inspired by the Western European state model and its territorial logic: one nation, one culture, one history, one state Thus, the synonym of a mixture of national entities from precedent centuries, - macedoine des fruits, was proclaimed a national state of the Macedonian people. Other groups in the historic Macedonian ethnic mosaic, the Albanians, the Turks, the Romas, the Vlachs and the Serbs, acquired the status of national minorities. In conditions of a one-party dictatorship dominated by ethnic Macedonians, but also of extreme poverty, the center of power prescribed the allowed dose of freedom and proclaimed public priorities. Among them were, the codification of a Macedonian standard language and the creation of conditions for development of the young Macedonian culture. The political and cultural framework designed by ethnic Macedonians in 1944, persisted for 46 years, when in conditions of democracy and a break-down of the regional balance of power, it was challenged by Albanian nationalism.
Macedonia's road to the EU has been a difficult one. Never wavering from its initial strategic foreign policy aim formulated in 1991 – membership in the EU, the Republic of Macedonia, however, had to surmount serious internal and external obstacles in order to survive and to move towards its goal. Internally, while most of the other countries of Eastern Europe had to make one transition – from communism and dictatorship to capitalism and democracy, Macedonia had two additional transitions – from war to peace and from a nation-state to a multinational state. Externally, Macedonia's historically contested nationality and territory put the fledgling state to serious tests in the relations with its neighbors.
Through the political turmoil that engulfed the Yugoslav federation at the beginning of the 1990', Macedonia was successfully guided by the principle of peaceful self-determination. This policy of non-violence was primarily the product of the moderate approach of resolving external and domestic issues of the government of President Kiro Gligorov, but also of the absence of basic military power of the new state. The policy, supported by the EU and the USA, proved its worth: Macedonia was the sole member of the federation that achieved its independence peacefully.
But, the withdrawal of the Yugoslav army in 1991, left Macedonia defenseless and since, the EC and the USA had no intention of engaging militarily, the Macedonian government turned to the UN. The idea of the first preventive UN mission, born in Skopje, was taken to the UN where it received support. Soon, soldiers from Scandinavia, to be followed by those of other countries, planted outlook-posts on the borders of Macedonia. Even America, who takes seriously the advice of its realists not to get entangled in the affairs of small states, sent a small contingent of soldiers under the UN flag.
How did Macedonia's neighbors behave? Towards the new state that proclaimed independence in 1991 Greece sent clear signals of animosity, similar to the ones of declaring war. The name, the flag, and articles of the Constitution were contested by Greece, a member of the EC and NATO. 1.5 million people marched in the streets of Athens and Thessalonika with the slogan "Macedonia is Greek", Greek military aircraft intruded into the country's airspace followed by blockades on the borders...Yet, there was no military intervention. Greece even refused Miloshevic's idea to partition Macedonia, marginalized the extreme nationalists in its government and very slowly turned towards a more moderate foreign policy course. The irredentist aims of the Bulgarian foreign policy towards Macedonia that dominated in the past, were surprisingly weak, while the Albanian state, expressing "care" for the position of the Albanian minority, nevertheless, sent a message to the Albanians in Macedonia to find common solutions for their problems with ethnic Macedonians.
Weiner's model, the "Macedonian syndrome"2, did not, in the case of Macedonia, produce a regional war. Namely, not a single neighbor invaded the defenseless country - the reason being that nationalistic projects did not have the support of the big powers, while membership in the EU and NATO was their top priority. In fact, both the US and the EU, with "carrots" and "sticks", forced the Balkan states to accept the principle of the inviolability of borders, in a region where state borders do not follow ethnic ones but cut across them, giving it advantage over the principle of self-determination.
II
After the declaration of independence 1991, Macedonia's new democratic pluralist political system had to be reinvented. It was essential for future stability that representatives of all the ethnic communities participate in laying the constitutional foundations of the democratic state. But in the chained chaos of the dissolution of Yugoslavia, fear and suspicion dominated the behavior of the representatives of the parties as representatives of their respective ethnic groups. The Constitutional system, written and voted by ethnic Macedonians in parliament, did not have protective mechanisms for minorities as collectives, so politics could not absorb their requests and translate them into state policy. In such conditions, nationalism, not democracy, became “the only game in town” with anger and mutual intolerance growing by the day. Macedonia was on the road to ethnic conflict. It was only a matter of time when Macedonian nationalism would be challenged by Albanian nationalism. The disapproval of the Albanians with their social status and the inability of the political structure to carry out economic and democratic reforms through a process of peaceful accommodation with the Albanian ethnic group, as well corruption of the political institutions and the judiciary became generators of conflict.
What
are
the lessons
learned?
The
political
literature
that
in this
last
decade
studies
the
experience
of the
twenty-two
states
that
emerged
after
the
break-up
of the
Soviet
Union,
Yugoslavia
and
Czechoslovakia,
come
to useful
general
conclusions.
One
of them
is that
an inadequate
strategy
of building
a state
and
building
a nation
in conditions
of democracy
can
position
the
whole
society
on wrong
tracks.
Juan
Linz
and
Alfred
Stepan,
long-time
researchers
of democracies
in the
world,
created
a useful
scheme
for
the relations
between
the
state,
the
nation
(or
nations)
and
democracy.
The
choice
of strategy
of building
a state
and
building
a nation
in conditions
of democracy,
they
conclude,
depends
on the
specific
situation
of the
state.
The
situation
itself
depends
on the
degree
of presence
of other
nations
besides
the
titular
nation
on the
territory
of the
state.
Thus,
the
first
situation:
if there
is no
other
nation
it is
easy
to consolidate
the
democratic
nation-state,
with
a decision-making
system
based
on the
majority
principle.
Second
situation:
if on
the
territory
of the
state,
besides
the
titular
nation
there
is another
nation,
it is
possible
to create
a democratic
nation–state
if the
other
nation
is not
nationally
awakened.
Third
situation:
if the
other
nation
is nationally
awakened
that
creates
conflicts,
making
democracy
difficult,
although
not impossible.
Democratic
consolidation
is possible
only
if the
political
system
is carefully
planned,
and the
state
moves
towards
a multinational
state.
Fourth
situation:
when
besides
the titular
nation
there
is another
nation
which
is militant,
it generates
so much
conflict
or repression,
that
democratic
consolidation
is highly
improbable.
Namely,
this
state
will
be under
strong
pressure
for territorial
division,
especially
if a
territorial
demarcation
between
the ethnic
groups
is possible.3
The
Macedonian
situation
in 1991,
is situation
number
three.
Still,
the
constitution
of 1991
chose
situation
number
one,
putting
Macedonia
on the
wrong
track
of democratic
transition.
Of course,
one
can find
many
justifications
and
the list
could
be headed
by fear
for
the state's
survival
under
attack
from
raging
nationalisms
that
tore
apart
the
Yugoslav
Federation
along
ethnic
lines.
But,
by choosing
the
wrong
strategy,
Macedonia,
ten
years
later,
ended
up a
step
lower
in the
mentioned
list
of situations–
with
a militant
Albanian
nation,
with
a military
conflict
and
with
demands
for
division
along
ethnic
lines.
Democracy,
many
were
convinced,
would
resolve
future
conflicts
between
the
two
ethnic
groups.
But,
in
the
decade
after
the
proclamation
of
the
Constitution
yet
another
theses
in
politics
was
confirmed
–
that
in
conditions
of
freedom,
a
just
solution
of
the
relation
“polis-demos”
or
“state-people”
should
precede
the
shaping
of
the
democratic
institutions.
Namely,
a
democratic
state
is
possible
only
if
loyalty
of
all
its
composing
elements.
In
the
case
of
Macedonia,
in
order
to
pass
the
Constitution
with
the
support
of
the
Albanians
in
Parliament,
an
exquisitely
difficult
task
had
to
be
fulfilled
–
the
construction
of
a
rightful
relation
between
the
state
and
its
nations!
In
order
to
do
that,
an
agreement
between
the
“demoi”
was
essential,
which
however,
was
not
reached
in
1991.
This
deficiency
could
not
be
surpassed
with
“democracy”,
because,
as
Robert
Dahl,
another
authority
in
democracy
studies,
warns:
“the
criteria
of
the
democratic
process
presupposes
the
rightfulness
of
the
unit
itself…
since
it
can
not
be
made
rightful
simply
by
democratic
procedures”.4
Under
international
pressure
and
with
the
help
of NATO
and
the
EU,
the
military
conflict
was
brought
to a
halt,
and
Macedonia
was
forced
to abandon
the
constitutional
architecture
of 1991.
The
Ohrid
Agreement
positioned
the
Macedonian
state
on the
right
track
that
leads
towards
a multiethnic
state.Consensual
democracy
lay
in
the
foundation
of the
new
strategy,
in the
shape
of a
combination
of political
liberalism,
based
on the
individual
rights
and
the
collective
rights
of the
nations.
The Ohrid Peace Agreement is a compromise: Macedonia remains a unitary state (“there are no territorial solutions for the ethnic conflicts”, states the Agreement) but power is shared with ethnic Albanians through several mechanisms: a proportional electoral model that enhances Albanian representation in parliament (27 of 120 MP); a new decentralized local-self government and the creation of municipalities where they are in majority; a right of veto in Parliament over several important issues; Albanian language as a second official language; equitable representation of the minorities in public administration, the police , the army and in the judiciary; the creation of two Albanian universities.
The implementation of the Ohrid Framework Agreement is a difficult process, since the majority is inevitably the one that will have to give up some privileges in a very difficult time. With record unemployment, Macedonia became the European “leader” with almost 40% jobless and a very low level of investments; growing poverty; a weak service in the public sphere (especially in health protection); an inefficient judiciary system; corruption; an underdeveloped system of protection of human rights; and a deficit in the democratic capacity of the state to deal with the problems. The intensity of these serious problems and their continuation makes for the inability of the institutions to establish conditions for the rule of Law, which erodes the legitimacy of political authority. Under such circumstances, the problem of political confidence between ethnic groups has become sharper.
III
Post-Ohrid Macedonian society is on the right track. Constitutional foundations for inter-ethnic stability have created a positive climate for further economic and political development. Reforms in the military have brought the country closer to NATO membership, together with the other two members of the Adriatic group, Croatia and Albania. The expansion of the Western military alliance to the region will, in time, resolve the "security dilemma", creating conditions for economic development and membership in the EU. Fifteen years after the breakdown of the Yugoslav federation, the process of creating new territorial entities is coming to a close. Kosovo will be the last piece of the new mosaic of states created by war and peaceful self-determination. But the end of the process of fragmentation of the region into seven states will have to be followed by the beginning of a process of integration through the creation of a customs union. With the assistance of EU, the Balkan region that amounts to 2% of the economic power of the Union, could easily be absorbed by this pan-European plan. This will liberate the economic potentials that are confined to small and, for foreign investors, unattractive markets. It could, undoughtedly have a positive influence on political stability as well.
But, Macedonia will be very sensitive to future developments in neighboring Kosovo. The creation of the new state, with predominantly Albanian population, together with the state of Albania and post-Ohrid multiethnic Macedonia, will be a strong boost to the restoration of the dignity of that nation, but also to possible rise of radicalism. Of course, this might not be the end of multiethnic Macedonia, as Kissinger predicted a few years back, but it could have a serious effect on the country's internal stability. Namely, nationalism, even though under control, is still very much alive in the Balkans. The support that all nationalists give to the processes of integration originates from their, very specific, interpretation of the European idea: borders will disappear and a "spiritual unification " among the divided nations will emerge, meaning that Balkan nations will achieve their nations' goals with the help of an idea that is attempting to create a new European identity.
True, "spiritual union" in a cultural sense could be achieved in a "Balkan without borders", but what will be the political implications of this process? The EU is not a substitution to the state, at least not for the near future. Thus, what are needed in the Balkans today are functioning democracies, capable of commanding the loyalty of all their citizens, regardless of ethnic origin. A multiethnic state such as Macedonia will have a hard time to maintain successfully its internal ethnic balance if caught by a wave of Albanian radicalism. So will moderate Albanians in Macedonia and the Balkans as a whole, who could fall in the gap created between a slow and arduous democratic process of economic and cultural emancipation, and the call of radicals for fast solutions of the "national question", possibly combined with manifestations of " Islamic radicalism".
IV
Macedonia' s divided society is united around a single idea today - the idea of European integration. Of course, there is a lot of simplification and idealism; yet, all the political segments see the country's future in an integrated Europe. The gradual process of reshaping the Macedonian state that has begun with the Ohrid Agreement was the result of a European-led multilateral intervention. With the help of the European Union whose top officials and institutions committed their resources and credibility in containing the crisis of 2001, Macedonia's recovery was a major achievement. Now that questions concerning emotional issues of national identity and their articulation through the institutions of the political system have been resolved, new problems arise. At the heart of the "revolution of great expectations" for members of all ethnic communities lies a yearning for better life. People, especially the young generations graduating from universities, including the two in Albanian language, expect a job and a better life for themselves and their families. If the state improves its performance in the economic field and creates opportunities there will be stability. There are many positive signs that things are also moving in the right direction in the economy. This trend should continue with the assistance of the Union, an organization that has experience in dealing with stagnant economies and poverty. Because, in the near future, economic issues might turn into dangerous interethnic quarrels that could cause further separation of the ethnic communities destabilizing the state and the region.
The huge costs of ending the wars in Yugoslavia, and reconstructing the devastated economies taught us that timely intervention is essential. In the case of Macedonia the EU, together with the USA and NATO, demonstrated that lessons have been learned from the wars in Bosnia. Their timely intervention in Macedonia prevented what was to be a full-blown civil war. Now the country must move away from this abyss, by developing its economy, yet again with the support of the European Union. So must the Balkans as a whole. That is why the idea of a Balkan integrated into the Union by the time of the hundredth anniversary of the other Balkan wars of 1912 - 1913, is a goal worth fighting for.
Mirjana Maleska, Ph.D. Professor at South-European University, Tetovo
Denko Maleski, Ph.D. Professor at Law School, Skopje
ENDNOTES
1 Area 25.713 km?; population, 2.054.800(78.7 inhabitants per km?); 59,8 is urban population while 40,2% is rural population (source:SSO-1994 population census).
Macedonia has 151 km border with Albania; 221km border with
Serbia
and
Montenegro;
148kmborder
with
Bulgaria
and
246
km
border
with
Greece
Population
profile:
Macedonian
(64,2%),
Albanian
(25,2%),
Turkish
(3,8%),
Roma
(2,7%),
Serb
(1,8%),
Bosniacs
(0,8%),
Vlachs
(0,5%),
other
(1%)
(
Source:SSO-2002
Census)
Language:
Macedonian,
Albanian,
Turkish
and
others
Religion:
Christian
Orthodox
(70%),
Muslim
(29%),
other
(1%)
(Source:SSO-2002
Census)
2 Back in 1971, the American political scientist Myron Weiner, in an attempt to predict the behavior of the newly independent African states, created a model that he called "the Macedonian syndrome". Built on the experience of Balkan tragedies which ended in wars, the model has several actors: a state which has terrirorial aspirations towards its neighbor on whose territory live their kin as an ethnic minirity (an irredentist state) ; a state that resists the changing of the borders (an anti-irredentist state) ; and a common ethnic group on both sides of the border. ("World Politics 1971) www.newbalkanpolitics.org.mk
3 Juan J. Linz and Alfred Stepan, Problems of Democratic Transition and Consolidation (Southern Europe, South America, and Post-Communist Europe, Baltimore and London, 1996, p.36
4 Robert
A. Dahl,
Democracy
and Its Critics, New
Haven, 1989, p.207

