The Balkans—
Many
Peoples, Many Problems
Other
People’s Business
Tottering Turkey
So far
we have been considering Turkish occupation of the Balkans from the Balkan point
of view. But all the major European states were concerned with the situation.
Throughout
the nineteenth century and on into the twentieth, the great powers of Europe were
faced with a complex series of problems presented by the breakup of the Turkish
Empire—which at that time included Libya, Egypt, Syria, Palestine, and Iraq,
as well as the Balkans. These problems of what to do with outlying Turkish possessions
when Turkey could no longer control them were collectively known as “the
Eastern Question.”
Turkey
was called “the sick man of Europe” largely because of the corruption,
inefficiency, and intrigue that characterized Turkish administration and politics.
It was frequently pointed out that “the sick man” never died, although
people kept predicting that he would. Every time that he seemed about to die,
and every time it looked as if the Balkan peoples were about to gain their independence,
something happened to give him a new lease on life.
The
Turks for many centuries ruled almost the whole of the Balkan Peninsula, and a
small part of it, at the extreme eastern corner, is still Turkish. Turkey-in-Europe
is of crucial importance today because it includes the whole European side of
the famous Straits—the Dardanelles, the Sea of Marmara, and the Bosporus—which
connect the Mediterranean and Black Seas.
Because
the Turks have controlled them, because the Russians have traditionally wanted
to control them, and because the British have opposed Russian ambitions, Constantinople
and the Straits—the crossroads of two continents—have always been
a focus of diplomatic and military activity.
Great Power Politics
From
time to time the attitudes of the powers most concerned in Balkan affairs were
revised somewhat, but their basic positions can be summed up in this way:
Imperial
Austria, ruled by the
Hapsburg family, was a Roman Catholic state dating back to the Middle Ages. Over
the centuries the Hapsburgs had acquired through marriage and treaty many lands
in central Europe. Vienna, one of the great capitals of Europe, was the center
of a cosmopolitan empire which included Austrians, Hungarians, Czechs, Slovaks,
many Italians, many Poles, and some Romanians. In the Balkans the Hapsburgs ruled
the Croats and Slovenes among the South Slavs.
Most
of this sprawling assortment of peoples were never satisfied with Austrian rule.
But only the Magyars, or Hungarians, were powerful and stubborn and numerous enough
to gain any degree of autonomy. Hungary became a partner in the Austrian Empire
and, as the junior half of Austria-Hungary, continued to rule tyrannically over
the Croats.
Austro-Hungarian
dominion over the Slovenes and Croats brought the Hapsburg Empire right up against
the Turkish Empire in the Balkans. For centuries after the Balkans fell to Turkey,
Austria stood off Turkish military expansion and always stopped it short of Vienna.
Though Hapsburg emperors coveted the sultan’s Balkan lands, they were perhaps
just as concerned lest his Slavic subjects, especially the Serbs, gain their independence.
For if the Serbs should get freedom from the Turks, the Hapsburgs reasoned, the
other Slavs within their own empire—Croats, Slovenes, Slovaks, Czechs, and
Poles—might agitate for it too and the whole Hapsburg structure would fall
apart.
Russia
under the czars was an imperialist and
expansionist state which desired to control its only outlet to the Mediterranean
and wanted a chance to challenge British supremacy in India. The Straits were
the key to the fulfillment of these wishes. And the independence of the Balkan
peoples was the key to the Straits. Moreover, Russia as the foremost Slavic and
Orthodox state had two excuses for intervention in the Balkans. Russia regarded
itself both as the protector of the Balkan Orthodox Christians and as the elder
brother or uncle of the Slavic Serbs, Montenegrins, and Bulgarians. Sometimes
Russia openly advocated Pan-Slavism—the union of all the Slav peoples under
Russian leadership.
Thus
it was to Russia’s interest to free the Balkan Slavs. It was to Austria’s
interest to keep them under the Turks or to annex them herself—but not to
let them become free. This made the two countries suspicious of each other and
they continually worked at cross purposes in the Balkans.
Great
Britain, well into
the 1900’s, was anxious to keep Russia out of the Mediterranean and to prevent
the Russians from offering any serious threat to the Empire. This put Britain
in the curious position of having to oppose the liberation of the Balkan peoples,
because their independence was Russia’s means of getting into the Mediterranean.
So Britain, over the protests of many liberal Englishmen, generally supported
Turkey and tried to keep “the sick man” at least well enough to maintain
his control over the Straits. It was principally Britain, sometimes with the help
of France, who helped him to keep alive long after his time.
Italy
too is closely linked to the Balkans.
The merchant-warriors of Venice once possessed a whole series of trading posts
and ports along the Balkan coasts. Fascist Italy, with its ambition to build again
the ancient Roman Empire, has looked greedily across the Adriatic to the Balkans.
Even before Mussolini, when the Allies in the first World War were anxious to
get Italian help, they promised Italy territory on the Balkan side of the Adriatic—land
then belonging to Austria-Hungary, but inhabited by Yugoslavs. The
Allies did not keep their promises in full, but Italy was given a lot of Yugoslavs
to rule. In this war she got even more, and kept them until Mussolini’s
regime collapsed.
Germany has invaded the Balkans twice in a
generation. A highly industrialized country. Germany has been in search of food
surpluses, raw materials, and markets. A highly aggressive country, it has felt
the urge to conquer and seek “laving space” in eastern Europe. In
several of the Balkan countries there are German minorities, who, according to
Hitler’s racial theories, belong to Germany.
When
you consider that the wretchedly poor Balkan farmer, under Turkish oppression,
was the pawn in an international game where the players were the heavily armed,
rich, and independent powers of Europe, you will see the truth in the saying:
If the Balkans are the powder keg of Europe, it is the great powers who supply
the powder.
Two Wars in the Balkans
We
have already seen that by the 1880’s the Greeks, Romanians, Serbs, and Bulgarians,
but not the Albanians, had succeeded in varying degree in winning independence,
Nationalist ideas had spread all over Europe after the French Revolution, and
were nowhere more eagerly received than in the Balkans. When the Balkan peoples
had won some of their territory for themselves, they naturally wanted to liberate
the rest of their compatriots still under the yoke. But Turkey still held Albania,
Macedonia—where Greeks, Serbs, and Bulgars lived—and Thrace (the northern
shores of, the Aegean).
In
1912 Montenegro, Serbia, Bulgaria, and Greece declared war on the Turks and drove
them back to the Straits. Serbia and Bulgaria had agreed beforehand on the division
of the territory to he conquered. Bulgaria was to get a large part of Macedonia,
and Serbia was scheduled to get northern Albania and an outlet on the Adriatic.
Naturally
the Austrians were alarmed at this projected expansion of Serbia, and so were
the Italians, who wanted a chance to exploit Albania. So the great powers got
together and in a typical refusal to let the Balkan peoples work out their own
destiny, created an independent Albania. Thus deprived of most of her gains, Serbia
then wanted to discuss with Bulgaria the possibility of readjusting the division
of Macedonia. Much of this region had been captured and was still being held by
the Serbian army.
The
Bulgarians, however, attacked the Serbs and their Greek allies without warning
in June 1913. Some people believe they had been urged on to do this by the Austrians.
While the Serbs and Greeks were repelling the attack and driving the Bulgars back,
the Romanians and even the Turks joined in the war against Bulgaria. Unequal to
this coalition, Bulgaria was quickly beaten. Serbia and Greece divided most of
the disputed area, and Romania and Turkey also acquired some territory from Bulgaria.
Thus in 1913, after the two Balkan Wars, Serbia was powerful and confident, Bulgaria
weak and embittered.
Sparking the First World Explosion
The very next year, World
War I, which was to cost so many millions of lives and to drag in all the powerful
nations of the world, started in the Balkans.
Once
the Turks had been driven out, Serbia’s main enemy was Austria. Already
ruler over the Slovenes and Croats, and. jealous of every Serb step toward power,
the Austrians had in 1908 annexed from Turkey the provinces of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
They were largely Serb in population and Serbia wanted them herself. On June 28,
1914, the Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the Hapsburg throne, and his wife
were shot and killed in Sarajevo, the capital of Bosnia.
The
occasion of his visit, a review of Austrian troops, was timed to fall on the Serb
national holiday. It seemed, at least to the Serbs, that he had gone out of his
way to insult them. It seemed to the Austrians that the Serb government was to
blame.
The assassin
was a student who was connected with a Serb secret society. This group, whose
head was also the chief of military intelligence in the Serb army, believed in
political assassination as a means to gain its ends. It is now thought probable
that the Serbian premier, Pashich, knew of the plot in advance, and some believe
that although he sent a warning, he did not do all he might have done to stop
it.
The Powder Catches
At
any rate, Austria presented a harsh ultimatum. The Serbian government gave in
to all but the most extreme demands. But Austria, determined to fight Serbia and
punish her once and for all, declared war just the same. The Germans gave the
Austrians full promise of help. The Russians had encouraged the Serbs to stand
up to the Austrians. The Austrians thought the Russians would back down. The Russians
mobilized. France backed Russia. Germany attacked France through Belgium. Britain,
as the ally of France and Russia, came in against Germany and Austria.
For
years the powers with their system of alliances, which divided Europe into two
armed camps, had been getting ready for this war by engaging in armament and naval
races against each other. They had poured the powder into the powder keg. And
the assassination at Sarajevo was the spark that touched it off.
The
Serbs fought bravely, but ultimately the country was occupied by Austro-German
troops, and the army retreated in the dead of winter over the Albanian mountains
to the Adriatic. It was re-formed in the Greek island of Corfu, and joined the
Allies in their triumphal march up the Vardar Valley from Salonika in 1918.
In
October 1915 Bulgaria joined the war on the side of Germany and Austria to get
back the Macedonian territory retained by the Serbs in 1913. Greece, against the
will of King Constantine, came in on the Allied side in 1917, as did Romania,
the enemy of the Hungarians.
Aftermath of the War
For
the Balkan countries the most important consequence of the first World War was
the breakup of the Hapsburg Empire. Romania got great areas of former Hungary,
and became the biggest state in southeastern Europe.
Even
more significant, the Croats and Slovenes were freed. Sentiment was strong for
joining the Serbs, and the Italians were eyeing the Dalmatian coast so eagerly
that Croats and Slovenes rushed into union with Serbia and Montenegro.
Their
new state was called at first “Kingdom of the Serbs, the Croats, and the
Slovenes.” Later its name was changed to “Yugoslavia.” The Serb
Karageorgeviches became its royal family. Its capital was the Serb capital, Belgrade.
The majority of its people were Serbs (about 8,000,000 Serbs to 5,000,000 Croats
to 1,500,000 Slovenes in 1941). Its ruling group was largely composed of nationalist
Serb politicians, who looked down on the Croats and Slovenes. Here were the seeds
of trouble.
Although
the Croats hated Austria, they had been accustomed to think of themselves as western
European people. They looked to Vienna and Budapest as their cultural capitals.
Their own capital, Zagreb, was always a center of intellectual life. They tended
to think of the Serbs, who had spent so many years under the Turks, as Oriental
and as nothing but warriors. The Serbs, on the other hand, were proud of their
tradition of rebellion against the Turks and were apt to look upon the Croats
as perhaps a bit too polished. The overwhelming majority of both peoples were
and are poor peasants of the same race who speak the same language. The differences
in alphabet and religion were nevertheless allowed to emphasize the difference
in cultural outlook.
The
real trouble was that no constitutional understanding had been reached in advance
as to what kind of state Yugoslavia would he. The Serbs, being more numerous,
tended to dominate the country. They used taxes paid by the Croats to improve
backward Serb areas and the Croats resented it. Our federal government uses taxes
paid in one state to build a dam in another and nobody thinks anything about it.
That is because the people of the forty-eight states are all conscious of being
Americans and have felt that way for a long time. Many Croats and Serbs had not
yet learned to think of themselves as Yugoslavs at all.
Moreover,
Italy, which always had wanted Yugoslav territory, came under the rule of Mussolini
in 1922. He did everything he could to make Serb-Croat trouble worse. Hungary,
which had lost land to the Yugoslavs, did the same. And for many years Bulgaria
did nothing to call off terrorists in the Yugoslav part of Macedonia who were
agitating for a cession of that region to Bulgaria.
Democracy under
Difficulties
All this led
to the establishment in 1929 of a dictatorship under King Alexander, with all
the trimmings of police terror. Most thoughtful Serbs, as well as Croats and Slovenes,
opposed it, but their opposition had to remain underground. In 1934 a Macedonian
terrorist, believed by some to have been coached by a violent Croat nationalist,
Pavelich, and to have been hired by agents of Mussolini, assassinated King Alexander
at Marseilles in France. Alexander’s cousin, Prince Paul, was made regent
and the dictatorship continued for his son, Prince Peter.
The
world-wide depression, the rise of Hitler, and the apparent inability of the League
of Nations to act effectively, as well as the economic advantages Germany seemed
to offer, helped to draw this Yugoslav dictatorship closer to Berlin. Its peasant-farmer
people dissented.
As
in Yugoslavia so in the neighboring countries democracy had a rapid upsurge at
the end of World War I and then suffered a relapse. Under the influence of Wilsonian
idealism all the Balkan states were enthusiastically committed to democratic institutions
with unrestricted political parties and free elections. But difficulties arising
out of the postwar settlements and bitter feuds rooted in wartime disagreements
contributed to split up the parties into factions and groups.
Parties
and Personalities
In a
two-party system like our own, one party or the other is almost sure to have a
clear majority. But each of the Balkan countries had many parties, sometimes even
ten or twenty. Often they rallied around particular personalities or leaders rather
than principles or platforms. So elections frequently resulted in stalemates when
no party got a working majority and it was only possible to form a government
by making a coalition of several groups—usually short-lived and unsatisfactory.
This
resulted in a succession of weak governments unable to take positive action and
settle urgent problems of the day. Sometimes a faction temporarily in power was
tempted to rig an election or tamper with it in an effort to show a majority.
Balkan
democracy also had to contend with such examples of strong, one-man governments
as those created by Kamal Ataturk in Turkey, by Mussolini in Italy, and later
by Hitler and Franco. Sometimes politicians, but more often dissatisfied army
officers, were led to attempt to overthrow a government and establish a dictatorship.
Democratic processes were subjected more and more to attack and disrespect as
being feeble and inefficient.
In
the meantime, also, acute economic ills, local as well as world-wide, added their
disturbing complications to the general political disease. The unfortunate Balkan
countries, whose peoples longed only for a chance to live and work in peace and
safety, were forced to meet one crisis after another.
Down the Road
to Dictatorship
What happened
in Yugoslavia has already been told.
In
Romania, first King Carol became the dictator with German support, and then General
Antonescu. The Iron Guard, a fascist group helped by Hitler, aping the extreme
Nazis in their racial and nationalist theories, exercised a powerful influence
in the state. In Greece the monarchy was replaced in 1924 by a republic. It had
an unstable career until 1935 when the king was recalled and the monarchy restored.
Within a year the prime minister, General John Metaxas, established a military
dictatorship that lasted until the German invasion in 1941.
In
Bulgaria violence and bloodshed characterized the various regimes. King Boris
skillfully balanced the army, the farmers, the urban classes, and the Macedonian
forces, and became dictator himself. All political parties were abolished in 1934.
In
Albania an energetic tribal chief named Zog became president in 1925, and made
himself king in 1928. As king, he too exercised dictatorial powers until the Italians
conquered his country in 1939.
In
Turkey the sultans were thrown out. All non-Turkish territory was lost. A vigorous
reformer, Kamal Ataturk, built a new nation, stripped of its traditionally corrupt
character. But he too did it with a certain amount of ruthlessness and violence.
He built a modern Turkey, which has tried, on the whole successfully, to overcome
the ancient hatred of her Balkan neighbors, and has renounced all claims and desires
to reconquer them.
Ferment on the Farms
In
the troubled period between the wars, there were at least two developments in
the Balkan countries that seemed to offer hope for the future.
The
first was the rise of agrarian parties and a cooperative movement. In Bulgaria
it was led by Stambuliski, in Yugoslavia by a Croat, Radich. Though both these
men met violent deaths, the work they had started was not seriously interrupted.
In Romania a similar party arose under Julius Maniu, who is still alive. Serb
and Greek peasant or “agrarian” parties developed also.
None
of their leaders was ideal by pure democratic standards. Some of them used the
methods of terror; some were unreliable and even unbalanced. Still, the mere fact
that these men existed and had popular support might in time have meant the substantial
strengthening of democracy, for they aimed at social as well as political democracy.
Improvement of conditions for the small farmer, increase of education, establishment
of cooperatives—all were supported by these men.
They
generally favored abolition of tariffs between their countries, and growing international
understanding with each other. But none of them had power long.
Talking
over Troubles
The second
and most hopeful development was the founding and holding of a series of annual
Balkan conferences. The first meeting in Athens in October 1930 was attended by
unofficial representatives of Yugoslavia, Albania, Greece, Bulgaria, Romania,
and Turkey. The delegates met in a friendly atmosphere for a frank and open exchange
of views on many common problems. Committees were appointed to deal with a great
variety of subjects, political, social, economic, as well as with communications
and intellectual cooperation.
A
second meeting was held in Istanbul in October 1931. Two hundred delegates from
the six states were present and the discussions were again carried out in a spirit
of reconciliation. In the following years a third meeting took place in Bucharest
(1932) and a fourth in Salonika (1933).
Since
these conferences were entirely unofficial and private in character they had no
authority to make treaties and agreements binding on the six countries. But they
brought together many of the leading men of the Balkan states representing all
principal fields of activity, who were able to talk together in a quiet and friendly
way. By beginning with the easier and less controversial questions and proceeding
to the more difficult, they made substantial progress toward mutual understanding.
These conferences established a tradition of Balkan cooperation that held out
much promise for the future.
International
developments in the 1930’s, such as the rise of strong dictatorships, the
loss of authority and prestige by the League of Nations, and the spread of ruthless
aggression, had alarmed the small countries of Europe (as well as large states)
for their own security.
The Balkan Entente
This
fear was felt particularly in the Balkans, and in 1934 an official Balkan pact
was signed by Yugoslavia, Greece, Romania, and Turkey. It was in part the fruit
of the Balkan conferences and in part the outcome of official diplomacy. In brief
it guaranteed the existing Balkan boundaries and obligated the four states to
agree on action in case of war.
Bulgaria
thought it was not possible for her to sign and thereby forever abandon the hope
of bettering her frontiers; Albania was not asked.
Every
effort was made to persuade Bulgaria to join the pact. Finally in 1938 she signed
a treaty of friendship and nonaggression with the four states of the Balkan entente.
It recognized Bulgarian right to rearm and freed her from the limitation of armaments
imposed nearly twenty years earlier after World War I: In return Bulgaria agreed
to submit any disputes with her neighbors to- arbitration and not to
try to modify her frontiers by force of arms.
This
treaty seemed to mark a great step forward toward unity in the Balkans and led
to the hope that other outstanding problems could be solved in a friendly way.
Unfortunately World War II came along the next year to blight the flower in the
bud.
Of course, conditions
in the world outside have also helped to check the progress of democracy in the
Balkans. The Balkan countries, not too sure-footed themselves in democratic practices
on a national scale, fell victims to neighboring dictatorships which flouted democracy
and proclaimed its inefficiency. It is hard to say how much the shadow of Mussolini
and then of Hitler over the Balkans forced abandonment of the democratic practices
still followed in faraway France, Britain, and the United States. Certainly the
former Allies of the first World War were not blameless—in quest of their
own security they left the Balkans largely to the mercy of the Axis.
But
security, many think, is indivisible. Because the world failed to learn that lesson
thoroughly, they say, it is now fighting another war against aggressors whom it
permitted for nearly ten years to ignore the rule of law. Into that war the Balkan
countries have been drawn, though they did not want it or have any part in starting
it.