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The
View from Bulgaria: A Big Chance for a Tiny Country
Atanas
Krussteff
Sarafovo
is a small village on the Black Sea coastline famous for
its beautiful sand beaches. It is also noteworthy
because it is one of two Bulgarian seaside resorts
possessing its own airport--which has been placed at the
disposal of the United States.
One can find young mothers pushing baby carriages
at the gates of the closed airport, who claim to be
nonpolitical, but who see this base as a possible threat
for babies and to the forthcoming tourist season, which
is the major source of income for the village.
However,
this picture is totally different in the rest of
Bulgaria. Bulgarians watch with some suspicion the wave
of pacifism sweeping the globe, comparing it with
memories that are still fresh of a similar sort of
propaganda they experienced during the period of
communist rule. Bulgarians,
of course, do not support war in principle--the Balkans
have had enough experience of the negative consequences
of war—but Bulgarians are also more realistic as to
what a dictator like Saddam really means and about the
possible ways to remove him from power.
So
Bulgaria finds itself "enlisted" as a
"hawk" along with several close U.S. allies,
and this official foreign policy line is not openly
rejected by Bulgarianpublic opinion.
Yet under the surface of an overwhelming media
campaign in favor of U.S. action there is some disquiet
among the populace. The country is tired after a decade of regional wars which
helped to impoverish the economy even more than corrupt
politicians.
But, if Bulgaria suffered enormous losses as the
consequences from the first Gulf War, now it looks
forward to some recuperation.
It also assumes that strong support for the U.S.
position will help to bring greater stability to the
region.
September
11 gave additional impetus to the notion that passive
democracy looks like feeble democracy.
So, the debate in Bulgaria on whether to support
the United States or "old Europe" (as labeled
by Donald Rumsfeld put it) is influenced primarily by
the calculus that while America deserves moral support,
France and Germany might somehow harm Bulgaria's
accession to the European Union.
At least, this is how it seems so to me.
It
appears that the historically pro-American right-wing
opposition is keeping quiet at this point, while the
left is feeling cut adrift within the "European
space" and are stumbling. The "Vilnius
Ten" creates a counterbalancing pro-American front
within Europe, and the lack of any serious threats of
retaliation on the part of "old Europe" has
deterred the socialists from taking a more active stance
vis-a-vis the United States--they prefer a slow,
incremental approach. (Within the last few months, for example, the president of
Bulgaria has had three personal meetings with Russian
President Vladimir Putin, accompanied by demonstrations
of extraordinary warmth.
Putin's visit coincided with our national holiday
(March 3rd) which marks the date of the San Stefano
treaty between Russia and Turkey that led to the
independence of the modern Bulgarian state.
Yet, this line cannot distract the gaze of the
majority which lies westward.)
So,
Bulgarians, as well as the rest of "new
Europe" place a great prize on peace but not as
unconditionally as it appears "old Europe"
does. This
does not mean that Bulgarians are somehow unconcerned
about the evil consquences of war.
Such concerns manifested themselves in 1999
during the NATO action in Kosovo, which initially was
very negatively received in Bulgaria.
Yet, as military action proceeded against
Yugoslavia, public opinion went slowly in a different
direction, from extreme anti-NATO sentiment to a
moderate acceptance that the war was a necessary price
to "unstop" Bulgaria's western borders and
restore overland connections to the rest of Europe.
Today, we find antiwar feelings awoken (with
great effort) mostly with fantasmagoric threats of
possible Iraqi and Islamic terrorism. But such threats
actually help to solidify the choice for war by
providing the basis for action. An unbalanced statement
of the Iraqi ambassador in Bulgaria who warned that U.S.
bases all over the world (meaning Sarafovo as well) are
possible targets of Iraqi retribution actually racheted
up anti-Iraqi feelings, rather than generating antiwar
sentiment.
There
is another factor for the quiescence of Bulgarian public
opinion, which is important to note in order to complete
the landscape. Bulgarians are sceptical about the weight
their will has in current policy-making. In a country
with an entirely proportional electoral system and no
real forms of direct democracy people “unload” all
their political power with the single (and usually
negative) vote at election time.
So,
the behavior of the Bulgarian representatives at the
United Nations (in expressing support for the United
States) does not seem in any event an externally
controlled action. The Bulgarian UN vote--assisted by
the desire for a comfortable "home
front"--could be a measured although adventurous
shortcut to the top of a forthcoming new world order,
especially considering the outcome of the unexpected
development in Turkey (the parliamentary rejection for
American usage of the bases). The Middle East crisis
came as a great inconvenience, coinciding with
Bulgarian Security Council membership. Yet, it
seems also a rare temptation for a tiny country.
The
author is a lawyer and and the director of the European
Law Centre in Sofia, Bulgaria.
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