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| Rexhep Qosja The Albanian question IntraText CT - Text |
The geopolitical and strategic aspects of the Albanian question
The Albanian question is a matter of substantial geopolitical and strategic
interest with regard to territory. For some parties, Kosovo was of greater
interest in the past than it is in the present, whereas for others it will be
of greater interest in the future than it was in the past.
Looking at ethnic maps which have been published in various
books and periodicals in Europe and the United States over the past few years,
serving to elucidate the ethnic structure of the Balkans, one gets a feeling
for the geopolitical and strategic significance of the peninsula in the years
to come, and for the role which the Albanian question will play in any possible
geopolitical constellation.
The Albanians have always been strongly influenced by their
geopolitical position. The lands they have inhabited since ancient times have
been crossroads for the Great Powers - the Great Powers of the West as well as
the Great Powers of the Orient. It is also here that the great cultures of the
Middle Ages met and intertwined: Roman Catholicism, Byzantine Orthodoxy and
Sunni Islam. Nolens volens, the Albanians found themselves in the eye of many a
storm created by the Great Powers and, more often then not, misfortune was
their lot.
Because of their geostrategic position at various moments of
history, the Albanians have been regarded by the Great Powers as a people
capable of playing various geopolitical roles. Up to the end of the Middle
Ages, for instance, the Albanians were regarded as a barrier to the penetration
of Islam. And because over the centuries, more than half of them converted to
Islam, they were regarded by the East as a barrier to the penetration of
Christian interests in the Balkans. Since there are Albanians of all three
faiths, however, they were never willing or able to play one of these
essentially religious roles exclusively. Subsequently, in the modern age,
because they inhabited territories of geopolitical and geostrategic importance
to the three great geopolitical powers - the Ottoman Empire, the
Austro-Hungarian monarchy and the Russian Empire - the Albanians (and other
Balkan peoples) were assigned other historical functions by the Great Powers of
Europe: sometimes religious, sometimes ethnic and sometimes ideological. Austria-Hungary,
Italy and Germany hoped that the Albanians would create a barrier to the spread
of the southern Slavs, who seemed uncontainable, in particular in view of
support from another of the Great Powers, Russia. But the Albanians did not
play the role to which they were assigned, and Serbia and Montenegro were able
to penetrate deep into the southeast Balkans. On the one hand, no Albanian
national elite could be found to play the game for the Great Powers in the
Eastern Crisis, but more importantly, these same powers sacrificed Albanian
interests to what they regarded as the loftier interests of their own states.
Later, from the First World War onwards, England and the
United States hoped that the Albanians would play the role of a barrier to the
spread of communism. But once again, the Albanians did not play the role they
were supposed to. Not only did they not form a barrier to the spread of
communism, they used all their energy to fling open the gates and windows of
their lonely stone mansions to the aggressive and impoverishing designs that
ideology.
Why?
During the First World War, the Albanians had hoped for
assistance from the Western powers for a just solution to their national
question. But in vain. None of the Powers showed any such willingness. Italy,
for instance, had territorial ambitions of its own on the Albanian coast,
ambitions that would soon spread to all Albanian territory. In 1939,
Mussolini's Italy occupied Albania, and the Western Powers did not even
consider it necessary to react to this aggression as they did to the other
aggressive moves of the Fascists and Nazis at the time.
During the course of the Second World War, the Western
Powers, England and the United States, made no promises to nationalist forces
in Albania that they would help them solve the greatest of their problems, i.e.
the national question. On the contrary, from the memoirs of British officer
Reginald Hibbert who was in Albania from 1943 to 1944, memoirs published in a
book with a telling title: Albania's national liberation struggle, The
bitter victory, it is clear that England gave its wholehearted support to
the territorial integrity of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, i.e. to maintaining the
status quo in the Balkans. This meant that Kosovo and other Albanian
territories were to remain under Slav rule. In short, for British foreign
policy the Albanian question did not exist.
Ignored by the West, many Albanians turned their attention
in another direction. The fact that half of the Albanian people and almost half
of their territory were under Serbian and Montenegrin domination created an
illusion for many Albanians who were strongly influenced by communist ideology
and politics: that this ideology could bring about a solution to the national
question which, after the inevitable defeat of Italy and Germany, had become
just as acute as it had been before the war. It was indeed this illusion,
created at a time of desperation for the West, which facilitated Albania's
inclusion in the communist alliance between Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union, an
event which was to have tragic consequences for the nation and for the
political, economic and intellectual life of the Albanian people. The
consequences of this ideological alliance, from which the Albanians would only
free themselves half a century later when communism finally faded into the
annals of European history, are evident to anyone visiting Albanian territory.
The ruins of communism are obvious, as are the systematic impoverishment of a
people divided into several countries and the brutal and systematic violations
of human rights and basic freedoms.
In their history up to the present day, the Albanians can
thus be seen in various geopolitical roles, as part of international political
alliances cut out for them and as part of international political alliances not
cut out for them. They acquiesced willingly to some of these alliances, whereas
others were imposed upon them against their will. Politics in the Balkans have
always been like this. They have often made use of the Albanians, and of other
Balkan peoples. But what of the present situation? A new world order is
presently being created and, if this can be accomplished without war as in the
past, but rather by peaceful democratic means, one could hope that the age of
unwanted geopolitical alliances is over. And yet, such geopolitical
constellations still exist in the Balkans. And quite logically so, because
Balkan issues have never been dealt with or resolved without the assistance of
powers from outside the Balkans. The small nations of the Balkan peninsula and
small nations elsewhere on earth are well aware that their interests cannot be
realized and will never be able to be realized without the help of an alliance
with some European or global power.
Western analysts have suggested that three political
alliances may arise in southeastern Europe now that Yugoslavia has collapsed.
The first of these would be a sort of re-creation of Austria-Hungary, i.e.
Austria, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia and Croatia. The
second would be Greece, rump Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro), Romania and
Bulgaria, and the third would be Turkey, Albania, Moslem Bosnia (following the
division of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina into three parts), and the Islamic
communities of Macedonia, Bulgaria, Montenegro and Serbia. Aside from
historical and cultural traditions and economic links, the uniting factor,
indeed the decisive factor in these alliances, is religion.
Serbia has shown the most interest in such a religious
alliance recently. Even though no open political alliance has been created as
yet, a cultural alliance already exists, uniting Russia, Georgia, Armenia,
Belarus, Greece, Bulgaria, Romania and Montenegro. This is not the only
indication in our era, in which cold war and the division of the globe into
ideological blocs has been overcome, that there exist political forces and
indeed countries which long to return to the logic of blocs and divisions along
religious lines. During his visit to Italy, the leader of the Russian Liberal
Democratic Party, Vladimir Zhirinovsky, declared that one of his greatest
political ambitions was to create a federation of Slavic peoples of one blood.
Their capitals would be Moscow, Warsaw, Sofia and Belgrade.
Although Albania has joined the conference of Islamic
states, the Albanians cannot seriously take part in any alliance based on
religion. They are themselves divided into three religious groups and any such
alliance would only cause friction within the country.
The Albanian people have their roots in Western
civilization. Considering the harm that has been done to them by the alliances
which have been formed in the Balkans and in Europe over the last two
centuries, it is understandable that they now prefer a world without alliances
and blocs. Such alliances can only serve to hinder contemporary achievements,
such as the process of European integration.
A united Europe of free and equal European peoples is the
only alliance in which the legitimate rights of the divided Albanian people can
be realized.
Regardless of what the future may bring to Balkan politics
and regardless of whether this future will be compatible with a new and just
world order or a new world disorder dominated by force, the Albanian coastline
will continue to be of strategic interest. As in the past, whoever controls
this coastline can easily control the Adriatic. And it is obvious that whoever
controls the Adriatic will find it easier to control the Mediterranean. This
was Albania's misfortune in the past. Whether things have changed remains to be
seen.