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From an Islamic point of view, this was nothing new - many similar manifestos were circulating in the Muslim countries - and it was very much in accordance with traditional [[Qur'an]]ic principles. It was also not a programme of [[Islamic fundamentalism]] in a sense that is generally understood by fundamentalists themselves: Izetbegović explicitly accepted [[innovation]] and the "achievements of Euro-American civilization." He spoke approvingly of the high educational and economic standards prevailing in the West and urged that "instead of hating the West, let us proclaim cooperation instead of confrontation." However, his arguments were fundamentally at odds with both the anti-nationalist ideology of Communist Yugoslavia and with the later nationalist sentiment in [[Croatia]] and [[Serbia]], which emphasized both nations' Christian heritage. Islam was widely perceived by non-Bosniak Yugoslavs as an alien influence introduced under the Turkish occupation, so Izetbegović's call for an Islamic revival came to be seen as a threat by many in the countries' Catholic and Orthodox communities. |
From an Islamic point of view, this was nothing new - many similar manifestos were circulating in the Muslim countries - and it was very much in accordance with traditional [[Qur'an]]ic principles. It was also not a programme of [[Islamic fundamentalism]] in a sense that is generally understood by fundamentalists themselves: Izetbegović explicitly accepted [[innovation]] and the "achievements of Euro-American civilization." He spoke approvingly of the high educational and economic standards prevailing in the West and urged that "instead of hating the West, let us proclaim cooperation instead of confrontation." However, his arguments were fundamentally at odds with both the anti-nationalist ideology of Communist Yugoslavia and with the later nationalist sentiment in [[Croatia]] and [[Serbia]], which emphasized both nations' Christian heritage. Islam was widely perceived by non-Bosniak Yugoslavs as an alien influence introduced under the Turkish occupation, so Izetbegović's call for an Islamic revival came to be seen as a threat by many in the countries' Catholic and Orthodox communities. |
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However, many figures outside of the Balkans, including senior members of the [[United States]] [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican Party]] and foreign policy analysts such as Dr [[Yossef Bodansky]], still regard Izetbegović as a dangerous Islamic fundamentalist, and there is much evidence to support their assertion. [http://www.senate.gov/~rpc/releases/1997/iran.htm] |
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==Imprisonment== |
==Imprisonment== |
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In February 1992, Izetbegović called a national referendum on independence for Bosnia as an European condition for recognition of Bosnia as independent state, despite warnings from the Serbian members of the presidency that any move to independence would result in the Serbian-inhabited areas of Bosnia seceding to remain with the rump Yugoslavia. The referendum was boycotted by Serbs, who regarded it as an unconstitutional move, but achieved a 99.4% vote in favour on a 67% turnout (which almost entirely constituted of the Bosniak and Croat communities). The Bosnian parliament, already vacated by the Bosnian Serbs, formally declared independence from Yugoslavia on [[February 29]] and Izetbegović announced the country's independence on [[March 3]]. It did not take effect until [[April 7]], [[1992]], when the [[European Union]] and [[United States]] recognised the new country. Sporadic fighting between Serbs and government forces occurred across Bosnia in the run-up to international recognition. Izetbegović appears to have gambled that the international community would send a peacekeeping force upon recognising Bosnia in order to prevent a war, but this did not happen. Instead, war immediately broke out across the country as Bosnian Serb and Yugoslav Army forces took control of large areas of Bosnia against the opposition of poorly-equipped government security forces. |
In February 1992, Izetbegović called a national referendum on independence for Bosnia as an European condition for recognition of Bosnia as independent state, despite warnings from the Serbian members of the presidency that any move to independence would result in the Serbian-inhabited areas of Bosnia seceding to remain with the rump Yugoslavia. The referendum was boycotted by Serbs, who regarded it as an unconstitutional move, but achieved a 99.4% vote in favour on a 67% turnout (which almost entirely constituted of the Bosniak and Croat communities). The Bosnian parliament, already vacated by the Bosnian Serbs, formally declared independence from Yugoslavia on [[February 29]] and Izetbegović announced the country's independence on [[March 3]]. It did not take effect until [[April 7]], [[1992]], when the [[European Union]] and [[United States]] recognised the new country. Sporadic fighting between Serbs and government forces occurred across Bosnia in the run-up to international recognition. Izetbegović appears to have gambled that the international community would send a peacekeeping force upon recognising Bosnia in order to prevent a war, but this did not happen. Instead, war immediately broke out across the country as Bosnian Serb and Yugoslav Army forces took control of large areas of Bosnia against the opposition of poorly-equipped government security forces. |
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For the next three years, Izetbegović lived precariously in a besieged Sarajevo surrounded by Serb forces. He denounced the failure of Western countries to reverse Serbian "aggression" and turned instead to the Muslim world, with which he had already established relations during his days as a dissident. The Bosnian government received money, arms and a unit of volunteers from some Muslim countries (called El-Mudžahid, counted less than 500 volunteers), including [[Iran]], [[Saudi Arabia]], [[Kuwait]] and [[Libya]]. The latter caused particular controversy: foreign fighters, styling themselves "[[mujahiddin]]," turned up in Bosnia around [[1993]]. They quickly attracted heavy criticism, who considered their presence to be evidence of violent Islamic fundamentalism at the heart of Europe. However, the foreign volunteers became unpopular even with many of the Bosniak population, because Bosnian army had thousands of soldiers and had no need for more soldiers, but for arms. Although Izetbegović regarded them as symbolically valuable as a sign of the Muslim world's support for Bosnia, they appear to have made little military difference and became a major political liability. Izetbegović's defence minister, Hasan Čengić, was closely associated with overseas fundamentalists and his dismissal in [[1996]] was a major US demand/condition for the funding and equipping of the Bosnian Federation Army. |
For the next three years, Izetbegović lived precariously in a besieged Sarajevo surrounded by Serb forces. He denounced the failure of Western countries to reverse Serbian "aggression" and turned instead to the Muslim world, with which he had already established relations during his days as a dissident. The Bosnian government received money, arms and a unit of volunteers from some Muslim countries (called El-Mudžahid, counted less than 500 volunteers), including [[Iran]], [[Saudi Arabia]], [[Kuwait]] and [[Libya]]. The latter caused particular controversy: foreign fighters, styling themselves "[[mujahiddin]]," turned up in Bosnia around [[1993]]. They quickly attracted heavy criticism, who considered their presence to be evidence of violent Islamic fundamentalism at the heart of Europe. However, the foreign volunteers became unpopular even with many of the Bosniak population, because Bosnian army had thousands of soldiers and had no need for more soldiers, but for arms.{{fact}} Although Izetbegović regarded them as symbolically valuable as a sign of the Muslim world's support for Bosnia, they appear to have made little military difference and became a major political liability. Izetbegović's defence minister, Hasan Čengić, was closely associated with overseas fundamentalists and his dismissal in [[1996]] was a major US demand/condition for the funding and equipping of the Bosnian Federation Army. Čengić was then appointed minister of refugee resettlement. |
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In addition to the ''mujahiddin'', there was another group known as the ''Handzar'' ("dagger" or "scimitar") Division, described by Dr [[Yossef Bodansky]] as Izetbegović's "[[praetorian guard]]". British journalist [[Robert Fox]] wrote in 1993: "Up to 6000-strong, the Handzar division glories in a [[fascism|fascist]] culture. They see themselves as the heirs of the [[13th Waffen Mountain Division of the SS Handschar (1st Croatian)|SS Handzar division]], formed by Bosnian Muslims in 1943 to fight for the [[Nazism|Nazis]]. Their spiritual model was [[Mohammad Amin al-Husayni|Mohammed Amin al-Husseini]], the [[Grand Mufti of Jerusalem]] who sided with [[Adolf Hitler|Hitler]]. According to UN officers, surprisingly few of those in charge of the Handzars . . . seem to speak good Serbo-Croatian. 'Many of them are [[Albanian]], whether from [[Kosovo]] (the Serb province where Albanians are the majority) or from [[Albania]] itself.' They are trained and led by veterans from [[Afghanistan]] and [[Pakistan]], say UN sources." ["Albanians and Afghans fight for the heirs to Bosnia's SS past," (London) [[Daily Telegraph]], 12/29/93, bracketed text in original] |
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⚫ | Izetbegović consistently promoted the idea of a multi-ethnic Bosnia, which in the circumstances seemed a hopeless strategy. The Bosnian Croats, disillusioned with the Sarajevo government and supported militarily and financially by the Croatian government, increasingly turned to establishing their own ethnically-based state of "[[Herceg-Bosna]]" in the Croat-populated regions of the country. The Bosnian Croats pulled out of the Sarajevo government and fighting broke out in 1993. In most areas local armistices were signed between the Serbs and Croats (Kreševo, Vareš, Jajce) and in two areas between the Bosniaks and Serbs ([[Cazin]] and near [[Mostar]] for a short period) while in some the Bosniaks and Croats continued to fight only against the Serbs (notably Maglaj). Bosnia's war thus never truly became three-sided but had three sides which shifted allegiances endlessly. Adding to the general confusion, Izetbegović's former colleague Fikret Abdić established an "[[Western Bosnia|Autonomous State of Western Bosnia]]" in opposition to the Sarajevo government. Abdić's faction was eventually routed by the Bosnian Army. By this time, Izetbegović's government controlled only about 25% of the country and represented principally the Bosniak community. |
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⚫ | Izetbegović consistently promoted the idea of a multi-ethnic Bosnia, which in the circumstances seemed a hopeless strategy.{{fact}} The Bosnian Croats, disillusioned with the Sarajevo government and supported militarily and financially by the Croatian government, increasingly turned to establishing their own ethnically-based state of "[[Herceg-Bosna]]" in the Croat-populated regions of the country. The Bosnian Croats pulled out of the Sarajevo government and fighting broke out in 1993. In most areas local armistices were signed between the Serbs and Croats (Kreševo, Vareš, Jajce) and in two areas between the Bosniaks and Serbs ([[Cazin]] and near [[Mostar]] for a short period) while in some the Bosniaks and Croats continued to fight only against the Serbs (notably Maglaj). Bosnia's war thus never truly became three-sided but had three sides which shifted allegiances endlessly. Adding to the general confusion, Izetbegović's former colleague Fikret Abdić established an "[[Western Bosnia|Autonomous State of Western Bosnia]]" in opposition to the Sarajevo government. Abdić's faction was eventually routed by the Bosnian Army. By this time, Izetbegović's government controlled only about 25% of the country and represented principally the Bosniak community. |
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In mid-1993, Izetbegović agreed to a peace plan that would divide Bosnia along ethnic lines but continued to insist on a unitary Bosnia government from Sarajevo and on the allocation to the Bosniaks of a large percentage of Bosnia's territory. The war between the Bosniaks and Croats was eventually ended by a truce brokered with the aid of the Americans in March [[1994]], following which the two sides collaborated more closely against the Serbs. From around this time onwards, [[NATO]] became increasingly involved in the conflict with occasional "pinprick" bombings conducted against the Bosnian Serbs, generally following violations of ceasefires and the no-fly zone over Bosnia. The Bosnian Croat forces benefitted indirectly from the military training given to the Croatian Army by the American military consultancy Military Professional Resources, Inc. In addition, the Croatians provided considerable quantities of weaponry to the Bosnian Croats and much smaller amounts to the Bosnian Army, despite a [[UN]] [[weapons embargo]]. Most of the Bosnian Army's supply of weapons was air-lifted from the Muslim world, specifically Iran - an issue which became the subject of some controversy and a US congressional investigation in 1996. |
In mid-1993, Izetbegović agreed to a peace plan that would divide Bosnia along ethnic lines but continued to insist on a unitary Bosnia government from Sarajevo and on the allocation to the Bosniaks of a large percentage of Bosnia's territory. The war between the Bosniaks and Croats was eventually ended by a truce brokered with the aid of the Americans in March [[1994]], following which the two sides collaborated more closely against the Serbs. From around this time onwards, [[NATO]] became increasingly involved in the conflict with occasional "pinprick" bombings conducted against the Bosnian Serbs, generally following violations of ceasefires and the no-fly zone over Bosnia. The Bosnian Croat forces benefitted indirectly from the military training given to the Croatian Army by the American military consultancy Military Professional Resources, Inc. In addition, the Croatians provided considerable quantities of weaponry to the Bosnian Croats and much smaller amounts to the Bosnian Army, despite a [[UN]] [[weapons embargo]]. Most of the Bosnian Army's supply of weapons was air-lifted from the Muslim world, specifically Iran - an issue which became the subject of some controversy and a US congressional investigation in 1996. |
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==Links and references== |
==Links and references== |
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*[http://www.senate.gov/~rpc/releases/1997/iran.htm Extended Bosnia Mission Endangers U.S. Troops - Clinton-Approved Iranian Arms Transfers Help Turn Bosnia into Militant Islamic Base] ([[United States Senate]] Republican Policy Committee) |
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*[http://today.reuters.com/News/CrisesArticle.aspx?storyId=L11425553 Terror Attack: Alija Izetbegovic's Grave Damaged by Explosion] - Reuters, Aug 11, 2006 |
*[http://today.reuters.com/News/CrisesArticle.aspx?storyId=L11425553 Terror Attack: Alija Izetbegovic's Grave Damaged by Explosion] - Reuters, Aug 11, 2006 |
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* [http://www.1Lit.com/izetbegovic Alija Izetbegovic: 1925-2003: Biographical information, book reviews and excerpts from Ummah.eu, Inc.] |
* [http://www.1Lit.com/izetbegovic Alija Izetbegovic: 1925-2003: Biographical information, book reviews and excerpts from Ummah.eu, Inc.] |
Revision as of 19:39, 19 December 2006
Alija Izetbegović |
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Alija Izetbegović (August 8, 1925 – October 19, 2003) was a Bosniak activist, lawyer, philosopher, and politician, first president of Bosnia and Herzegovina from 1990 to 1996 and member of the Bosnia and Herzegovina Presidency from 1996 to 2000, and author of several books, most notably Islam Between East and West.
Early life
Izetbegović was born in the northern Bosnian town of Bosanski Šamac, one of five children born to a distinguished but impoverished family descended from former Ottoman aristocrats from Belgrade who fled to Bosnia after Serbia gained independence from the Ottoman Empire. His grandfather, Alija, was the mayor of Bosanski Šamac. His father, an accountant, declared bankruptcy in 1927 and the family moved to Sarajevo. Izetbegović became closely involved in Bosniak society as he grew up during the 1930s and 1940s. With a devoted family and Muslim upbringing, he received a secular education, eventually graduating from law school in Sarajevo.
Dissident and Activist
In 1970, Izetbegović published a manifesto entitled The Islamic Declaration. Later, Serb nationalists as well as war criminals made a portrayal of Izetbegović as an Islamic fundamentalist (for instance Radovan Karadžić, Slobodan Milošević and Vojislav Šešelj) mentioning The Islamic Declaration as a synonym for fundamentalism. Izetbegović highlighted the decayed state of Islam and called for a religious and political regeneration across the Muslim world, although the book made no reference to Bosnia. He promoted the idea of a "united Islamic community" in Islamic countries, in which non-Muslims would have their rights guaranteed. British author Noel Malcolm asserted that the Serb nationalist interpretation of the Declaration was 'false propaganda'.[1]
From an Islamic point of view, this was nothing new - many similar manifestos were circulating in the Muslim countries - and it was very much in accordance with traditional Qur'anic principles. It was also not a programme of Islamic fundamentalism in a sense that is generally understood by fundamentalists themselves: Izetbegović explicitly accepted innovation and the "achievements of Euro-American civilization." He spoke approvingly of the high educational and economic standards prevailing in the West and urged that "instead of hating the West, let us proclaim cooperation instead of confrontation." However, his arguments were fundamentally at odds with both the anti-nationalist ideology of Communist Yugoslavia and with the later nationalist sentiment in Croatia and Serbia, which emphasized both nations' Christian heritage. Islam was widely perceived by non-Bosniak Yugoslavs as an alien influence introduced under the Turkish occupation, so Izetbegović's call for an Islamic revival came to be seen as a threat by many in the countries' Catholic and Orthodox communities.
However, many figures outside of the Balkans, including senior members of the United States Republican Party and foreign policy analysts such as Dr Yossef Bodansky, still regard Izetbegović as a dangerous Islamic fundamentalist, and there is much evidence to support their assertion. [2]
Imprisonment
In April 1983, Izetbegović and twelve other Bosnian Muslim (Bosniak) activists including Melika Salihbegović, Edhem Bičakčić, Omer Behmen, Mustafa Spahić and Hasan Čengić were tried before a Sarajevo communist court for a variety of "offences", according to the accusations principally "hostile activity inspired by Muslim nationalism", "association for purposes of hostile activity" and "hostile propaganda." Specifically, the defendants were accused of intending to create "an ethnically pure Muslim Bosnia-Herzegovina". Izetbegović was further accused of organizing a visit to a Muslim congress in Iran. All of those tried were convicted and Izetbegović was sentenced to 14 years in prison. The verdict was strongly criticised by Western human rights organisations, including Amnesty International and Helsinki Watch, which pointed out that the case was based on communist propaganda, and the accused were not charged with either using or advocating violence. The following May, the Bosnian Supreme Court conceded the point with an announcement that "some of the actions of the accused ... did not have the characteristics of criminal acts" and reduced Izetbegović's sentence to 12 years. He was pardoned in 1988 (after almost five years in prison) as communist rule faltered and was released from prison, but not before he had suffered serious and lasting damage to his health.
Presidency
The introduction of a multi-party system in Yugoslavia at the end of the 1980s prompted Izetbegović and other Bosniak activists to establish a political party, the Party of Democratic Action (Stranka Demokratske Akcije, or SDA) in 1989. It had a largely Muslim character; similarly, the other principal ethnic groups in Bosnia, the Serbs and Croats, also established ethnically based parties. (The Communist Party renamed itself the Party of Democratic Changes.) The SDA won the largest share of the vote, 33% of the seats, with the next runners-up being nationalist ethnic parties representing Serbs and Croats. Fikret Abdić won the popular vote for president among the Bosniak candidates, with 44% of the vote, Izetbegović closely behind with 37%. According to the Bosnian constitution, the first two candidates of each of the three constitutient nations would be elected to a seven-member multi-ethnic rotating presidency (with two Croats, two Serbs, two Bosniaks and one Yugoslav); a Croat took the post of prime minister and a Serb the presidency of the Assembly. Abdić agreed to stand down as the Bosniak candidate for the Presidency and Izetbegović became President.
Bosnia's power-sharing arrangements broke down very quickly as ethnic tensions grew after the outbreak of fighting between Serbs and Croats in neighboring Croatia. Although Izetbegović was to due to hold the presidency for only one year according to the constitution, this arrangement was initially suspended due to "extraordinary circumstances" and was eventually abandoned altogether during the war as the Serb and Croat nationalistic parties SDS and HDZ abandoned the government (although many individual Serbs and Croats continued to work and fight for it).
When fighting broke out in Slovenia and Croatia in the summer of 1991, it was immediately apparent that Bosnia would soon become embroiled in the conflict. Izetbegović initially proposed a loose confederation to preserve a unitary Bosnian state and strongly urged a peaceful solution. He did not, however, subscribe to the "peace at all costs" view and commented in February 1991 that "I would sacrifice peace for a sovereign Bosnia-Herzegovina ... but for that peace in Bosnia-Herzegovina I would not sacrifice sovereignty." By the start of 1992 it had become apparent that the rival nationalist demands were fundamentally incompatible: the Bosniaks and Croats sought an independent Bosnia while the Serbs wanted it to remain in a rump Yugoslavia dominated by Serbia. Izetbegović publicly complained that he was being forced to ally with one side or the other, vividly characterising the dilemma by comparing it to having to choose between leukaemia and a brain tumour.
January of 1992, Portuguese diplomat José Cutileiro drafted a plan that would turn Bosnia into a triethnic cantonal state. This would later become known as the Lisbon Agreement. Initially, all three sides signed up to the agreement, Izetbegović for the Bosniaks, Radovan Karadžić for the Serbs and Mate Boban for the Croats. Some two weeks later, Izetbegović withdrew his signature and declared his opposition to any type of division of Bosnia, supposedly encouraged by the then US ambassador to Yugoslavia, Warren Zimmermann. This aim of a united Bosnia under the control of a central government in Sarajevo (seen as Bosniak domination by Serbs and Croats) would become both Izetbegović's war cry and aim.
In February 1992, Izetbegović called a national referendum on independence for Bosnia as an European condition for recognition of Bosnia as independent state, despite warnings from the Serbian members of the presidency that any move to independence would result in the Serbian-inhabited areas of Bosnia seceding to remain with the rump Yugoslavia. The referendum was boycotted by Serbs, who regarded it as an unconstitutional move, but achieved a 99.4% vote in favour on a 67% turnout (which almost entirely constituted of the Bosniak and Croat communities). The Bosnian parliament, already vacated by the Bosnian Serbs, formally declared independence from Yugoslavia on February 29 and Izetbegović announced the country's independence on March 3. It did not take effect until April 7, 1992, when the European Union and United States recognised the new country. Sporadic fighting between Serbs and government forces occurred across Bosnia in the run-up to international recognition. Izetbegović appears to have gambled that the international community would send a peacekeeping force upon recognising Bosnia in order to prevent a war, but this did not happen. Instead, war immediately broke out across the country as Bosnian Serb and Yugoslav Army forces took control of large areas of Bosnia against the opposition of poorly-equipped government security forces.
For the next three years, Izetbegović lived precariously in a besieged Sarajevo surrounded by Serb forces. He denounced the failure of Western countries to reverse Serbian "aggression" and turned instead to the Muslim world, with which he had already established relations during his days as a dissident. The Bosnian government received money, arms and a unit of volunteers from some Muslim countries (called El-Mudžahid, counted less than 500 volunteers), including Iran, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Libya. The latter caused particular controversy: foreign fighters, styling themselves "mujahiddin," turned up in Bosnia around 1993. They quickly attracted heavy criticism, who considered their presence to be evidence of violent Islamic fundamentalism at the heart of Europe. However, the foreign volunteers became unpopular even with many of the Bosniak population, because Bosnian army had thousands of soldiers and had no need for more soldiers, but for arms.[citation needed] Although Izetbegović regarded them as symbolically valuable as a sign of the Muslim world's support for Bosnia, they appear to have made little military difference and became a major political liability. Izetbegović's defence minister, Hasan Čengić, was closely associated with overseas fundamentalists and his dismissal in 1996 was a major US demand/condition for the funding and equipping of the Bosnian Federation Army. Čengić was then appointed minister of refugee resettlement.
In addition to the mujahiddin, there was another group known as the Handzar ("dagger" or "scimitar") Division, described by Dr Yossef Bodansky as Izetbegović's "praetorian guard". British journalist Robert Fox wrote in 1993: "Up to 6000-strong, the Handzar division glories in a fascist culture. They see themselves as the heirs of the SS Handzar division, formed by Bosnian Muslims in 1943 to fight for the Nazis. Their spiritual model was Mohammed Amin al-Husseini, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem who sided with Hitler. According to UN officers, surprisingly few of those in charge of the Handzars . . . seem to speak good Serbo-Croatian. 'Many of them are Albanian, whether from Kosovo (the Serb province where Albanians are the majority) or from Albania itself.' They are trained and led by veterans from Afghanistan and Pakistan, say UN sources." ["Albanians and Afghans fight for the heirs to Bosnia's SS past," (London) Daily Telegraph, 12/29/93, bracketed text in original]
Izetbegović consistently promoted the idea of a multi-ethnic Bosnia, which in the circumstances seemed a hopeless strategy.[citation needed] The Bosnian Croats, disillusioned with the Sarajevo government and supported militarily and financially by the Croatian government, increasingly turned to establishing their own ethnically-based state of "Herceg-Bosna" in the Croat-populated regions of the country. The Bosnian Croats pulled out of the Sarajevo government and fighting broke out in 1993. In most areas local armistices were signed between the Serbs and Croats (Kreševo, Vareš, Jajce) and in two areas between the Bosniaks and Serbs (Cazin and near Mostar for a short period) while in some the Bosniaks and Croats continued to fight only against the Serbs (notably Maglaj). Bosnia's war thus never truly became three-sided but had three sides which shifted allegiances endlessly. Adding to the general confusion, Izetbegović's former colleague Fikret Abdić established an "Autonomous State of Western Bosnia" in opposition to the Sarajevo government. Abdić's faction was eventually routed by the Bosnian Army. By this time, Izetbegović's government controlled only about 25% of the country and represented principally the Bosniak community.
In mid-1993, Izetbegović agreed to a peace plan that would divide Bosnia along ethnic lines but continued to insist on a unitary Bosnia government from Sarajevo and on the allocation to the Bosniaks of a large percentage of Bosnia's territory. The war between the Bosniaks and Croats was eventually ended by a truce brokered with the aid of the Americans in March 1994, following which the two sides collaborated more closely against the Serbs. From around this time onwards, NATO became increasingly involved in the conflict with occasional "pinprick" bombings conducted against the Bosnian Serbs, generally following violations of ceasefires and the no-fly zone over Bosnia. The Bosnian Croat forces benefitted indirectly from the military training given to the Croatian Army by the American military consultancy Military Professional Resources, Inc. In addition, the Croatians provided considerable quantities of weaponry to the Bosnian Croats and much smaller amounts to the Bosnian Army, despite a UN weapons embargo. Most of the Bosnian Army's supply of weapons was air-lifted from the Muslim world, specifically Iran - an issue which became the subject of some controversy and a US congressional investigation in 1996.
In September 1993, the Congress of Bosniak Intellectuals (Svebošnjački sabor) returned historical term Bosniak instead of the previously used Muslim in former Yugoslavia, as a compromise between Serb communists and Bosniak communist leader, Hamdija Pozdrerac.
Ending the War
In August 1995, following the Srebrenica massacre, NATO launched an intensive two-week bombing campaign which destroyed the Bosnian Serb command and control system. This allowed the Croatian forces and Bosniak forces to overrun many Serb-held areas of the country, producing a roughly 50/50 split of the territory between the two sides. The offensive came to a halt not far from the de facto Serb capital of Banja Luka. When the Bosniaks stopped their advance they had captured the power plants supplying Banja Luka's electricity and used that control to pressure the Serb leadership into accepting a cease fire.
The parties agreed to meet at Dayton, Ohio to negotiate a peace treaty under the supervision of the United States. Crucially, the Croats and Serbs were left out of the negotiations; their interests were represented by Croatia's President Tuđman and Serbia's President Milošević respectively. Izetbegović represented the internationally recognised Bosnian Government.
After the war
After the Bosnian war was formally ended by the Dayton peace accord in November 1995, Izetbegović became a Member President of Precidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina. His party's power declined after the international community installed a High Representative to oversee affairs of state, with more power than the presidents or parliaments of either the Bosniak-Croat or Serb entities. He stepped down in October 2000 at the age of 74, citing his bad health. However, Izetbegović remained popular with the Bosniak public, who nicknamed him "Djedo" or Grandpa. His endorsement helped his party to bounce back in the elections of 2002. He died in October 2003 of heart disease complicated by injuries suffered in a fall at home.
Personal Life and Other information
He was a controversial figure in the former Yugoslavia and was denounced by Serb and Croat politicians for inciting Islamic fundamentalism[citation needed]. Many aspects of Izetbegović's life remain strongly disputed between all three sides in the Bosnian War. Mladen Ivanić, president of Republika Srpska government and other Serb politicians twice petitioned the war crimes tribunal at The Hague to indict him on charges of genocide, violations of the customs of war and other issues[citation needed]. No indictment was issued.
Izetbegović was married to Halida Repovac and they had three children Lejla, Sabina and Bakir. The Spanish newspaper El Mundo declared him "Person of the Year" in 1995. He has received the "Reward from King Feysal" and a medal from "The Center For Democracy, Washington." His most famous book outside Yugoslavia was Islam Between East And West, which has been published widely in a number of languages since its release in 1984. Other published works include The Islamic Declaration, Problems of Islamic Renaissance, My Escape to Freedom, Notes from Prison, 1983-1988 and most recently the memoirs Inescapable Questions: Autobiographical Notes.
Following his death there was a drive to rename the main street of Sarajevo from Ulica Marsala Tita (Marshall Tito Street) and the Sarajevo International Airport in his honor. Following objections from the Serb side in Bosnia both initiatives failed. [3]
His grave at the Kovaci cemetery in Sarajevo was badly damaged by a bomb on the morning of 11 August 2006. The identity of the bomber(s) has not yet been determined. [4]
In October 2006 his son Bakir was elected to a 4 year term in the Parliament of Bosnia and Herzegovina represending the SDA
Writings
Available in English
- Islam Between East and West, Alija Ali Izetbegović, American Trust Publications, 1985 (also ABC Publications, 1993)
- Inescapable Questions: Autobiographical Notes, Alija Izetbegović, The Islamic Foundation, 2003
- Izetbegović of Bosnia and Herzegovina: Notes from Prison, 1983-1988, Alija Izetbegović, Greenwood Press, 2001
- Notes From Prison - 1983-1988, Alija Ali Izetbegović, published in PDF-format courtesy Bakir Izetbegović, 2006
Available in Bosnian
- Govori i pisma, Alija Izetbegović, SDA, 1994
- Rat i mir u Bosni i Hercegovini (Biblioteka Posebna izdanja), Alija Izetbegović, Vijece Kongresa bosnjackih intelektualaca, 1998
- Moj bijeg u slobodu: Biljeske iz zatvora 1983-1988 (Biblioteka Refleksi), Alija Izetbegović, Svjetlost, 1999
- Islamska deklaracija (Mala muslimanska biblioteka), Alija Izetbegović, Bosna, 1990
Links and references
- Extended Bosnia Mission Endangers U.S. Troops - Clinton-Approved Iranian Arms Transfers Help Turn Bosnia into Militant Islamic Base (United States Senate Republican Policy Committee)
- Terror Attack: Alija Izetbegovic's Grave Damaged by Explosion - Reuters, Aug 11, 2006
- Alija Izetbegovic: 1925-2003: Biographical information, book reviews and excerpts from Ummah.eu, Inc.
- "Alija Izetbegović, Ideological Biography", anon.
- "The leader caught without a land", The Times (UK), 4 February 1993
- "Alija Izetbegović, Muslim Who Led Bosnia, Dies at 78", New York Times, 20 October 2003
- "Obituaries; Alija Izetbegović, 78; Led Bosnia Through War", Los Angeles Times, 20 October 2003
- "Obituary: Alija Izetbegović: Bosnia's first president, a devout Muslim who fought for his country's survival in war and peace during the 1990s", The Guardian (UK), 20 October 2003
- Bosnia: A Short History, Noel Malcolm, 1996
- Galvanizing Fear of Islam: The 1983 Trial of Alija Izetbegović in Context, Aimee Wielechowski, 1996
- The Two Faces of Islam, Stephen Schwartz, 2002