By David Swanson, reprinted with permission, first published
for World BEYOND War, March 31, 2022
https://worldbeyondwar.org/dont-let-a-mountain-in-montenegro-be-lost-to-a-war-in-ukraine/
Across the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy sits the tiny, largely rural and mountainous, and exquisitely beautiful nation of Montenegro. At its center is a huge mountainous plateau called Sinjajevina — one of the most wonderfully non-“developed” places in Europe.
By undeveloped we should not understand uninhabited. Sheep,
cattle, dogs, and pastoral people have lived on Sinjajevina for centuries,
apparently in relative harmony with — indeed, as part of — the ecosystems.
About 2,000 people live on Sinjajevina in some 250 families
and eight traditional tribes. They are orthodox Christians and work to maintain
their holidays and customs. They are also Europeans, engaged with the world
around them, the younger generation tending to speak perfect English.
I recently spoke by Zoom from the U.S. with a group of
people, young and old, from Sinjajevina. The one thing that every one of them
said was that they were prepared to die for their mountain. Why would they feel
compelled to say that? These are not soldiers. They said nothing of any
willingness to kill. There’s no war in Montenegro. These are people who make
cheese and live in little wooden cabins and practice old habits of
environmental sustainability.
Sinjajevina is part of the Tara Canyon Biosphere Reserve and
bordered by two UNESCO World Heritage sites. What on Earth is it endangered by?
The people organizing to protect it and petitioning the European Union to help
them would probably be standing up for their home were it threatened by hotels
or billionaires’ villas or any other sort of “progress,” but as it happens
they’re trying to prevent Sinjajevina being turned into a military training
ground.
“This mountain gave us life,” Milan Sekulović tells me. The
young man, President of Save Sinjajevina, says that farming on Sinjajevina paid
for his college education, and that — like everyone else on the mountain — he
would die before he allowed it to be turned into a military base.
In case that sounds like baseless (pun intended) talk, it’s
worth knowing that in the fall of 2020, the government of Montenegro tried to
begin using the mountain as a military (including artillery) training ground,
and the people of the mountain set up a camp and stayed in the way for months
as human shields. They formed a human chain in the grasslands and risked attack
with live ammunition until the military and government backed down.
Now two new questions immediately arise: Why does the tiny
peaceful little nation of Montenegro need a giant mountain war-rehearsal space,
and why did almost nobody hear about the courageous successful blocking of its
creation in 2020? Both questions have the same answer, and it’s headquartered
in Brussels.
In 2017, with no public referendum, Montenegro’s
post-communist oligarchic government joined NATO. Almost immediately word began
to leak out about plans for a NATO training ground. Public protests began in
2018, and in 2019 the Parliament ignored a petition with over 6,000 signatures
that should have compelled a debate, instead simply announcing its plans. Those
plans have not changed; people have simply thus far prevented their
implementation.
If the military training ground were just for Montenegro,
the people risking their lives for their grass and sheep would be a great
human-interest tale — one we’d likely have heard of. If the training ground
were Russian, some of the people who had thus far prevented it would probably
be on their way toward sainthood or at least grants from the National Endowment
for Democracy.
Every person from Sinjajevina I have spoken with has told me
that they’re not against NATO or Russia or any other entity in particular.
They’re just against war and destruction — and the loss of their home despite
the absence of war anywhere near them.
However, now they are up against the presence of war in
Ukraine. They are welcoming Ukrainian refugees. They are worrying, like the
rest of us, about the environmental destruction, the possible famines, the
incredible suffering, and the risk of nuclear apocalypse.
But they are also up against the major boost given to NATO
by the Russian invasion. Talk in Montenegro, as elsewhere, is much more
NATO-friendly now. The Montenegrin government is intent on creating its
international ground for training for more wars.
What a crying shame it would be if the disastrous Russian
attack on Ukraine were allowed to succeed in destroying Sinjajevina!
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David Swanson is an author, activist, journalist, and radio
host. He is director of WorldBeyondWar.org and campaign coordinator for
RootsAction.org. Swanson's books include War Is A Lie. He blogs at
DavidSwanson.org and WarIsACrime.org. He hosts Talk Nation Radio. He is a 2015,
2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 Nobel Peace Prize Nominee. Swanson was awarded the 2018
Peace Prize by the U.S. Peace Memorial Foundation. Longer bio and photos and
videos here. Follow him on Twitter: @davidcnswanson and FaceBook, and sign up
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