Small Business Resources, Business Advice and Forms from AllBusiness.com

They Would Never Hurt A Fly

By Drakulic, Slavenka
Publication: Kirkus Reviews
Date: Saturday, May 15 2004
Croatian expatriate Drakulic (S., 2000, etc.) offers a philosophically charged indictment of onetime Yugoslavians now standing before the International War Crimes Tribunal.

Ordinary people do not commit monstrous crimes; and because we are ordinary people, we could

not have committed monstrous crimes in the past. So goes the human impulse to explain away atrocities; so goes the refusal, throughout the former Yugoslavia, to admit that something horrible happened not so very long ago. "But once you get closer to the real people who committed those crimes," writes the Croatian expatriate Drakulic, "you see that the syllogism doesn't really work." Ordinary people do indeed do terrible things. Sitting in a courtroom in The Hague, Drakulic searches their faces and their files for signs of madness, an explanation for their deeds as something other than a sick response to peer pressure or a cosmic dare. (Explaining why those 80 or so men—and a couple of women—shed their ordinary lives to become killers is of paramount importance, Drakulic holds, because otherwise they will be eulogized as war heroes back home.) Their trials are dull matters, she admits, a far cry from the witty back-and-forth of Hollywood film, but from them bits and pieces of truth emerge. Some of the killers are pathological, likely murderers in peacetime or war, but otherwise the proverbial guy next door; in the title essay, one defendant, in his mid-20s at the time of slaughtering more than a hundred people in a single month in 1992, remarks, "It is nice to kill people this way. I kill them nicely. I don't feel anything." Others, such as the former Yugoslavian leader Slobodan Milosevic, killed (or had others kill) out of ambition: in Milosevic's case, it appears that he thought war would keep him in power. Others were bureaucrats, anxious to please the boss. Still others merely went with the flow. And thousands died.

Take it from Drakulic: Ordinary people suck.

In addition, make sure to read these articles:

  • Why special ops prefer C-130s for many missions. (Unconventional Warriors).
  • The venerable C-130 Hercules air transport turned up almost everywhere in the special-operations war in Afghanistan, with different versions of it performing a variety of ......
  • RIO SAN JUAN: FROM NICARAGUA AND COSTA RICA TO THE HAGUE.
  • Costa Rica and Nicaragua have failed to resolve a dispute regarding the use of the Rio San Juan. A three-year period the countries had given ......
  • MEANS AND METHODS OF WARFARE
  • This symposium honors a long-time colleague. I met Ed Cummings in 1974 when, as a first lieutenant in the Army Judge Advocate General Corps, he ......
  • Double Vision
  • Very capably written and insistently readable, it's an eventful narrative focused initially on sculptress Kate Frobisher, whose photojournalist husband Ben had moved on from covering ......
  • Motor Knows Best
  • Journalists rejoice ... You are obsolete.
  • The Small Boat Of Great Sorrows
  • Former Yugoslav detective Vlado Petric fled the sniper terror in Sarajevo to find peace if not proper employment in Berlin, where he had sent his ......
  • No place for pride
  • HEADNOTE The only foreigners who visit Serbia these days are journalists, aid workers or disaster tourists. The Serbs cater well for the latter. Postcards for ......
  • Shake Hands With The Devil
  • Favoring the light-skinned, indigenous Tutsi people over the short, dark farmers of the Hutu nation, the Belgians who colonized Rwanda gave Tutsi leaders privileged positions ......
  • Freeport Copper & Gold feels pressure from shareholders
  • STOCKHOLDERS OF Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. voted to change the way the New Orleansbased mining giant selects its board of directors at the company's ......
  • Motor Knows Best
  • When Media Person started reading the article, he had to go back and check the top of the Web site to make sure it wasn't ......
  • Stay The Hand Of Vengeance
  • An analysis of the politics underlying war-crimes tribunals—from the exile of Napoleon at St. Helena up to the indictment of Slobodan Milosevic for Serbian atrocities ......
  • Nuremberg: The Reckoning
  • The 15th novel by the conservative intellectual godfather and gadfly is a brainy thriller cut from the same cloth as Spytime (2000): fast-moving and based ......
  • Not suitable for broadcast. (Comment).
  • THERE was some pretty important stuff going on last Tuesday morning. The FBI had issued a new -- and ominous -- warning of another possible ......
  • Trapped in its own maze
  • HEADNOTE KOSOVO HEADNOTE Two beaten-up coaches rumble down the dusty streets of Kosovo on a spring morning. Swedish KFOR tanks - one in front, the ......