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Liberland

The Croatian Invasion of the Micronation of Liberland

Liberland President Vít Jedlička is still optimistic that these setbacks are just steps toward autonomy for his new country on the disputed Croatian and Serbian border.

Brian Doherty | 10.5.2023 4:05 PM

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screenshot of Croat officials supervising tearing down of Liberland settlement, from Jan Jirkal YouTube video | Illustration: Lex Villena from screenshot from Jan Jirkal YouTube videom
(Illustration: Lex Villena from screenshot from Jan Jirkal YouTube videom )

Vít Jedlička, a Czech libertarian activist and president of the would-be libertarian micronation he founded called Liberland, remains cheery about the future of his project. He has aspired since April 2015 to create what he hopes will be the freest nation on Earth on fewer than three square miles of land on a disputed part of the Croatia-Serbia border. (For complicated reasons related to a shift in the flow of the Danube over time, both nations would prefer the bit of land, known as Gornja Siga, on the western bank of the river belong to the other.)

The project drew extended attention from prominent media, including the New York Times, from the start. By July 2023, according to Wired, the project had attracted more than 700,000 online registrants expressing their interest in the so-far mostly conceptual micronation. Plus, "6,000 have signed up as paying e-residents, and roughly 1,000 have paid $5,000 or made an equivalent contribution to become full citizens."

Jedlička was optimistic in early August, for obvious reasons. After eight years of Croatian authorities generally trying to deny anyone entry to Liberland, they began mellowing out and allowing a gaggle of settlers, first handfuls and then close to dozens, to enter and even begin building structures there. Finally, as Jedlička told me in a phone interview in September, "We had a permanent presence inside of the territory."

Liberlander boats were beginning to bring in material to build solar power arrays and small shelters. A set of Liberland-branded deck chairs were lined up on their beach. The first Liberland-generated utility bill, for 25 euros for high-speed internet via Starlink, was proudly displayed on Facebook. Jedlička found a meadow in the jungly tree-thick land that he announced would be Liberland's helicopter pad.

Liberland's and Jedlička's Facebook feeds were awash with enthusiasm and video clips showing Liberlanders constructing, pumping water from a well, celebrating, making music, taking late-night swims, and generally luxuriating in finally being Liberlanders in practice and not just theory.

Sure, Jedlička was a little annoyed that the Croats, while tolerating their settlement, were still randomly harassing or driving out individual Liberlanders for what he saw as illegitimate reasons. They'd hold up every boatload for as long as they could, obsessively checking papers and being general bureaucratic nuisances. And he was a little bugged that some of the big money sloshing around the world of libertarian and crypto causes weren't rushing in during this exciting moment to more swiftly propel Liberland out of its cradle.

But Jedlička's attitude was overwhelmingly positive, even puckishly reframing Croatian harassment as really help—they might have thought they were confiscating a Liberland boat, but really they moved it to someplace Jedlička needed it to go.

When they arrested him on September 7, and eventually kicked him out of Croatia, they were really giving him a chance to get some sleep away from all the constant Liberland business blowing up his phone all month.

According to a Liberland press release, Jedlička had been "arrested and subsequently deported for a period of five years on grounds of 'national security.'" He was told, per an earlier press release, that "proponents of Liberland had engaged in 'extremist actions' aimed at 'undermining the position of Croatia.'"

Some paperwork he got related to that arrest and expulsion was to Jedlička another wonderful gift from his Croat friends. He says the document listed two distinct expulsions: from Croatia and from Gornja Siga, which he insists means that "Gornja Siga is recognized to be not Croatia."

"They gave us really nice paperwork," he says, that "basically recognizes the fact that they don't believe that [Liberland] is part of Croatia."

Why Did the Croats Let the Liberlanders Settle (At First)?

The reasons for August's brief thaw in Croatian practice toward Liberland settlers are twofold, Jedlička and Liberland's minister of foreign affairs, Thomas D. Walls, agreed in separate phone interviews in September. (Disclosure: Walls is an old college friend and former bandmate of mine.)

One reason is that Croatia at the start of 2023 joined the Schengen Area, a 27-nation visa-free travel zone, meaning there are no border crossing requirements from Hungary to Croatia. As Jedlička says, this means legally if you have a Schengen Area passport, Liberlanders "cannot really be stopped. They can only be threatened."

A second reason, they both think, is bad press for Croatia that arose from a video made by YouTuber Niko Omilana, which has earned over 8 million views in the past two months.

Omilana seemed to buy in totally to Jedlička's vision of a new, free country. He vowed to set foot and plant the Liberland flag on the disputed territory—and, naturally, to capture it all on video.

After a couple of failures, harassment from Croat police boats, and eventually zooming in on a jet ski faster than those boats, Omilana and a camera-wielding companion made landfall on Liberland. He planted the flag. He exulted in that cheerful YouTuber-dude way.

A Croatian cop landed to challenge them. Despite believing he'd destroyed the Liberland explorers' two cameras, a drone in the air captured the Croat cop shoving and kicking both men unnecessarily.

"I think [the thaw in Liberland border control] is directly related to that," Walls says. "It didn't make the Croatian police look good at all—made them look like bumbling idiots and kind of brutal and, you know, why is he beating these people up for doing something that's totally legal?"

Jedlička believes the Croats have no legal reason to deny entrance to or harass Liberlanders. But throughout August and early September, despite the first multi-person Liberland settlement growing and building, the Croats were still randomly harassing them without worrying much about the legality of the matter. When the Croats have gotten annoyed with certain Liberland visitors, Jedlička relates, "people that have Schengen visa actually get [a] 30-day ban from Schengen after they visit Liberland. How ridiculous is that?"

A lot seemed to depend on the attitude and mood of particular officials, Walls thinks. Jedlička too thinks certain police officials are hostile while others not so much, crediting one for pardoning a Liberlander from a Schengen-Area ban.

The Croats still act like they're in charge. "We built some structures already and they called in some kind of building inspector," Walls says, "and they slapped a sticker on one of the houses we built that says, you know, you need a permit for this, but it doesn't say exactly where [one gets a permit for this area]. So that's going to be fun to take that to court and see. You know, the judge will say, well, what's the location of [the structure]?"

As weeks passed and the Liberland settlement continued to grow and build, Walls says the Croats especially "started putting the heat on people with non-Schengen passports," including Americans. Other Americans he knew, though not Walls himself, "were removed, taken to the police station, given a stern talking to, and were given either seven days to leave Croatia or they were escorted out of Croatia."

The Croatian Invasion of Liberland

Jedlička's optimism in August and early September, as he saw the micronation's first true settlement take root, was one thing; but he was equally optimistic in a phone interview this week when an outsider might think things were no longer going so well for Liberland.

On September 21, as described in an article in Liberland Press, "a private company acting on behalf of the Croatian Forests (Hrvatske Šume d.o.o.) accompanied by police made an unannounced extraterritorial incursion into Liberland and demolished and removed Liberland property. Liberlanders living on the land were threatened with arrest if they interfered….Croatian police escorted the demolition crews who committed this act of indiscriminate destruction. This assault was committed without warning and without the forest company or police issuing any reasons or justification."

A series of videos documenting the assault on Liberland and the property destruction can be found on YouTube. A mournful Liberlander played his violin while throughout the day officials milled about, breaking up, chainsawing, and removing their shelters and kitchen.

Jedlička sees all this as merely another small setback on his path to a thriving Liberland. He thinks the Croat media was nearly universally on Liberland's side in coverage of the invasion and that the Croats will eventually decide it is "not sustainable" to keep such a close eye on Liberland. The whole experience, he says, amazed about the "100 calls from media in one or two days" after, ultimately gave Liberland a great public relations boost, its value far exceeding that of the objects destroyed or stolen.

Jedlička still has big plans. So sure is he of a future rapprochement with Croatia that he finds the whole invasion "quite funny" (though he does lament that "they even stole our toilet, I cannot believe it") and says more people, and bikes, are now staying on Liberland than before the Croats invaded. (He relates the latest Croat legal flex: detaining bike riders for lacking a vest to help them be better seen at night. Still, Jedlička's expressed attitude toward all the Croats do is to pleasantly thank them for caring so much about the safety and security of his people. He says Liberlanders and Croats are now cooperating on trash gathering and removal.)

Jedlička wants to get the cryptocurrency that will be the backbone of Liberland business and governance, Merit, on more exchanges at a two-euro valuation. He foresees adventure parks, hotels, and the world's tallest building eventually built in his Liberland on the Croatian border.

While Jedlička still believes a more permanent rapprochement will come with Croatia, and insists a vibrant Liberland will be an economic boon for Croats as well, Liberlanders aren't taking the recent Croatian incursion and property destruction lying down. Jedlička says this week that they have filed court cases in various home jurisdictions of the Liberlanders who had their property taken by the Croats to get it back, and they even plan to hold native Liberlander judicial proceedings against them, in which merits will be given or taken away.

All of it—the rebuilding of a settlement, the launching of Liberland's judicial system, the daily petty conflicts with Croatian officials that Jedlička thinks are still illegitimate—will, he says, "make also a nice reality TV show out of the whole situation, which I think will be hilarious."

UPDATE: Vít Jedlička wants it on record that he does not consider Liberland a "micronation," for one reason because a nation is a people separate from a specific area and he considers all 700,000 online signups to be part of the nation of Liberland.

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Brian Doherty is a senior editor at Reason and author of Ron Paul's Revolution: The Man and the Movement He Inspired (Broadside Books).

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  1. Public Entelectual   2 years ago (edited)

    The Liberlandagons should rename their turf Ascorbia, and threaten their tourism -dependent invaders with disinformation campaign about infectious scurvy in Serbocroatia.

  2. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

    "Curse your sudden but inevitable betrayal!"
    https://youtu.be/e35BU1eB_5k?si=L9PAykT_Nb0-gNof

  3. Chinny Chin Chin   2 years ago

    Good luck with the experiment, Vít Jedlička!

    Rejoice in the outpouring of support from Reason's libertarian commentariat!

  4. Anastasia Beaverhausen   2 years ago

    "Nothing to see here", say Republicans who think it's hunky-dory that Putin invaded Ukraine.

    1. SQRLSY One   2 years ago

      Agreed! In spades!

      Ass soon ass Liberland has $3.57 to its name, SOME nearby and queerby piggish nation will invade shit and take shit over! It is known! History tells us so! (Since Liberland has no vast resources, mineral or otherwise, to bribe us all with, and has NO nukes or other BIGGLY weapons of ass destruction.)

      If'n ye Deeply Care about the welfare of Liberland, get ON BOARD with #SendSpermyDanielstoLiberland!!! If Spermy Daniels lives in Liberland, our NEXT POTUS, Der Dear Leader TrumpfenFarter-Fuhrer, will BEND OVER BACK-TURDS to aid and ASSist Liberland!!!

    2. VULGAR MADMAN   2 years ago

      Go sign up to defend Ukraine you retarded neocon.

    3. Dirk Honkler   2 years ago

      If you're looking for Republicans, why come here?

      You're assblasted your favorite ruler isn't getting unlimited funding from the American tax payer, boo-hoo faggot.

  5. Agammamon   2 years ago

    You don't have a nation unless your neighbors accept that you are a nation.

    And you don't get that acceptance until you kill enough invaders that the survivors accept it.

    1. Daniel Parker   2 years ago (edited)

      That has been the effective definition of “nation” for most (if not all) nations in the past, but people’s attitudes about such things may have changed. The idea behind Liberland is the premise that people are more civilized these days and you actually could create a nation simply by insisting loudly enough that it exists (note that “loud” here includes not just words but also actions such as building); as long as the people who disagree with the idea are less loud with their complaints, the nation will eventually come into existence. It’s an interesting idea, but it sounds like the voices against it (i.e. the police with chainsaws) have been pretty dang loud. Still, the “invasion” did happen without any deaths, so that’s a point in favor of the Liberland proposition.

      1. tenocik54   2 years ago (edited)

        Start now making every month extra $19k or more by just doing an easy online job from home. Last month I have earned and received $16650 from this job by giving this only 3 hrs. a day. Every person can now get this job and start earning online by:-.

        Follow details: → → bitecoinsallar.COM

  6. Roberta   2 years ago

    Got to get the Russians on their side. There'll need to be some give and take with Putin, of course.

    1. VULGAR MADMAN   2 years ago

      Well, Serbia hates Croatia and Serbia is allied with Russia, so there might be a deal there.

      1. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

        Historically, Croatia and Bosnia were allied with Nazi Germany and Serbia was allied with the Soviet Union until Josef Broz Tito decided to have his own flavor of Communism. So basically, Liberland is like a Poland of the Balkans.

        It sounds to me like Liberland needs arms, training, and secret agents and operatives in every neighboring and nearby nation if they are really serious about being an independent and free society.

    2. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

      You're shitting me, right?

      The name of the place is Liberland, not New Siberia or Revanchistan or Rod Dreher's Basement Closet Cloister-Fuck.

      Why would you want to give up the closest thing to a Libertarian society so far on Earth to become a Client-State to Czar-Commissar Putin?

      Oh wait...You're the one willing to submit to the horrors of slavery to avoid the horrors of war. That explains it.

  7. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

    Borders are mere social constructs until Putin invades Ukraine and *checks article* "Liberland" is invaded by the social construct surrounding it.

    1. VULGAR MADMAN   2 years ago

      It’s only western borders that don’t exist.

      1. Public Entelectual   2 years ago

        Phillip Glass could get an opera out of Liberland- its western border disappears at sunset, but is born again in the east with every dawn

        1. VULGAR MADMAN   2 years ago

          I’d watch that.

  8. Jerry B.   2 years ago

    Watch “Playing Frisbee in North Korea” on PBS or Prime.

    1. VULGAR MADMAN   2 years ago

      Or not.

      1. Jerry B.   2 years ago

        Want to see the end game for Socialism, you should watch.

  9. Nobartium   2 years ago

    for one reason because a nation is a people separate from a specific area and he considers all 700,000 online signups to be part of the nation of Liberland.

    He really doesn't want this to be valid precedent.

    He thinks he does, but he doesn't.

    1. Public Entelectual   2 years ago (edited)

      For the price of a Liberlandtine Moldovan tramp stamp, Putin would sign and seal the Constitution of the Sorboatian Seastederation ten times over.

      1. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

        Only if said Sorboatian Seasteaderation threw in a "soul," since Putin
        supposedly bore his own "soul" to The Little Bush Boy.

  10. R Mac   2 years ago

    In case anyone was wondering what’s going on at CATO:

    “The COVID vaccines were a triumph of globalization as they required complex international collaboration in terms of logistics, shipping, storage, and supply chains.”

    https://twitter.com/CatoInstitute/status/1710037101100634325

  11. JesseHaines   2 years ago (edited)

    My most recent pay test was for a 12-hour-per-week internet job for $9,500. For months, my sister’s friend has been making an average of 15,000, and she puts in about 20 hours every week. As soon as I gave it a try, I was shocked at how simple it was.

    Do this instead————————————>>> https://www.dailypay7.com/

    1. Herbert Hoover   2 years ago

      Pepperland aka Liberland, thirty thousand leagues off the bottom of the Adriatic it lay... or lie... I'm not sure which. Now the Apple Bonkers, Snapping Turtle Turks, Hideden Persuaders, Blue Meanies and Gloves have reestablished ordered-at-gunpoint liberty and sent dog-eat-dog egoism packing. Croatia's percap GNP tripled after George Holy War Bush waved packets of dope in his nationwide teevee commercial--then dropped after Waffen Bush asset forfeiture wrecked ALL economies.

      1. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago (edited)

        HI again, Hank!
        🙂
        😉

  12. Herbert Hoover   2 years ago

    The entire Balkans region east of the Adriatic was dedicated to the cultivation of opium poppies before my friend Teedy Rosenfeld advanced the Hague Opium Convention to please the Qing. China promptly collapsed into collectivism and the religious Balkan States flew at each others' throats murdering women, children and babies to keep prices up so Germany, Switzerland, Holland, France and Belgium paid a premium despite the glut. With the narcotic evil now happily eliminated, thanks to my appointee Harry Anslinger, Croatia is free and hippie libertarians deported.

    1. Public Entelectual   2 years ago

      Have you been staring at 43's cat paintings again?

      1. tenocik54   2 years ago (edited)

        Start now making every month extra $19k or more by just doing an easy online job from home. Last month I have earned and received $16650 from this job by giving this only 3 hrs. a day. Every person can now get this job and start earning online by:-.

        Follow details: → → bitecoinsallar.COM

    2. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

      Hi, Hank!
      🙂
      😉
      Man, I'm going to have to get me a Doppelganger and see what fun I could have with it!

  13. liamhellen55   2 years ago

    If you are looking for a game to supplement your English vocabulary, then Wordle is definitely the game for you play wordle, this word guessing game was released in 2021.

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