ARHIVSKI VJESNIK 42. (ZAGREB, 1999.)

Strana - 127

M. Kchrig, The position of military archives in the frame of archival service ­Independence or integration?, Arh. vjesn., god. 42 (1999), str. 113-128 tonomous military archives for political or, if you will, ideological reasons. One co­uld also argue that the uniform administration of the state's archived heritage is com­promised by autonomous military archives, but as long as the latter are subject to the provisions of archive laws and the state archive administration has a right of inspec­tion vis-a-vis the žspecial archives' for defence and foreign policy, this danger must be regarded as being fairly remote. As regards the second group of military archives, which I shall term the Swed­ish-German group, the consistency of archival work and documentation of the state administration is of course guaranteed. And when the archival requirements of the state archive administration and the professional demands of the military on the ar­chive system are balanced, then a satisfactory situation has been achieved. Howe­ver, this demands from both sides much discretion, consideration and sympathy for the tasks and peculiarities of the other party. Whether one can still call on such quali­ties of good citizenship is another matter. With regard to the last group, which I would term the Anglo-Saxon group, many years of practical experience and the needs of the armed forces and of the ar­chive administration have produced a satisfactory solution. We can, therefore, see that with all three models benefits and drawbacks are more or less balanced. The an­swer to the question as to where military archives are best placed, with the Ministry of Defence or the state archive administration, is therefore dependent on the questi­on of where they can best fulfil their tasks of acting as a guardian of the records of the state's activities and simultaneously as centres of scientific research. The optimal discharge of these duties is conditioned to a significant degree by the extent to which the military and state archives are equipped with adequate resources in terms of fi­nance, manpower, infrastructure and materials. In the countries of the former War­saw Pact it is my impression that the autonomous military archives were better equ­ipped in these respects than those archives under state administration. This was par­ticularly evident in the former GDR, whose military archive in Potsdam I was res­ponsible for integrating into the Federal Military Archives as from October 1990. However, autonomous military archives must unequivocally define themselves as part of the national memory, be bound by the national archival legislation and in ac­cordance with this make their holdings accessible to all, and must demonstrate a sen­sible measure of willingness to cooperate with the state archive administration in or­der to show a common responsibility for the written heritage of the state. On no ac­count, however, should historical developments in the field of the state archival ad­ministration be gratuitously disrupted and autonomous military archives forced into the civil archive administration, just as military archives which are integrated into the national or state archives should not be forcibly separated out into an inappropri­ate special position. It must be kept in mind that military archives, as "central me­127

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