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<text id=93TT1718>
<link 93XP0516>
<link 93TT0212>
<link 93TO0097>
<title>
May 17, 1993: Reluctant Warrior
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
May 17, 1993 Anguish over Bosnia
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
COVER, Page 26
Reluctant Warrior
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Clinton threatens to take on the Serbs, but a wary America fears
a Balkan quagmire
</p>
<p>By BRUCE W. NELAN--With reporting by Michael Duffy, J.F.O.
McAllister and Bruce van Voorst/Washington, with other bureaus
</p>
<p> Americans know what a war in the desert is like. Many
remember a bitter conflict in the jungle. Now they must imagine
one in the mountains:
</p>
<p> On a balmy Adriatic evening, U.S. Navy attack planes leap
from the deck of their carrier on tails of flame. As they climb
through the gathering darkness, signals from the radar domes and
computers of Air Force AWACS planes direct the jets to targets
nestled in the forests and pastures of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Ahead of them, electronic-warfare jets swoop down to jam any
Serbian antiaircraft radar that might still be working.
</p>
<p> In a valley in eastern Bosnia, American Special Forces
troops with blackened faces silently slip out of a tree line to
point laser beams at Serbian artillery pieces, ammunition stores
and fuel dumps. The F/A-18 Hornet and A-6 Intruder aircraft
from the carriers roar in, lock on to the laser spots and send
their bombs streaking toward the targets.
</p>
<p> Air Force F-15s, British Tornadoes and French Mirages,
launching from bases in Italy, join in with precision bombing
of Serbian militiamen. The attacks go on night after night for
months. Meanwhile allied agents supply the bedraggled Bosnian
Muslim troops with new artillery and tanks, along with advisers
to show how the weaponry works. Before long, the land battles
among Bosnia's warring peoples become more evenly matched. At
that point, perhaps, the Serbs might finally be willing to make
peace with the Muslim-dominated Bosnian government.
</p>
<p> That is the Bill Clinton plan for getting tough with the
Serbs. At least it is the essence of the ideas Secretary of
State Warren Christopher was shopping around Europe last week
as the U.S. sought support for a way to push the Serbs toward
the peace table and end a slaughter that has taken at least
134,000 lives. The U.S. proposal is to exempt Bosnia from the
U.N. embargo on arms sales and use air strikes to protect Muslim
enclaves from Serb attacks until their forces are strong enough
to defend themselves.
</p>
<p> There was a glimmer of hope at week's end that none of
this would be necessary. At Sarajevo airport, the commanders of
the rebel Serb forces and the Bosnian army signed a cease-fire
agreement aimed at "a cessation of armed attacks" throughout the
country on Sunday. They also agreed to demilitarize the
encircled Muslim towns of Srebrenica and Zepa.
</p>
<p> It was far from clear that the truce would hold. Many such
accords have broken down over the past year, and the Serbs have
not honored their April 18 agreement to halt the siege of
Srebrenica. The Bosnian government is also mixing its signals.
It formally asked the 9,000 U.N. troops in the country to leave
because their governments are using their presence as an excuse
for not lifting the arms embargo.
</p>
<p> If Clinton does decide he must use military force, he will
have to do a major selling job not just to the allies but to a
divided Congress and a skeptical American people. In a TIME/CNN
poll, only 36% of those surveyed said the U.S. should do more
to stop the war in Bosnia, vs. 52% who said the U.S. has already
done enough. For many Americans, the horror of Bosnia is a
modern-day Holocaust that carries a moral obligation to
intervene. Some Americans think the U.S. can do so at a low cost
in lives, expecting the fast-acting, high-tech precision of the
Gulf War. But many shudder and see the frustration of Vietnam,
the years of domestic conflict and the long black slabs of the
Vietnam Memorial engraved with 58,000 names.
</p>
<p> For Clinton, history offers little guidance because there
is no direct parallel for the action he is considering. If he
uses military force in Bosnia, he cannot know whether he will
succeed. If he bombs the Bosnian Serbs, their brethren across
the Drina River in Serbia proper might heed the call of blood
and join them for a war of annihilation against the Muslims. Or
the Serbian militiamen who now bestride 70% of Bosnia may simply
dig in and refuse either to negotiate or pull back.
</p>
<p> The prospect of stumbling into a quagmire or of outright
failure looms large for a President who was elected to cure
domestic ills and who, as he begins his second 100 days in
office, is already in political trouble. Clinton told a
television interviewer last week that he was distressed when he
heard the Bosnian Serbs had refused to go along with the peace
plan negotiated by Cyrus Vance and Lord Owen. "I don't want to
have to spend any more time on that than is absolutely
necessary," Clinton said, "because what I got elected to do was
to let America look at our own problems and our own challenges
and deal with those things."
</p>
<p> The Administration was unprepared at this early stage to
deal with a foreign policy problem of such high risk and low
payoff, one that even the old hands in the Bush Administration
had shied away from. "The question raised by Clinton's
performance," says a U.S. diplomat, "is not just his backbone
but his basic competence." A measure of the Clinton team's
frustration: at the last meeting of the President's advisers
before his May 1 decision to send Christopher to Europe with a
sample case of options, a frustrated participant asked, "Isn't
there anyone outside the government with some bright ideas?
Someone who could help us?"
</p>
<p> The meetings in which top advisers developed Bosnia
proposals to offer Clinton were often rudderless, according to
a close associate of one participant. In a break with tradition
at such meetings, the lower-echelon advisers tended to pipe up
freely, sometimes carrying on debates among themselves, while
senior officials like Christopher offered sensible observations
but were mostly silent. Defense Secretary Les Aspin was just
the opposite, caroming from subject to subject, the official
said. Foreign policy experts Tony Lake and Sandy Berger,
meanwhile, wanted to position Clinton as a forceful leader, to
set him apart from Jimmy Carter.
</p>
<p> This vacuum of authority has led to the emergence,
ironically, of Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Colin Powell as
a central figure in the Administration's security policy.
Powell, who has clashed openly with Clinton on issues like gays
in the military, found himself thrust into a key role in
developing a Bosnia plan, even though he had serious
reservations about intervention. In meetings with Congress last
week, Aspin and Powell left no doubt about the situation. Powell
dominated the session, going into such detail on the military
options, an attendee said, that he may have undercut the
Administration's position by stating the drawbacks so clearly.
Other White House advisers have been even more forcefully
opposed to military intervention. One official believes the
President finds himself in a corner "because he has no strong
views of his own," and warns that if Clinton gives in to the
impulse to put Americans into Bosnia, "I think he'll lose his
presidency."
</p>
<p> Yet Clinton decided that after speaking so boldly on
Bosnia in the past, inaction carried great political risk. "He
wants to be a Big President," says a senior Administration
official. "He wants to do Big Things." The Administration
finally arrived at an approach designed to rally the public, but
one that, if it failed, would not damage the presidency. "We
didn't want to be stuck," says a senior official. Air strikes
alone did not make sense, because they could not end the war.
So the White House decided to try to exempt the Bosnian
government from the embargo, and hoped that might push the sides
toward a cease-fire and negotiations. Meanwhile the U.S. would
use air attacks to keep the Serbs from grabbing all that
remained of Bosnia while the Muslims were rearming. That would
aim air power at a clear goal for a limited time and not just
be an "act of lashing out."
</p>
<p> The choices narrowed a lot more quickly than the White
House had intended. When Christopher took off for Europe after
a four-hour policy session on May 1, he was under instructions
to feel out the Western allies and Russia about the combination
of air strikes and rearming of the Muslims. Clinton knew the
Europeans were against those measures, and he fully expected to
amend his proposal after Christopher made his rounds of the
allied capitals. In calls to several Presidents and Prime
Ministers, Clinton sketched out what he had in mind, stressed
it was not a final decision and asked for support.
</p>
<p> The strategic game changed abruptly when the leader of the
Bosnian Serbs, Radovan Karadzic, showed up on May 1 in Athens
to sign the Vance-Owen plan to partition the country into 10
provinces. If the plan were to be carried out, the U.S. would
have to live up to its promise to contribute as many as half of
the 60,000--or more--peacekeeping troops sent to Bosnia. It
was a pledge that most of Washington thought would never be
called in.
</p>
<p> Karadzic's surprising acquiescence abruptly refocused
Christopher's discussions. Air strikes were virtually off the
agenda as the allies began talking about patching together a
peacekeeping force of three or four divisions. All the major
European countries, including Russia, said they were ready to
police Vance-Owen with ground troops in Bosnia.
</p>
<p> No sooner had Washington been sobered by this possibility
than the Bosnian Serbs reversed course again. At a meeting of
their self-designated parliament at Pale, in the mountains east
of Sarajevo, they refused overwhelmingly to accept the
Vance-Owen plan and Karadzic's signature on it. They ignored his
pleas for support, as well as those from Serbian President
Slobodan Milosevic, who had supported and financed them.
</p>
<p> The Serbs, particularly their militia leaders, were
adamant, arguing that the Vance-Owen plan meant giving up land
they had bled for--something they would never do. "Let them
bomb us," smirked Radoslav Brdjanin, a faction leader from Banja
Luka. "We will win the war." Serbian commanders had already
begun moving their headquarters and supply centers out of towns
and into caves and wooded areas. After 17 hours of debate at
Pale, the assembly voted to submit the peace proposal to a
referendum among Bosnian Serbs on May 15. The move was a ploy
that allowed Karadzic to claim Vance-Owen had technically not
been rejected.
</p>
<p> Clinton, who had spent days getting used to the idea of
securing peace in Bosnia with American troops, was dumbfounded
by the rejection of the peace plan. "It showed," said a White
House official, "that the chain of influence was less strong
among the Serbs than just about everybody predicted." The
President responded to the Serbs' go-to-hell decision by urging
the "international community to unite and to act quickly and
decisively." What the U.S. sought, he said, was "not to act
alone, not to act rashly, not to do things which would draw the
U.S. into a conflict not of its own making and not of its own
ability to resolve."
</p>
<p> Clinton and Lake discussed the next steps and decided to
press the Europeans for tougher measures. White House spokesman
George Stephanopoulos explained later that everything depended
on what the Europeans might agree to do. "The first goal," he
said, "is to reach a united front with our allies and make final
decisions and then go to the American people and explain what
our policy is."
</p>
<p> When Christopher returned to the White House on Saturday,
however, he was nearly back where he had started a week earlier.
Though the allies listened sympathetically, they were not
convinced that either lifting the arms embargo or launching air
strikes would hasten a settlement. They professed concern about
a wider war and revenge attacks on their thousands of troops on
peacekeeping duty in the former Yugoslavia. After Christopher
reported to the President on Saturday morning, Stephanopoulos
told reporters there would be more talks with the Europeans.
"This is a continuing process," he said.
</p>
<p> The stakes for the President, meanwhile, have escalated.
By sending Christopher abroad and calling for prompt action
after the Bosnian-Serb rejection, Clinton generated momentum
toward a confrontation. It would be awkward for him to back
down. "Once you say you're going to do something," explained a
congressional leader who was briefed by Aspin last week, "you
have to do it. There is no turning back without a big cost."
Even so, Clinton is not planning to order any military moves
unilaterally or suddenly. He intends to ask Congress for a vote
of confidence and the U.N. Security Council for a resolution.
</p>
<p> The council could present an obstacle because the
Russians, who hold veto power, insist on taking the Bosnian
Serbs' May 15 referendum seriously. Russian Foreign Minister
Andrei Kozyrev said he hoped "the population will be wiser than
its legislative branch." Moscow he said, was not excluding "any
option, including tough measures" if the Serbs remain defiant,
but Washington wonders if Russia would approve air strikes
against fellow Slavs.
</p>
<p> Russians and other Europeans see another good reason for
delay: Milosevic's reaction to the Bosnian Serbs' refusal to
follow his instructions. After the vote in Pale, Milosevic
stalked out, flew back to Belgrade and announced that he was
cutting off all Serbia's assistance to them except for food and
medicine. But many Western military experts contend that
Milosevic cannot really seal the Serbian border and that Bosnian
Serbs have stockpiled at least two years' worth of war materiel
and food.
</p>
<p> Beyond the statecraft is Clinton's biggest assignment:
persuading the American people that their children and their
billions should be spent on Bosnia. (Maintaining a fully
deployed armored division of 25,000 at peak readiness in Bosnia
for one year could cost $5 billion.) It is a long reach to argue
that vital U.S. interests are involved, beyond a preference for
peace and stability in all parts of the world. With the
rationalizations peeled off, the West's concern is prompted by
the moral imperative and is essentially humanitarian. That is
why France and Britain sent troops to escort aid shipments and
do not feel any urge to do much more.
</p>
<p> One of the more sour speculations about White House
motives was offered last week by Ross Perot in an interview with
U.S. News & World Report. The Texan suggested that Clinton was
out to "get a little war going" to "distract the American
people" from economic hard times and broken campaign promises.
An indignant Stephanopoulos responded that Perot's assertions
were "outrageous" and "ill-considered and intemperate."
</p>
<p> Congress is divided over the issue in some surprising
ways, with veteran hawks and doves swapping roles. The
Republican leader in the Senate, Bob Dole, is calling for
military action, but former Vietnam naval aviator--and POW--Republican John McCain is a leader of the opposition to bombing.
Many members of Congress are calling for clear explanations from
Clinton. Democrat Sam Nunn, chairman of the Senate Armed
Services Committee and one of Capitol Hill's leading military
experts, says, "There ought to be a clear exit point. We ought
to know how we're going to get out."
</p>
<p> Leaders in both houses agree, nevertheless, that after hot
debate, a majority will support the President on what he asks
for. "You can't really beat a President on a national-security
issue," says Lee Hamilton, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs
Committee. "I'd expect him to get what he wants when the time
comes."
</p>
<p> At the Pentagon, preparations have been at full speed for
months. Planners are ready for the order to go, starting with
a quick strike on Serbian artillery positions--quick because
surprise is vital to catch them in place. The targets have
already been mapped and reported to operations officers by U.S.
Special Forces teams moving stealthily around Bosnia. Events may
be pushing the decision makers. "Things are going so fast," says
Brent Scowcroft, who was George Bush's National Security
Adviser, "and nobody knows quite where we are headed."
</p>
<p> When it is time for the go or no-go decision, however,
Clinton will have to make it himself. He has only a few choices.
He can go ahead with air strikes, stall for more time or risk
a loss of credibility by backing away. He can also be certain
that if Bosnia is an annoying distraction today, it will become a
monumental headache that crowds out his domestic programs if he
sends American forces into action.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>