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- <text id=93TT0211>
- <title>
- Aug. 16, 1993: Blood, Threats and Fears
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 16, 1993 Overturning The Reagan Era
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOSNIA, Page 30
- Blood, Threats and Fears
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>It's decision time. Will NATO launch air attacks? Can the Serbs
- avoid being bombed by pulling back? Will the Bosnians agree
- to partition their country?
- </p>
- <p>By BRUCE W. NELAN--With reporting by James L. Graff/Vienna and J.F.O. McAllister and
- Bruce van Voorst/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The British diplomat grumbled sarcastically: "Full marks for
- Clinton for appalling timing." Visibly angry, he was also speaking
- for most of his NATO colleagues. As Europeans saw it, they had
- the besieged Bosnian government just where they wanted. President
- Alija Izetbegovic was ready to capitulate to a plan to partition
- Bosnia and Herzegovina into three ethnic zones, with the largest
- slice going to the biggest aggressors, the Serbs. However distasteful,
- it was a settlement that might end the war with a "negotiated,"
- face-saving way out for the West.
- </p>
- <p> That was the precise moment Bill Clinton chose to threaten to
- bomb the Serbian forces that were "strangling" Sarajevo. Encouraged,
- possibly believing that U.S. military intervention could still
- save him, Izetbegovic bolted from the talks in Geneva. When
- Clinton's renewed determination to mount air strikes hit the
- NATO council in Brussels, it set off a 12-hour meeting so acrimonious
- that some participants feared the alliance itself was in danger
- of breaking apart over what would be the first offensive military
- action in its 44-year history.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. threat has catalyzed events in a way that forces all
- sides into critical decisions this week: NATO will have to decide
- what to bomb and under whose command. In order to avoid being
- bombed, the Serbs must demonstrate that they will live up to
- their promise to pull back a step from Sarajevo. Izetbegovic
- and the Bosnians will have to choose between defeat at Geneva
- and extinction. And all these decisions must be made at roughly
- the same time.
- </p>
- <p> In spite of what resentful European allies think, Washington
- was not trying to complicate the Geneva negotiations. The proximate
- cause of war talk was a report in early July from the World
- Health Organization, saying Sarajevo faced potential catastrophe
- because of shortages of food, fuel and electricity. Worried
- by that--and by the political beating the Administration would
- take for "losing" Sarajevo--U.S. Secretary of State Warren
- Christopher joined hawkish National Security Adviser Anthony
- Lake in ordering an analysis of air power to break the Serbian
- choke hold on the capital. That surprised many policymakers
- unused to seeing Christopher push the government toward the
- use of force in Bosnia. But the Secretary of State felt badly
- stung by the failure of his attempts in May to push NATO into
- military intervention, and was worried that U.S. diplomatic
- credibility had been eroded by months of vacillation. As a result,
- he seemed determined not to be blamed if Sarajevo fell. He may
- also have felt disgust at the bad faith of the Serbs, who promised
- once again last week to lift the siege, then immediately started
- squabbling about exactly where their front line had been.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton accepted the plan and told leaders of the NATO states
- about it in personal letters on July 30. Christopher followed
- up with letters of his own to foreign ministers of the NATO
- countries, Russia and U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali.
- The U.S., said Christopher, intended to use military force not
- only to relieve Sarajevo but also to push the warring parties
- toward a negotiated settlement.
- </p>
- <p> When the alliance council met in Brussels last week to debate
- the U.S. proposal, tension built quickly. Washington's plan
- to issue an ultimatum to the Bosnian Serbs was rejected. So
- was the suggestion that the Serbs' headquarters should be a
- bombing target. The British, French and Canadians, all of whom
- have troops at risk on peacekeeping duty in Bosnia, staunchly
- opposed any action other than the most limited retaliation for
- attacks on U.N. forces. Eventually the allies cobbled together
- a compromise committing the alliance to prepare air strikes
- but not specifying when or how to undertake them. They left
- undecided knotty issues of whether the U.N. or NATO would command
- the strikes, the range of acceptable targets and the degree
- of Serb aggression necessary to trigger the raids.
- </p>
- <p> If the NATO plan seemed less than clear-cut, it was concrete
- enough to produce results--desired or not. "It was bound to
- raise false hopes among the Muslims," snapped the senior British
- diplomat. Sure enough, Izetbegovic announced that he was boycotting
- the talks until the Serbs halted the offensive that had seized
- the last two important mountaintops around Sarajevo. "Air attacks
- won't save the Muslims," said a conference official in Geneva.
- "They must talk or die."
- </p>
- <p> The Serbs also reacted, with a promise to ease off. Saying he
- takes the threat of air attacks "very seriously," Bosnian Serb
- leader Radovan Karadzic pledged his forces would withdraw from
- newly captured mountains and allow free flow of aid convoys
- into the city. Similar commitments have gone unfulfilled in
- the past, but this time hard-line Serb military commander General
- Ratko Mladic stood next to Karadzic and said, "Everything which
- is agreed will be carried out." The U.N. commander in Bosnia,
- Belgian Lieut. General Francis Briquemont, was still skeptical.
- Said he: "Actions speak louder than words." On Friday he and
- Mladic talked for six hours at Sarajevo airport without reaching
- agreement on handing Serb positions on the mountains over to
- U.N. peacekeepers. Briquemont said he and Mladic "did not have
- the same concept about conditions, control or monitoring an
- area."
- </p>
- <p> Izetbegovic had little choice but to agree to return to the
- talks, which were to resume in Geneva this week. If he had refused,
- he would have risked being labeled the obstacle to peace. Moreover,
- the U.S. told him flatly that no bombing of Serb positions would
- be considered unless the Bosnian government had returned to
- good-faith negotiations. "We're making it very, very clear to
- him," said a senior official. "The cavalry is not coming to
- take back his country for him." The co-chairmen of the negotiations,
- Thorvald Stoltenberg representing the U.N. and Lord Owen for
- the European Community, say they are committed to allocating
- 30% of Bosnia and Herzegovina's territory to Muslims, even though
- they hold only about 10% now. Izetbegovic considers 30% insufficient.
- "There is no final map yet," said Owen.
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, NATO was to meet again in Brussels to try
- to resolve the outstanding issues on who would control the air
- strikes and how they would be carried out. The U.S. is still
- trying to persuade its allies that bombs and rockets, if used,
- should be directed not just at Serbian troops who endanger U.N.
- peacekeepers but also at ammunition dumps, roads, bridges and
- communications. Once such questions are settled, says an Administration
- official, the allies "may or may not be at the point at which
- a political decision is made to authorize strikes." To be ready,
- NATO ground controllers are moving into position in Bosnia equipped
- with radar and laser targeting systems and digitalized maps
- accurate to within 50 ft.
- </p>
- <p> Washington officials say their bombing policy is primarily intended
- to spur negotiations by warning the Serbs that they cannot hope
- for total victory and reassuring the Muslims that the U.S. can
- be counted on for serious peacekeeping efforts after an agreement
- is signed. What precisely that portends has not been spelled
- out, and even Clinton may not know. Reflecting the mixed messages
- that have characterized his Bosnia policy all along, the President
- told a Congressman on Capitol Hill, "I will not let Sarajevo
- fall." Then, as he walked away, Clinton turned and added, "Don't
- take that as an absolute. I'll do my part."
- </p>
- <p> In this phase of the Bosnian endgame, the U.S. and its allies--whether they admit it or not--are disputing methods rather
- than objectives. The international community is not talking
- about rolling back the victorious Serbs and restoring a multiethnic
- Bosnia and Herzegovina to its former territory. The most that
- may happen is that Serbian victors would face a tribunal for
- war crimes. But even a conviction could not remake the map.
- "The fundamental purpose of all this," says a congressional
- staff expert, "is to achieve the partition of Bosnia in the
- Geneva talks." Senior Administration officials do not challenge
- that grim prescription. "Our effort," says one, "is serious,
- but it's also limited." With luck the U.S. and Europe will get
- a signed agreement at Geneva they can endorse, no matter how
- distasteful it may be--and never have to bomb at all.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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