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- <text id=93TT0212>
- <title>
- Aug. 16, 1993: A Casualty of Level-10 Frustration
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 16, 1993 Overturning The Reagan Era
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOSNIA, Page 31
- A Casualty of Level-10 Frustration
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> In this age of scandal, government officials more often quit
- in shame than resign over principle. So Washington took notice
- last week when Marshall Harris, a 32-year-old desk officer
- at the State Department, publicly left his post after reaching
- "level-10 frustration" at the Clinton Administration's erratic
- Bosnia policy. "I thought about resigning last month when Secretary
- Christopher said the U.S. was doing all it could," he says.
- "But the real kicker came when I found out we were putting heavy
- pressure on the Muslims to come to an agreement in Geneva, and
- using the threat of withholding air strikes around Sarajevo
- as part of that pressure. It's wrong to pressure a legitimately
- elected government to agree to a dismemberment that has been
- forced by a brutal campaign of aggression that we could have
- stopped and can still stop."
- </p>
- <p> Like George Kenney, who resigned as the State Department's Yugoslav
- affairs officer in August 1992 to protest George Bush's supine
- Bosnia policy, Harris could not stomach Clinton's inaction "against
- genocide and the Serbs who perpetrate it." Now that the U.S.
- is ready to send in the Air Force, it would seem an odd time
- for a dramatic stand. But not to Harris, who considers the Administration's
- role a tawdry sellout.
- </p>
- <p> Trained as a maritime lawyer, Harris served as a diplomat in
- England, Bulgaria and Macedonia. He liked Bill Clinton's campaign
- promises to do more for Bosnia, and thought something would
- come of Christopher's maiden speech decrying the dangers of
- Serb aggression. But he and other working-levofficers who had
- to write the daily press guidance reconciling Bosnia's brutal
- carnage with a stand-back American policy grew increasingly
- dismayed as Clinton backed away from using force.
- </p>
- <p> Harris' path to resignation was anything but straight. "There
- have been so many twists and turns in our policy that it's been
- a real roller-coaster ride," he says. Considered energetic and
- capable by his superiors, he proved unusually outspoken for
- a mid-level Foreign Service officer. In April he and 11 colleagues
- wrote a letter to Christopher urging military intervention to
- help the Muslims; the missive somehow leaked to the New York
- Times. In May, when Christopher asked the allies to lift the
- arms embargo against the Bosnian government and bomb Serb targets,
- "we were excited that the U.S. was finally moving the right
- way. That went straight to hell in a matter of days," he says,
- when Christopher returned empty-handed. Last week's bomb-or-not-to-bomb
- contortions made up his mind. "I had to leave because my conscience
- wouldn't allow me to keep advocating and implementing policies
- that will bring about the partition of Bosnia," he says. "I
- could have just turned in a resignation letter and walked out
- the door, but I did it publicly because I hope it won't be just
- a quixotic gesture." Representative Frank McCloskey, an opponent
- of Clinton's Bosnia policy, hired Harris immediately.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-