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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1995-01-31
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<text id=94TT1578>
<title>
Nov. 14, 1994: Bosnia:Reversal of Fortunes?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Nov. 14, 1994 How Could She Do It?
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BOSNIA, Page 71
Reversal of Fortunes?
</hdr>
<body>
<p> With new tactics, an improved arsenal and Croat help, the Bosnian
military begins to taste victory
</p>
<p>By Mark Thompson--Reported by Alexandra Stiglmayer/Zagreb and Douglas Waller/Washington
</p>
<p> Sometimes at dusk, sometimes at dawn, when the dim gray light
shrouds them from the enemy, commandos of the mainly Muslim
Bosnian army launch coordinated attacks on Serb positions. Using
their advantage in manpower, the Bosnian troops pick their way
around the enemy's heavy tanks and guns, ambushing troops or
blasting through sparsely defended encampments.
</p>
<p> In the course of two weeks, these new tactics have served the
Bosnian government well: for the first time in 31 months of
war, they are poking through the overextended lines of the Bosnian
Serb army. Government forces have retaken 60 sq. mi. of territory
from the Serbs near Bihac in the north, made significant gains
around strategic Mount Igman overlooking the capital of Sarajevo
and recaptured the town of Kupres and perhaps an additional
40 sq. mi. in central Bosnia.
</p>
<p> A forlorn quartet of Bosnian Serb tanks abandoned in the mountains
south of Sarajevo last week--their fuel tanks parched dry
and deserted by once proud Serb soldiers--signaled critical
changes on the frontlines as the Balkan war enters its third
winter. The government's gains are still limited, but the string
of tactical successes is sparking new reassessments about the
conflict.
</p>
<p> The Bosnians owe much of their reversal of fortune to the adoption
of the successful guerrilla tactics used by Tito's communists
in the former Yugoslavia almost a half-century ago. Bosnian
army units, some with barely 100 men, began ambushing Serb forces
at 16 different locations around the country. Instead of the
frontal assaults that foundered against the Serbs' superior
firepower, says U.N. spokesman Paul Risley in Zagreb, the Bosnians
"are employing commando tactics to grab territory." The breadth
of the government offensive has exposed how thin the Serb defenses
are: reinforcements dispatched to the Bihac region came from
Kupres, for example, leaving it largely undefended.
</p>
<p> The new tactics caught the Bosnian Serbs, who had come to discount
the Muslims' fighting ability, by surprise. Bosnian Serb soldiers
have been demoralized by Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic's
decision last August to close his border with Bosnia, cutting
off fuel and spare parts for the Bosnian Serb army. Its longstanding
edge in mobility and firepower--a heavy-weapons arsenal 10
times as big as the Bosnian government's--is diminishing as
fuel and supplies dwindle. Less fuel also means fewer rotations
back home, hurting morale.
</p>
<p> At the same time, the Bosnian army has been helped by a renewed
flow of weaponry from Iran and other countries. "If the Croats
really opened the routes," says a middleman supplying the Bosnian
troops, "we could even bring in tanks and heavy artillery. We
have the money." The government has also revitalized its local
defense industry, churning out automatic rifles, hand grenades
and bullets.
</p>
<p> The pincer campaign to seize Kupres marks the first time the
Muslims and Croats have fought as allies since they agreed to
work together last spring. A firm alliance, much encouraged
by Washington, could enhance Bosnia's military might by widening
supply routes and bringing in Croat artillery. But U.N. observers
warn that Croat cooperation in Kupres may simply be opportunistic--a chance to advance their own territorial objectives.
</p>
<p> The Bosnian triumphs have sparked concern in the Pentagon that
the Muslims, flush with victory and seeking revenge for past
Serb atrocities, might begin terrorizing Serb civilians. The
Pentagon advised the White House to order retaliatory air strikes
when Bosnian troops fired on French peacekeepers on Mount Igman
two weeks ago to show NATO's evenhandedness against those who
attack blue helmets. The State Department and the White House
demurred, but later the Administration privately warned Bosnia
to obey the rules of warfare under the Geneva Convention.
</p>
<p> But Washington was not altogether displeased by the Bosnians'
display of martial prowess. "If the government is more effective
on the battlefield," Secretary of State Warren Christopher said,
"that could remind the Bosnian Serbs that there may be some
reasons to settle."
</p>
<p> The Muslim offensive comes just as the U.N. Security Council
begins debating a U.S. proposal to set a date for lifting the
ban on weapons shipments to the Bosnian government six months
from now. But Britain, France and Russia continue to oppose
the plan because it might make the conflict, in which at least
200,000 people are already dead or missing, even bloodier, and
could endanger the region's 23,000 U.N. peacekeepers.
</p>
<p> Serb leader Radovan Karadzic, who has changed from his customary
suit into military fatigues in recent days, has vowed not to
let the Bosnian victories stand and promises a full-bore counterattack.
"Our enemy wants war," he told a rally in northwest Bosnia,
"and he shall have it." Late in the week, Serb forces began
making good on Karadzic's threat. Two surface-to-air missiles
hit Bihac, damaging up to 40 buildings and wounding seven people.
Rather than hastening the end of Europe's most gruesome conflict,
the Bosnian government's recent successes may only be stoking
the engines of war.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>