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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1995-01-31
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<text id=94TT1654>
<title>
Nov. 28, 1994: Bosnia:Doesn't Anybody Want Peace?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Nov. 28, 1994 Star Trek
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BOSNIA, Page 48
Doesn't Anybody Want Peace?
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Strong Serb counterattacks threaten the Bosnian forces, Croatia--and the Western Alliance
</p>
<p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by James L. Graff/Sarajevo, J.F.O. McAllister/Washington
and Alexandra Stiglmayer/Zagreb, with other bureaus
</p>
<p> Peacekeepers in Bosnia watched as two fighter-bombers took
off from Udbina, in an area of Croatia controlled by Serbs.
A few minutes later other U.N. military observers saw two jet
planes roar low near the town of Bihac, a mainly Muslim "safe
zone" theoretically under U.N. protection in Bosnia's northwest
corner. "After they arrived," a U.N. spokesman reported, "two
loud explosions were heard." Military monitors went to inspect
and found fragments from cluster bombs and, in the U.N.'s view,
for the first time in the war, napalm. Fighting worsened the
next day as Serbian jets from Udbina bombed and strafed the
center of the nearby town of Cazin.
</p>
<p> On Saturday the U.N. Security Council voted to permit NATO air
strikes into Croatia, forcing NATO officials to confer nervously
on how to put the resolution into effect. The escalating warfare
could not have come at a worse time for the NATO allies and
the members of the five-nation contact group that has been working
on a plan to partition the country. Mired in their own disagreements
over how to end the war, almost anything they might try seemed
likely to add to the tensions. The Europeans, especially the
French, are outraged at the U.S. decision to stop enforcing
the international arms embargo on Bosnia, and they complained
aloud over what unpleasant surprises might issue from Washington
next.
</p>
<p> Less than a month ago, the news from the government-controlled
enclave of Bihac had lent hope to the diplomats trying to negotiate
an end to the 31-month-old war. After a period of training and
refitting with weapons smuggled in from Croatia, a reinvigorated
Bosnian army conducted sharp, sustained attacks and was driving
the rebel Serbs back from the Bihac area and several towns in
central Bosnia. Even Yasushi Akashi, the U.N.'s very cautious
representative in the former Yugoslavia, speculated that the
Bosnian Serbs' unexpected losses of territory might push them
to return to the negotiating table.
</p>
<p> Such hopes, always frail, evaporated last week. They have been
replaced by fear of a wider war, one that may bring the national
army of Croatia back into the battle against the Serbs. The
fighting around Bihac exemplifies the ethnic confusion of Bosnia.
Bihac is surrounded by Serbs, but because it sits at what is
now an international border, the Serbs to the north and west--self-proclaimed rulers of the Krajina region--are in Croatia,
while the ones to the east and south are in Bosnia.
</p>
<p> As the two groups coordinated their attack, the Serbs recovered
all the territory they had lost and could probably overrun the
town of 60,000 and its government defenders. If the Serbs were
to take Bihac, they would forge a more solid link between their
holdings in Bosnia and Krajina across the border in Croatia.
The threat of such a consolidated Serb ministate reaching into
Croatia could then set off a counterattack by the Croatian army.
"The Croats are very nervous," says a senior U.S. official.
"There's a war party in Zagreb that would like nothing better
than an excuse to fight."
</p>
<p> To complete the confusion, rebel Muslims have also joined the
Bihac fray. Armed followers of renegade Muslim businessman Fikret
Abdic were driven out of Bihac last summer and took refuge in
camps in Croatia. Last week, rearmed by the Croat Serbs and
given covering fire from artillery and missiles, some 5,000
of the rebel Muslims charged back across the border to surround
their former base at Velika Kladusa. Another group of rebels
attacked toward Bihac from the west.
</p>
<p> The U.S. first reacted by pressing for a U.N. declaration banning
heavy weapons from a 6-mile radius of the safe area. After a
series of meetings in Western capitals, the allies were unable
to agree on how to proceed. The contact group met in London
but could find no common stance. Said a U.N. representative:
"They see no way forward."
</p>
<p> "We can't let this just drift along," said a worried American
official. "We have to do something." But that refrain has been
heard before, and the outlook for action this time seems less
promising than ever. European allies are balky and fuming about
Washington's decision two weeks ago to stop enforcing the arms
embargo. Paris and London are talking in dire terms about the
disunity the step implies for the future of NATO. "There is
a fear everywhere in Europe," says Jonathan Eyal, director of
studies at the Royal United Services Institute, a London think
tank, "that we may end up with a NATO that will not be meaningful
because of the unreliability of the most important member state."
</p>
<p> The French in particular have been pumping up the volume. "What
are we trying to wage, war or peace?" demanded Foreign Minister
Alain Juppe. He warned that an "eating away" of the arms embargo
would intensify the fighting, endanger French peacekeeping troops
and force their withdrawal--which might even require U.S.
military help. British Defense Secretary Malcolm Rifkind soothingly
said the operational effect of Washington's decision was almost
nil.
</p>
<p> That is true because most arms shipments to Bosnia are not arriving
from across the Adriatic, where U.S. warships were patrolling,
but from Croatia. American officials complained that the French
were inflating the issue to pursue their old objective of edging
Washington out of European defense councils. The U.S. officials
point out that Congress forced the measure on the Administration
four months ago and that any well-run embassy should have warned
its government what was coming.
</p>
<p> Washington's objections are fair, but they ignore the psychological
impact that breaking ranks on the embargo has had in Europe.
Press commentaries in Britain and France had trouble distinguishing
between a decision to stop using U.S. ships and planes to enforce
the embargo, which has been made, and a decision to break the
embargo, which has not.
</p>
<p> The European allies can be excused for assuming that Washington's
recent announcement on the arms embargo will not be its last.
Even under Democratic control, the Congress has been pressing
President Clinton to lift it--if necessary, unilaterally and
in defiance of Security Council resolutions. With the Republicans
taking over on Capitol Hill in January, the pressure could grow
irresistible. Senator Bob Dole wrote to Clinton last week saying
"enough is enough" in Bosnia and calling for "decisive action."
</p>
<p> As required by the same law that ended enforcement of the embargo,
Pentagon and State Department officials last week briefed Congress
on options that members could consider if Washington does decide
to violate the embargo and effectively side with the Bosnian
government. The briefings were secret, but participants said
a so-called heavy option would provide Bosnia with up to $5
billion in weapons, aid and training, while a light version
would involve $500 million in hardware.
</p>
<p> Included in those briefings, Administration spokesmen said,
were firm warnings to the lawmakers that a decision to ignore
the embargo "would have a potential negative effect" and could
wreck the peacekeeping and humanitarian efforts in Bosnia. That
is an understatement. It could shatter the unity of the NATO
alliance in precisely the way many Europeans feared last week.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>