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- <text id=93TT0954>
- <title>
- Jan. 25, 1993: Serbia's Spite
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jan. 25, 1993 Stand and Deliver: Bill Clinton
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE BALKANS, Page 48
- Serbia's Spite
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Milosevic should be pleased. If the West's peace plan ever goes
- into effect, it will ratify his aggression and grant him almost
- everything he wants.
- </p>
- <p>By BRUCE W. NELAN - With reporting by James L. Graff/Belgrade,
- William Mader/London and J.F.O. McAllister/Washington
- </p>
- <p> With a broad smile, Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic
- told would-be peacemakers in Geneva last week that he had
- persuaded the leader of Bosnia's Serbs to accept their plan for
- partitioning war-torn Bosnia and Herzegovina. It was, he said,
- a "very important step toward peace." The mediators, U.N.
- special envoy Cyrus Vance and European Community representative
- Lord Owen, indicated that they believed him. Both gave Milosevic
- credit for pressing the Bosnian Serb boss, Radovan Karadzic, to
- accept the plan.
- </p>
- <p> If Milosevic is now in the market for peace, and is
- carrying Karadzic with him, it can only be because war has
- brought him almost all that he hoped to tear out of Bosnia. "The
- Serbs are not going to cease firing until satiated," says a
- State Department official. After more than nine months of
- fighting, an estimated 125,000 have been killed, more than a
- million refugees are homeless, and Bosnian Serbs hold 70% of the
- republic. An internationally sanctioned accord now would reward
- the Serbs, who make up only 31% of the Bosnian population, for
- their aggression. Milosevic would then be another de facto step
- closer to his dream of creating a Greater Serbia in the former
- Yugoslavia.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever his motivations, Milosevic had little reason to
- reject the Vance-Owen plan. Talking about peace has repeatedly
- allowed the Serbs valuable time to consolidate their conquests.
- So after Karadzic said no at the international negotiations in
- Geneva last week, Milosevic had a long, private talk with him
- and persuaded him to say yes.
- </p>
- <p> Whether the Vance-Owen plan is the key to peace is
- questionable. It would force the legitimate Bosnian government,
- which represents other ethnic groups in addition to the Muslims,
- who make up 44% of the population, to accept partition of the
- country. The two mediators have designed an elaborate scheme for
- twisting Bosnia into 10 autonomous provinces, to be ethnically
- apportioned among Muslims, Serbs and Croats. The patchwork
- blueprint can hardly be mapped, let alone offer a structure
- capable of standing up to the waves of hatred that flow through
- the real Bosnia. Rather than tamping down ethnic animosity, the
- design seems to guarantee perpetual quarreling; it would also
- hand the Serbs the fruits of their "ethnic cleansing." Owen
- admits as much, saying, "The proposals are not necessarily what
- I would like most, but they reflect reality on the ground."
- </p>
- <p> Outside observers react to the plan in much the same way.
- "It is a defeat for the West and international law," says
- Lawrence Freedman, professor of war studies at London's King's
- College. Though Vance is a former U.S. Secretary of State,
- Washington does not fully support--or denounce--his plan.
- Says a U.S. official: "It essentially recognizes most of the
- gains made by ethnic cleansing and genocide."
- </p>
- <p> Under the circumstances, such skeptics may be reassured by
- the strong possibility that the plan will never go into effect.
- Karadzic conditioned his acceptance on a demand that the
- ultra-nationalist assembly of the self-styled Bosnian Serb
- government must vote its approval. He predicted the assembly
- would do so this week, but not everyone believes it will.
- </p>
- <p> If the assembly does accept, that would be only the
- beginning of a long and complicated process. First, the sides
- would have to implement a durable cease-fire and settle the
- disputed demarcation of the 10 proposed provinces. Then would
- come the demilitarization of the area and arrangements for
- elections. At each step the Serbs, who dominate so much of the
- country, could discover any number of pretexts for not pulling
- back to their designated areas. And Muslims are most unlikely
- to try to resettle in Serb-controlled areas.
- </p>
- <p> Enforcing all these procedures would, in any case, depend
- on the U.N. and its local presence in Bosnia. Referring to the
- assassination of a Bosnian leader two weeks ago, a U.S.
- official says, "The U.N. can't even protect the Bosnian Vice
- Premier in its own armored personnel carrier on a road it
- supposedly controls." The weakness of the U.N. is also visible
- in Croatia, where it is supposedly supervising large areas that
- Serbs seized in 1991. The U.N. has not disarmed the Serbs there,
- has not resettled Croats in their homes and has not
- re-established local government.
- </p>
- <p> Karadzic may have had some of this in mind when he said,
- after announcing his agreement, "I think there are still a lot
- of possibilities to reach our objectives." A senior State
- Department official in Washington says, "Milosevic has succeeded
- in convincing Karadzic that it is best to wait." Milosevic's
- long-term objective remains the eventual annexation of the
- Serb-controlled areas of Bosnia by Serbia. In this, as in all
- other aspects of Milosevic's single-minded determination to
- dominate, the West comes up hard against what the Serbs
- themselves call inat--spite.
- </p>
- <p> Serbs have long believed that the world has it in for
- them. This time they have persuaded themselves that they are
- facing an imminent onslaught and must prepare for what they
- think of as their historic martyrdom. On Orthodox Christmas Eve
- two weeks ago, Yugoslav President Dobrica Cosic, 71, a Serb
- writer, appeared on television to warn of demands for "national
- capitulation" from the West. "If we don't accept," he predicted,
- "we are going to be put in a concentration camp and face an
- attack by the most powerful armies of the world." These outside
- forces, he said, are determined to subordinate "the Serbian
- people to Muslim hegemony."
- </p>
- <p> Strange as such rhetoric sounds, it is echoed throughout
- Serbia. A great majority of Serbs, including some who detest
- Milosevic, perceive the outside world as inherently anti-Serb.
- To varying degrees, Serbs see themselves as victims of double
- standards, willful misunderstandings and great conspiracies. All
- nations tend to pull together under pressure, but in Serbia
- there is an even stronger tradition, founded on centuries of
- subjugation by the Ottoman Empire, of defiance in the face of
- insuperable odds. Though the Turks are long gone, Serbs still
- dwell on their fear of living under Muslim domination. The
- cumulative effect, visible in last month's elections, which
- Milosevic and his allies won easily, is increased support for
- virulent nationalism. "Milosevic's main weapon," says Milos
- Vasic, a journalist at the Belgrade weekly Vreme, "is the
- systematic maintenance of a siege mentality."
- </p>
- <p> Much of the Serbs' evident sense of impending disaster is
- of their own--and Milosevic's--making. The West has not
- been aggressive, or even firm and decisive, in its handling of
- Serbia, which has fomented and backed armed rebellion in major
- portions of Croatia and Bosnia while suffering scant punishment.
- In view of the West's performance so far, Milosevic's confidence
- is understandable. If the Vance-Owen accord collapses, he and
- his Bosnian allies can sit tight. If it holds, he can shift his
- resources to his pursuit of Greater Serbia in the Kosovo and
- Macedonia regions of the former Yugoslavia.
- </p>
- <p> But there are many things short of accepting the Serbs'
- fait accompli or sending ground troops to fight them that the
- U.N. or the NATO allies could do to end the bloodletting--if
- they had the political will to carry them out. They could
- blockade Serbia to make sanctions work, and launch air strikes
- against Serb fighters in Bosnia. If Serbia were to join the
- battle, Western air forces could bomb military targets in Serbia
- as well.
- </p>
- <p> Such a clear demonstration by the West that it will not
- allow Europe to fall back into the turmoil of ethnic and
- religious wars of yesteryear, complete with massacres, rape and
- concentration camps, would force Serbs to confront themselves
- and their defiance. Up to now, the self-defeating gradualism of
- the West has put too little painful pressure on the Serbs to
- halt their aggression.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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