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- <text id=94TT0451>
- <title>
- Apr. 25, 1994: A Little Bombing Is A Dangerous Thing
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Apr. 25, 1994 Hope in the War against Cancer
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOSNIA, Page 47
- A Little Bombing Is A Dangerous Thing
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Despite NATO raids, the Serbs tighten their vise around Gorazde,
- confounding Clinton and his allies
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by Sally B. Donnelly/Moscow, James L. Graff/Vienna,
- J.F.O. McAllister/Washington and Chris Stephen/Sarajevo
- </p>
- <p> As each day passed, the designation of Gorazde as a U.N.-sanctioned
- "safe area" seemed increasingly like a cruel joke. Two rounds
- of NATO air strikes early in the week had done little to ease
- the Serbs' tightening vise around the besieged Muslim enclave
- on the Drina River. By Friday, Serb forces had moved artillery
- and armored vehicles into the surrounding hills and pounded
- away at the city of 65,000 civilians with howitzers, mortars
- and tank cannons. On Saturday afternoon, as Bosnian radio reported
- fretfully that tanks were rolling through Gorazde and firing
- into residential areas, NATO dispatched six planes to search
- for a Serb tank lobbing shells into Gorazde from the city's
- outskirts. Bad weather forced the planes back, but not before
- a surface-to-air missile launched by the Serbs downed a British
- Sea Harrier jet. The pilot parachuted to safety in a Bosnian
- village, but the episode only escalated the tensions. Would
- NATO step up air strikes? Would the Serbs make good on their
- vow to take the city by dusk?
- </p>
- <p> As darkness settled on Gorazde, neither scenario came to pass.
- Instead, Yasushi Akashi, the U.N.'s chief civilian representative
- in Bosnia, suddenly announced that he was close to signing a
- pact with the Serbs. According to Akashi, the U.N. would stop
- combat air patrols above Gorazde if the Serbs agreed to a cease-fire
- and released U.N. personnel held across Bosnia beginning last
- Monday. The Serbs must also withdraw to the outskirts of Gorazde
- and allow a multinational U.N. protection force to police the
- front lines around the city. The deal, brokered with the help
- of Russian mediator Vitali Churkin, offered face-saving possibilities
- for all parties. But given Serb proclamations just hours earlier
- that they intended to take Gorazde, and the ease with which
- cease-fires come and go in Bosnia, hopes were slim that the
- accord would actually hold.
- </p>
- <p> After two years of anguished but feckless soul searching by
- NATO about its proper role in the Bosnia mess, the organization's
- halfhearted display of military muscle in the skies over Gorazde
- did little to enhance its reputation. On Saturday, before the
- tentative agreement with the Serbs was announced, six former
- U.S. officials, among them former National Security Adviser
- Zbigniew Brzezinski and former Defense Secretary Frank Carlucci,
- blasted Bill Clinton for a "posture of moral and political abdication,"
- and called for further NATO air action. And barely hours before
- Akashi released word of the accord, he issued a statement calling
- a halt to the U.N.'s Gorazde venture. "I believe it would be
- meaningless in present circumstances for ((the U.N. peacekeeping
- force)) to fulfill its activities in Bosnia and Herzegovina,"
- he said. A U.N. official in Zagreb made the point more forcefully:
- "Either we close up shop or we come back with a huge army."
- </p>
- <p> The confusion in Bosnia--on the battlefield as well as in
- diplomatic quarters--did little to help the Administration
- think out an effective policy. After two U.N. peacekeepers were
- injured on Friday, the U.N. military commander in Bosnia, Lieut.
- General Sir Michael Rose, suggested further air strikes to enable
- his military observers to withdraw from the battlefield. But
- Akashi, who was in the Bosnian Serb headquarters in Pale trying
- to resuscitate negotiations, was not willing to approve the
- request. The next day when the Serbs began encircling Gorazde,
- Rose and Akashi called for "fairly robust air cover," according
- to a senior White House official. When a Serb tank fired on
- a hospital, injuring several people, Rose and Akashi upped their
- request to "close air support." But when NATO aircraft went
- in search of targets, bad weather forced the planes to fly low,
- which in turn resulted in the downing of the British jet.
- </p>
- <p> When the Clinton Administration had quietly encouraged limited
- strikes on the Gorazde perimeter earlier in the week, it had
- several aims in mind. It was trying to rob the Serbs of another
- battlefield victory, inject new life into stalled peace negotiations
- and redeem its own recent bumbling performance, when senior
- officials publicly contradicted each other about the prospect
- of air strikes. While the bombings were technically NATO operations
- in response to a request to protect U.N. peacekeeping troops,
- in practice the attacks were a U.S. experiment: an attempt to
- use limited military force to end the fighting in Bosnia. But
- the result was inconclusive, with the Serbs still in a position
- to fight on, and Washington appearing unable to punish the Serbs,
- no matter how blatant the provocation.
- </p>
- <p> Moreover, the long-threatened NATO air strikes had hardly been
- models of military precision. In misty weather, embattled U.N.
- peacekeepers called for fighter-bombers to hit Serbian tanks
- that were firing into Gorazde. Two U.S. Air Force F-16s swept
- in and dropped three 500-lb. bombs on some tents. The following
- day, as shells continued to pound Gorazde, two Marine F/A-18s
- tried to drop four bombs on the Serbs. One bomb remained stuck
- in its rack; two hit the ground but failed to explode. The planes
- swooped down in the wake of the bomb that did blow up and strafed
- Serb positions with cannon fire, wrecking three military vehicles.
- </p>
- <p> In the two-year Bosnian war that has resulted in 200,000 people
- dead or missing, those four U.S. bombs were a military pinprick.
- Politically, however, they shook the ground in all directions--for a few days. As Bosnia lay relatively quiet, Washington
- took pride in its muscle flexing. "Every time we have been firm,"
- said Clinton, "it has been a winner for the peace process."
- The Bosnian Serbs, who denounced the strikes as an intervention
- in support of the Muslims they are trying to crush, broke off
- contact with the U.N., charging that it had chosen sides.
- </p>
- <p> The Serbs did not immediately retaliate by killing peacekeeping
- troops, as NATO had feared, but at least two were wounded--and one subsequently died--in the continued fighting. Serbs
- abducted some blue helmets at gunpoint and held hostage more
- than 200 U.N. soldiers and civilians. They surrounded several
- artillery depots around Sarajevo and on Saturday reportedly
- seized heavy weapons sequestered by peacekeepers.
- </p>
- <p> The aerial bombings early in the week also miffed Moscow. "Air
- strikes," snapped President Boris Yeltsin, "must not be decided
- without preliminary consultations between the U.S. and Russia."
- Some of that rhetoric was intended to pacify the nationalists
- at home who still see the Serbs as Russia's traditional allies.
- But Moscow surprised many by its willingness to spread some
- of the blame this time to the Serbs. "They told us that nothing
- was happening and that they had no military plans involving
- Gorazde," said Churkin. "We have certain complaints against
- the Bosnian Serbs." On Saturday, Russian Foreign Minister Andrei
- Kozyrev, who had been consulting with Secretary of State Warren
- Christopher, arrived in Belgrade, which no doubt played a hand
- in the Serbs' sudden willingness to initial the agreement.
- </p>
- <p> The Bosnian government remained wary that the lines of a military
- standstill might solidify into national boundaries, leaving
- the Serbs holding the 70% of the country they occupy now. "If
- we proclaim a cease-fire without time limits," said Mufid Memija,
- an adviser to Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic, "it is a
- recognition of occupation." He may be right. "We are going to
- keep putting pressure on the Bosnian government to agree to
- a cease-fire in place and say it doesn't determine the final
- boundaries," a U.S. official admits. "But in effect it probably
- will."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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