home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT1533>
- <title>
- Apr. 26, 1993: Srebrenica Succumbs
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Apr. 26, 1993 The Truth about Dinosaurs
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOSNIA, Page 34
- Srebrenica Succumbs
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The fall of a fated town deepens the Balkans' tragedy and shames
- a spectating world
- </p>
- <p>By JAMES L. GRAFF/VIENNA--With reporting by Bonnie Angelo/New
- York, William Mader/London, J.F.O. McAllister/Washington and
- Michael Montgomery/Sarajevo
- </p>
- <p> "Bold tyrants and fearful minorities are watching to see
- whether `ethnic cleansing' is a policy the world will tolerate.
- If we hope to promote the spread of freedom or if we hope to
- encourage the emergence of peaceful multiethnic democracies, our
- answer must be a resounding no."
- </p>
- <p>-- U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher, announcing
- the Clinton Administration's initiatives on Bosnia, Feb. 10,
- 1993
- </p>
- <p> Bold tyrants take heart. Fearful minorities take heed. As
- NATO jet fighters assigned to Operation Deny Flight screamed
- impotently across the skies of Bosnia last week, what resounded
- around the world was the thunder of Serb artillery, its cannon
- and mortars trained on the Muslim town of Srebrenica, its
- shells primed for airbursts, which would cause maximum carnage.
- After the deadliest barrage last week, the shattered bodies of
- the dead, including 15 children, lay in mute testimony to the
- world's age-old ability to turn its face away from the suffering
- and subjugation of others.
- </p>
- <p> Even as fighting eased in Srebrenica under a cease-fire
- agreement brokered in Sarajevo late Saturday night, painful
- memories were being evoked half a continent away, in Poland,
- where preparations to mark the 50th anniversary of the Warsaw
- Ghetto uprising were under way. In 1943, 60,000 Jewish survivors
- of starvation and deportation--roughly the same number as
- those trapped in Srebrenica--confronted Nazi troops in a
- final, hopeless battle. Back then the outside knew little and
- could do less about what was afoot. But the horror of the last
- days of Srebrenica could not be ignored by a world kept abreast
- of every twist and turn in the bloody Bosnian conflict. Despite
- a hardened stance forged in an emergency Security Council
- session on Saturday night, the guardians of the much touted new
- international order appeared at a loss to bring a definitive end
- to a war that has already claimed at least 134,000 dead and
- missing and created 2 million refugees.
- </p>
- <p> Fragmented accounts painted a picture of final hours
- fraught with confusion and bloodletting. "In the name of God,
- do something!" cried one of Srebrenica's ham radio operators on
- Friday. The next day began with an eerie silence that was
- shattered when Serb gunners opened fire again and the town took
- cover as best it could.
- </p>
- <p> As Srebrenica succumbed, the Bosnian government in
- Sarajevo lambasted the U.N. for being "a passive witness and
- accomplice in tragedy" and urged the Security Council to
- authorize the deployment of NATO ground troops to stem the Serb
- tide. That was not to be. When the Council finally met in
- emergency sessions on Friday and Saturday, it stopped short of
- anything resembling Bosnia's request. What emerged was an
- agreement to declare Srebrenica a safe haven, a warning to Serbs
- to advance no farther, and a tightening of sanctions on Belgrade
- including the freezing of Serbian assets abroad.
- </p>
- <p> Earlier in the week, the Council, at U.S. insistence, had
- postponed yet again a resolution that would have toughened
- economic sanctions against Serbia and, it was hoped, would have
- persuaded its President, Slobodan Milosevic, to pressure his
- Bosnian Serb acolytes into signing on to the Vance-Owen peace
- plan. Washington did not want to force an anti-Serb vote that
- might discomfit President Boris Yeltsin, who faces Russian
- nationalists generally sympathetic to the Serb cause in a
- referendum April 25. The U.N. looked set to content itself with
- its early decision to assign NATO to enforce a long-declared
- no-fly zone over Bosnia, but the relentless shelling by the
- Serbs around Srebrenica on Saturday advanced the vote on the new
- sanctions, from which Russia and China abstained. Putting the
- best face on a week rife with diplomatic hesitancy, French U.N.
- ambassador Jean-Bernard Merimee called the action "the proper
- response coming at the right time."
- </p>
- <p> Yet after the carnage of the week and the Serbs'
- relentless assault on Srebrenica, hopes had begun to rise that
- the U.N. would show itself to be made of still sterner stuff.
- In Britain, one of the five permanent members of the Security
- Council, public sympathy was running in favor of more determined
- action, led by an impassioned plea from Lady Margaret Thatcher
- to exempt Bosnian Muslims from the arms embargo and allow them
- to acquire the means to defend themselves. "There is nothing
- moral or right about leaving a people defenseless," she fumed.
- "We cannot just let things go on like this. It is evil."
- </p>
- <p> The British government, wary of anything that might invite
- Serb attacks on its peacekeeping contingent in Bosnia,
- dismissed the Iron Lady's appeal as "emotional nonsense." By
- Friday, however, the emotion had apparently spread to
- Washington. President Bill Clinton had begun to talk tougher
- too, expressing his "outrage" at events in Bosnia and warning
- that it was time for Western nations to consider taking stronger
- measures, including those "that previously have been
- unacceptable." Clinton's advisers and the Pentagon were debating
- the pros and cons of arming the Muslims or even flying U.S. air
- strikes against Serb artillery positions and lines of
- communication. Clinton said he "would not rule out any option"
- short of the deployment of U.S. ground forces.
- </p>
- <p> In any event, the consensus once again was for something
- less than militant action. The Serb assault on Srebrenica
- forced nothing more than what had been all but agreed upon--and pushed off--earlier in the week. The Council did what it
- has done so often to such poor effect: it drew a line in the
- blood-soaked soil of the Balkans and defied the Serbs to step
- over it. They lost no time in obliging. On Saturday a vanguard
- of 60 Canadian blue helmets en route to Srebrenica from Tuzla
- and an aid convoy from Belgrade failed to cross Serb lines. The
- soldiers were turned back by local Serb commanders; the aid
- trucks returned because of shelling in Srebrenica.
- </p>
- <p> The dilemma confronting the U.N. was acute. Although
- Srebrenica had been declared a safe haven by the Security
- Council, the propensity of the Serbs to pour artillery fire onto
- civilians spoke in favor of a speedy evacuation. But with an
- important Muslim foothold at stake, there was also the risk of
- abetting, albeit unwittingly, the Serb goal of ethnic cleansing.
- The Bosnian authorities themselves were not pressing for a mass
- exodus, save for 500 badly wounded soldiers in need of hospital
- treatment. Said U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees spokeswoman
- Sylvana Foa: "They are very frightened, because they know, as
- we've seen, that the life expectancy of a Bosnian soldier on
- Serb territory is very short."
- </p>
- <p> For the moment, relief officials on the ground were
- treating evacuation "as a last resort," said Foa. If U.N. troops
- do reach Srebrenica, the hope is that they will help quell panic
- among the population and thus make a massive evacuation
- unnecessary. They will also serve as what a U.N. spokesman
- called "the eyes and ears" of the world, and overseers of any
- laying down of arms. "People don't do dirty things in the night
- when international observers are walking around," said Foa. "I
- don't think the Serbs will risk the wrath of the world by moving
- in."
- </p>
- <p> Yet they have risked that wrath frequently--and remained
- unpunished. "The steps the international community has taken are
- all worthy ones," says a Western diplomat. "But each has come
- far too late, in fact so late that they've only reaffirmed to
- Milosevic that he needn't fear force." The Western allies'
- decision to ignore Yeltsin's potential problems and push on over
- the weekend for an immediate deepening of sanctions against
- Serbia only repeats that pattern. Sanctions have not measurably
- weakened Belgrade's resolve, and are not likely to. Indeed, the
- campaign in Bosnia is so unquestioned in Belgrade that the
- nominally democratic opposition last week hailed a plan to
- install a new parliament representing Serbs in Serbia,
- Montenegro, Bosnia and Croatia--a.k.a. Greater Serbia.
- </p>
- <p> Sadly, the creation of that state, by the means Warren
- Christopher so excoriated, appears to be the only strategy
- currently effective in Bosnia. The Vance-Owen plan, the sole
- overreaching policy the international community has proffered,
- is an ineluctable shambles. Lord Owen himself, co-purveyor of
- that scheme, which proposes to divide Bosnia into 10 provinces
- drawn along ethnic lines, acknowledged last week that bombing
- Serb supply lines may be necessary after all. "If they are
- hell-bent on taking other towns, then we will have to meet this
- assault on Muslim towns with military action," he said.
- </p>
- <p> That option cannot and should not be lightly considered,
- since armed intervention could end the humanitarian aid effort
- that is keeping hundreds of thousands of Bosnians alive. But
- having schooled the Serbs for so long in the idea that it is
- unwilling to translate threat into action, the West, with
- Clinton at the fore, faces the crunch: talk of force in Bosnia
- has cheapened to worthlessness, leaving force itself the only
- effective option. The prospect for freedom and peace in Bosnia--and in the Bosnias waiting to happen elsewhere--demands no
- less.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-