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- <text id=93TT1671>
- <title>
- May 10, 1993: To Bomb Or Not To Bomb?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 10, 1993 Ascent of a Woman: Hillary Clinton
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOSNIA, Page 48
- To Bomb Or Not To Bomb?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Clinton settles on a tougher policy toward Serbian
- aggression. Now he has to sell it.
- </p>
- <p>By J.F.O. MCALLISTER WASHINGTON--With reporting by Ann
- Blackman and Bruce van Voorst/Washington and William
- Mader/London
- </p>
- <p> By 8:30 Saturday morning, 10 advisers in coats and ties
- and one in a skirt were seated around the table in the
- Roosevelt Room of the White House, awaiting their Com mander in
- Chief. This was the moment of truth, when Bill Clinton--breezing in wearing a golf shirt--would wrestle with the
- options for action in Bosnia one more time. For more than four
- hours, the advisers went over the pros, but mainly the cons, of
- military intervention in Bosnia. "The President listened and
- everyone talked," said one participant. "It was not a session
- called to ratify his ready-made decisions." Only one thing,
- everyone agreed, could be firmly ruled out: any deployment of
- American ground troops. Moreover, there was little support in
- European capitals or among the American public for military
- action. So, pondered the President, what should the U.S. do?
- </p>
- <p> When the meeting was over, Clinton had settled on a new,
- tougher approach toward Serbian aggression. But the long-awaited
- decision was less a firm policy than a work in progress, "a
- direction the U.S. and its allies should now take, including
- military steps," as Secretary of State Warren Christopher put
- it after the session, subject to further consultations with
- Congress and the Europeans.
- </p>
- <p> After more than two weeks of highly public debate and his
- own repeated promises to get tough, the President narrowed the
- possibilities to a two-step strategy. It centered on an effort
- to exempt the Muslim-dominated Bosnian government from the U.N.
- arms embargo, which requires Security Council approval, combined
- with limited air strikes in the interim, if necessary, to
- protect the Bosnian forces while they await arms, and to prod
- the Serbs toward serious negotiations. Along with stepped-up
- sanctions on Serbia, Washington hoped, a credible threat of
- force would obviate the need to use it.
- </p>
- <p> Emphatic about winning a skeptical Europe's support for
- military action, Clinton sent Christopher speeding across the
- Atlantic to solicit agreement or amendment before making his
- plan fully public. Meanwhile, the Bosnian Serbs moved to parry
- the building offensive. They agreed to attend a weekend peace
- conference in Athens with the other parties to the Vance-Owen
- peace plan and said their so-called parliament would meet on May
- 5 to reconsider a proposed settlement. "They must do more than
- simply sign a peace plan," Christopher warned at his Saturday
- briefing. "It will take actions on the ground to convince the
- international community of their good faith." Yet he
- acknowledged privately that "if the negotiations make headway,
- the chance of military action will all but disappear."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton has had a devil of a time making up his mind on
- this one. When he allowed himself to dream in his Oxford digs
- that someday he might be President, his vision did not include
- having his first 100 days disrupted by a Balkan quagmire with
- no good options. He considers Bosnia a thoroughly impossible
- situation that has forced its way to the top of his agenda by
- its urgency and growing outrage. He has discovered, says a close
- adviser, that "each path is fraught with peril." His agonizing
- has been acute and highly visible, sparking murmurs even among
- Democrats that his grasp of diplomacy was unsure. He seemed to
- be searching for a magic bullet: a policy that would at once
- unite his fractious advisers, please go-slow European allies,
- satisfy a mostly skeptical Congress, halt the killing and
- "ethnic cleansing," and keep his presidency out of an expensive
- foreign mess.
- </p>
- <p> The White House promised a decision "in a few days," which
- stretched to a few weeks, in part to avoid provoking a
- pre-referendum Russian veto. Subordinates leaked their
- contending plans to the press. Generals publicly tussled about
- whether air strikes could bring the Serbs to heel. "He should
- put Hillary in charge of Bosnia," joshed a former ambassador.
- European officials waiting for a lead from Washington began to
- despair. "What we face with the Clinton people is confusion,"
- said a British diplomat.
- </p>
- <p> But the President would not be rushed. His aim was to
- balance the moral and political responsibility of the U.S. to
- end the horror in Bosnia against a fear of losing support from
- Europe and Russia and the possibility of derailing his domestic
- program. He pulled his top aides aside for frequent informal
- talks and peppered them with late-night phone calls. "He wants
- to make sure we have an escape," said a top aide. "He doesn't
- want a solution that's O.K. for the next few weeks but then
- leaves you so inherently unstable that you're there a year or
- more from now."
- </p>
- <p> In his final deliberations, Clinton focused on the goals
- of U.S. involvement. Was the aim of any action just to stop the
- killing? Roll back Serbian gains? Restart the Vance-Owen peace
- process that provides for Bosnia's dissolution into 10
- ethnically based provinces? Give the Bosnians a shot at
- defending themselves? At a two-hour White House meeting on April
- 21, he asked all his chief advisers to state their preferred
- goals, then to write memos marrying their goals to the available
- means. The President studiously avoided tipping his own hand.
- "Often," said a participant, "he was trying to force people to
- answer: Suppose your option doesn't work--what's the worst
- thing that could happen?"
- </p>
- <p> Some advisers hated their own recommendations but backed
- them as the least undesirable options. By the end of the
- review, the main players all favored some form of limited,
- graduated escalation intended to encourage diplomacy.
- </p>
- <p>-- The Pentagon. Originally Defense Secretary Les Aspin
- leaned toward air strikes to punish the Serbs, while Colin
- Powell, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, counseled against
- any involvement unless the U.S. used overwhelming force to win
- complete victory. But eventually they came to Clinton united.
- Neither wanted to commit American ground forces. Both were
- willing to exempt the Bosnian Muslims from the arms embargo.
- They agreed that air strikes would be unlikely to accomplish
- ambitious goals like rolling back Serbian territorial gains. Air
- Force Chief of Staff Merrill A. McPeak testified that his
- bombers could "put out of business" most Serbian artillery in
- Bosnia at "virtually no risk" to U.S. pilots. True enough, Aspin
- and Powell told Clinton, but that would accomplish little if the
- Serbs just moved their artillery. Strategically, they advised,
- even a far-ranging bombing campaign in Bosnia might not make
- much of a dent in the thinking of Serbian strongman Slobodan
- Milosevic, deemed the ogre behind the war. "The pain has to
- extend to Belgrade to have much effect," said a military
- planner, a step Clinton is not now inclined to take.
- </p>
- <p>-- The State Department and the National Security Council.
- Christopher began the week articulating a set of requirements
- for military action that seemed to rule it out. He and National
- Security Adviser Anthony Lake eventually concurred on lifting
- the arms embargo and launching limited air strikes if required
- to protect the Bosnians in the meantime. They do not expect to
- roll back all Serbian gains, and they think the U.S. should
- endorse any solution adopted by all the Bosnian factions--as
- long as it inflicts some penalty for ethnic cleansing. In
- practice, that means accepting the current Vance-Owen plan, even
- if it gives the Serbs nearly everything they want.
- </p>
- <p>-- The Europeans. Britain and France, with 6,500 lightly
- armed troops employed in humanitarian assistance in Bosnia, are
- reluctant to take any steps that might invite Serbian
- retaliation or close down their relief effort. They believe that
- sending more arms to the Muslims will only fuel a deadlier and
- possibly wider war. Lifting the embargo, said Britain's Foreign
- Secretary Douglas Hurd, "would salve consciences without saving
- lives." France is highly skeptical about the ability of air
- strikes to force the Serbs into concessions, Britain only
- slightly less so. While both want to stay in step with
- Washington, they remain adamantly opposed to the embargo
- exemption. Moscow, after considerable massaging, has not blocked
- U.S. steps against Serbia, but is far from ready to support
- military action.
- </p>
- <p> If Clinton is to act boldly, he will first have to make
- everyone, friend and foe, understand exactly what he is trying
- to do. In a meeting with Congressmen, the President asked what
- would happen if limited intervention failed to end the war.
- Would there be an acceptable way to withdraw? The answer was a
- resounding no, reminding Clinton that once into Bosnia, there
- will be no easy way out.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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