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- <text id=93TT1718>
- <link 93XP0516>
- <link 93TT0212>
- <link 93TO0097>
- <title>
- May 17, 1993: Reluctant Warrior
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 17, 1993 Anguish over Bosnia
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER, Page 26
- Reluctant Warrior
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Clinton threatens to take on the Serbs, but a wary America fears
- a Balkan quagmire
- </p>
- <p>By BRUCE W. NELAN--With reporting by Michael Duffy, J.F.O.
- McAllister and Bruce van Voorst/Washington, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> Americans know what a war in the desert is like. Many
- remember a bitter conflict in the jungle. Now they must imagine
- one in the mountains:
- </p>
- <p> On a balmy Adriatic evening, U.S. Navy attack planes leap
- from the deck of their carrier on tails of flame. As they climb
- through the gathering darkness, signals from the radar domes and
- computers of Air Force AWACS planes direct the jets to targets
- nestled in the forests and pastures of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
- Ahead of them, electronic-warfare jets swoop down to jam any
- Serbian antiaircraft radar that might still be working.
- </p>
- <p> In a valley in eastern Bosnia, American Special Forces
- troops with blackened faces silently slip out of a tree line to
- point laser beams at Serbian artillery pieces, ammunition stores
- and fuel dumps. The F/A-18 Hornet and A-6 Intruder aircraft
- from the carriers roar in, lock on to the laser spots and send
- their bombs streaking toward the targets.
- </p>
- <p> Air Force F-15s, British Tornadoes and French Mirages,
- launching from bases in Italy, join in with precision bombing
- of Serbian militiamen. The attacks go on night after night for
- months. Meanwhile allied agents supply the bedraggled Bosnian
- Muslim troops with new artillery and tanks, along with advisers
- to show how the weaponry works. Before long, the land battles
- among Bosnia's warring peoples become more evenly matched. At
- that point, perhaps, the Serbs might finally be willing to make
- peace with the Muslim-dominated Bosnian government.
- </p>
- <p> That is the Bill Clinton plan for getting tough with the
- Serbs. At least it is the essence of the ideas Secretary of
- State Warren Christopher was shopping around Europe last week
- as the U.S. sought support for a way to push the Serbs toward
- the peace table and end a slaughter that has taken at least
- 134,000 lives. The U.S. proposal is to exempt Bosnia from the
- U.N. embargo on arms sales and use air strikes to protect Muslim
- enclaves from Serb attacks until their forces are strong enough
- to defend themselves.
- </p>
- <p> There was a glimmer of hope at week's end that none of
- this would be necessary. At Sarajevo airport, the commanders of
- the rebel Serb forces and the Bosnian army signed a cease-fire
- agreement aimed at "a cessation of armed attacks" throughout the
- country on Sunday. They also agreed to demilitarize the
- encircled Muslim towns of Srebrenica and Zepa.
- </p>
- <p> It was far from clear that the truce would hold. Many such
- accords have broken down over the past year, and the Serbs have
- not honored their April 18 agreement to halt the siege of
- Srebrenica. The Bosnian government is also mixing its signals.
- It formally asked the 9,000 U.N. troops in the country to leave
- because their governments are using their presence as an excuse
- for not lifting the arms embargo.
- </p>
- <p> If Clinton does decide he must use military force, he will
- have to do a major selling job not just to the allies but to a
- divided Congress and a skeptical American people. In a TIME/CNN
- poll, only 36% of those surveyed said the U.S. should do more
- to stop the war in Bosnia, vs. 52% who said the U.S. has already
- done enough. For many Americans, the horror of Bosnia is a
- modern-day Holocaust that carries a moral obligation to
- intervene. Some Americans think the U.S. can do so at a low cost
- in lives, expecting the fast-acting, high-tech precision of the
- Gulf War. But many shudder and see the frustration of Vietnam,
- the years of domestic conflict and the long black slabs of the
- Vietnam Memorial engraved with 58,000 names.
- </p>
- <p> For Clinton, history offers little guidance because there
- is no direct parallel for the action he is considering. If he
- uses military force in Bosnia, he cannot know whether he will
- succeed. If he bombs the Bosnian Serbs, their brethren across
- the Drina River in Serbia proper might heed the call of blood
- and join them for a war of annihilation against the Muslims. Or
- the Serbian militiamen who now bestride 70% of Bosnia may simply
- dig in and refuse either to negotiate or pull back.
- </p>
- <p> The prospect of stumbling into a quagmire or of outright
- failure looms large for a President who was elected to cure
- domestic ills and who, as he begins his second 100 days in
- office, is already in political trouble. Clinton told a
- television interviewer last week that he was distressed when he
- heard the Bosnian Serbs had refused to go along with the peace
- plan negotiated by Cyrus Vance and Lord Owen. "I don't want to
- have to spend any more time on that than is absolutely
- necessary," Clinton said, "because what I got elected to do was
- to let America look at our own problems and our own challenges
- and deal with those things."
- </p>
- <p> The Administration was unprepared at this early stage to
- deal with a foreign policy problem of such high risk and low
- payoff, one that even the old hands in the Bush Administration
- had shied away from. "The question raised by Clinton's
- performance," says a U.S. diplomat, "is not just his backbone
- but his basic competence." A measure of the Clinton team's
- frustration: at the last meeting of the President's advisers
- before his May 1 decision to send Christopher to Europe with a
- sample case of options, a frustrated participant asked, "Isn't
- there anyone outside the government with some bright ideas?
- Someone who could help us?"
- </p>
- <p> The meetings in which top advisers developed Bosnia
- proposals to offer Clinton were often rudderless, according to
- a close associate of one participant. In a break with tradition
- at such meetings, the lower-echelon advisers tended to pipe up
- freely, sometimes carrying on debates among themselves, while
- senior officials like Christopher offered sensible observations
- but were mostly silent. Defense Secretary Les Aspin was just
- the opposite, caroming from subject to subject, the official
- said. Foreign policy experts Tony Lake and Sandy Berger,
- meanwhile, wanted to position Clinton as a forceful leader, to
- set him apart from Jimmy Carter.
- </p>
- <p> This vacuum of authority has led to the emergence,
- ironically, of Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Colin Powell as
- a central figure in the Administration's security policy.
- Powell, who has clashed openly with Clinton on issues like gays
- in the military, found himself thrust into a key role in
- developing a Bosnia plan, even though he had serious
- reservations about intervention. In meetings with Congress last
- week, Aspin and Powell left no doubt about the situation. Powell
- dominated the session, going into such detail on the military
- options, an attendee said, that he may have undercut the
- Administration's position by stating the drawbacks so clearly.
- Other White House advisers have been even more forcefully
- opposed to military intervention. One official believes the
- President finds himself in a corner "because he has no strong
- views of his own," and warns that if Clinton gives in to the
- impulse to put Americans into Bosnia, "I think he'll lose his
- presidency."
- </p>
- <p> Yet Clinton decided that after speaking so boldly on
- Bosnia in the past, inaction carried great political risk. "He
- wants to be a Big President," says a senior Administration
- official. "He wants to do Big Things." The Administration
- finally arrived at an approach designed to rally the public, but
- one that, if it failed, would not damage the presidency. "We
- didn't want to be stuck," says a senior official. Air strikes
- alone did not make sense, because they could not end the war.
- So the White House decided to try to exempt the Bosnian
- government from the embargo, and hoped that might push the sides
- toward a cease-fire and negotiations. Meanwhile the U.S. would
- use air attacks to keep the Serbs from grabbing all that
- remained of Bosnia while the Muslims were rearming. That would
- aim air power at a clear goal for a limited time and not just
- be an "act of lashing out."
- </p>
- <p> The choices narrowed a lot more quickly than the White
- House had intended. When Christopher took off for Europe after
- a four-hour policy session on May 1, he was under instructions
- to feel out the Western allies and Russia about the combination
- of air strikes and rearming of the Muslims. Clinton knew the
- Europeans were against those measures, and he fully expected to
- amend his proposal after Christopher made his rounds of the
- allied capitals. In calls to several Presidents and Prime
- Ministers, Clinton sketched out what he had in mind, stressed
- it was not a final decision and asked for support.
- </p>
- <p> The strategic game changed abruptly when the leader of the
- Bosnian Serbs, Radovan Karadzic, showed up on May 1 in Athens
- to sign the Vance-Owen plan to partition the country into 10
- provinces. If the plan were to be carried out, the U.S. would
- have to live up to its promise to contribute as many as half of
- the 60,000--or more--peacekeeping troops sent to Bosnia. It
- was a pledge that most of Washington thought would never be
- called in.
- </p>
- <p> Karadzic's surprising acquiescence abruptly refocused
- Christopher's discussions. Air strikes were virtually off the
- agenda as the allies began talking about patching together a
- peacekeeping force of three or four divisions. All the major
- European countries, including Russia, said they were ready to
- police Vance-Owen with ground troops in Bosnia.
- </p>
- <p> No sooner had Washington been sobered by this possibility
- than the Bosnian Serbs reversed course again. At a meeting of
- their self-designated parliament at Pale, in the mountains east
- of Sarajevo, they refused overwhelmingly to accept the
- Vance-Owen plan and Karadzic's signature on it. They ignored his
- pleas for support, as well as those from Serbian President
- Slobodan Milosevic, who had supported and financed them.
- </p>
- <p> The Serbs, particularly their militia leaders, were
- adamant, arguing that the Vance-Owen plan meant giving up land
- they had bled for--something they would never do. "Let them
- bomb us," smirked Radoslav Brdjanin, a faction leader from Banja
- Luka. "We will win the war." Serbian commanders had already
- begun moving their headquarters and supply centers out of towns
- and into caves and wooded areas. After 17 hours of debate at
- Pale, the assembly voted to submit the peace proposal to a
- referendum among Bosnian Serbs on May 15. The move was a ploy
- that allowed Karadzic to claim Vance-Owen had technically not
- been rejected.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton, who had spent days getting used to the idea of
- securing peace in Bosnia with American troops, was dumbfounded
- by the rejection of the peace plan. "It showed," said a White
- House official, "that the chain of influence was less strong
- among the Serbs than just about everybody predicted." The
- President responded to the Serbs' go-to-hell decision by urging
- the "international community to unite and to act quickly and
- decisively." What the U.S. sought, he said, was "not to act
- alone, not to act rashly, not to do things which would draw the
- U.S. into a conflict not of its own making and not of its own
- ability to resolve."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton and Lake discussed the next steps and decided to
- press the Europeans for tougher measures. White House spokesman
- George Stephanopoulos explained later that everything depended
- on what the Europeans might agree to do. "The first goal," he
- said, "is to reach a united front with our allies and make final
- decisions and then go to the American people and explain what
- our policy is."
- </p>
- <p> When Christopher returned to the White House on Saturday,
- however, he was nearly back where he had started a week earlier.
- Though the allies listened sympathetically, they were not
- convinced that either lifting the arms embargo or launching air
- strikes would hasten a settlement. They professed concern about
- a wider war and revenge attacks on their thousands of troops on
- peacekeeping duty in the former Yugoslavia. After Christopher
- reported to the President on Saturday morning, Stephanopoulos
- told reporters there would be more talks with the Europeans.
- "This is a continuing process," he said.
- </p>
- <p> The stakes for the President, meanwhile, have escalated.
- By sending Christopher abroad and calling for prompt action
- after the Bosnian-Serb rejection, Clinton generated momentum
- toward a confrontation. It would be awkward for him to back
- down. "Once you say you're going to do something," explained a
- congressional leader who was briefed by Aspin last week, "you
- have to do it. There is no turning back without a big cost."
- Even so, Clinton is not planning to order any military moves
- unilaterally or suddenly. He intends to ask Congress for a vote
- of confidence and the U.N. Security Council for a resolution.
- </p>
- <p> The council could present an obstacle because the
- Russians, who hold veto power, insist on taking the Bosnian
- Serbs' May 15 referendum seriously. Russian Foreign Minister
- Andrei Kozyrev said he hoped "the population will be wiser than
- its legislative branch." Moscow he said, was not excluding "any
- option, including tough measures" if the Serbs remain defiant,
- but Washington wonders if Russia would approve air strikes
- against fellow Slavs.
- </p>
- <p> Russians and other Europeans see another good reason for
- delay: Milosevic's reaction to the Bosnian Serbs' refusal to
- follow his instructions. After the vote in Pale, Milosevic
- stalked out, flew back to Belgrade and announced that he was
- cutting off all Serbia's assistance to them except for food and
- medicine. But many Western military experts contend that
- Milosevic cannot really seal the Serbian border and that Bosnian
- Serbs have stockpiled at least two years' worth of war materiel
- and food.
- </p>
- <p> Beyond the statecraft is Clinton's biggest assignment:
- persuading the American people that their children and their
- billions should be spent on Bosnia. (Maintaining a fully
- deployed armored division of 25,000 at peak readiness in Bosnia
- for one year could cost $5 billion.) It is a long reach to argue
- that vital U.S. interests are involved, beyond a preference for
- peace and stability in all parts of the world. With the
- rationalizations peeled off, the West's concern is prompted by
- the moral imperative and is essentially humanitarian. That is
- why France and Britain sent troops to escort aid shipments and
- do not feel any urge to do much more.
- </p>
- <p> One of the more sour speculations about White House
- motives was offered last week by Ross Perot in an interview with
- U.S. News & World Report. The Texan suggested that Clinton was
- out to "get a little war going" to "distract the American
- people" from economic hard times and broken campaign promises.
- An indignant Stephanopoulos responded that Perot's assertions
- were "outrageous" and "ill-considered and intemperate."
- </p>
- <p> Congress is divided over the issue in some surprising
- ways, with veteran hawks and doves swapping roles. The
- Republican leader in the Senate, Bob Dole, is calling for
- military action, but former Vietnam naval aviator--and POW--Republican John McCain is a leader of the opposition to bombing.
- Many members of Congress are calling for clear explanations from
- Clinton. Democrat Sam Nunn, chairman of the Senate Armed
- Services Committee and one of Capitol Hill's leading military
- experts, says, "There ought to be a clear exit point. We ought
- to know how we're going to get out."
- </p>
- <p> Leaders in both houses agree, nevertheless, that after hot
- debate, a majority will support the President on what he asks
- for. "You can't really beat a President on a national-security
- issue," says Lee Hamilton, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs
- Committee. "I'd expect him to get what he wants when the time
- comes."
- </p>
- <p> At the Pentagon, preparations have been at full speed for
- months. Planners are ready for the order to go, starting with
- a quick strike on Serbian artillery positions--quick because
- surprise is vital to catch them in place. The targets have
- already been mapped and reported to operations officers by U.S.
- Special Forces teams moving stealthily around Bosnia. Events may
- be pushing the decision makers. "Things are going so fast," says
- Brent Scowcroft, who was George Bush's National Security
- Adviser, "and nobody knows quite where we are headed."
- </p>
- <p> When it is time for the go or no-go decision, however,
- Clinton will have to make it himself. He has only a few choices.
- He can go ahead with air strikes, stall for more time or risk
- a loss of credibility by backing away. He can also be certain
- that if Bosnia is an annoying distraction today, it will become a
- monumental headache that crowds out his domestic programs if he
- sends American forces into action.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-