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- <text id=92TT1286>
- <title>
- June 08, 1992: A Chronic Case of Impotence
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- June 08, 1992 The Balkans
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 39
- THE BALKANS
- A Chronic Case of Impotence
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The U.S., Europe and the U.N. have imposed sanctions, but they
- don't stand much chance of stopping Serbia's war
- </p>
- <p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH -- Reported by David Aikman with Baker,
- William Mader/London and Frederick Ungeheuer/Paris
- </p>
- <p> "Like pre-1914 Europe, the new world order of George Bush
- died in Sarajevo."
- </p>
- <p> -- French political analyst Pierre Hassner
- </p>
- <p> The comparison is a bit hyperbolic: hardly anyone expects
- a third World War to blossom from the present fighting in the
- capital of Bosnia-Herzegovina. But in other respects Hassner's
- comment is right on. The essence of Bush's "new world order,"
- proclaimed shortly before the Persian Gulf war, was that quick,
- decisive action by international bodies would make the world
- unsafe for aggression. But when the next test came, in the
- breakup of Yugoslavia, the U.S. and its European allies
- floundered.
- </p>
- <p> A year of vicious ethnic bloodletting has ensued. Now most
- of the world has decided that the prime cause of the fighting
- is the nationalist fervor of Serbia. Yes, the war is a more
- complicated eruption of ancient religious, ethnic and
- territorial hatreds, but it is Serbia's determination to bite
- off parts of the other republics peopled by Serbs that keeps the
- war going. And the U.S., the 12-nation European Community, the
- 52-nation Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe
- (C.S.C.E.) and the United Nations have let it roll on unchecked
- while dithering helplessly about what, if anything, to do.
- </p>
- <p> There are no obvious solutions if the parties on the
- ground are unwilling to call it quits. Even now the odds are
- that the sanctions finally imposed last week by the U.S., the
- European Community and the U.N. Security Council will not stop
- the bloodshed before Serb leader Slobodan Milosevic achieves,
- by dint of arms, his apparent aim of forging a Greater Serbia.
- </p>
- <p> Like Saddam Hussein, Milosevic probably could have been
- halted only by force. But no one outside Yugoslavia was -- or
- is -- prepared to go to war against him. Military intervention,
- most believe, would be likely to land outside powers in a
- Vietnam-style quagmire and cost them heavy casualties. There may
- be universal outrage at the human carnage, but unlike Iraq's
- grab for oil-rich Kuwait, Serbia's depredations against Croatia
- and Bosnia do not threaten the strategic interests of the U.S.
- or European neighbors enough to justify the risks of sending in
- troops.
- </p>
- <p> The U.N. sanctions go about as far as foreign pressure
- can, short of war. They will stop all Serbian exports and all
- imports except for food and medicine, freeze Serbian assets held
- abroad and break all air links to the outside world. The key
- measure, though, is an embargo on oil, the lifeblood of both
- modern industry and mechanized armies, but it is far from
- certain that the tap will be turned off. Almost half of Serbia's
- fuel comes from Russia and China, which went along only
- reluctantly with the sanctions resolution. Some British
- diplomats are worried that oil may slip into Serbia from
- Romania, or from the Middle East via Greece, which has important
- trade routes through Serbia.
- </p>
- <p> Worse, the sanctions may not work even if they are
- enforced. Serbia is close to self-sufficiency in food production
- and has stockpiled goods and fuel; its external trade has
- already been nearly halted by the war without noticeably denting
- the Serbs' fighting spirit. "The more primitive the economy, the
- more impervious the country is to boycotts," notes Michael
- Dewar, deputy director of the London-based International
- Institute for Strategic Studies. Though British officials hope
- that economic hardship might eventually loosen Milosevic's hold
- on his followers, one senior French diplomat fears that it will
- breed an us-against-the-world solidarity.
- </p>
- <p> If sanctions fail, there is some cautious talk about
- military intervention to the extent of providing armed escorts
- for shipments of food and medicine to Bosnia's beleaguered
- Muslim Slavs. But so far the Security Council has not authorized
- sending U.N. troops to the republic; members are concerned that
- the soldiers might come under fire and suffer casualties.
- Similar worries delayed the dispatch of a peacekeeping force of
- 14,000 to Croatia until the Serbs had completed their conquest
- of Serb areas, and an "ethnic cleansing" of those regions to
- expel Croats continues.
- </p>
- <p> The months of flopping around give little reason to hope
- that the international community can agree on and carry through
- any more vigorous course of action. The Europeans and the U.S.
- had long refused to accept that Yugoslavia was irresistibly
- coming apart. Germany had to bludgeon the Community into
- recognizing the independence of Slovenia and Croatia. The U.S.,
- Britain and Greece argued -- prophetically, as it turned out --
- that the move would inevitably lead to recognition of
- independent Bosnia-Herzegovina and give Milosevic an excuse to
- spread the fighting into that land. Until last week, Russia
- helped to block even the mildest sanctions against Serbia in the
- C.S.C.E. and at the U.N.; along with China, Russia apparently
- fears to set a precedent for interference in its own ethnic
- conflicts. The U.S. until very recently let the Europeans take
- the policy lead. Only in the past two weeks has Secretary of
- State James Baker woken up to lecture them for doing nothing
- effective and to push hard for sanctions. If Yugoslavia presents
- a test case for the ability of international bodies to defuse
- the ethnic violence that is emerging as the greatest threat to
- world peace, then the world community has resoundingly flunked.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-