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- <text id=94TT1017>
- <title>
- Aug. 01, 1994: Bosnia:Return to Sender
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Aug. 01, 1994 This is the beginning...:Rwanda/Zaire
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOSNIA, Page 38
- Return to Sender
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> As the Bosnian Serbs reject another peace plan, can mediators
- muster the will to pressure the naysayers?
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by James L. Graff/Zagreb
- </p>
- <p> The Bosnian Serbs wanted to just say no. They did not intend
- to accept the U.S-European proposal for partitioning war-torn
- Bosnia and Herzegovina. At the same time they preferred not
- to proclaim themselves the main obstacle to peace. So after
- two days of secret discussions last week, the Serbs' self-appointed
- legislature in Pale sent a written reply, coyly sealed in a
- pink envelope, to the international mediators in Geneva. It
- turned out to be a no masquerading as a maybe: without giving
- a straight answer, the Serbs called for "further work" on the
- proposed map and other issues.
- </p>
- <p> The map was the heart of a last-ditch peace effort offered by
- the so-called contact group of the U.S., Russia, Britain, France
- and Germany. Under their rules, hedging was unacceptable, and
- the two sides were expected to take the plan or leave it. When
- the proposal was presented to the Muslim-led Bosnian government
- and the Serb rebels on July 6, it came with an ultimatum: if
- they turned it down, they would be punished. The Bosnian government
- signed on without conditions. But the Serbs, who have never
- met a peace plan they liked, coolly called the bluff. Foreign
- ministers of the five would-be peacemaker states are to meet
- in Geneva on July 30 and try again to muster the political will
- to punish Serb defiance.
- </p>
- <p> Not that the Serbs' rejection was a great surprise, since there
- was plenty in the plan for everyone to dislike. The Clinton
- Administration approved a partition that would award the Serbs
- title to towns they had purged of Muslims with violent "ethnic
- cleansing"--something Washington had said it would never
- accept. The Bosnian government and its Croat-federation partners
- thought the 51% of the territory they would receive was too
- little. They may have said yes only because they expected the
- Serbs to say no.
- </p>
- <p> For their part, the Bosnian Serbs also viewed the 49% share
- they were allotted as too small; their troops have already captured
- 72% of the country. Last week they presented additional demands,
- including Serbian access to the Adriatic Sea, a share in governing
- the capital city, Sarajevo, an end to economic sanctions against
- Serbia proper and certain "constitutional arrangements." The
- last is a veiled reference to the Bosnian Serbs' call for recognition
- as a separate state free to merge one day into a Greater Serbia.
- For the Bosnian government, on the other hand, a legal unity
- of the state is essential.
- </p>
- <p> In hopes of putting pressure on the Serbs, the contact group
- had floated hints of the punishment they would inflict on the
- naysayers. First, they warned, they could tighten economic sanctions
- on Serbia, the Bosnian Serbs' backers and suppliers. Second,
- they might expand and police the security zones around six mostly
- Muslim areas. Finally, as a last resort, the Bosnian government
- might be exempted from the international arms embargo that affects
- all of the former Yugoslavia but hurts the Muslims and Croats
- most.
- </p>
- <p> Now that members of the contact group have to deliver on some
- of those threats, it is not certain they will be able to do
- so. The Russians, traditional allies of the Serbs, did not share
- the American view that Pale had said no. The reply, said Russian
- Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev, had "a positive element" and
- was "not devoid of logic." In other words, let's keep talking.
- Even if it turns out that there is enough harmony in the contact
- group to squeeze Serbia with new economic sanctions, they are
- unlikely to be more effective politically than those already
- in place.
- </p>
- <p> Expanding the security zones around Muslim enclaves--where
- tanks and artillery are banned--could require the use of military
- force beyond the strength of the 13,000 U.N. troops in the country.
- If they tried to push the Serb forces back, Pale's troops might
- launch a full-scale attack on the lightly armed blue helmets.
- "If the exclusion zones are enforced," warns Yasushi Akashi,
- the U.N.'s special representative, "peacekeeping troops may
- be seen by the Serbs as an enemy, which would make our withdrawal
- necessary." Says another U.N. official: "Extending the exclusion
- zones would amount to going to war against the Serbs."
- </p>
- <p> The U.N. military commander in Sarajevo, British Lieut. General
- Sir Michael Rose, also fears that his forces are stretched too
- thin. "If we are going to go further down the road of enforcement,"
- he says, "there will come a time when I will have to say I really
- do have to hand over to somebody else, such as NATO." Of course,
- NATO would not be likely to take that assignment without U.S.
- participation, and Washington has ruled out use of its ground
- troops except to police a peace settlement.
- </p>
- <p> Lifting the arms embargo on Bosnia, though much discussed, seems
- even less likely. The Serbs could respond with an immediate
- offensive aimed at winning the war outright before new weaponry
- could reach the Muslims. Britain and France, with thousands
- of their troops on the ground, are worried that they would be
- targeted for revenge attacks but now might be ready to consider
- dropping the embargo. Russia would almost certainly veto the
- idea.
- </p>
- <p> Summing up the outlook for this week's meeting of the contact
- group, Bosnia's U.N. Ambassador Muhamed Sacirbey says, "The
- international community is together only as long as there are
- no potential disagreements. It's a joke." That is exactly what
- the Serbs were counting on when they rejected the partition
- plan. Some analysts believe the Bosnians will go on the offensive
- to try to reclaim some of their lost land. Either way, as long
- as it is impossible to secure a negotiated peace, all that remains
- is more war.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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