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- <text id=94TT1047>
- <title>
- Aug. 15, 1994: Bosnia:Thieves in the Night
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Aug. 15, 1994 Infidelity--It may be in our genes
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOSNIA, Page 24
- Thieves in the Night
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Defiance and desperation drive Bosnian Serbs to raid a U.N.
- arms depot and provoke a NATO air strike
- </p>
- <p>By Kevin Fedarko--Reported by James L. Graff/Vienna and Ann M. Simmons/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Give the Bosnian Serbs at least this much: if audacity were
- the only requirement for winning a war, they would have routed
- their opponents long ago. But even the most brazen strategists
- can sometimes trump themselves. And the Serbs did so last week
- by launching a raid on a United Nations weapons center in an
- abandoned factory just west of Sarajevo. The Ukrainian peacekeepers
- guarding the depot were taken completely by surprise, not realizing
- the predawn smash-and-grab had taken place until they spotted
- the Serbs rolling a T-55 tank, two armored personnel carriers
- and an anti-aircraft gun out the main gate.
- </p>
- <p> The U.N., however, was not going to tolerate the behavior, and
- on Friday evening NATO attack planes penetrated the thick cloud
- cover over Bosnia, trained their Gatling guns on a Serb motorized
- antitank weapon and blasted it with at least 600 rounds of ammunition.
- The mobile weapon, which was destroyed, was not among the arms
- purloined in the Serbs' morning raid. But the target was one
- of dozens of large Serb guns that have been spotted around Sarajevo,
- in clear violation of the U.N.-imposed heavy-weapons exclusion
- zone that has kept the Bosnian capital virtually free of shelling
- since February. The symbolic NATO strike did the trick. Within
- two hours, Momcilo Krajisnik, speaker of the self-styled Bosnian
- Serb parliament, had phoned U.N. officials in Zagreb to say
- that the stolen weapons would be returned. By the next day they
- had been handed back.
- </p>
- <p> The move to steal the arms in the first place reflected not
- only the Serbs' defiance but also their desperation at recent
- battlefield advances made by their enemies the Bosnian Muslims,
- who have been helped by a new arms pipeline through Croatia.
- Even worse, the Bosnian Serbs appeared to have been abandoned
- by one of their staunchest allies--Slobodan Milosevic, President
- of Serbia. On Thursday, Milosevic severed all political and
- economic ties with the Bosnian Serbs, accusing them of "insane
- political ambitions." Milosevic's move was ostensibly in retaliation
- for the Bosnian Serbs' refusal to sign the latest U.N.-brokered
- peace plan. But his action stems less from his own outrage at
- Serb aggression--one that he, more than anyone, has nurtured
- and fed--than hope for relief from the international trade
- embargo that has choked his country's economy.
- </p>
- <p> NATO and the Clinton Administration hailed the air strike as
- a successful demonstration of allied resolve. But the Bosnian
- Serbs apparently remain determined to keep fighting--and to
- refuse the peace plan that both Croatia and Bosnia have now
- endorsed. On Friday three Serb mortar rounds were fired at Sarajevo--the first such attack on the city in months. "We are prepared
- to be hungry, naked and barefoot," declared Bosnian Serb leader
- Radovan Karadzic. "But we must fight for our freedom."
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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