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- <text id=94TT1374>
- <title>
- Oct. 10, 1994: Bosnia:Maybe Next Time
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 10, 1994 Black Renaissance
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOSNIA, Page 49
- Maybe Next Time
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Izetbegovic proposes a six-month delay in lifting the arms embargo--saving Clinton a hard policy decision
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by J.F.O. McAllister/Washington, Thomas A. Sancton/Paris
- and Alexandra Stiglmayer/Travnik
- </p>
- <p> It looked like the latest Administration flip-flop: Bill Clinton
- once again sliding away from a hard policy decision on Bosnia.
- Under pressure from Congress last August, he had pledged to
- ask the U.N. Security Council "to terminate the arms embargo"
- on Bosnia and Herzegovina after Oct. 15 if the rebel Serbs did
- not agree to accept an international peace plan by then. The
- deadline was fast approaching when the President went to U.N.
- headquarters last week to deliver a state-of-the-world address.
- His only reference to Bosnia was a call for strong action to
- save Sarajevo from threatened "strangulation" by besieging Serbs.
- </p>
- <p> Despite his previous bouts of support for lifting the embargo,
- Clinton was not really eager to do so for a number of practical
- reasons. He faced opposition in the Security Council from Russia,
- France and Britain. NATO was warning him against a nasty internal
- split. Nor did he need a noisy diplomatic crisis so close to
- the November elections. And then along came Bosnian President
- Alija Izetbegovic to give the U.S. the perfect out. The day
- after Clinton spoke, Izetbegovic stepped up to the same U.N.
- rostrum and announced he would agree to a resolution that would
- "defer" an end to the embargo for six months.
- </p>
- <p> It had all the feel of a put-up job. The Bosnians have been
- demanding the West lift its embargo on armaments for almost
- three years, arguing that it hurt them much more than the well-armed
- Serb aggressors. Now they were suddenly putting off their demand
- when they were so close to achieving it, conveniently letting
- Clinton off the hook. Surely Washington had forced the Bosnians
- to ask for a delay.
- </p>
- <p> Administration officials insist they did not do so--directly.
- They say the Bosnians decided to ask for the delay on their
- own when Izetbegovic realized the U.S. could not win a Security
- Council vote to lift the embargo, and after France and Britain
- told the Bosnians flat out that if the embargo went, so would
- their 9,200 peacekeeping troops.
- </p>
- <p> But U.S. officials do not deny that they--as they put it--helped the Bosnians understand the dangerous implications of
- lifting the arms embargo. Almost as soon as the promise to Congress
- was made, Administration officials set about undermining it.
- They began a series of meetings in Sarajevo in which U.S. Ambassador
- Victor Jackovich and American military officers pointed out
- the problems to Izetbegovic and his ministers. The military
- officers estimated it would take up to a year to train the Bosnians
- to use the tanks, armored personnel carriers and artillery they
- need. The long time lag between the weapons' arrival and the
- Bosnians' training would leave them extremely vulnerable to
- snap Serb offensives, especially in the embattled eastern enclaves
- and Sarajevo.
- </p>
- <p> Two weeks ago, Bosnian Prime Minister Haris Silajdzic suggested
- to Secretary of State Warren Christopher that the effect of
- any embargo lifting be deferred for six months. The most convincing
- reason for postponement, in the end, was the stern British and
- French warning that they would pull out if the embargo were
- to be lifted. London and Paris maintained that letting in more
- arms would intensify the war and threaten the survival of all
- the U.N. forces on the ground. "If we leave," declared a British
- U.N. spokesman, "all the others leave too."
- </p>
- <p> The hard fact for the Bosnian government is that its embattled
- enclaves, such as Zepa, Srebrenica and Gorazde in eastern Bosnia
- and Bihac in the west, are wholly dependent on humanitarian
- aid flown in by the U.N. and delivered by peacekeeping troops.
- If the embargo were lifted and the blue helmets left, U.N. officers
- in Bosnia warned, the Serbs would immediately seize those enclaves
- and might even attack Sarajevo. "We think we may prevent these
- attacks by postponing the lifting," says Kasim Trnka, the new
- Bosnian ambassador to Croatia and a former Cabinet Minister.
- </p>
- <p> So after three years of bravado, the Bosnians have apparently
- accepted the fact that, for now, peacekeepers are more important
- than the prospect of future arms shipments. But after swallowing
- that bitter truth, the Muslim-led Bosnian government now faces
- a future almost without choices. The Western allies have in
- effect backed away from intervention and put their faith in
- the blockade Serbia has imposed on its Bosnian brethren to bring
- about a settlement. The Bosnian battlefield is locked in a bloody
- stalemate, and the negotiating table offers no prospect of forcing
- the Serbs--who occupy 70% of Bosnia--to accept a peace plan
- that would allow them to keep only 49%. The war now seems endless.
- </p>
- <p> And Clinton is not entirely freed from tricky policy decisions.
- The legislation that forced his promise to try to lift the embargo
- stands, and he is still obliged to consult with Congress. In
- light of Izetbegovic's compromise, however, Clinton intends
- to ask Congress to extend the deadline.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, the U.S. must still introduce some sort of resolution
- at the Security Council. Izetbegovic has insisted that it call
- for an end to the embargo in principle, setting an effective
- date certain six months from now. Given the opposition from
- Russia, Britain and France, no such measure is likely to pass.
- Given the facts on the ground that forced him to accept this
- postponement in the first place, though, Izetbegovic may be
- relieved if the Security Council simply says it will think about
- the matter again in six months.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-