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- <text id=94TT1729>
- <title>
- Dec. 12, 1994: Bosnia:Allied in Failure
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Dec. 12, 1994 To the Dogs
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOSNIA, Page 28
- Allied in Failure
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Western impotence over Bihac is the culmination of two years
- of ineffectual wrangling among Washington, its European partners
- and the U.N.
- </p>
- <p>By James Walsh--Reported by Jay Branegan/Brussels, James L. Graff/Vienna, J.F.O.
- McAllister/Washington, and Alexandra Stiglmayer/Zagreb, with
- other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> The tables were spread in Brussels last week for a grand conclave
- charting the future of NATO. Foreign ministers representing
- the 16 partners in one of history's strongest, most successful
- alliances arrived with words intended to reaffirm its solidarity,
- even as the war in Bosnia was testing its inner strength. The
- mantra of the hour was articulated by Warren Christopher, who
- came armed with a freshly retuned U.S. policy toward a corner
- of Europe that has defied Western peacemaking efforts. Declared
- the U.S. Secretary of State: "The crisis in Bosnia is about
- Bosnia, not about NATO."
- </p>
- <p> But how to believe Western credibility is alive and well, despite
- all evidence to the contrary--despite feckless diplomacy,
- a chain of broken promises and empty threats, mounting rancor
- among the allies and a record on Bosnia so altogether contradictory
- as to very nearly beggar understanding? What really stood out
- in red on the Brussels agenda was the unsettling truth that
- the crisis is about not only Bosnia but also that much vaunted
- chimera, the new world order.
- </p>
- <p> The emergency concerns not just NATO but also the U.N. and other
- instruments through which the U.S. and the West's other powers
- have sought to enforce peace and deter aggression. In practice,
- if the "international community" means anything, it denotes
- the U.S. in tandem with Britain and France. Russia must be consulted,
- Germany and Japan write occasional checks, and China's nonobstruction
- is sometimes needed; but Washington, London and Paris are the
- governments that count.
- </p>
- <p> In suffering Bosnia, the first test case of cohesion following
- the Soviet Union's collapse, the great powers have certifiably
- failed. Western impotence last week in the face of the Serb
- assault on Bihac was the culmination of more than two years
- of ineffectual wrangling among Washington, its European partners
- and the U.N. over how the horrible ethnic conflict could be
- stopped. Now, as the fighting worsens again, none of the peacemaking
- institutions so grandly charged with keeping the post-cold war
- world order has the vision or unity to impose a policy.
- </p>
- <p> Indeed much of the diplomatic discussion last week focused on
- ways to bail out: how to withdraw the 24,000 U.N. peacekeepers
- should the need arise quickly, an undertaking that could pose
- appalling dangers. Extreme contingencies call for the troops
- to abandon equipment and dash for helicopters or the coast,
- shooting their way out if necessary. Already as of late last
- week, 360 soldiers of the U.N. "protective" force, which sometimes
- seems to need more protection than it delivers, were being held
- virtual hostages by Serb forces; their numbers could grow if
- a pullout were ordered.
- </p>
- <p> Lost amid the recriminations was a firm grasp of how the order
- of battle in Bosnia really stands. Have the Serbs won, as Defense
- Secretary William Perry pronounced on television early last
- week? He wrote off the Bosnian government's hopes of regaining
- turf. Yet even if the town of Bihac should fall, and assuming
- continued supplies of food, fuel and medicine from outside,
- the defenders of Bosnian sovereignty are actually better prepared
- than ever to fight for their homeland against the viciousness
- of tribal aggrandizement.
- </p>
- <p> Other remote Muslim enclaves would be vulnerable if fighting
- escalated, but Serb forces in the Bosnian republic have dwindled
- through desertion. According to best estimates, only about 80,000
- Serb fighters remain active in the republic, but they lack sufficient
- fuel and are stretched thin. Though they outgun the Bosnian
- army 6 to 1 in heavy weapons, Sarajevo's infantry has an edge
- in manpower and a mobility advantage over tanks and artillery
- in winter. The Bosnian army has a chance of holding its own
- and even of advancing--which is probably a major reason why
- Serb commanders undertook to invade Bihac. At the practical
- level, the strategy was to take land needed to open a rail link
- between their forces and kindred units holding territory across
- the border in Croatia--a prospect that prompted the Croatian
- government to threaten intervention. Beyond that, the unpunished
- siege of Bihac could and did shatter Western resolve.
- </p>
- <p> Last week the Clinton Administration sought to patch up its
- differences with the Europeans by putting a stronger accent
- on negotiating with the militant Serbs. The fresh angle was
- evidently--but for the record, not explicitly--a further
- sop to the aggressors, if only they would cease further killing.
- That prospective inducement looked very much like a prize that
- the U.S., particularly since Clinton became President, has sought
- expressly to deny the "ethnic cleansers": formation of a Greater
- Serbia between the rump Yugoslav state and the Serbs in breakaway
- Bosnia and Croatia. Douglas Hurd, the British Foreign Secretary,
- and French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe were to visit Belgrade
- this week to consult on the initiative with Slobodan Milosevic,
- Serbia's nationalistic President.
- </p>
- <p> In official circles, Western Europe was delighted at Washington's
- apparent decision to drop the calls for bombing the Serbs that
- had so riled Paris and London. Some news accounts crowed that
- the turnabout marked Europe's first success in calling the tune
- on a major alliance policy. But how successful is the European
- line? U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali got a faceful
- of answers last week as he flew into Sarajevo demanding cease-fires.
- He left empty-handed amid jeers and snubs, underscoring how
- low the U.N. stands in Bosnian public opinion. Radovan Karadzic,
- head of the rebel Serb "republic" that occupies 70% of Bosnian
- territory, refused to meet on the neutral ground of Sarajevo's
- airport, insisting that Boutros-Ghali come to see him. Boutros-Ghali
- declined.
- </p>
- <p> Even as NATO's pep rally began in earnest in Brussels, it was
- treated to a shower of ice water from Russian Foreign Minister
- Andrei Kozyrev, who set the meeting back on its heels by suddenly
- refusing a long-prepared deal offering Moscow a special relationship
- with NATO in coordinating European security. Kozyrev's rebuff
- might have been meant to fend off nationalists at home, but
- its timing suggested that lessons from the Bosnia debacle were
- taken into account.
- </p>
- <p> After shifting its position back and forth on NATO's future
- now that it no longer has an enemy, the Clinton Administration
- now seems to be leaning toward a more rapid enlargement of the
- alliance right up to Russia's doorstep, incorporating Poland,
- Hungary and other edgy former Soviet satellites. Clinton was
- to travel to Budapest last weekend to cement the pledge of good
- faith toward these candidate front-line states, but Moscow was
- not snapping up a separate compact designed to keep mistrustful
- Russians mollified. Not only was Kozyrev miffed that Christopher
- was floating the idea of another international conference on
- Bosnia without consulting the Kremlin, but as long as the West
- could not sort out whether it wanted to punish or reward aggression,
- expanding the alliance's frontiers seemed beside the point.
- </p>
- <p> Martin McCusker, director of the Defense and Security Committee
- of the North Atlantic Assembly, NATO's parliamentary wing, blamed
- the divisions on "the shambolic command-and-control operation"
- in Bosnia, under which the alliance supplies the military muscle
- but the ever cautious U.N. calls the shots. The point, however,
- is that the same nations that control NATO also control the
- U.N. Security Council. Out of one side of their mouths, Britain
- and France have said they want authority to strike at Serbs
- attacking "safe areas"; out of the other, they veto the idea,
- or limit targets to unmanned tanks or empty runways.
- </p>
- <p> The failure to hit at the Serbs besieging Bihac finally exposed
- the threats as hollow. Said Jean-Francois Deniau, a centrist
- French parliamentarian and critic of Western policy: "Today
- all rules and references have been wiped out. The U.N. has been
- discredited, Europe has been discredited, and NATO has been
- discredited. Forget all these defeated institutions and failed
- solutions. We're going to have to come up with a new approach."
- The trouble is, new approaches with any grit are all but ruled
- out by the old one, which has consisted mainly of keeping the
- conflict off the front pages and providing the Western powers
- a fig leaf of respectability.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S., which ordinarily exercises the crucial leadership
- in such affairs, has fumbled on Clinton's watch. After demands
- by presidential candidate Clinton for an ironfisted approach
- toward the Serbs, the Administration proceeded to soft-sell
- the strategy among NATO allies. When Serbs continued to shell
- and "cleanse" Muslims out of their homes, the alliance belatedly
- declared "safe areas," to be protected by air strikes and other
- military measures--but then rarely ordered them. The only
- time military threats worked was around Sarajevo last February
- after a horrifying Serb bombardment of the capital's marketplace
- outraged world opinion to such a degree that for once it seemed
- retribution would be forthcoming. The subsequently created "total
- exclusion zone" for heavy weapons afforded Sarajevo a welcome
- semblance of peace for several months that is now beginning
- to fray dangerously.
- </p>
- <p> Last week the Western front was roiling just about everywhere.
- As Christopher was peddling a revamped approach before NATO,
- Bob Dole was winding up visits to London and Brussels during
- which he called for an end to the arms embargo against the Bosnians.
- The man who will soon become the Republican majority leader
- in the U.S. Senate was given short shrift in Britain, where
- Defense Secretary Malcolm Rifkind termed American criticisms
- of British policy "disgraceful" and demanded that Washington
- remain silent if it would not send troops to Bosnia.
- </p>
- <p> Dole, displaying what he surely hoped would be regarded as presidential
- stuff, said he was unconvinced that reprisals against the Serbs
- could not work. "I want to express my strong support for a strong
- NATO," he stressed in Brussels. Yet he still planned to introduce
- an embargo-lifting resolution in the Senate, perhaps tacked
- to a veto-proof spending bill, sometime after the new Congress
- convenes in January. He predicted at least 70 to 80 votes in
- favor.
- </p>
- <p> The rough treatment that Republicans could dish out to what
- remains of the new world order visibly worries the Europeans.
- At the least, the Republican-controlled Congress may try to
- gut the U.N. peacekeeping budget, in light of the Balkan experience.
- Dissension was not afflicting the U.S. alone though. In Germany
- the Suddeutsche Zeitung last week put on its front page a classified
- wire sent to Bonn by the German ambassador to NATO, Hermann
- von Richthofen, a grandnephew of the World War I flying ace
- known as the Red Baron. His complaints centered on what he styled
- an arbitrary U.S. push to expand NATO eastward rapidly and to
- lift the arms embargo on Bosnia, which he said would strain
- the alliance "to the limits."
- </p>
- <p> A strange wire indeed. The German government, or at least the
- Defense Ministry, has been an agitator on behalf of faster NATO
- enlargement. Chancellor Helmut Kohl's own Christian Democratic
- Union, meeting in a party congress last week, passed a resolution
- recognizing that the Bosnia embargo may have to be lifted. Kohl
- personally endorsed the measure, saying failure to protect Muslim
- sanctuaries was a "disgrace." Foreign Minister Klaus Kinkel
- said Germany "stands morally close to the American position."
- In practical terms, however, it stands apart.
- </p>
- <p> The reason is those allied ground troops deployed under U.N.
- command. Britain and France both have sizable contingents in
- Bosnia, and they have waved the dangers to these soldiers every
- time a punitive action against the Serbs is mentioned. Yet the
- infantry forces were inserted in the first place under impossible
- conditions that limit them to little more than glorified Red
- Cross work. The humanitarian mission remains vital, but the
- troops also provide an excuse for not using air power and other
- forceful measures.
- </p>
- <p> In New York last week, Kofi Annan, the U.N. Under Secretary
- for Peacekeeping, bridled at the charges of U.N. do-nothingness.
- "I believe the United Nations has been made a scapegoat," he
- charged, by "member states who do not want to take the risks."
- An official at NATO headquarters summed up U.S. frustrations:
- "It's because the Europeans say one thing in New York and something
- different here."
- </p>
- <p> The double-bluff approach has worked precisely because Europeans,
- along with Americans, flinch at the thought of risking a single
- one of their soldiers in confronting such an ugly, inscrutable
- and remote enemy. The allies have all sought to dodge the question
- and posture. Margaret Thatcher was one Briton who would probably
- have asked for support and perhaps won it.
- </p>
- <p> Offering comfort to Dole last week, the former British Prime
- Minister and co-architect of the war against Iraq said, "Did
- you ever hear of anything so absurd as to go after the runway
- but not the aircraft? I must say on the whole, my method of
- tackling aggression was quite a good one." In a Daily Mail commentary
- excoriating Hurd, defense analyst and Oxford historian Mark
- Almond concluded, "Whitehall's indignation at American criticism
- is all the more heated because it masks a bad conscience." His
- view was echoed in Washington by a similar criticism of Clinton,
- who has kept the dispute at arm's length and did not even attend
- last week's policy review. A former Administration official
- said, "Bill Clinton was not able to lead the Western alliance.
- Did he try? Who cares? He struck out." The ashes of the policy
- are being tasted in Bihac, but they have soiled every corner
- of the new world order.
-
- </p></body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-