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- From: wickerhauser-victor@math.yale.edu (Victor Wickerhauser)
- Newsgroups: soc.culture.bosna-herzgvna
- Subject: Re: The New York Times Editorial - Nov. 20
- Date: 20 Nov 1992 16:01:44 -0500
- Organization: Yale University Mathematics Dept., New Haven, CT 06520-2155
- Lines: 75
- Message-ID: <1ejjnoINN62v@PASCAL.MATH.YALE.EDU>
- References: <92325.142724U15231@uicvm.uic.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: math-gw.cs.yale.edu
-
- In article <92325.142724U15231@uicvm.uic.edu> <U15231@uicvm.uic.edu> writes:
- > At Sea, Still, on Bleeding Bosnia
- >... It took six months and 100,000 deaths in Bosnia for the United
- >Nations finally to order a maritime blockade, backed by NATO, on
- >Serbia, the aggressor against beleaguered Bosnia. This resort to
- >arms, while welcome, ought not to be confused with effective
- >action. Even with this naval blockade, the West is still at sea.
- > The belated tightening of economic sanctions is no substitute
- >for forceful pressure to stop the bloodletting in Bosnia. And it
- >won't stop Serbia from blowing up more of the Balkans. It's only
- >one of several strong steps the world needs to take, inside Bosnia.
- >Serbian planes still attack unprotected Bosnian cities, in defiance
- >of ano-fly order declared by the U.N. When will the West bestir
- >itself long enough to enforce this order?
- > Bosnia is having trouble even trying to defend itself because of
- >a superficially neutral U.N. arms embargo that Serbia has no
- >trouble running. When will the West stop enforcing ferocious
- >unfairness?
- > Serbian-sponsored ethnic cleansing still drives Muslims from
- >their homes in northern Bosnia, swelling the tide of refugees. Safe
- >havens, secured by a U.N. force, would keep them secure against
- >further Serbian aggression. At least armed convoys are now
- >protecting desperately needed relief supplies, previously held up
- >by rival gunslingers.
- > And finally, U.N. troops could be deployed in Kosovo and
- >Macedonia before the war spreads southward, even beyond the borders
- >of the former Yugoslavia.
- > Aggressor regimes in Serbia and Croatia now press for peace on
- >the assumption that outgunned Bosnia will soon collapse, allowing
-
- Without the "informal" military aid from Croatia, the Bosnian problem
- would not exists because by now the Serbs would have killed all the
- Bosnians.
-
- >them to carve up the remains. While the U.S. contemplates backing
- >U.N. resolutions with steel, European governments cravenly shrink
- >from armed intervention in the vain hope that peace is at hand.
- > But the struggle is far from over. Many Bosnians are now aroused
- >and armed.
-
- By Croats.
-
- > They have begun a guerrilla war in Serb-held areas that
- >won't be readily suppressed. The war could easily spill back into
- >Croatia if its dictator, Franjo Tudjman, double-crosses his Bosnian
- >ally and cuts a deal with the Serbian strongman Slobodan Milosevic.
-
- I think by now Tudjman realizes just how little Milosevic can be
- trusted. I predict that any weapons Croatia might have obtained in
- spite of the embargo will remain in Croatian hands until Bosnia and
- Croatia sign a mutual defense treaty and declare war on Yugoslavia,
- which I hope can be avoided. I also think that Tudjman will likely
- build up more and more power as long as parts of Croatia are occupied
- by a foreign power.
-
- > Worse, this could soon become a holy war, with ramifications far
- >beyond Central Europe. Bosnia's Muslims, Croats, and Serbs are, for
- >the moment, fighting side by side. But if the West won't help,
- >Bosnia's Muslims, radicalized by ethnic cleansing and abandoned by
- >the Croats, will turn to other Muslims for support.
-
- There are 300,000 Bosnian refugees in Croatia, Bosnians of Croatian
- and Muslim nationality fight side by side, Serbian concentration camps
- are intended for "non-Serbs", and Serbs started their ethnic cleansing
- campaign in parts of Croatia last year and are carrying out atrocities
- in Croatia even as we speak. These and other aspects of this war
- suggest to me that Bosnia and Croatia are wedded by experience and
- unlikely to abandon each other.
-
- > Western governments have long been paralyzed by the risks of
- >action to save Bosnia. How long will it take them to understand the
- >price of inaction? Meanwhile Bosnia bleeds.
-
- Croatia bleeds too, from earlier wounds. How soon we (try to) forget.
-
-