Ivan Avakumovic, Department of History, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C. V6T 1Z1
Second Annual Regional Conference on Russian, East European, and
Central Asian Studies, University of Washington, Seattle
Bully
Person who uses his strength or power to frighten or hurt those
who are weaker
- Oxford Advanced Leamer's Dictionary of Current English, OUP, 1974, p.
111
A person who is habitually cruel, esp. to smaller and weaker
people
- The American Heritage Edition, 2nd college ed., Boston, Haughton
Mifflin Co., 1985, p.216
Few events since the Gulf War have attracted as much attention
and controversy as the war in the former Yugoslavia (1991-1995).(1)
Controversy was noticeable in one area in particular: the role
that USA had played and/or should have played in either preventing
the outbreak of hostilities or putting an end to the fighting
as part of a grand design for a caring, democratic, multiethnic
society.
The purpose of this paper is to present evidence that in the former
Yugoslavia the USA acted as "the bully on the block."
It imposed its own priorities and solutions. It showed little
finesse and ignored the history of the area.(2) It preferred instead
the use of force rather than negotiation. In the process, the
USA managed to antagonize its WWII allies in the East and the
West, allies who had to be dragged along to do America's bidding.
At the same time, America assumed responsibility for a course
of action that shows few signs of durable success.
A closer look at the arguments used to defend American policy
in the former Yugoslavia reveals again a crevasse between proclaimed
verities and what actually happened.(3) Given the high stakes
for the political future of the policy-makers, great care was
taken to establish quasi-unanimity among opinion-makers and to
ensure that alternative explanations of the causes, course, and
nature of the conflict did not reach a public that remembered
Vietnam and was fearful of new entanglements in a part of the
world of little importance to most Americans. Once again, "political
correctness" prevailed with the result that the call for
action received the endorsement of people as far apart as the
editor of Soldier of Fortune and the president of the AFL/CIO.
Given the focus of the paper, I do not propose to dwell on the
numerous American moves that, strictly speaking, do not come under
the heading of "bully on the block" behaviour: shelter
for many Ustashe, who are fascists of Croat extraction;(4) toleration
of Ustashe activity in the American zone in Germany; the impact
of American economic policies on Yugoslavia's foreign trade, employment
rate and repayment of loans in the 1 980s; failure to realize
that the break-up of Yugoslavia was bound to lead to large-scale
bloodshed in view of the outlook of the leading advocates of secession
in Croatia and Bosnia;(5) the willingness of the US to pay much
attention to the foreign policy agenda and desiderata of the German
right-wing government in Eastern Europe. Last but not least, the
recognition of Croatia and Bosnia as independent states without
proper guarantees for the rights of large Serbian minorities who
had frighfful memories of what their Croat and Moslem neighbours
had done to their parents and grandparents in the heyday of Hitler's
New Order (6) provided a recipe for armed conflict.
The fateful steps that the US took make it easier to understand
certain moves in the best "bully on the block" tradition.
The first example was the American insistence on tough enforcement
of economic sanctions against the rump Yugoslavia (Montenegro,
Serbia) on the ground that Slobodan Milosevic, the President of
Serbia, was supporting the Serb insurgents in Bosnia and Croatia.
The sanctions had catastrophic results on the economy, standard
of living and public health in Serbia and elsewhere. American
sanctions made it very difficult for Serb opponents of Milosevic
to rally much support in Serbia, let alone in Bosnia, because
US policy and media appeared very one-sided.
Sanctions against the rump Yugoslavia were enforced while the
UN, USA, and European Community did not subject Croatia to the
same kind of punishment although Croat troops fought in Bosnia
(7) and its territory was used for the shipment of most military
supplies to the Bosnian Moslems. Nor were sanctions imposed on
Germany, a major supplier of arms, many of which came from the
stock of the former East German Army.
Although a signatory to UN resolutions prohibiting the export
and sale of arms to all the former Yugoslav republics, the USA
made no genuine effort to enforce the arms embargo well before
the White House announced that it would no longer abide by it
in 1994. The US allowed other states to ship arms to Croatia and
Bosnia and drop others from the air or disgorge them at Tuzla
airfield in spite of the "no-fly zone" over Bosnia.
The major exception to this rule occurred when US fighters shot
down four Bosnian Serb planes who had just bombed a plant producing
heavy guns for the Bosnian Army near Travnik.
More recently, The Los Angeles Times revealed that President Clinton
allowed covert Iranian arms shipments into Bosnia-Herzegovina
early in 1994, despite a UN arms embargo that the US was pledged
to support. Large-scale arms transfers from Iran continued until
January 1996.8
To ensure a Moslem-Croat victory over the Serbs, the Clinton administration
took several other measures that increased American involvement
in the war in Bosnia and Croatia. These measures laid bare the
pretence that the USA was committed to a peaceful solution of
the problems in the former Yugoslavia. First, senior American
officers, including a former NATO commander, went to Bosnia to
give advice on military matters to the Bosnian army brass; other
were hired to help to train the Croat army before it took offensive
army action in May and August 1995.
Then, America provided intelligence to Croat and Bosnian Moslem
forces. In the summer of 1995, American planes gave valuable support
to the Croat offensive, knocking out Serb rocket and radar installations.
The close links between the USA and Croatia were symbolized by
Peter Galbraith, the American ambassador in Zagreb, who posed
for photos on top of a Croat tank prior to the Croat offensive
in West Slavonia in May 1995.(9)
Third, the USA gave a green light to Croatia to attack the Krajina
region in Croatia, provoking a new wave of refugees and adding
thousands to the long list of missing and murdered Serbs.
Fourth, US warships using Cruise missiles and American planes
led the NATO attack on Serb-held territories across Bosnia at
the end of August 1995. Almost two weeks of heavy bombing followed,
more civilians perished, and the infrastructure of modern society
was damaged even further.(10)
In the autumn of 1995, the US-sponsored peace conference at the
Dayton Air Base had many similarities with the Diktat to Hungarians
and Romanians in the Belvedere palace in Hitler's Vienna. In both
1940 and 19r1g the delegates were sequestered until they signed
on the dotted line. In each case they had to accept the borders
drawn up by outsiders. At the offficial signing ceremony the godfathers
promised an era of peace and good relations to the miffed representatives
of southeastern Europe.(11)
***
US strategy and tactics in the former Yugoslavia were defended
on several grounds. To begin with, the Serbs were branded as
"aggressors"(12)
and the Western public was led to believe that Serbs from Serbia
had crossed en masse from Serbia into Bosnia to make trouble for
the government of Bosnia. What was purposely left unmentioned
was the outbreak of a popular insurrection inside Bosnia with
the Bosnian Serbs providing the vast majority of fighters across
Bosnia. Few volunteers came from Serbia proper and the only foreigners
who joined the Bosnian Serbs on the battlefield were two hundred
Greeks and a similar number of Russians and Ukrainians. Foreigners
fought on the other side as well. The most numerous group consisted
of Arabs and Iranians. Their number has been estimated at anything
up to 5,000. Small groups of right-wing and neo-nazi Britons,
Frenchmen, and Germans also took part in the fighting against
Serbs in Croatia and Bosnia.
According to the "Authorized Version" fashionable in
the USA, Bosnia became a victim of aggression on the very day
President Izetbegovic proclaimed its independence and the European
Community recognized Bosnia as a sovereign state. Ironically,
the right of selfdetermination granted to Croats, Slovenes and
the Bosnian Moslems was not extended to the Bosnian Serbs. They
had to fight for more than 40 months before the Dayton Peace Accord
granted them - with caveats - the possibility of creating their
own state.
The American insistence on the preservation of a united Bosnia
within the borders drawn up by the victorious Yugoslav Communists
in 1945(13) was defended with copious reminders that the Serbs,
Croats and Muslims had lived fairly harmoniously for ages. As
President Clinton put it on the day he was busy drumming up support
for the stationing of American troops in Bosnia, "just a
few years ago the mosques and churches of different faiths in
Sarajevo were a shining example of multi-ethnic tolerance, that
Bosnia once found unity in its diversity."(14)
The tremendous losses that the civilian population had suffered
during Bosnia's civil war was another pretext for American military
intervention. The figure of 200,000 dead and missing was proclaimed
more than once. On the night he urged Americans to support his
decision to send troops to Bosnia, President Clinton raised the
figure to 250,000 without producing substantiating information.(15)
Two days later, the Bosnian Prime Minister contradicted him indirectly
when he came to Washington to boost congressional backing for
the President's initiative. Speaking on PBS, he mentioned the
figure 200,000. When the need to manipulate public opinion on
Bosnia was becoming less acute than before, yet another figure
became fashionable. Manfred Nowak, the top missing persons expert
for the UN Commission on Human Rights, began "his efforts
to trace an estimated 27,000 missing people.(16)
It is unlikely that the figure of 27,000 missing persons includes
many Bosnian Serbs. Nor does it embrace those whose death has
been duly recorded by the Bosnian Moslem authorities. Among them
are the inhabitants of Moslem-held parts of Sarajevo killed by
Moslem mortars and snipers before the Serbs were blamed for the
loss of life. Interviewing General Lewis W. MacKenzie, the first
commander of UN forces in Sarajevo, a Canadian journalist wrote
that "in New York the consensus was that the Serbs were the
malefactors: MacKenzie bluntly stated that the Bosnians were firing
on their own people, in an effort to ratchet up UN intervention.
'You weren't very popular when you made statements like that,
which contradicted New York,' he grimaced."(17)
The American media regularly accepted the Moslem version of Serb
culpability and gave great publicity to it. One of the worst cases
of Moslems firing on their own people and attributing the deaths
to others occurred on 5 February 1994. Providentially, Peter Jennings,
the ABC anchorman, had just arrived in Sarajevo and was able to
add his voice to those expressing horror on the spot. Few paid
any attention to Serb denials of responsibility and their calls
for an international commission to investigate the matter. It
took TNYT a year to admit through its correspondent in Sarajevo
that "the Bosnian Serbs have repeatedly suggested that the
Moslems of Sarajevo were bombing themselves in order to lure NATO
into war. At times - as after the mortar attack on the Sarajevo
market in which more than 60 people were killed - the United Nations
had declined to contradict the Serbs."
The admission was tucked away in "The Living Arts" section
of the great American daily.(18)
A similar massacre organized by Moslems took place in the same
neighbourhood on the very eve of massive American air raids on
the Bosnian Serbs. This time, the number of victims was 37. The
Serb reaction was the same as in 1994. It did them no good, since
a persuasive pretext was needed to demonize the Serbs prior to
hitting them from the air. The decision to bomb them was taken
although the Bosnian Serb leadership had already told Richard
Holbrook, the American envoy, that they were prepared to accept
a new US peace plan as a basis for negotiation.(19) No bully is
a true bully unless he knows how to flex his muscles to impress
others on the block.
The truth about the massacre in Moslem-held Sarajevo reached the
Western public only after the successful end of American military
operations. On 1 October 1995, an article in The Sunday Times
(London) questioned the official version of the massacre and referred
to British ammunition experts serving with the UN in Sarajevo.
Their French colleagues confirmed the findings. "They suspected
that the perpetrators might easily have been not the Bosnian Serbs,
but the Bosnian government army, which had been implicated in
other incidents such as a rocket attack on Sarajevo's television
station on 29 June, in which five people were killed and 30 others
wounded .(20)
Managed news has been one of the main characteristics of the war
in Bosnia.(21) Jimmy Carter was one of the few prominent Americans
who realized what was happening and said so during his visit to
Sarajevo in 1994. His verdict, "the Serb side of this story
has not been told," did not endear him in Washington. The
State Department was careful not to endorse his peace initiative.
Single-handed, without issuing threats or firing a shot, he brought
about a radical reduction in the fighting and loss of life.(22)
Large-scale American involvement in Bosnia(23) has also been defended
on the ground that the war in that republic could easily spill
over across South-East Europe and might even lead to a dangerous
confrontation between NATO and Russia. No serious evidence in
support of this apocalyptic vision has been produced by those
who were busy issuing dire warnings. There is no reason to believe
that the states that had the capacity to wage a minor war in the
region were eager to profit from the situation. On the contrary
they were highly critical of UN sanctions against the rump Yugoslavia
because these affected their exports and imports, deprived them
of their access to Serbia's energy resources, and interfered with
the shipment of goods through Serbia and on the Danube. As a matter
of fact, Bulgaria, Hungary, and Romania were so helpful to Serbia
that Milosevic was able to survive devastating UN sanctions. Neither
Bulgaria nor Hungary used the opportunity to profit from the Serb
predicament by acting the way their royal governments had done
as Hitler's allies in 1941. Traditional Greek-Serb and Romanian-Serb
friendship survived heavy American pressure. The unsettled state
of Albanian-Serb relations in the Kosovo region did not lead to
a Bosnian-style war(24)- and is unlikely to do so unless the USA
provides military assistance to Albania or gives at the very least
the kind of go-ahead that Croatia needed before President Tudjman
launched his attack on the Serbs in the Krajina in August 1995.
The 60,000 Bosnian Serb militiamen and their 25,000 Krajina Serb
allies were unable to ward off Moslem and Croat advances on Serb-held
territories even before American bombs fell on them. At no time
were they capable of either attacking Croatia or starting a general
conflagration by marching through Serbia to invade - with or without
Milosevic - Albania, Bulgaria, Hungary, Macedonia or Romania.
As a matter of fact, Turkey was in the best position to start
a minor war in the region. The Turkish army had shown its mettle
during the invasion of Cyprus and in the repression of the Kurdish
rebellion. The destruction of almost 1600 Kurd villages and the
removal of hundreds of thousands of Kurds from their birthplaces
are testimony to the determination and firepower of a most valuable
American ally in the Balkans, Middle East, and the Moslem parts
of the former USSR. The Bosnian policy of the Turkish government
did not stray much from American desiderata. Turkey provided shelter
for Mrs Izetbegovic and military training facilities for Bosnian
Moslems. By night, Turkish planes supplied Bosnian Moslems with
arms and Turkish UN forces on the ground gave valuable assistance
to their Bosnian coreligionarie.
In the last resort, the supporters of the bully-boy approach to
international politics were left with the argument that American
leadership in Europe was at stake. According to them, it depended
on what the USA did or failed to do in the former Yugoslavia.
The idea that 1,300,000 Bosnian Serbs or 8,600,000 Serbs in the
various lands of the former Yugoslavia could change significantly
European perceptions of America's might and resolve may flatter
the ego of those Serbs who are not overwhelmed by more mundane
concerns. It does not reflect reality, no matter how many warnings
were issued in the US media or on the floor of the Senate.
The fact that American policy and opinion-makers were forced to
dredge the bottom of the barrel in search of a convincing argument
in support of US military intervention indicates one of two things.
It can be interpreted as yet another example of the weakness of
the case for massive US involvement in the Balkans. Alternatively,
repeated incantations on the need for "American leadership"(25)
raises the question whether American opinion-makers are beginning
to realize that "the only superpower" status rests on
more fragile foundations than cheerleaders for "America the
great" would like to convey to their domestic audience and
the international community. If my scepticism merits consideration,
we can look forward to more Bosnia-style operations to show to
the world that the USA can enforce its stated and unstated objectives.
The corollary of such interventions will be more lies, more threats,
more loss of life, as well as growing pressure on reluctant allies
to toe the line. There is good reason to believe that Washington
will expect its allies to provide more cash and troops in the
future because the balance of power in the world is shifting away
from the USA.
***
Justification seldom replaces explanation. No single factor can
provide a convincing reason for US policy in the former Yugoslavia.
The role of ethnic politics in the States should not be exaggerated
since neither the Croats nor the Moslems present powerful voting
blocks. More important is the attitude of the Catholic Church
in the United States and elsewhere. For centuries, the Vatican
has tried to push eastward the borders of Eastern Christendom.
Until late August, the Krajina was the most westward bulge in
the Catholic land mass stretching from southern Dalmatia to the
triangle where the Hungarian, Romanian, and Yugoslav borders meet.
What missionary zeal, local authorities under Habsburg rule, and
the Croat fascists in WWII had failed to do, Tudjman accomplished
temporarily at least: the line separating Eastern Orthodoxy from
Roman Catholicism was pushed several dozen kilometers eastward
as Serbs fled or were deported.
The Catholic Church did take a stand in the conflict in the former
Yugoslavia. The Pope prayed for peace, denounced aggression and
expressed great sympathy for the tribulations of the Catholic
Croats. Several bishops in the former Yugoslavia and elsewhere
went further in public and called for military intervention against
"aggressors." Such statements would have aroused less
controversy had not the Catholic Primate of Croatia added fuel
to the fire by declaring that "only (emphasis added) 40,000"
Serbs had been killed in the notorious Jasenovac extermination
camp in wartime Croatia.
The military input in favour of an interventionist policy in Bosnia
was hardly negligible though tempered, especially in the case
of Colin Powell, by an understandable desire to avoid another
Vietnam or Somalia. The war in Bosnia gave the armed services
another argument in favour of a strong military and a more generous
defence budget. In Bosnia itself the military could assess the
value of this or that tactic in a low-intensity conflict, test
new weapons or try to perfect existing ones. In the process, the
Americans delivered a notso-subtle message to the Russian military.
The message was duly received: Russian officers on Bosnian Serb
territory spent many an hour inspecting the damage that US rockets
and bombs had caused and measuring the degree of contamination
some of the new weapons had created.
Business interests were not indmerent to the prospect of profits
they thought they could make in the former Yugoslavia. The muchlamented
Ron Brown was in an excellent position to inspire American commercial
initiatives since had had honed some of his undeniable skills
in the wheeler-dealer atmosphere of Port-auPrince long before
Aristide returned to power. More important was the desire to gain
or retain lucrative contracts in the Arab world by taking a stand
favourable to fellow-Moslems in Bosnia. Several politicians who
had been closely associated with the big Bental firm active in
the Arab peninsula were prominent among those who urged military
action against the Serbs long before August 1995. The need for
relatively cheap Middle Eastern oil and the desire to sell US
bonds to investors in oil-rich states became an additional incentive
to come out in favour of President Izetbegovic.
The Republican electoral victory in 1994 temporarily reduced President
Clinton's radius of action in the former Yugoslavia. He knew how
strongly Senator Dole favoured the Bosnian Moslems. The Majority
Leader did not preclude the use of US air power to hit the Serbs.
The President's lacklustre performance in world affairs and the
absence of strong views on anything but his political future were
an additional incentive to be seen acting in a resolute way.
There was enough evidence to show that the Senate would pass by
a fairly large majority a resolution that would reflect the wishes
of Sen. Dole and those Democrats who held similar views for various
reasons. The proposed resolution on Bosnia sped up the decision
to employ American planes against the Bosnian Serbs. By the summer
of 1995, Clinton knew that the Senator would not oppose him and
that the Establishment in New York and Washington was broadly
sympathetic to robust action as long as there was no risk of significant
American casualties. Conditioned by years of crude propaganda,
the average person could merely express vague misgivings about
the need for such an operation.
Last but not least, the existence of battle-trained mujahadeens,
unemployed since the end of the Afghan war, posed a major security
risk to traditional rulers in the Middle East, let alone to Israel
and the secular government in Ankara. The best way of reducing
the potential danger that the guerrillas represented was to induce
them to seek eternal glory in fighting the non-Moslem Serbs who
lived far away from Saudi oil wells and Israeli kibbutzim. The
main prerequisite for the diversion of the mujahadeens' interest
was the demonization of the Bosnian Serbs. American diplomats
and PR firms did their best to remind the world what was at stake
in Bosnia and why concerted action was essential. The American
spin-doctors and State Department smoothies were as persuasive
as the guerrillas were restless. Iranian and Arab volunteers became
the international Brigades in the Bosnian civil war. Resting on
their well-earned laurels, many of the Moslem fighters expressed
little desire to leave Bosnia under the clauses of the Dayton
Peace Accord. Their defiance annoyed those in Washington and elsewhere
who thought that the mujahadeen could be as easily manipulated
as many an American legislator and newspaper editor.
The problems facing American policy-makers in the Balkans and
the Middle East are as insoluble today as they were at the time
of the Arafat-Rabin handshake and the Dayton Peace Accord. Such
a headache is the inevitable fate of the bully who wants to run
the world with a swollen head.
Annex A
Main Characters in the Former Yugoslavia
Abdic, Fikret. Dissident Moslem leader opposed to the Bosnian
government in Sarajevo
Izetbegovic, Alija. President of Bosnia
Karadzic, Radovan. Bosnian Serb leader and President fo the Republika
Srpska
Milosevic, Slobodan. President of Serbia
Mladic, Ratko. Commander of the Bosnian Serb Army
Tudjman, Franjo. President of Croatia
Annex B
Enemies and Allies on the Battlefields of Bosnia
Serbs versus Moslems
Serbs versus Croats
Serbs and Croats versus Moslems
Serbs and dissident Moslems (Abdic) versus Moslems
Serbs and government Moslems against Croats
Moslems versus dissident Moslems
Croats versus Moslems
Croats and Moslems against Serbs
Endnotes
FA Foreign Affairs, N.Y.
GM The Globe and Mail, Toronto
TNYT The New York Times
Sun The Vancouver Sun
(1) TNYT devoted more inches to the former Yugoslavia than to
Russia in 1992-1995
(2) General Charles G. Boyd, Deputy Commander in Chief, U.S. European
Command, and a visitor to Bosnia, pointed out after his retirement
in the summer of 1995 that "conventional wisdom in Washington.
. . is stunted by a limited understanding of current events as
well as by a tragic ignorance or disregard for history."
FA,, September-October 1995, p.23.
(3) "Most damaging of all," wrote General Boyd, "U.S.
actions in the Balkans have been in sharp variance with stated
U.S. policy." Ibid.
(4) For some of the evidence, see M. Aarons and J. Loftus, Ratlines,
London, 1991.
Slobodni Tjednik (17 July 1993) gives a very sympathetic account
of an Ustasha who rose high during the war in the former Yugoslavia.
Nijaz Batlak, alias Mate Sarlija-Daidza, was an "Ustasha
officer during the Second World War." He "returned home
with the experience of a mercenary in South America and many years
of political emigration in the States." Croatia's Minister
of Defence, "Gojko Susak Daidza's friend from the USA, knew
what a warrior Croatia was getting." Given Daidza's role
in the defence of Dubrovnik, Gorazde, etc., the ex-Ustasha officer
was promoted to the "rank of Colonel-General."
(5) Tudjman's contribution to the preservation of a multi-ethnic
society in Croatia includes such statements as "I am glad
my wife is neither Serb nor Jewish."
Better-known are his views on the subject of Jewish iosses during
WWII. He repeatedly refers to estimates no American scholar would
accept. Asked by an NYT correspondent "whether he believed
six million Jews perished in the war, he replied 'This figure,
l mean, all figures when they refer to the casualties of war,
in a certain sense, are exaggerated.' He added 'since time immemorial
this has always been the case'." 25 October 1995.
Tudjman's long-standing views about Jewish losses did not deny
him an invitation to the opening of the Holocaust Memorial at
the height of the anti-Serb campaign in Washington. Some booing
at the ceremony was the only indication that there were American
Jews who felt strongly about him.
Alija Izetbegovic's main opus is Muslimanska Deklaracija, written
in 1970 and published in Sarajevo in 1990. A robust critique of
Ataturk's efforts to modernize Turkey precedes and accompanies
categorical statements of which the most revealing is no doubt
that "there is no peace and no co-existence between 'Islamic
faith' and non-lslamic social and political institutions"
(p.22). Calls for a state based on sheryat law once a majority
of the population of Bosnia is Moslem are followed by the promise
that in such a state "gambling, night and dance clubs"
would be prohibited (p.30). The pages devoted to Israel, Jews
and Zionism contain a prediction: "to keep Jerusalem, the
Jews would have to defeat Islam and Moslems,and that is, thank
God, beyond their power" (p 53). Pakistan, however, is seen
in a very positive light. It is "our great hope, full of
temptation" (p.46).
The mainstream US media were careful not to tell their readers
and listeners the kind of ally that the Americans were expected
to support with cash, arms, and troops. It was only on 1 November
1995 that the readers of TNYT learned that the book in question
"contains inflammatory passages."
It is only fair to add that Izetbegovic practised what he wrote.
His first state visit as the President of a still-peaceful Bosnia
was to Qaddafi, the second to Teheran and the third to Dr Waldheim
in Vienna. His first private visit to Teheran took place while
Ayatollah Khomenei was still in charge.
In both Zagreb and Sarajevo, steps were taken to rehabilitate
amhonour some of those who were associated with the worst aspects
of Hitler's New Order. A "Mile Budak" street graces
Zagreb. The Wall Street Journal and GM, 10 February 1994. As Minister
of Education, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Ambassador of the
Croat Ustasha state to Berlin, Budak met Hitler more than once.
According to the dissident Croat essayist, Slavenka Drakulic,
the "Con mission for Renaming of Streets" proposed that
"one of the most beautiful squares in Zagreb. . . be named
after Ante Pavelic," the head of the Croat Ustasha state
in 1941-1945. But "someone on the city council - or even
much higher up - decided that it would be too overt an act of
rehabilitation for the late fascist leader. . . So the change
was postponed for better days." The New Republic (N.Y.) February
6, 1995, p. 17. In the same article she refers to the fact that
"Croat army brigades are named after Ustashe war criminals."
In Bosnia, rehabilitation centred round the Handzar Division.
In an attempt to reduce the threat Serb "bandits" posed
to German rule in Bosnia, Himmler raised two Mountain SS divisions
(13th "Handzar" and 23rd "Kama"). SS offficers
trained the Moslem recruits outside Bosnia. The Great German Reich
provided heavy and light weapons and saw to it that the Moslem
SS were well supplied with ammunition. Most of the commanding
staff consisted of Germans. The Grand Mufti of Jerusalem visited
Sarajevo to encourage recruitment.
However unsavoury the reputation of these SS units, there were
individuals eager to recreate the SS Handzar Division under a
slightly different name ("The SS 13th" was unceremoniously
dropped) when an organization of the veterans of the WNll Handzar
Division was founded in Sarajevo. It seems that the first attempt
to recreate a new unit called "Handzar Division" was
launched in Sisak, Croatia. According to a laudatory article about
the founder of the Division, Ekrem Mandal was "closely connected
with pro-Croat financial circles" of Moslems from the Sandzak
region in the rump Yugoslavia. SlobodniiTjednik, 17 July 1993.
More recently, a Handzar Division surfaced under the operational
control of the Bosnian Government. One of its duties is to protect
President Izetbegovic. American journalists have still to ask
him who he thinks is the best-known living member of the 13th
SS Handzar Division. All in all, the US media have displayed very
little interest in exploring the revival of Ustashism in Croatia
and the Croat parts of Bosnia. Branding Bosnian Serbs as "fascists"
and "extremists" proved intellectually less demanding
and less likely to damage the American vision of "good and
bad guys" in the former Yugoslavia.
(6) According to the Encyclopedia of the Holocaust (1990), edited
by 1. Gutman, bin a brutal terror campaign more than half a million
Serbs were killed. . . It is estimated that thirty thousand Jews
were murdered in Croatia. . . Many Catholic priests, mainly of
the lower rank, took an active part in the murder operations."
Pp 323, 328.
(7) As early as May 30, 1992, the Security Council called for
the withdrawal of units of the Croat Army from the Republic of
Bosnia.
(8) Article published in Sun, 6 April 1996.
Yves Heiler, the Monde correspondent in Sarajevo, wrote on his
return to Paris that "American air drops did not serve just
humanitarian objectives" (14 November 1994). Other journalists
noted the intricate system of US flights from military airfields
in Germany and Italy in the middle of the night. As a result,
observers on the ground found it more difficult to find out and
report exactly to their superiors whether they were dealing with
planes enforcing the "no flight zone" over Bosnia or
flying supplies to the Moslems.
(9) Photograph in possession of the author.
(10) The military targets included a hospital at Pale, the capital
of Serb Bosnia, and the water purification plant in General Mladic's
birthplace. NATO claims that its planes bombed only military targets
produced the rejoinder of a Serb woman that the Clintons could
then safely send Chelsea to live in one of the Serbheld areas
of Sarajevo.
(11) The great player absent from the Dayton Peace Accord is Fikret
Abdic, a Moslem who was the top votegetter in the elections for
the collective Presidency of Bosnia before the outbreak of hostilities.
His crime: during much of the Bosnian civil war he sided with
the Serbs against the government in Sarajevo. He managed to raise
an army of 5000-7000 Moslem soldiers who co-operated with the
Serbs and thus provided convincing evidence that Izetbegovic was
not the sole representative of the Moslem community. In 1995,
Croat and government Moslem forces overran Abdic's Republic of
West Bosnia. At one stage of the civil war, almost 30,000 of his
followers had to flee for their lives, hotly pursued by fellow-Moslems.
The miserly rations that international humanitarian organizations
distributed to Abdic's followers and their families were designed
to induce them to return to their villages and towns now under
Bosnian government control. The plight of these Moslem refugees
received scant publicity and even less sympathy in the US media.
.
(12) A Serb was the first victim of the civil war in Sarajevo.
Sniper fire killed the father of the bridegroom in front of the
Serb Orthodox Church in central Sarajevo. The parish priest was
wounded and the church flag burned on 1 March 1992. Barricades
were built the same evening and in the ensuing fusillade several
people were killed.
The first massacre in the Bosnian civil war occurred in the village
of Sijekovac in the night of 26/27 March. Fifteen Serbs were killed.
Their age ranged from ten to eighty. More than fifty Serb houses
were set on fire ten days before Izetbegovic proclaimed the independence
of Bosnia and the European Community recognized the new state.
The Commission of Enquiry that investigated the massacre was unable
to agree on who was responsible for what had happened. The Serb
representative blamed the 108th Brigade of the Croat Army and
the local supporters of the ruling Croat and Moslem parties. Names
of the suspects were produced and details given about the massacre.
The non-Serb members responded by claiming that the Serbs had
killed each other.
On 34 April 1992, another massacre involving 55 Serb civilians
occurred in the Kupres region, the scene of mass killings of Serbs
in 1941.
(13) The borders of Bosnia and the eastern borders of Croatia
were redrawn on five separate occasions in the first part of the
twentieth century. Those of Dalmatia, now a part of Croatia, were
reconfigured six times during the same period.
(14) TNYT, 28 November 1995. Anyone who knows anything about the
mistreatment of the Christian churches under Ottoman rule in Bosnia
will be as impressed by the President's argument as he would be
by neo-Nazis claiming that open synagogues in the Third Reich
are indicative of Hitler's treatment of Jews before the Kristallnacht.
(15) TNYT, 28 November 1995. The Deputy Commander in Chief, U.S.
European Command, in 1992-1995, estimated the number of victims
in the range of 70,000 to 100,000. FA, September-October 1995,
p 27. He pointed out that "even the rate of violent deaths
(in Sarajevo - I.A.) had gone down considerably in 1994 (324 for
the year, according the United Nations; the per capita rate was
comparable to some North American cities and slightly lower than
Washington, D.C.) although press coverage and government statements
gave the image of unrelenting siege." FA, September-October
1995, p.28.
(16) GM, 3 February 1996.
(17) Saturday Night, (Toronto), December 1992, p.1 1 1. The Bosnian
Moslem authorities took a dim view of the Canadian general. They
biked about trying him for war crimes. MacKenzie denied the charge
as well as the rumour that his wife was Serb. Ul can understand
why they would do something like that. If I had been in their
position and found that the peacemaking force was not what i had
wanted, l can envision my devious mind working out a story to
discredit them." Sun, 13 February 1993. His successor, the
French General Morillon, accused the Bosnian government troops
of trying to kill him by bombarding his HQ on Christmas day. TNYT,
27 December 1992.
(18) Ibid., 2 February 1995
(19) GM, 30 August 1995.
(20) TNYT, 28 November 1995. What the editors of quality British
papers thought would be important to their readers was ignored
by President Clinton when he addressed the nation on the subject
of Bosnia: "This summer, Bosnian Serb shelling once again
turned Bosnia's playgrounds and marketplaces into killing fields."
TNYT, 28 November 1995.
(21) The president of Rudder Finn Global Public Affairs, a PR
firm representing Croatia and Bosnia, claimed that "in terms
of persuading and convincing the UN to take the proper measures,
it is even more important" than what is happening on the
ground. Sun, 13 February 1993.
A study of American images of Serbs and Serb behaviour remains
to be written. It will have to encompass labels that American
policy and opinion-makers used in 1991-1995. Much of what they
had to say resembled the ruminations of the Vienna press in 1914.
However, the Nazis had a very limited vocabulary. Their favourite
term for Serbs was "bandits." "Eternal conspirators
with a propensity to opposition" was Hitler's characterization
of the Serbs in 1942. Two years later, he described them as the
"only statesmanlike people in South-East Europe." National
Archives, Washington, T-120-30449.
The case of "misplaced" documents dealing with war crimes
in Yugoslavia is indicative of the extent to which the cards were
stacked against Serbs in the USA. The evidence of crimes against
Serbs was "presented once in diplomatic pouch and twice in
person to Prof. Bassiouni," the chairman of the Commission
of Experts who collected evidence for the International War Crimes
Tribunal in Holland. In each case, the documents were "misplaced."
The Wall Street Journal, New York, 22 March 1995. W. Dorich's
letter to the editor.
For a refutation of some of the charges against Serbs, see Alex
N. Dragnich, Yugoslavia's Disintegration and the Struggle for
Truth (Boulder, 1995).
(22) Bad weather, in any case, limited military operations during
the winter months. After the vigorous Croat and Moslem counter-attacks
in 1995, a number of Serbs felt that they had made a mistake in
listening to Carter's advice and proposals. Instead, they claimed
that they would have done better if Mladic had pursued the Serb
offensive in the Bihac region. As a result of Carter's peacemaking
efforts, the Moslems had gained a useful respite.
(23) The American Air Force and planes of several other NATO air
forces, including the Luftwaffe, flew more combat sorties over
Bosnia at the end of August and beginning of September 1995 than
did Goering's Luftwaffe during a similar time period in the war
against Yugoslavian forces in Bosnia in April 1941.
(24) Bad relations between Belgrade and Tirana did not stop a
number of Albanians from smuggling large quantities of oil across
the border to Montenegro and Serbia. The Albanians profited and
the Bosnian Serbs received much-needed gasoline. After the Dayton
Peace Accord, the standard of living dropped in North Albania.
(25) President Clinton used "leadership" nine times
in his TV speech justifying the stationing of US troops in Bosnia.
TNYT, 28 November 1995.
(26) The fact that most of the other mass killings took place
in the non-white parts of the world may explain the lack of profound
indignation in Washington and the absence of calls for stiff sanctions
and military intervention against perceived villains. Perhaps
race does count more in shaping the outlook and the persistent
Euro-centrality of opinion and policy-makers than is assumed by
students of American foreign policy.
Writing in TNYT (31 January 1996), Thomas L. Friedman declared
that "between 1992 and 1994, the renewed conflict killed
1000 Angolese a day." In Indonesia between 100,000 to 500,000
people were killed after an unsuccessful coup inspired by the
Communists (Yearbook on Intemational Communist Affairs 1966) (Stanford,
1967) p.359. General Suharto played an important role in the repression
of Communists and their families. President Clinton visited him.
It is not known whether they discussed the mistreatment of the
population of East Timor. The civil war in Liberia has killed
150,000 people, according to a Reuters dispatch published in the
GM, 10 April 1996. Africa Watch estimated that during the previous
four years, 500,000 had died in the Sudan as a result of the (civil
- I.A.) war and the famine created by it. (1991 Britannica Book
of the Year) (Chicago). p.397.