English persons, therefore, of humanitarian and reformist
disposition constantly went out to the Balkan Peninsula to see who was
in fact ill-treating whom, and, being by the very nature of their
perfectionist faith unable to accept the horrid hypothesis that
everybody was ill-treating everybody else, all came back with a pet
Balkan people established in their hearts as suffering and innocent,
eternally the massacres and never the massacrer.
Rebecca West
Black Lamb and Grey Falcon, 1938
REBECCA WEST loved the peoples of the Balkans, but she is not the
only traveler to return from there with some measure of cynicism. For
more than two years, I have found myself increasingly consumed and
frustrated by events in the former Yugoslavia. I have traveled to the
region on several occasions and have had the advantage of hearing the
personal views of young men and women in Croatia and Macedonia
assigned to the American forces, the UN. Protection Force (UNPROPOR),
and the UN. High Commissioner for Refugees.
The views I share here are the product of seeing this
war up close, almost continuously, in all its ugliness. These views
differ from much of the conventional wisdom in Washington, which is
stunted by a limited understanding of current events as well as a
tragic ignorance or disregard of history. Most damaging of all, U.S.
actions in the Balkans have been at sharp variance with stated U.S.
policy.
The linchpin of the U.S. approach has been the underinformed
notion that this is a war of good versus evil, of aggressor against
aggrieved. From that premise the United States has supported U.N. and
NATO resolutions couched in seemingly neutral terms-for example, to
protect peacekeepers-and then has turned them around to punish one
side and attempt to affect the course of the war. It has supported
the creation of safe areas and demanded their protection even when
they have been used by one warring faction to mount attacks against
another. It has called for a negotiated resolution of the conflict
even as it has labeled as war criminals those with whom it would
negotiate. It has pushed for more humanitarian aid even as it became
clear that this was subsidizing conflict and protecting the warring
factions from the natural consequences of continuing the fighting. It
has supported the legitimacy of a leadership that has become
increasingly ethnocentric in its makeup, single-party in its rule, and
manipulative in its diplomacy.
To take one example: recently more than go percent of the Serbs
in western Slavonia were ethnically cleansed when Croatian troops
overran that U.N.-protected area in May. As of this writing this
Croatian operation appears to differ from Serbian actions around the
U.N. safe areas of Srebrenica and Zepa only in the degree of Western
hand-wringing and CNN footage the latter have elicited. Ethnic
cleansing evokes condemnation only when it is committed by Serbs, not
against them.
We must see things in the Balkans as they are, not as we wish
them to be. We must separate reality from image. Is it possible that
all sides have legitimate interests and fears, or does legitimacy
remain the special province of only one or two factions? We need a
healthy skepticism about -accepted "wisdom," and above all, we need to
tell the truth, if only to ourselves.
THE OBJECTIVES
ALL FACTIONS in the former Yugoslavia have pursued the same
objective-avoiding minority status in Yugoslavia or any successor
state-and all have used the tools most readily available to achieve
that end. For the Croats that meant a declaration of independence
from a Yugoslav federation increasingly dominated by Serb nationalism
and an appeal to the European Union for recognition. The new state
identified itself and full citizenship within it as Croatian and
claimed sovereignty extending to the boundaries of the old Croat
Republic of the Yugoslav federation. Bosnia!s Muslims had no such
option as they were a plurality, not a majority, on their territory.
They were also considerably less enthusiastic about leaving the
federation, recognizing that with its explosive population mix, Bosnia
seemed to make more sense as part of a larger multiethnic Yugoslavia
than as a stand-alone entity. The secession of Slovenia and Croatia
left a rump Yugoslavia formed around Serbia and Montenegro an even
less hospitable home, however, and Bosnia!s Muslims too opted for
secession.
In recognizing the new Bosnian state, the international community
demanded, and Bosnia's Muslims (and some of their Serb and Croat
neighbors) delivered, a commitment to democracy and individual rights
that made the nations of the West comfortable with their own
commitment to the new Bosnian state. Their approach was tactically
sound and, as a practical matter, the only course available to
Bosnia's well-educated but under-armed Muslim plurality if it was to
preserve its newly proclaimed independence. Pointing this out does
not diminish the essential nobility of this course, nor the obvious
moral advantage it gave the new state in comparison with some of its
neighbors.[1]
[1]Regrettably, the Bosnian polity had organized itself into
political parties based largely on ethnic identity. As the world
moved toward recognition of the Bosnian state, Bosnian President Alija
Izetbegovic's Party of Democratic Action and its Croat and Serb
counterparts exercised near-absolute control over regions where their
ethnic groups were in the majority. Izetbegovic's party today runs
Bosnia as a one-party state.
In this atmosphere of fear, uncertainty, and resurgent
nationalism, first the Croatian and then the Bosnian Serbs-with
Serbian support - took up arms to do what international recognition
had done for the Croats of Croatia and the Muslims of Bosnia: ensure
that they would not be a minority in a state they perceived to be
hostile. What is frequently referred to as rampant Serb nationalism
and the creation of a greater Serbia has often been the same volatile
mixture of fear, opportunism, and historical myopia that seems to
motivate patriots everywhere in the Balkans. Much of what Zagreb calls
the occupied territories is in fact land held by Serbs for more than
three centuries, ever since imperial Austria moved Serbs to the
frontier (the Krajina) to protect the shopkeepers of Vienna (and
Zageb) from the Ottomans. The same is true of most Serb land in
Bosnia, what the Western media frequently refers to as the 70 percent
of was Bosnia seized by rebel Serbs. There were only 500,000
fewer Serbs than Muslims in Bosnia at independence, with the more
rural Serbs tending toward larger landholdings. In short, the Serbs
are not trying to conquer new territory, but merely to hold on to what
was already theirs.
These are not minor historical points. The twin poles of much of
Western diplomacy in the Balkans and elsewhere have been self-
determination and the inviolability of borders. In the cases of Croa-
tia and Bosnia, as well as Slovenia and Macedonia, Western nations
suffered a temporary lapse in their concern over borders, accepting
the dissolution of a UN. member nation in favor of self-determination.
That policy contributed to stability where the will of the population
was most clear - ethnically homogeneous Slovenia-and led to
catastrophic destabilization where the will of the population was most
ambiguous - ethnically mixed Bosnia. One-third of Bosnia's population
boycotted the referendum on independence and made it unmistakably
clear that it would take up arms if the new state was created and
recognized.
There are legitimate concerns over what constitutes an appropri-
ate unit of self-determination; the United States cannot possibly sup-
port ever-shrinking pockets of ethnic preference. But the United
States hobbles its understanding of this conflict if it imputes its
global concerns to the local players. As one Serb officer confided to
a member of my staff, he did not understand why his people had been
"satanized' for insisting on the same right of self-determination that
had been accorded virtually all others in the former Yugoslavia.
War in Bosnia and Croatia was not the inevitable product of cen-
turies of ethnic hatreds. It was created from ambition, fear, and
incompetence-local and international
THE CONDUCT OF THE WAR
No ONE of conscience can ignore the moral dimension of this
crisis. Unspeakable acts have been perpetrated on the innocent. I
have flown over Bosnian villages and seen the results, not of combat,
but of ethnically based criminal violence, homes within a village
selectively and systematically destroyed as the majority population--
Muslim, Serb, or Croat-cleansed its community of now unwanted
minorities. I have walked the streets of villages like Gornji Vakaf
and seen the faces of angry, armed young men staring at one another
across city squares and streets transformed into ethnic confrontation
fines. No one can visit Mostar and witness the city's historic
center-made rubble by small arms fire-and not feel and fear how thin
the veneer of civility must be for us all. And as one turns every
corner in Sarajevo to be greeted by more destruction, it is difficult
to escape the questions, what manner of man is in those hills, and
what possessed him to pull the lanyard on his artillery?
But to make rational judgments of policy requires a depth of
understanding that goes beyond a transient image or sound bite. For
some, the war in Bosnia has become a tragedy of proportions that
parallel the Holocaust, an example of plain good against stark evil.
For these people, the Serbs are the forces of darkness, responsible
for most if not all of the atrocities, the ethnic cleansing, mass
rapes, concentration camps, and indiscriminate killing.
Regrettably, that behavior is not unprecedented in Balkan
conflicts, and to say that it is peculiarly Serb behavior says more
about the observer than the Balkans. If one comes into the movie in
1991 or 1992, a case can be made that the Serbs indeed are the
villains of this picture, but to ignore the previous reels will, at a
minimum, impair divining the ultimate plot line. And let me dare to
suggest that my observations tell me that even, today's picture is
more complex than is generally regarded. The public view of this war
has come largely through the eyes of one party, a people, as Rebecca
West warned, whose status as victim has been a valuable and jealously
protected tool of war. Make no mistake: Serb behavior has been
reprehensible. The question is how bad? On what scale? And how
unique? Analysis of what has happened is not a claim of moral
equivalence, nor is it a justification for the actions being examined.
How bad has this war been? When one drives past the destroyed
speed-skating rink and the Olympic stadium in Sarajevo, the eye
involuntarily turns to row upon row of markers atop fresh graves dug
in the new and largest cemetery in the capital. Clearly, thousands
have died in Sarajevo. How many people have died in this war overall?
Nobody knows. The Bosnian government has an interest in portraying
the number as high as possible: it is a testament to the savagery of
their opponent, a cry for assistance and at the same time an
indictment of a cautious international community. Until recently the
government claimed the number of dead and missing to be about 250,000.
Many have been skeptical of that figure, with some suggesting the real
number could be as low as 25,000, although other estimates-including
my own-are more frequently in the 70,000 to 100,000 range. In April
the government lowered its estimate to just over 145,000, about 3
percent of the prewar population. That is a sobering number, but even
accepting it at face value and granting that it is unevenly
distributed across the population, does that total after 38 months of
warfare make charges of genocide a meaningful contribution to policy
debate?
Sarajevo is instructive. The government estimate puts the death
toll in the capital just above 10,000. Someone has calculated that the
city has been hit by 600,000 shells, and some 60 percent of its build-
ings have been destroyed or severely damaged. Recent fighting,
shelling, and harassment of humanitarian convoys have once again
increased the city's suffering and isolation. What normalcy that
exists there is a tribute to international relief efforts and, above
all, the courage and resilience of the city's population.
The city's actual suffering, however, does not change the reality
that the image of Sarajevo, battered and besieged, is a valuable tool
for the Bosnian government. As that government was commemorating the
thousandth day of the siege, local markets were selling oranges,
lemons, and bananas at prices only slightly higher than prices in
western Europe. At the same time the commercial price of gasoline in
Sarajevo was 35 percent cheaper than gasoline in Germany. A World
Food Programme survey in May 1994 found that, after a tough winter for
Sarajevo, no one in the city was malnourished, and only a small
percentage of the population was undernourished. Even the rate of
violent deaths had gone down considerably in 1994 (324 for the year
according to 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.
Some of the city's suffering has actually been imposed on it by
actions of the Sarajevo government. Some were understandable poli-
cies, like the restriction on travel to prevent the depopulation of
the city during those periods when movement was possible. Others were
the by-product of government weakness, like relying on the Sarajevo
underworld for the initial defense of the city, thereby empowering
criminal elements that took their toll on the population, especially
Serbs. Still others were intentional; whether out of individual greed
or official policy is unclear. Government soldiers, for example, have
shelled the Sarajevo airport, the city's primary lifeline for relief
supplies. The press and some governments, including that of the
United States, usually attribute all such fire to the Serbs, but no
seasoned observer in Sarajevo doubts for a moment that Muslim forces
have found it in their interest to shell friendly targets. In this
case, the shelling usually doses the airport for a time, driving up
the price of black-market goods that enter the city via routes
controlled by Bosnian army commanders and government officials.
Similarly, during the winter of 1993-94, the municipal government
helped deny water to the city's population. An American foundation
had implemented an innovative scheme to pump water into the city's
empty lines, only to be denied permission by the government for health
reasons. The denial had less to do with water purity than with the
opposition of some Sarajevo officials who were reselling U.N. fuel
donated to help distribute water. And, of course, the sight of
Sarajevans lining up at water distribution points, sometimes under
mortar and sniper fire, was a poignant image.
The war has also redrawn the demographic map of Bosnia;
fear, combat, and nationalist extremism have displaced upwards of two
million people. Much of this displacement has been forced population
movements, the engine for much of which has been Serbian-Serb fear,
Serb security demands, and Serb cruelty. When the Serbs took up arms
in the spring of 1992,their immediate aim was to secure their
communities from real and imagined threats from their nonSerb
neighbors. With this accomplished, they moved to connect Serb areas
with secure lines of communication through locations in which other
ethnic groups were dominant. In both operations, non-Serbs were
viewed as security threats and cleansed from the territory in
question. In a campaign that appeared to reflect central direction
and planning, Serb excesses were common and well documented.
Less generally known are Serb population movements. During a
visit to Sarajevo in February a senior UN. official told me that there
may be as few as 500,000 Serbs on Serb-held territory in Bosnia.
Combined with the 200,000 Serbs that he estimated are living on
Bosnian-controlled land, the Serb population in Bosnia may be only
about half its prewar total. Like their former neighbors, Bosnia's
Serbs can point to fear, combat, and forced expulsion as the reasons
for their movement, although the proportions are likely different.
Serbian people have suffered when hostile forces have advanced,
with little interest or condemnation by Washington or CNN
correspondent Christiane Amanpour. Late in 1994, when the Bosnian V
Corps broke out of the Bihac pocket, they burned villages as they went
and forced several thousand Serbs to flee. The same happened when
Bosnian Croat forces pushed up the Livno valley shortly thereafter.
If anyone doubts the capacity of Bosnia's non-Serb population to
inflict ethnic cruelty, let him or her visit the Croat enclaves around
Kiseljak or Vitez. The scarred shells of Catholic churches and Muslim
mosques as well as thousands of private homes give ample testimony to
the barbarity of Muslim and Croat violence, and these Muslim and Croat
troops likely did what they did for much the same reasons as their
Serb neighbors: revenge for real and alleged sins of the past and the
perceived demands of present security. There are times when the
distinctions among the factions appear more a question of power and
opportunity than morality.
THE FUTURE COURSE OF THE WAR
THE STRATEGIC situation on the ground has changed substantially
since the war began. Three years of fear, combat, and crime mas-
querading as battle have effected great change. With their enclaves
largely preserved, Croats see their future more in their relationship
with Zagreb than with Sarajevo. And with the 1993-94 combat and
atrocities a fresh memory, they view their Muslim federation partners
with distrust, frequently echoing Serb fears of the encroachment of
Islam into Christian Europe. Bosnia!s Croats joined the federation to
get out of the Bosnian war (which they were losing) and have little
interest in joining any sustained campaigns against Bosnia's Serbs,
This is not true of Bosnia's Muslims and Serbs. Without question,
these factions each intend to win this war. The Serbs think they have
won already and want the war to end. The Muslims know they have not
and are seeking ways to continue it.
Serbs suffer from the general depopulation of the areas they con-
trol; economic activity is depressed, and they are hard-pressed to
marshal forces. The popular image of this war is one of unrelenting
Serb expansion, but much of Bosnia has historically been Serb, and the
recent Serb moves against the eastern enclaves represent the only
significant changes in their area of control in nearly two years.
Muslims have been largely forced into the central core of the
country. This has provided the Sarajevo government with a strong base
and internal lines of communication with which to take the fight to
extended Serb units. The refugee population that forms the core of
the Bosnian army guarantees a numerical advantage (150,000-200,000 to
80,000) and ensures a continued will to fight to recapture lost
territory.
Even the Serb advantage in heavy equipment is not what it once
was. The closure of the Serbian border by Belgrade is incomplete and
imperfect but nonetheless real. It has affected Bosnian Serb access
to fuel and equipment. Meanwhile, the flow of armaments passing to
Bosnian forces continues almost unremarked upon by the international
community. Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole's much-trumpeted desire to
lift the embargo would be amusing but for the fact that it would
almost certainly lead to the introduction of U.S. ground forces. The
embargo has been lifted in all but name, to the delight of much of the
US. policy elite. To be sure, since supplies must pass through
Croatian territory, Zagreb controls the types of weapons that pass to
Bosnia and continues to deny the heavy weapons that could challenge it
in renewed Muslim-Croat fighting. Nonetheless, the Muslims' forces
are vastly better off than they were earlier in the war. The armies
in Bosnian-Serb and Muslim-like asymmetrical in their military power,
but they are very closely matched. Serbian successes against the
eastern enclaves in July were small-scale operations against isolated,
demoralized units. That Serbian units did not attack the government
army in central Bosnia-Sarajevo's real center of gravity-is a
reflection of this new balance. And time is quite likely on the side
of the Muslims.
It is a remarkable achievement of Bosnian diplomacy, and one
reinforced by the government's rhetoric after the fall of Srebrenica,
that the Muslims have been able to gain significant military parity
with the Serbs, while nonetheless maintaining the image of hapless
victim in the eyes of much of the world community. It is all the more
remarkable since, before the Srebrenica attack, the Muslims had been
on the strategic offensive for more than a year.
In this campaign the Muslims have consistently tried to use the
United Nations and NATO (with the attendant safe areas, no-fly zones,
exclusion zones, and demilitarized zones) as a shield, allowing
themselves to weaken their forces in one area-depending on the United
Nations or the international community to protect it-while
concentrating their forces elsewhere. In the winter Of 1993-94 the
Sarajevo government stripped the capital's defenses to release troops
to fight against the Croats in central Bosnia, counting on their pub-
lic diplomacy efforts to manage the risk to Sarajevo. It was a near-
run thing, but in the end the city was protected by the threat of NATO
air strikes and the imposition of a heavy-weapons exclusion zone.
This spring and summer the Muslims excoriated the United Nations
for failing to protect Sarajevo, or as one U.N. official privately put
it, for failing to do their fighting for them. Almost immediately
after the Serb shelling of the tunnel under the Sarajevo airport--the
only route open for Muslim military supplies and commercial goods-the
Bosnian government demanded NATO air strikes, attacked the passive
attitude of UNPROFOR, and complained that the genocide was continuing;
Sarajevo was still a death camp. Holocaust-like rhetoric was even
more prominently featured in government statements following the mid-
July fall of Srebrenica.
All of this is designed to enlist active military intervention in
support of Muslim war aims. To date this campaign appears to have
been successful in guaranteeing the Bosnian government against cata-
strophic failure in continuing to pursue the military option. The
Bosnian army may suffer casualties and even significant defeats, but
neither the existence of the Bosnian state nor its control over the
core of its territory can be seriously jeopardized without provoking a
sharp international response. Beyond this, the Sarajevo government
hopes to prod NATO and particularly the United States into even more
active intervention. French President Jacques Chirac's challenge to
President Clinton to help the Bosnians defend Gorazde and the latter's
willingness to consider helicopter and air support for the operation
suggest that the effort might yet bear fruit.
Last fall's action around Biha'c-a portion of which is a U.N.
safe area-is particularly instructive. The situation in this pocket
is complex, even by Balkan standards. The Bosnian government unit
there, the V Corps, was opposed by both Bosnian Serb forces and troops
loyal to Fikret Abdic, usually described in Western press accounts as
renegade Muslim units'. Actually Abdic a powerful local businessman,
was a member of the Bosnian collective presidency (he outpolled
Izetbegovic in national elections) and had been expelled from the
government (or broke with it, depending on your point of view) when
Sarajevo rejected an internationally brokered peace agreement. Eager
for profit and familiar with operating on the gray side of the law,
Abdic established his own state and mutually profitable relationships
with his Serb and Croat neighbors. These ties were one of the few
examples of successful multiethnic cooperation in the Balkans.
The Bosnian V Corps was still a fighting force, however, and in a
series of well-conducted campaigns it defeated Abdic's largely merce-
nary army. The V Corps then turned its attention to the Bosnian Serb
forces that surrounded it, broke out of the pocket, and captured
several hundred square kilometers of territory from a shaken Serb
opponent.
Serb forces were hard-pressed, and to mount a counterattack they
had to rely not only on forces in Bosnia but units in the Krajina of
Croatia as well. Slowly the Serbs pushed the V Corps back to approx-
imately the original lines of confrontation. The V Corps gave ground
but was never defeated and remains -an effective fighting force to
this day. During the counterattack, however, the Bosnian government
and many in the international community demanded that the United
Nations and NATO protect the Bihac' safe area from Serb aggression. A
common theme was the impending humanitarian catastrophe if strong
steps were not taken-even though this was a fight that the Muslim army
had picked, there was limited damage to the safe area, and Biha'c was
the headquarters and garrison town of the Bosnian units that had
mounted the attack. Finally, rat-her than work toward a cease-fire to
fend off the looming tragedy, Bosnian government actions were clearly
orchestrated to create the conditions for NATO air strikes, not a
cessation of hostilities.
HOW TO MAKE PEACE
I BELIEVE that the U.S. approach to the war in Bosnia is torn by
a fundamental contradiction. The United States says that its objec-
tive is to end the war through a negotiated settlement, but in reality
what it wants is to influence the outcome in favor of the Muslims.
The United States, for example, watched approvingly as Muslim
offensives began this spring, even though these attacks destroyed a
cease-fire Washington has supported. This duplicity, so crude and
obvious to all in Europe, has weakened America's moral authority to
provide any kind of effective diplomatic leadership. Worse, because
of this, the impact of US. action has been to prolong the conflict
while bringing it no closer to resolution.
The United States recognized the secession of Bosnia reluctantly,
but having done that, it embraced the new state and both praised and
supported its multiethnic character. Whether this character was ever
real or had a reasonable chance of success is a fair subject of
debate, but no reasonable person can believe that a unitary,
multiethnic Bosnia is possible today. Nonetheless, Washington treats
the Bosnian government as it-and perhaps the best of the Bosnian
leadership- hoped and dreamed the country would be. It is not. It is
the representative of one warring faction.
More balanced American diplomats admit privately that the Bosnian
Serbs-like their Muslim and Croat neighboors - are not without legit-
imate interests and concerns in this conflict. The United States
rarely addresses the problem in this light and for much of the past
three years has based its approach more on excluding than including
the Serbs. Former President Jimmy Carter made this point
following his December visit to Sarajevo and Pale when he
commented to the author that negotiating with one side, condemning the
other, and issuing ultimatums was unlikely to lead to any agreement.
It is worse than that. Isolation and privation have helped
legitimize in the eyes of Serbs the worst of the Serb nation, to make
acceptable to the broader population the faction that said the world
was their enemy, that they were history's victims and Europe's
protectors, that so great was their danger that any measures were
appropriate to their defense. Demonization has unleashed demons.
How then is the United States to make tomorrow better than today?
The most important change is to start telling the truth. The result
will be, aside from restoring some moral stature, to reduce the
fighting.
To think with clarity about the former Yugoslavia that exists
rather than the one the U.S. administration would prefer and then to
speak with honesty about it will be very difficult given the distance
this government has traveled down the road of Serb vilification and
Muslim and Croat approval. But until the US. government can come to
grips with the essential similarities between Serb, Croat, and Muslim
and recognize that the fears and aspirations of all are equally
important, no effective policy can possibly be crafted that would help
produce an enduring peace. This truth, however difficult to
acknowledge publicly at this late date, must at the very least be
recognized privately so that a revamp of policy can proceed from dear
and accurate premises.
The first step is for the United States to announce, and then
follow through by its actions, that it really does oppose a military
solution. That would require a cessation of all the nonsense rhetoric
about lifting an embargo that has in reality long since been lifted
and about leveling a playing field that is as nearly level as it is
likely to get. As long as the free flow of arms through Croatia to
Bosnia continues to be taxed by the Croats in terms of a percentage of
the total plus a prohibition on most heavy weapons (which the Croats
understandably do not want to face the next time they square off
against the Muslims), the strategic balance that now exists in Bosnia
will likely remain.
By turning a blind eye to these arms deliveries while screeching
at Belgrade to stop whatever still continues across the Drina to the
Bosnian Serbs, the United States does two things: one, it disqualifies
itself as the f-air and balanced intermediary in the peace process,
and two, it sends a powerful signal to the Muslims that a military
solution is acceptable and perhaps preferred, notwithstanding solemn
public statements in support of the diplomatic process.
Once established as actually supporting the arms embargo, the
United States can gain credibility by opposing military activity irre-
spective of the source. Strong public denunciation must follow all
attacks by Bosnian Serbs, Bosnian government forces, or for that
matter Croatian campaigns such as that against the Krajinian Serbs in
the western sector. The quiet approval by the United States when the
Muslim forces broke the Cessation of Hostilities Agreement must change
to condemnation just as stern as that directed at the Bosnian Serbs as
they captured Srebrenica. Moreover, an absolutely impartial use of
NATO air power against any faction that violates a UN. sanction, not
just the Serbs, must also become the expected response that the United
States supports if the antagonists are to be persuaded that violence
is not acceptable. This, if nothing else, will certainly help reduce
the dying.
The second step is to reinforce peace and cooperation where they
are found. The Bosnian federation is a starting point. The slow
progress of building Muslim-Croat cooperation highlights the
difficulties ahead, but the major failing of the federation is not the
pace of its progress but its biethnic nature. It includes none of the
Serbs in Bosnia, many of whom live in government-controlled lands. If
the United States is not anti-Serb-merely against criminals and those
who would choose war over peace-it must address the status of these
citizens. Making peace with the Serbs in federation territory and
giving them an identity, political voice, and the potential for
constitutional options comparable to Bosnia's Croats would send a
powerful signal to those in Bosnian Serb territory that there are
options beyond war and isolation.
The third major step is to restart the negotiation process. In
the Washington agreement that led to the federation, the United States
treated Bosnia!s Croats and Muslims as separate entities, accorded
their leaders legitimacy, brokered a deal between the two that largely
stopped the killing, sought the ratification of that deal from a
foreign power (Croatia), and recognized the validity of constitutional
ties from one of those ethnic communities to another state (again,
Croatia). The Contact Group's approach to Bosnia's Serbs (largely
driven by U.S. pressure) has been decidedly different: take-it-or-
leave-it map. Under these circumstances there are no incentives for
the Bosnian government to negotiate or compromise. That leaves the
Serbs with three choices: accept the Contact Group plan, respond to
government military action, or drastically increase the level of
violence to force a military decision. The current map is
unacceptable, so the fighting continues.
A key to restarting the negotiation process may lie with the
nation that has quietly, but continuously, been marginalized: Russia.
The United States' apparent desire to minimize Russia!s involvement in
the peace process is difficult to comprehend but may be rooted in two
fears: that Russia would balk at using the peace process to advance
for the Muslims diplomatically what they could not achieve militarily;
and that Russia, currently on the sidelines in the international com-
munity, would gain considerable prestige and renewed diplomatic status
from a success in brokering a solution to the conflict.
Whether these fears existed or were justified in the past is no
longer relevant. The United States has now reached the point where
the Russians may be its best hope for facilitating a diplomatic solu-
tion. The United States, for reasons of credibility, cannot do so; it
can talk effectively with only two sides and therefore is not in a
position to lead the diplomatic effort. Likewise, the United States
has coopted the other Players of the Contact Group, except Russia. In
this regard, the Russians are untainted and have more credibility with
the Serbs. Perhaps only they can address the Serbs' deepest fears and
give them the confidence no other party has been interested in
providing. And the Russians may like this new role. It would give
them foreign policy stature in the wake of their debacle in Chechnya
and a chance to prove their willingness and ability to play a
constructive diplomatic role. More important, it would give the West
new hope for settling the conflict diplomatically where no other
option seems viable. This significant role comes with a risk, but at
this stage it is a worthwhile price the United States may have to pay
to stop the war. If the marginalization of Russia has not alienated
the latter beyond redemption, the United States should seek its full
partnership immediately.
The hour is late in Bosnia. By the time you read this, the
United States may not be able to prevent the withdrawal of UN. forces;
it may even be beyond its ability to resist the pressures to deploy
American ground troops, goaded by a strangely bellicose press and anx-
ious allies. But if the United States is to insert itself, it should
do so without illusion. Without a determined policy choice to the
contrary, it would in fact be entering not to reinforce the peace, but
rather to help one faction win, a faction that has been maneuvering
for such intervention since the Bosnian state was created. It would
be allowing its European allies who, until now, have had the lead
militarily in the Balkans, to transfer the tar now stuck to their
fingers to the United States' and force America to assume the moral
responsibility for the outcome of the conflict.
All this will be at considerable cost because in this conflict
only very large numbers of troops on the ground will make a
difference. Despite its appeal to the amateur strategist, a reliance
on air power alone-the strike option this type of terrain with these
kinds of targets has never held any real promise of conflict
resolution. Given the political dynamics that developed after the
fall of Srebrenica and Zepa and as Gorazde seemed threatened, a strong
response from NATO was necessary if further erosion of its credibility
was to be avoided. And indeed, the use of "robust" air power can have
an effect on Serb behavior, particularly if it is used without regard
for civilian casualties. But it cannot make the Serbs want to live as
an ethnic minority in a nation they perceive to be hostile. It can
only reinforce the paranoia that drives them to continue the fight so
relentlessly even now.
Pushing NATO to agree to the robust use of its air power, then,
as with most of the other U.S. policy moves in the former Yugoslavia,
is linked more to the immediacy of the evening newscasts than to a
rational overall political objective. For that reason it can have no
more than a near-term effect. At the end of the day the United States
must face the reality that it cannot produce an enduring solution with
military torchbearer or ground-only one that will last until it
departs.
There is an alternative: proceed from the premise that all
factions to the conflict have legitimate needs, not just Muslims and
Croats. Leverage Belgrade and Zagreb equally to stop the flow of arms
to Bosnia. Denounce the use of military force with equal indignation
toward all perpetrators. Pressure the Bosnians to negotiate in good
faith or risk true abandonment. Enlist the Russians both to represent
and dampen Serb demands. Enforce a cease-fire impartially.
There need be no illusions about the future. Given the horrors
of the last three years, rebuilding trust in Bosnia will take a very
long time. True healing is beyond our means. The best we can hope
for is to create the conditions for Bosnia to heal itself. The US.
can aid in this process but only if it is willing to be honest, at
least to itself.
GENERAL CHARLES G. BOYD, USAF (RET.), was the Deputy
Commander in Chief, U.S. European Command, from November 1992 to July
1995. A fighter pilot and combat veteran of Vietnam, he held many
senior command and staff positions throughout his 35-year military
career.