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27 Apr 96This Week: U.S. to stay more than year; U.S. caught running arms to Bosnians; killings in Kosovo; ICTY releases suspect | ![]() |
| Though I thought when I left in January that I had published my last issue, I also thought I would not be returning for 12 months (six at the earliest). However, I returned in April, after only little over two months in country. The daily journal I kept help fills in that gap. |
Clinton aide Mack McClarty collected $100 million in pledges of military aid from Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Kuwait for Bosnia's Muslim government. McClarty was accompanied on the mission by Bosnian Foreign Minister Muhamed Sacirbey. Clinton said he was "deeply gratified by the generosity" of the Arabs.
Note: The Dayton accord prevents the U.S. from providing military aid to any of the factions in Bosnia.
The OSCE is concerned that there isn't enough money to fund independent media in Bosnia. The majority of the nationalist media is government-controlled.
Note: The U.S., for one, has drastically cut funding the last for radio programs aimed at Eastern Europe the last few years. This 'peace dividend' saves mere millions of dollars each year -- alot less than the billions being spent on military efforts in the region. And alot less dangerous too.
New radar and navigational equipment has been delivered to the Dubrovnik airport. The $2.3 million system will be installed by June. The improvements were prompted by the crash of Commerce Secretary Brown's plane several weeks ago.
Police in Yugoslavia arrested two Serbs suspected of bombing several mosques in Belgrade over the last four years. The most recent bombing was on March 30. The Serbs were caught with handguns, grenades and 1.9 kilos of explosives.
10,000 Albanians protested this past weekend's killing of an Albanian student in Kosovo by a Serb civilian. Nine Serbs have been killed or wounded in revenge shootings.
Note: Kosovo is the key. Not Bosnia, not Croatia. Kosovo. It is the first domino. If open conflict were to break out, that would draw in the Yugoslav Army and probably Albania itself. That would prompt the Albanians in Macedonia to break away, bringing Macedonia in. Greece, a traditional Serb ally, paranoid about Macedonian claims on Greece's region of the same name, would then enter the fray. Turkey, ancient enemy of Greece would ally with Macedonia. Open conflict between Turkey and Greece would be disastrous because they are members of NATO and control vital lines of communication with the Middle East. It would be a nightmare. That's not to say war will break out in Kosovo, just that it is something to keep an eye on. Kosovo was, by the way, the first Yugoslav territory to begin agitating for independence after Tito's death.
UNTAES, the UN authority overseeing the return of Eastern Slavonia from Serb to Croatian control, moved its headquarters from Zagreb to Vukovar. Vukovar is the Slavonian town devastated early in the war. There are currently 3,000 UNTAES peacekeepers in the region. When the deployment is completed in May, there will be 5,000.
The ICTY issued secret indictments against war crimes suspects in the Balkans. A Tribunal judge may issue a secret indictment to "protect confidential information obtained by the prosecutor" or "in the interests of justice". The ICTY said the secret indictments were issued for witness security and the location of suspects. Lawyers for Dusan Tadic protested that some witnesses may not come to The Hague to testify, fearing their names may be on the secret wanted list. The indictments must be revealed once the suspects are arrested.
| U.S. to Stay More Than One Year |
| U.S. and other NATO peacekeeping troops will not meet the one year deadline to leave Bosnia. Secretary of Defense William Perry said that NATO commander General Joulwan asked that U.S. forces remain in Bosnia at "essentially a full capability" through December. That means the 60,000 NATO troops -- including 18,000 Americans -- will remain in Bosnia right up to the one year limit. As a result, they would be there at least until late-January or early February. (If the deployment was any indicator of the ease of movement in mid-winter Bosnia, it will be even longer than that.) Admiral Smith said on April 23 that his troops are overburdened with patrolling thousands of kilometers of roads, over 1000 kiometers of confrontation lines, verifying and maintaining compliance, protecting war crimes investigators, attempting to arrest Karadzic and Mladic, and facilitating refugee movement. Joulwan seems especially concerned that NATO be present in full force to provide security for September's elections. Other European allies have been discussing contingency plans for keeping NATO forces in Bosnia beyond one year. Even after the withdrawal of ground troops, Perry expects U.S. air and naval assets to remain in theater. Perry said he sees the success of the mission being "separation of the warring parties, withdrawal of the heavy weapons, arming and training of the BH Army and implementation of such conditions providing a beginning of the cooperation between Serbs, Muslims and Croats ..." Because he sees restoring security as the goal, he would therefore consider extending the mandate beyond one year to "deter a war [but not] to unify the country." The American exit strategy has never been publicly clarified, but it was expected that the GIs would be out by December 20, about one year after the Dayton treaty was signed. (It wasn't expected, it was explicitly so stated by Clinton.) |
Five Bosnians were arrested near Senj, Croatia, on terrorism charges. Three were Bosnian Interior Ministry agents, another was an employee of the Bosnian Agency for Investigation and Documentation (which answers directly to Bosnian President Izetbegovic.)
Bosnian Prime Minister Hasan Muratovic denied reports that the agents were trained by Iranians to kill or capture enemies, claiming the whole affair is a publicity stunt by the intended victim, deposed Muslim rebel Fikret Abdic. Abdic, closely tied to the Croatian leadership, plans to run in the upcoming elections. He was meeting with Serbian President Milosevic in Belgrade at the time of the arrests.
The U.S. believes Iranian military intelligence agents are still operating in Bosnia. Under-Secretary of State for Political Affairs Peter Tarnoff said "our 'train and equip' programme will not be implemented unless and until the Iranian military intelligence presence is out of the country."
ICTY President Antonio Cassese said Yugoslavia and the Bosnian Serbs should be be punished with sanctions unless they start cooperating with the court, including handing over wanted war criminals. He added that Croatia was reluctantly cooperating and Bosnia's cooperation had yet to be tested. The Tribunal wants the leaders -- primarily Karadzic and Mladic -- first. Cassese believes that if they aren't handed over now, they may be as they are gradually marginalized by new leaders after the September elections.
The UNHCR said it is getting next to nowhere with its main task in Bosnia of helping hundreds of thousands of refugees to retun to their homes. It blamed authorities on all sides for obstructing the freedom of movement which was guaranteed by the Dayton accord. The UNHCR wants "a lot more pressure and a lot more effort by everyone [or] this will be a partitioned country." General Shalikashvili, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said NATO does not want to get into the process of helping refugees return home.
Meanwhile, Slovenia will begin returning the 15,000 Bosnian refugees within its border. The repatriation will take about a year.
The Muslims and Bosnian Croats agreed to end their acrimonious dispute over the nature of the federal police force by disbanding half of their respective forces, merging the rest, and issuing them neutral gray uniforms. Germany had threatened the two sides with sanctions if they did not reach and stick to agreements to bolster their shaky federation.
Meanwhile, the Bosnian Croats are resisting military integration, citing security concerns. The government claims that officers on active duty would be barred from elected office or from holding high positions in political parties. However, President Izetbegovic's Party for Democratic Action (SDA) has been consolidating its hold over the military. Its governing bodies at all levels contain officers, and two generals serve on the top SDA steering committee.
Greece officially recognized each of the Yugoslav successor states. (However, it still refers to Macedonia as the "Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia".) Norway also officially recognized Yugoslavia. Japan is expected to normalize relations within the year.
Ethnic Albanian activists distributed leaflets calling for more mass demonstrations in Kosovo. The appeal is not supported by any of the shadow-state's political parties, which have asked on the population to remain calm. The shadow-state government may lose control over more radical activists. Serbian police have arrested more than 100 Albanians since last weekend.
A Serbian court in found three Serbs guilty of war crimes. Two soldiers recieved 10 and 15 years for murdering four Croats in 1993; another recieved 3.5 years for stirring up ethnic and religious hatred.
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27 Apr 96 | ![]() |