Using War as an Excuse for More War; Srebrenica Revisited
The imperialist media tries to demonize all those who defy U.S. hegemony
of the planet, from Saddam Hussein to Robert Mugabe to Slobodan Milosevic.
Rarely have they been so successful in imposing these falsehoods on those
considered on the left as they were with Milosevic; they even managed to extend
this demonization to Serbs in general. Even this last summer, the media
rehashed all the old stories of Srebenica during the civil war in Bosnia. In
the article below, Diana Johnstone, a meticulous journalist and careful
observer of events in the Balkans, presents a different view of what happened
that summer 10 years ago. -- IAC
October 12, 2005
By DIANA JOHNSTONE
Last summer, almost the entire political spectrum in the Western world
joined in a chorus of self-flagellation on the 10th anniversary of the
Srebrenica massacre. The dominant theme was "nostra culpa":
"we" let it happen, "we" didn't want to know about it,
and "we" mustn't let it happen again.
Dear reader, who are "we" in this case? How in the world could
"we" (you and I) have known or done anything about this at the time?
And in fact, how much do "we" really know about it now? We know what
we read in the newspapers or see on television. But how precise and accurate is
that information? How do we know now that we are much better informed than we
were before the event?
Such questions are virtually taboo. Srebrenica has become a sacred symbol of
collective guilt, and to raise the slightest question is to be instantly
condemned as an apologist for frightful crimes , or as a "holocaust
denier".
A left that retains any capacity for critical thinking should regard the
lavish public breast-beating over "Srebrenica" (the quotation marks
indicate the symbol rather than the actual event) with a certain skepticism. If
mainstream media commentators and politicians are so extraordinarily moved by
"Srebrenica", this is because it has become an incantation to justify
whatever future foreign war the U.S. government and media decide to sell under
the label of "humanitarian intervention".
The Uses of a Massacre
Aside from the probable future use of "Srebrenica", there is the
way it has already been used. Indeed, it was perhaps being used even before it
happened.
From the the U.N. Secretary General's 1999 Report on Srebrenica, it
emerges that the idea of a "Srebrenica massacre" was already in the
air at a September 1993 meeting in Sarajevo between Bosnian Muslim president
Alija Izetbegovic and members of his Muslim party from Srebrenica. On the
agenda was a Serb proposal to exchange Srebrenica and Zepa for some territories
around Sarajevo as part of a peace settlement.
"The delegation opposed the idea, and the subject was not discussed
further. Some surviving members of the Srebrenica delegation have stated that
President Izetbegovic also told them he had learned that a NATO intervention in
Bosnia and Herzegovina was possible, but could only occur if the Serbs were to
break into Srebrenica, killing at least 5,000 of its people." (1)
Izetbegovic later denied this, but he is outnumbered by witnesses. It is
clear that Izetbegovic's constant strategy was to portray his Muslim side
in the bloody civil war as pure helpless victims, in order to bring U.S.
military power in on his side. On his death bed, he readily admitted as much to
his ardent admirer Bernard Kouchner, in the presence of U.S. diplomat Richard
Holbrooke. Kouchner reminded Izetbegovic of a conversation he had had with
French President Mitterrand in which he "spoke of the existence of
'extermination camps' in Bosnia."
You repeated that in front of the journalists. That provoked considerable
emotion throughout the world. [...] They were horrible places, but people were
not systematically exterminated. Did you know that?
Yes. I thought that my revelations could precipitate bombings. I saw the
reaction of the French and the others-I was mistaken. [...] Yes, I tried, but
the assertion was false. There were no extermination camps whatever the horror
of those places. (2)
Like the Bosnian Serbs, the Muslims also herded their adversaries into
"horrible" camps at the start of the civil war, on the way to
expulsion. Unlike the Bosnian Serbs, the Bosnian Muslims enjoyed the services
of high-powered U.S. public relations experts in the Washington-based Ruder
Finn agency who knew how to "spin" the Bosnian conflict in order to
equate the Serbs with the Nazis-the quickest and easiest way to win public
opinion over to the Muslim side. The news media and political figures were
showered with press releases and other materials exaggerating Serb atrocities,
whereas Muslim atrocities (such as the decapitations of Serb prisoners, fully
documented) remained confidential. To the public, this was a one-sided conflict
between a Serbian "fascist aggressor" and innocent victims, all
unarmed civilians.
The general public did not know that Srebrenica, described as a "safe
area", was not in fact simply a haven for refugees, but also a Muslim
military base. The general public did not know what Lord Owen knew and
recounted in his important 1995 book, Balkan Odyssey (p.143), namely that in
April 1993, Serbian president Slobodan Milosevic was extremely anxious to
prevent Bosnian Serb forces from overrunning Srebrenica. "On 16 April I
spoke on the telephone to President Milosevic about my anxiety that, despite
repeated assurances from Dr. Karadzic that he had no intention of taking
Srebrenica, the Bosnian Serb army was now proceeding to do just that. The
pocket was greatly reduced in size. I had rarely heard Milosevic so
exasperated, but also so worried: he feared that if the Bosnian Serb troops
entered Srebrenica there would be a bloodbath because of the tremendous bad
blood that existed between the two armies. The Bosnian Serbs held the young
Muslim commander in Srebrenica, Naser Oric, responsible for a massacre near
Bratunac in December 1992 in which many Serb civilians had been killed.
Milosevic believed it would be a great mistake for the Bosnian Serbs to take
Srebrenica and promised to tell Karadzic so."
Thus, many months before the July 1995 "Srebrenica massacre", both
Izetbegovic and Milosevic were aware of the possibility and of its potential
impact-favorable to the Muslim cause, and disastrous for the Serbs.
A few other indisputable facts should not be overlooked:
Shortly before the Bosnian Serb attack on Srebrenica, the Muslim troops
stationed in that enclave carried out murderous attacks on nearby Serb
villages. These attacks were certain to incite Serb commanders to retaliate
against the Srebrenica garrison.
Meanwhile, the Muslim high command in Sarajevo ordered the Srebrenica
commanders, Oric and his lieutenants, to withdraw from Srebrenica, leaving
thousands of his soldiers without commanders, without orders, and in total
confusion when the foreseeable Serb attack occurred. Surviving Srebrenica
Muslim officials have bitterly accused the Izetbegovic government of
deliberately sacrificing them to the interests of his State.
According to the most thorough study of Srebrenica events, by Cees Wiebes
for the Netherlands Institute for War Documentation report, the Bosnian Serb
forces set out in July 1995 to reduce the area held by Bosnian Muslim forces on
the outskirts of Srebrenica, and only decided to capture the town itself when
they unexpectedly found it undefended.
"The VRS [Republika Srpska Army] advance went so well that the evening
of July 9 saw an important 'turning point' [...] The Bosnian Serbs
decided that they would no longer confine themselves to the southern part of
the enclave, but would extend the operation and take the town of Srebrenica
itself. Karadzic was informed that the results achieved now put the Drina Corps
in a position to take the town; he had expressed his satisfaction with this and
had agreed to a continuation of the operation to disarm the 'Muslim
terrorist gangs' and to achieve a full demilitarization of the enclave. In
this order, issued by Major General Zdravko Tolimir, it was also stated that
Karadzic had determined that the safety of UNPROFOR soldiers and of the
population should be ensured. Orders to this effect were to be provided to all
participating units. [...] The orders made no mention of a forced relocation of
the population. [...] A final instruction, also of significance, was that the
population and prisoners of war should be treated in accordance with the Geneva
Convention. On July 11 all of Srebrenica fell into the hands of the Bosnian
Serbs."
In testimony to a French parliamentary commission inquiry into Srebrenica,
General Philippe Morillon, the UNPROFOR officer who first called international
attention to the Srebrenica enclave, stated his belief that Bosnian Serb forces
had fallen into a "trap" when they decided to capture Srebrenica.
Subsequently, on February 12, 2004, testifying at the International Criminal
Tribunal in The Hague, General Morillon stressed that the Muslim commander in
Srebrenica, Naser Oric, "engaged in attacks during Orthodox holidays and
destroyed villages, massacring all the inhabitants. This created a degree of
hatred that was quite extraordinary in the region, and this prompted the region
of Bratunac in particular---that is the entire Serb population---to rebel
against the very idea that through humanitarian aid one might help the
population that was present there."
Asked by the ICTY prosecutor how Oric treated his Serb prisoners, General
Morillon, who knew him well, replied that "Naser Oric was a warlord who
reigned by terror in his area and over the population itself. I think that he
realized that these were the rules of this horrific war, that he could not
allow himself to take prisoners. According to my recollection, he didn't
even look for an excuse. It was simply a statement: One can't be bothered
with prisoners."
Morillon recounted how "the Serbs took me to a village to show me the
evacuation of the bodies of the inhabitants that had been thrown into a hole, a
village close to Bratunac. And this made me understand the degree to which this
infernal situation of blood and vengeance [...] led to a situation when I
personally feared that the worst would happen if the Serbs of Bosnia managed to
enter the enclaves and Srebrenica."
"I feared that the Serbs, the local Serbs, the Serbs of Bratunac, these
militiamen, they wanted to take their revenge for everything that they
attributed to Naser Oric. It wasn't just Naser Oric that they wanted to
revenge, take their revenge on, they wanted to revenge their dead on Orthodox
Christmas."
In short, Srebrenica, whose Serb population had been chased out by Muslim
troops at the start of the civil war in 1992, was both a gathering point for
civilian Muslim refugees and a Muslim army base. The enclave lived from
international humanitarian aid. The Muslim military did not allow civilians to
leave, since their presence was what ensured the arrival of humanitarian aid
provisions which the military controlled.
When the Bosnian Serb forces captured the town on July 11, 2005, civilians
were clamoring to leave the enclave, understandably enough, since there was
virtually no normal economic life there. Much has been made of the fact that
Serb forces separated the population, providing buses for women, children and
the infirm to take them to Tuzla, while detaining the men. In light of all that
preceded, the reason for this separation is obvious: the Bosnian Serbs were
looking for the perpetrators of raids on Serb villages, in order to take
revenge.
However, only a relatively small number of Muslim men were detained at that
point, and some of them are known to have survived and eventually been released
in exchange for Serb prisoners. When the Serb forces entered the town from the
south, thousands of Muslim soldiers, in disarray because of the absence of
commanding officers, fled northwards, through wild wooded hills toward Tuzla.
It is clear enough that they fled because they feared exactly what everyone
aware of the situation dreaded: that Serb soldiers would take vengeance on the
men they considered guilty of murdering Serb civilians and prisoners.
Thousands of those men did in fact reach Tuzla, and were quietly redeployed.
This was confirmed by international observers. However, Muslim authorities
never provided information about these men, preferring to let them be counted
among the missing, that is, among the massacred. Another large, unspecified
number of these men were ambushed and killed as they fled in scenes of terrible
panic. This was, then, a "massacre", such as occurs in war when
fleeing troops are ambushed by superior forces.
Counting the victims
So we come to the question of numbers. The question is difficult, both
because of the uncertainty that surrounds it, and because merely pointing to
this uncertainty is instantly denounced as "revisionism" and lack of
respect for the victims. This reproach is not logical. Victims are victims,
whether few or many, and respect is not in proportion to their numbers.
The question of numbers is complex and has been dealt with in detail by
others, recently by an independent international Srebrenica research group
which will soon publish its findings in book form. (3)
Suffice it here to note the following:
1. The sacralization of the estimated number of victims. In many if not most
disasters, initial estimates of casualties tend to be inflated, for various
reasons, such as multiple reports of the same missing person, and are
subsequently corrected downwards. This was the case for the World Trade Center
disaster, where initial estimates of up to 10,000 victims were finally brought
down to less than 3000, and there are many other examples. In the case of
Srebrenica, the figure of 8,000 originated with September 1995 announcements by
the International Committee of the Red Cross that it was seeking information
about some 3,000 men reportedly detained as well as about some 5,000 who had
fled to central Bosnia. Neither the Bosnian Serbs nor the Muslims were ever
forthcoming with whatever information they had, and the "8,000"
figure has tended ever since to be repeated as an established total of
"Muslim men and boys executed by Serb forces". It can be noted that
this was always an estimate, the sum of two separate groups, the smaller one of
prisoners (whose execution would be a clear war crime) and the larger one of
retreating troops (whose "massacre" as they fled would be the usual
tragic consequence of bitter civil war). Anyone familiar with the workings of
journalism knows that there is a sort of professional inertia which leads
reporters to repeat whatever figure they find in previous reports, without
verification, and with a marked preference for big numbers. This inertia is all
the greater when no truly authoritative figures ever emerge.
The number of bodies exhumed.
Despite unprecedented efforts over the past ten years to recover bodies from
the area around Srebrenica, less than 3,000 have been exhumed, and these
include soldiers and others-Serb as well as Muslim-who died in the vicious
combats that took place during three years of war. Only a fraction have been
identified.
2. The political desire for the largest possible number. Aside from the
journalistic inertia mentioned above, the retention of the unproven high figure
of massacre victims in the case of Srebrenica is clearly the result of
political will on the part of two governments: the Bosnian Muslim government of
Alija Izetbegovic and, more importantly, the government of the United States.
From the moment that Madeleine Albright brandished satellite photos of what she
claimed was evidence of Serb massacres committed at Srebrenica (evidence that
was both secret, as the photos were shown in closed session to the Security
Council, and circumstantial, as they showed changes in terrain which might
indicate massacres, not the alleged massacres themselves), the U.S. used
"Srebrenica" for two clear purposes:
- to draw attention away from the U.S.-backed Croatian offensive which drove
the Serb population out of the Krajina which, as much as Srebrenica, was
supposed to be protected by the United Nations;
- to implicate Bosnian Serb leaders in "genocide" in order to
disqualify them from negotiating the future of Bosnia-Herzegovina. (The U.S.
preferred to replace them at Dayton by Milosevic, whose eagerness to end the
war could be exploited to get concessions the Bosnian Serbs might refuse.)
Exploitation of "Srebrenica" then helped set the stage for the
Kosovo war of 1999:
- by blaming the United Nations (whose failure to defend Srebrenica was in
reality the inevitable result of the unwillingness of the United States to give
full support to U.N. ground forces), NATO emerged as the only agent capable of
effective "humanitarian intervention".
- by falsely identifying Milosevic with the Bosnian Serb leadership and by
exploiting the notion that Srebrenica killings were part of a vast Serb plan of
"genocide" carried out against non-Serbs for purely racist reasons,
Madeleine Albright was able to advocate the NATO war against Yugoslavia as
necessary to prevent "another Srebrenica" in Kosovo, where the
situation was altogether different.
To use "Srebrenica" as an effective instrument in the
restructuring of former Yugoslavia, notably by replacing recalcitrant Serb
leaders by more pliable politicians, the crime needed to be as big as possible:
not a mere war crime (such as the United States itself commits on a serial
basis, from Vietnam to Panama to Iraq), but "genocide": "the
worst atrocity in Europe since the Holocaust". That arouses the Hitler
image, which is always good for the image of the United States as saviour from
across the seas, and implies a plan decided at the highest levels, rather than
the brutal behavior of enraged soldiers (or paramilitaries, the probable
culprits in this case) out of control.
But what plan for genocide includes offering safe passage to women and
children? And if this was all part of a Serb plot to eliminate Muslims, what
about all the Muslims living peacefully in Serbia itself, including thousands
of refugees who fled there from Bosnia? Or the Muslims in the neighboring
enclave of Zepa, who were unharmed when the Serbs captured that town a few days
after capturing Srebrenica? To get around these common sense obstacles, the
ICTY prosecution came up with a sociologist who provided an "expert"
opinion: the Srebrenica Muslims lived in a patriarchal society, therefore
killing the men was enough to ensure that there would be no more Muslims in
Srebrenica. This amounts to shrinking the concept of "genocide" to
fit the circumstances.
It was on basis of this definition that in August 2001 the Tribunal found
Bosnian Serb General Radislav Krstic guilty of "complicity in
genocide". Although he neither ordered, participated in or was even aware
of any executions, the judges ruled that he took part in what the ICTY calls a
"joint criminal enterprise" simply by capturing Srebrenica, since he
must have been aware that genocide was "a natural and foreseeable
consequence". This is the ruling that established "genocide" as
the official description of events at Srebrenica.
Why such relentless determination to establish Srebrenica as
"genocide"? A December 27, 2003, Associated Press dispatch provided
an explanation by U.S. jurist Michael Scharf, one of the designers of the ICTY
who has also coached the judges for the trial of Saddam Hussein: On a practical
level, if the court determines Srebrenica does not fit the legal definition of
genocide, it would be very difficult to make the charge stick against
Milosevic, said Michael Scharf, a professor at Case Western Reserve University
School of Law.
"And it is crucial that he be convicted of genocide," Scharf said.
If Milosevic can't be convicted, "then who can you convict of genocide
in the modern age?" he asked.
The legal definition of genocide could also come into play in an Iraqi
war-crimes tribunal, which has vowed to follow international legal
precedent.
It is striking that from the very start, the effort of the United States and
of the Tribunal in The Hague-which it mainly finances, staffs and controls-has
been to establish what it calls "command responsibility" for Serb
crimes rather than individual guilt of actual perpetrators. The aim is not to
identify and punish men who violated the Geneva conventions by executing
prisoners, but rather to pin the supreme crime on the top Serb leadership.
The office of the ICTY prosecutor has chosen to rely heavily on a single
confessed participant in the Srebrenica massacre. This person is one Drazen
Erdemovic, a petty criminal of Croatian nationality who was hospitalized in
Serbia in March 1996 after a near-fatal brawl in a bar in Novi Sad. Quite
possibly in order to escape further threats from his personal enemies,
Erdemovic confessed to Western news media to having taken part in mass murder
in Bosnia. He was arrested by Serb authorites who then, at his request, turned
him over to the Hague Tribunal.
From then on, the prosecution has used Erdemovic repeatedly as its star
witness, using the U.S. procedure of "plea bargaining" by which a
confessed criminal gets off lightly by incriminating somebody else the
prosecution wants to convict. He has told his story to the judges at his own
brief trial, where he was exempted from cross examination thanks to his guilty
plea, as well as at a hearing incriminating Karadzic and Mladic (in the absence
of any legal defense) and at various trials whenever "Srebrenica"
comes up.
His story goes like this: after briefly serving in the Bosnian Muslim army,
Erdemovic joined an international mercenary militia unit that seems to have
been employed by the Bosnian Serb command for sabotage operations on enemy
territory. On July 16, 1995, his unit of eight men executed between 1,000 and
1,200 Muslim men near the village of Pilice, some 40 kilometers north of
Srebrenica. From around 10:30 in the morning to 3 o'clock in the afternoon,
these eight mercenaries emptied bus load after bus load of prisoners and lined
them up to be shot by groups of ten.
Now in fact, it seems that a serious crime was indeed committed in
Pilice. Subsequent forensic investigators exhumed 153 bodies. One hundred and
fifty-three executions of prisoners of war is a serious crime, and there is
material evidence that this crime was committed. But 1,200? According to the
manner of execution described by Erdemovic, it would have taken 20 hours to
murder so many victims. Yet the judges have never questioned this elementary
arithmetical discrepancy, and Erdemovic's word has consistently been
accepted as gospel truth by the International Criminal Tribunal in The Hague.
(4)
Why this insistence on an implausibly higher number than can be supported by
material evidence? Obviously, the Tribunal wants to keep the figures as high as
possible in order to sustain the charge of "genocide". The charge of
"genocide" is what sharply distinguishes the indictment of Serbs from
indictments of Croats or Muslims for similar crimes committed during the
Yugoslav disintegration wars.
In August 2000 after not quite four and a half years in jail, the
self-confessed mass murderer Erdemovic was freed, given a new identity,
residence in an unspecified Western country and a "job", so to speak,
as occasional paid and "protected" witness for the ICTY.
In contrast, General Krstic was sentenced to 35 years in prison and will be
eligible for parole in 20 years.
Clearly, the purpose of the "genocide" charge is not to punish the
perpetrators but to incriminate the Bosnian Serb, and the Yugoslav Serb, chain
of command right up to the top.
Srebrenica As Myth
The transformation of Srebrenica into myth was illustrated last July by an
article in the Italian leftist daily Liberazione (close to the "Communist
Refoundation" party) reporting on a semi-documentary film entitled
"Srebrenica, luci dall'oblio" ("Srebrenica, lights from
oblivion"). The title suggests that the film-makers have rescued from
oblivion a tragically neglected event, when in fact, rarely in the history of
warfare has a massacre been the focus of so much attention.
Here we have the usual self-flagellation: "...what happened in
Srebrenica: the massacre of 9,000 civilians, in the most total silence/absence
on the part of the world institutions [responsible for] peace..." The
author accepts without question the term "genocide" and raises the
figure of victims to new heights. "Around 9,000 men between the ages of 14
and 70 were transported by truck to nearby centers where they were massacred
and buried in mass graves..." This was "the greatest mass genocide
committed since the days of Nazism until today"... What is the point of
this exaggeration, this dramatization? Why is Srebrenica so much more terrible
than the war that ravaged Vietnam, with countless massacres and devastation of
the countryside by deadly chemicals, or the cold-blooded massacre of
surrendering Iraqis at the end of the first Gulf War in 1991? But that is a
genuinely forgotten massacre-not only forgotten, but never even recognized in
the first place, and the "international community" has not sent teams
of forensic scientists to find and identify the victims of U.S. weapons.
In all probability the film-makers, aspiring artists and "genocide
experts" who consider "Srebrenica" suitable material for
touching the emotions of the public believe that they are serving the interests
of peace and humanity. But I would suggest quite the contrary. The
misrepresentation of "Bosnia" as scene of a deliberate
"genocide" against Muslims, rather than a civil war with atrocities
on all sides, contributes to a spirit of "conflict of civilizations".
It has helped recruit volunteers for Islamic terrorist groups.
The political exploitation of Srebrenica has turned the Bosnian war into a
morality pantomimew between pure good and pure evil, a version of events which
the Serbs can never really accept and the Muslims have no desire to give up.
This stands in the way of unbiased investigation and serious historical
analysis. Reconciliation is in fact ruled out by the moralistic insistence that
a stark distinction must be made between "aggressor" and
"victim". This stark difference exists between NATO and Yugoslavia,
or between the U.S. and Iraq, where an overwhelmingly superior military power
deliberately launched an aggressive war against a sovereign country that
neither attacked nor threatened it.
But the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina was not of that nature. The war there was
the result of an extraordinarily complex legal situation (an unsettled small
Federal Republic constitutionally composed of three "nationalities":
Serb, Muslim and Croat, itself part of a disintegrating larger Federal
Republic) exacerbated by myriad local power plays and the incoherent
intervention of Great Powers. Moreover, this occurred in a region where
memories of extremely bloody civil war during World War II were still very much
alive. To a large extent, the fighting that broke loose in 1992 was a
resumption of the vicious cycle of massacres and vengeance that devastated
Bosnia-Herzegovina in 1941-44, when the Nazi occupation broke up Yugoslavia and
attached Bosnia-Herzegovina to Greater Croatia, which proceeded to eliminate
Serbs.
Today it is an unquestioned dogma that recalling atrocies is a "duty of
memory" to the victims, something that must be endlessly repeated, lest we
forget. But is this really so obvious? The insistence on past atrocities may
simply prepare the next wave, which is what has already happened in the
Balkans, and more than once. Because in reality, the dead victims cannot profit
from such memories. But the memory of victimhood is a moral and political
capital of great value for the heirs of victimhood and especially for their
self-appointed champions. And in the case of Bosnia, it promises to bring
considerable financial gain. If Milosevic, as former president of Serbia, can
be convicted of genocide, then the Bosnian Muslims hope to win billions of
dollars in reparations that will keep Serbia on its knees for the foreseeable
future.
The obsessive reference to "Srebrenica" has a negative effect far
beyond the Balkans.
The "Srebrenica massacre" is part of a dominant culture discourse
that goes like this: We people in the advanced democracies have reached a new
moral plateau, from which we are both able and have a duty both to judge others
and to impose our "values" when necessary. The others, on a lower
moral plateau, must be watched carefully, because unlike us, they may commit
"genocide". It is remarkable how "genocide" has become
fashionable, with more and more "genocide experts" in universities,
as if studying genocide made sense as a separate academic discipline. What
would all these people do without genocide? I wonder what is behind the
contemporary fascination with genocide and serial killers, and I doubt that it
is a sign of a healthy social psychology.
In the world today, few people, including Bosnian Muslims, are threatened by
"genocide" in the sense of a deliberate Hitler-style project to
exterminate a population-which is how most people understand the term. But
millions of people are threatened, not by genocidal maniacs, but by genocidal
conditions of life: poverty, disease, inadequate water, global climate change.
The Srebrenica mourning cult offers nothing positive in regard to these
genocidal conditions. Worse, it is instrumentalized openly to justify what is
perhaps the worst of all the genocidal conditions: war.
The subliminal message in the official Srebrenica discourse is that because
"we" let that happen, "we" mustn't let "it"
happen again, ergo, the United States should preventively bomb potential
perpetrators of "genocide". Whatever happened in Srebrenica could
have best been prevented, not by U.S. or NATO bombing, but by preventing civil
war from breaking out in Bosnia Herzegovina to begin with. This prevention was
possible if the "international community", meaning the NATO powers,
Europe and the United States, had firmly insisted that the Yugoslav crisis of
1990 should be settled by negotiations. But first of all, Germany opposed this,
by bullying the European Union into immediate recognition of the secession of
Slovenia and Croatia from Yugoslavia, without negotiation. All informed persons
knew that this threatened the existence of Bosnia Herzegovina. The European
Union proposed a cantonization plan for Bosnia Herzegovina, not very different
from the present arrangement, which was accepted by leaders of the Bosnian
Muslim, Serb and Croat communities. But shortly thereafter, Muslim president
Alija Izetbegovic reneged, after the U.S. ambassador encouraged him to hold out
for more. Throughout the subsequent fighting, the U.S. put obstacles in the way
of every European peace plan. [6] These years of obstruction enabled the United
States to take control of the eventual peace settlement in Dayton, in November
1995.
This rejection of compromise, which plunged Bosnia-Herzegovina into
fratricidal war, was supported at the time by a chorus of humanitarians- not
least politicians safely ensconced in the European Parliament who voted for
"urgent resolutions" about situations of which they were totally
ignorant-claiming that Bosnia must be a centralized State for the sake of
"multiculturalism". These were the same humanitarians who applauded
the breakup of multicultural Yugoslavia-which in fact created the crisis in
Bosnia.
Clearly, whoever executes unarmed prisoners commits a very serious crime
whether in Bosnia or anywhere else. But when all is said and done, it is an
illusion to think that condemning perpetrators of a massacre in Bosnia will
ensure that the next civil war somewhere in the world will be carried out in a
more chivalrous manner. War is a life and death matter, and inevitably leads
people to commit acts they would never commit in peacetime.
The notion that war can be made "clean", played according to
rules, should not be the main focus of international law or of peace movements.
War first of all needs to be prevented, not policed.
The false interpretation of "Srebrenica" as part of an ongoing
Serb project of "genocide" was used to incite the NATO war against
Yugoslavia, which devastated a country and left behind a cauldron of hatred and
ethnic cleansing in Kosovo. The United States is currently engaged in a far
more murderous and destructive war in Iraq. In this context, the Western
lamentations that inflate the Srebrenic massacre into "the greatest mass
genocide since Nazi times" are a diversion from the real existing
genocide, which is not the work of some racist maniac, but the ongoing
imposition of a radically unjust socio-economic world order euphemistically
called "globalization".
Diana Johnstone is the author of Fools' Crusade: Yugoslavia, Nato,
and Western Delusions published by Monthly Review Press. She can be reached at:
dianajohnstone@compuserve.com
NOTES
1. Report of the Secretary-General Pursuant to General Assembly Resolution
53/35 (1998), Section IV, paragraph C.115.
2. Bernard Kouchner, "Les Guerriers de la Paix",
Grasset, Paris, 2004, pp. 372-375.
3. "Srebrenica: The Politics of War Crimes", by George Bogdanich,
Tim Fenton, Philip Hammond, Edward S. Herman, Michael Mandel, Jonathan Rooper
and George Szamuely. See
http://www.srebrenica-report.com/politics.htm.
4. Germinal Civikov, "Kalaschnikow und Einzelfeuer: Der
Fall Drazen Erdemovic", Freitag, 16 September 2005.
5. Davide Turrini "Il genocidio jugoslavo rivive sullo
schermo", Liberazione, 12 July 2005.
6. See David Owen, Balkan Odyssey, Victor Gollancz, London, 1995. Lord Owen,
who, as co-chairman of the steering committee of the International Conference
on the Former Yugoslavia, attempted from August 1992 to June 1995 to negotiate
a peace settlement in Bosnia-Herzegovina, concludes (Indigo paperback, p.400):
"From the spring of 1993 to the summer of 1995, in my judgement, the
effect of US policy, despite its being called 'containment', was to
prolong the war of the Bosnian Serbs in Bosnia-Herzegovina."