Subject: Why only Bosnia? - A. M. Rosenthal, N. Y. Times, 30/5/95 Topic: for-papers From: Iason.Demos@hri.org New York Times Tuesday, May 30th, 1995 p. A17 WHY ONLY BOSNIA ? A. M. Rosenthal All over the word, rebel peoples are at war with their internationally recognized governments. They die to destroy regimes they detest - or just separate from them. But in only one country has the West gone to war to block anti-goverment forces: in Bosnia, where Serbian Christians seek separation from a Government they see as created and held by Serbian Muslims. Chechens by the thousands have been slaughtered by Russian Government troops. In Iraq, Turkey, in Sri Lanka, the Sudan, Algeria, Kashmir, Mexico, people in rebellion kill - and are killed by government forces. For a half-century Arab Palestinians and Arabs have been at war to separate Palestinians from Israel, or destroy it. In none of those cases did the U.N. use air bombardment to save the rebels or the government they fought. Tibetans, occupied by Communist China decade after decade, brutalized day after day, are not even allowed to set foot in foreign ministries or the halls of the U.N. Why only Bosnia ? If that blaze is to be put out or even dampened, the answers that face us must be acknowledged. Serbian Christians in what became the Yugoslav province of Bosnia and Herzegovina regarded the area as their own ancestral home. So did Serbs of Bosnia who had become Muslims centuries ago. When the Yugoslav federation began to break up in 1990, Serbian Christians knew they would be a minority of one-third in a new Bosnian nation that they feared. But Western Europeans, led by Germany, were searching for areas of influence in the Yugoslav breakup - first Croatia and Slovenia, then Bosnia. Europeans and the U.S. swiftly recognized the new Bosnia. Bosnian Christian Serbs fought, with military help from adjoining Serbia. Muslims got active political backing of the West and later arms from Muslim countries. Both sides sought and profited from aid. But the idea took hold in the West that Serbian Christians of Bosnia were largely invaders. The war was unspeakably vicious. Serbian Christians outdid Serbian Muslims in atrocity. Serbian Christian murders and ethnic cleansing were fully reported by the U.N. and foreign correspondents. Muslim murders received less attention than they deserved. Members of Western governments will acknowledge that, with off-the-record nods. The Clinton Administration faltered and failed on Bosnia. But it did accomplish one thing. It kept American forces out of the war. Late last year, however, Mr. Clinton gave in to pressure to show how tough he was - by bombing the Serbs from the air. He was egged on by a strange combination of laptop bombardiers - liberals and conservatives who did not want a drop of American blood shed on Bosnian ground but were tippy-toe keen to kill Bosnian Serbian Christians by air. We are told that Bosnia is a vital security matter for the West. If so, it was not until the West intervened to create and preserve a new Bosnian Government doomed in advance by the furious rejection of more than a third of its people. The idea that the Serbian Christians would surrender under aerial bombardment was as realistic as the hope the North Vietnamese would do the same. The Christian Serbs of Bosnia answered the bombing by killing more Muslim Serbs. They also made the obscene decision to take U.N. soldiers hostage. Against Ayatollah Khomeini in Iran the U.S. tried to rescue hostages by sending in a stale chocolate cake. The British and French may not be so delictae. Preident Clinton may have to send in troops to help them. he and Bosnian Serbs will then have one thing in common - the talent for self-destruction. What to do now ? Recognize the truth of the disastrous Western intervention. Free the hostages. Stop the bombing. Keep American troops out and the embargo on - against all parties. Tell Bosnians to deal with their own fate, asking for Western diplomatic help if they want it. They cannot so much worse than the West has done for them and to them. The only alternative for the U.S. is to send in 100,000 troops or more, and rule Bosnia for a limited time. That would be, oh, a half-century or so.