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Bombing by Committee
France Balked at NATO Targets
By Dana Priest
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, September 20, 1999;

Second of three articles

Before U.S. warplanes fired missiles into Belgrade's 23-story Socialist
Party headquarters in late April, NATO planners bluntly spelled out the
risks in a document circulated to President Clinton, British Prime
Minister Tony Blair, and French President Jacques Chirac.

Next to a photograph of the party headquarters, the document said:
"Collateral damage: Tier 3 -- High. Casualty Estimate: 50-100
Government/Party employees. Unintended Civ Casualty Est: 250 -- Apts in
expected blast radius."

In short, NATO anticipated that the attack could, in the worst case, kill
up to 350 people, including 250 civilians living in nearby apartment
buildings.

Officials in Washington and London approved the target, but the French
were reluctant, noting that the party headquarters also housed Yugoslav
television and radio studios. "In some societies, the idea of killing
journalists -- well, we were very nervous about that," said a French
diplomat.

One of the myths of the war is that the leaders of NATO's 19 member
countries ran the air campaign by committee. But that is not the way the
decision-making looked to the alliance's generals and political leaders.
Inside the alliance, it was clear that the important choices -- such as
whether to bomb targets that had a largely civilian character -- were
made by the leaders of three countries: the United States, Britain and
France.

And only one of them, France, regularly played the skeptic.

France's veto power was one of the unwritten codicils to Operation Plan
10601, the military blueprint for Operation Allied Force. When bombs
accidentally hit Albanian refugees or Serbian civilians, the
international outcry was swift, and popular support for the war waned. So
political leaders became deeply involved in the nitty-gritty of targeting
decisions, and NATO planners routinely gave them casualty estimates.

In many of these decisions, there was an underlying tension. NATO
commanders were never sure exactly what it would take to break the will
of Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic. Over time, they became
convinced that it was necessary to target not just military bunkers,
barracks and ammunition depots but also factories, bridges, TV stations
and power plants. While avoiding civilian deaths, they were trying to
inflict a certain amount of pain on the Serbian people. NATO wanted, in
the words of White House spokesman Joe Lockhart, to "turn out the lights
on Belgrade." But carefully.

How to accomplish this was one of the overarching moral, political and
military questions of the war -- and a source of dissension among the
allies.

The French Connection

The first time President Chirac of France realized how fast and far the
air campaign had moved from its original, modest size was when he watched
the Yugoslav Interior Ministry erupt into a fireball on April 3, day 11
of the war.

"Paris was pretty shocked," a French diplomat recalled. Chirac requested
an urgent telephone call with Clinton to discuss the strategy being
pursued by Gen. Wesley K. Clark, the supreme allied commander in Europe.

It was Easter weekend, and Chirac was at his government's medieval castle
in Bregancon on the French Riviera, which did not have a secure line to
Washington. White House officials immediately dispatched a communications
team from the U.S. European Command in Germany to put in a "Stu 3" phone,
the most secure equipment.

To NATO officers, the phone's installation was a sign that the presidents
were going to interject themselves into the minutiae of the war, which
the alliance had hoped would be over in two or three days. "We were just
discovering," said a French military official, "that maybe the war would
last a long time and we'd have to have discussions about it."

That day, Chirac told Clinton he wanted a say, along with the American
president and the British prime minister, in all crucial decisions about
the war. Clinton told Chirac the target approval process was already too
slow. He agreed to include the Frenchman but proposed that they agree in
advance on the kinds of airstrikes over which each leader would reserve a
veto.

Chirac asked to review any targets in Montenegro, a small republic of
Yugoslavia that had remained democratic and was trying to stay out of the
war. Blair wanted a veto over all targets to be struck by B-52 bombers
taking off from British soil. And all three leaders wanted to review
targets that might cause high casualties or affect a large number of
civilians, such as the electrical grid, telephone system and buildings in
downtown Belgrade.

All agreed on the new guidelines.

Still, Clark continued to be peppered with calls from the French chief of
staff and other European officials.

"We need to help Wes Clark, who has to spend half of his time schmoozing
with the allies," Clinton told Blair in a phone call, according to White
House notes of the conversation.

To help out, Washington created "a management committee," as one senior
administration official called it, to smooth over disagreements about the
military campaign. The core of the committee was the so-called quints:
Secretary of State Madeleine K. Albright and the foreign ministers of
Britain, France, Germany and Italy. They held a five-way conference call
almost every day.

The calls helped maintain unity. If Italy's Lamberto Dini was
apprehensive about accelerating the bombing, as he often was, Albright
would call first to the German and British foreign ministers and arrange
for them all to reassure the Italian.

Occasionally even the British wavered, as when Foreign Secretary Robin
Cook questioned strikes on power lines affecting a large hospital in
Belgrade. But the group brought him around.

During the May 26 call, German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer let out a
loud shriek. "Are you all right?" Albright asked, worried. In a sheepish
voice, Fischer admitted that he was watching a championship soccer game
between Manchester United and Bayern Munich. The Brits won the game, 2-1,
with two goals in the final 30 seconds.

At times, political leaders in Italy and Greece publicly voiced strong
misgivings about the bombing campaign. But all 19 delegates to the North
Atlantic Council (NAC), the alliance's defense committee, agreed in the
first week of the war to give their proxy on sensitive targeting
decisions to the alliance's secretary general, Javier Solana.

Solana, in turn, took his cues from the United States, Britain and France
-- though he also made sure that none of the 19 countries turned their
sometimes bold public pronouncements into actual roadblocks at NAC
meetings in Brussels. None did.

The Devil's Advocate

In the second week of April, the Yugoslav military began hiding
helicopters and fighter jets in bunkers at an air base near Podgorica,
Montenegro's capital. For the first time, radar there and on Yugoslav
ships at the Montenegrin port of Bar also began tracking NATO warplanes.

Arguing that Milosevic was trying to use Montenegro's neutrality as a
shield, NATO commanders wanted to destroy the Podgorica air base. But
first, they had to get past France's opposition to bombing Montenegro.

At a morning intelligence briefing, Clark was informed that Yugoslav
artillery in Montenegro was shelling northern Albania.

Forget the French! Clark thundered, according to participants. "No, no,
no, wait! Hold off on that," he said. "I'll get French permission. I'll
get it."

Within hours, Clark and three of the Clinton administration's top players
-- Albright, national security adviser Samuel R. "Sandy" Berger and
Defense Secretary William S. Cohen -- dialed their counterparts in Paris.
By the next morning, Clark had political approval for the strike.

France also reluctantly agreed in mid-April to airstrikes on Belgrade's
two main TV towers, one of which was atop the Socialist Party
headquarters. The Pentagon warned Western reporters to stay out of those
buildings. But as warplanes streaked toward the kill on April 12, the
Pentagon got word that some journalists were inside. Air Force Gen.
Joseph Ralston, acting as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff because
Gen. Henry H. Shelton was traveling, ordered the jets to turn around.

By April 18, Clark was pushing to reschedule the strike, and Western
journalists were warned again.

Two days later, French officials declared that the decision needed "more
study." Washington went into a full-court press, arguing that the
Socialist Party headquarters was really an alternative headquarters for
the Milosevic regime and providing videotapes to show that Serbian TV was
broadcasting nationalist propaganda.

"It was tough," said Shelton of the negotiations with the French. "We
kept after it. Persistence wore them down, and I think they eventually
saw exactly what we were talking about."

Still, Chirac floated the possibility that he might show up for only part
of NATO's 50th anniversary summit in Washington. Clinton got on the phone
again. "Glad you can stay," he told the French president, according to
administration notes of the call. "Your early departure would have been
perceived as disunity and would encourage Milosevic."

As NATO dignitaries rolled into Washington's red-carpet hotels on April
21, rescue workers were digging through the rubble of the Socialist Party
headquarters, struck by four cruise missiles at 3:15 a.m. Two days later,
NATO bombed the Yugoslav state TV and radio building, collapsing the top
two floors. While no authoritative casualty figure exists, Yugoslav
reports indicate that 10 people died in the twin attacks, far fewer than
NATO's worst-case estimate.

France had quit NATO's integrated military command in 1966 and acted
aloof toward the alliance ever since. But with 60 planes involved at the
start, and 100 by the end, France had the second largest air force in
Operation Allied Force. Despite frictions, both Paris and Washington
considered the joint effort a quantum leap in their political-military
relations. And the alliance's cohesiveness was strengthened at the summit
by the prospect that it might lose its first war.

With Clinton at the helm, NATO leaders quashed British moves to press for
a ground invasion. But they agreed at the summit to take two other big
steps: training NATO's might on the personal property and businesses of
Milosevic and his cronies, and striking targets that affected large
numbers of civilians by disrupting not just TV broadcasts but also
transportation, water and electricity.

Lights Out

U.S. commanders and political leaders had wanted to strike Yugoslavia's
electrical system in the first week of the war, but the French were
opposed. To try to break the stalemate, French and American military
officials exchanged ideas on how to bring down the grid. The United
States proposed a strike on transmission lines that would take days or
even weeks to repair. The French called that unacceptable.

So the Americans offered up a top-secret weapon, the CBU-94, which would
turn the electricity off for just a few hours. Shelton showed his French
counterparts how it would work. He even described what kind of backup
electricity would be available to hospitals.

When the French still balked, the discussions became heated. "Okay,
what's your alternative?" Ralston asked, according to a participant. "You
want to back away?"

Finally, Paris agreed. And in the post-midnight darkness of Sunday, May
3, dispensers the size of a can of tennis balls dropped from the sky,
each with its own parachute. As they reached Yugoslav power grids and
transformer yards, spools of specially treated carbon-graphite thread
unraveled into a web, causing instant short circuits.

The "rubber duckies," as the military dubbed the weapon, knocked out
power to 70 percent of Yugoslavia. Most of it was back on within a day.
But the strike pushed NATO over a threshold it had avoided for 40 days:
bringing the war to the Serbian people.

Three weeks later the French agreed to more severe strikes on the power
system, disabling it for days and disrupting water supplies.

The only target the French refused to allow NATO to strike was the
so-called Rock 'n' Roll bridge over the Sava River in Belgrade, where
scores of Serbian volunteers stood as human shields. "That was the one
that was obvious. Don't waste your time trying to get approval to do this
one," recalled Shelton.

The Death of Innocents

Not only in France, but throughout the alliance, a portion of the public
criticized NATO for keeping its pilots safe at 15,000 feet while causing
civilian casualties on the ground.

The Geneva Conventions prohibit the bombing of civilian buildings or even
dual civilian/military sites if the "incidental loss of civilian life . .
. would be excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military
advantage" of the attack. Citing those rules, human rights groups
questioned the legality of attacking party buildings, TV studios and
power stations.

"Our concern is that the NATO campaign crossed what should be a very
clear line between military targets and civilian structures," said
Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch in New York.

While there are no reliable, official statistics on the number of
civilian and military deaths, it is likely that NATO killed about as many
civilians as military personnel. Yugoslav officials report that
approximately 600 soldiers and special police were killed, though the
Pentagon suspects the number may be higher. International organizations
and journalists in Yugoslavia during the war estimate that 500 to 1,000
civilians died from errant NATO bombs or the fallout of accurate ones.

For a month, beginning in mid-April, mistakes seemed to be an almost
daily occurrence. Seventeen civilians were killed in the mining town of
Aleksinac; a passenger train was blown apart on a railroad bridge; dozens
of refugees were annihilated in a convoy headed for the Macedonian
border; more than 20 people were killed by a laser-guided bomb in
Surdulica; 47 died in a bus incinerated on a bridge.

And, finally, came the fateful day of May 7. First, cluster bombs and a
missile struck a marketplace and hospital in Nis, killing at least 15
people. Then, U.S. B-2 bombers hit the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade,
killing three Chinese citizens and injuring more than 20 others.

The CIA, which does not usually develop targets in the midst of a war,
had been asked to help out. Agency employees meant to target the Yugoslav
Directorate of Supply and Procurement, an arms agency. But they picked
the wrong building on a map, and the mistake was not caught because U.S.
computer databases still showed the Chinese Embassy at the location that
it left in another part of the city three years ago.

"Is it really the Chinese Embassy?" Clark asked the next morning in the
video conference. "I want to make sure that the building we targeted was,
in fact, the Chinese Embassy."

"Sir," said the chief of intelligence, "I take personal responsibility
for the error . . . and we're working to re-scrub each of the remaining
targets."

Stacks of taunting faxes came into Clark's office that day. "Dear Gen.
Clark," many of them began. "We've moved. Our new address is . . ."

While NATO planners double-checked other targets, it appeared that the
alliance had imposed a moratorium on bombing Belgrade. In fact, after the
May 7 strikes, there was hardly any important target left in the capital
to hit.

On May 11, Clark went to Brussels to brief the North Atlantic Council,
NATO's standing political body, on the embassy disaster and to listen to
complaints.

"There was contradictory guidance," he told commanders at the video
conference the next morning. "They don't like collateral damage. Some
don't like attacking Belgrade. I want them to get in the boat on
targeting. I told them, 'Give us targets and no-strike areas.' "

But, he concluded optimistically, "The Chinese Embassy problem is behind
us."

It was not behind NATO's pilots. Many had become demoralized by the
accidents and nonstop demands for detailed information about each mishap.
Colonels who were supposed to be directing daily missions found
themselves reconstructing cockpit video and audio tapes, looking for
errors in judgment.

The mood got to Brig. Gen. Randall C. Gelwix, director of the operations
center in Vicenza. On May 13, he wrote a new battle cry on a white easel
in his office: "We Are the Good Guys." It remains there to this day.

"At one point you got the sense NATO would quit" because of the run of
civilian deaths, he said. "We were over here feeling, 'We're going to
lose the will to beat this bad guy.' "

NEXT: The battle inside headquarters

ABOUT THE WAR

NATO launched its first war as an alliance on March 24 after Yugoslav
President Slobodan Milosevic refused to restore autonomy to Kosovo, a
province the size of Connecticut. About 90 percent of its 2 million
people were ethnic Albanians, and they chafed under the control of Serbs,
Yugoslavia's dominant ethnic group. As NATO began airstrikes, Yugoslav
soldiers and paramilitaries accelerated a brutal campaign to crush ethnic
Albanian rebels, driving more than a million civilians from their homes.
After 78 days of bombing, Milosevic capitulated on June 9, agreeing to
withdraw forces from Kosovo. There are now nearly 50,000 NATO
peacekeeping troops in the province, which is under U.N. administration
but still legally part of Yugoslavia.

� Copyright 1999 The Washington Post Company










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