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Subject: [STOPNATO] as per Piotr's request


STOP NATO: NO PASARAN! - HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.COM

[Hi Prof. Bien. In response to your request, I just went to the LA Times
and found this article. -- Peace and prayers from Kev.]
---------------
LA Times http://www.latimes.com/cgi-bin/print.cgi
---
Clinton's Massive Ground Invasion That Almost Was
Yugoslavia: After 71 days of air war, White House had in place a memo to
send in 175,000 NATO troops.
By DOYLE McMANUS, Times Washington Bureau Chief
---
[A family makes their way along streets of rubble in Jacovica less than
a week after the NATO troops occupied Kosovo.]
---
CAROLYN COLE/Los Angeles Times
WASHINGTON--On the night of June 2, 1999, President
Clinton's national security advisor, Samuel R. "Sandy" Berger, sat
glumly in his corner office in the White House's West Wing. His task:
drafting a memo advising Clinton to prepare for a ground invasion of
Yugoslavia.
NATO's air war against Serbia had been underway for 71
days, but Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic hadn't buckled. Almost a
million refugees from Kosovo had fled into exile, and thousands more
were homeless inside the province. For weeks, Berger had argued that an
air war would be enough, that a land war was unnecessary. But now he was
no longer sure, and time was running out. If the United States and its
allies wanted to launch ground operations before the Balkan winter set
in, they would have to start preparing now.
"It was the longest night of my time in this job," Berger
said later.
About 2 a.m., scribbling on a yellow pad, he finished his
memo. To be sure of winning in Kosovo, Berger wrote, the United States
had only one option left: a massive ground invasion using 175,000 North
Atlantic Treaty Organization troops, about 100,000 of them from the U.S.
The "go/no-go" memo, freshly typed by a secretary, went
to the Oval Office that same morning. Clinton was ready to approve it,
Berger said. But before he could, unexpected news arrived from Belgrade:
Milosevic had agreed to NATO's terms.
The American public didn't know it, but Clinton had been
within days of launching full preparations for an invasion. Berger's
account, in an interview with The Times, marks the first time a highly
placed U.S. official has publicly described how close the United States
and its allies came to deciding to fight their way into Kosovo, a
province of Serbia, the dominant Yugoslav republic.
In the end, of course, the invasion didn't happen. It
might not have occurred even if Clinton had ordered preparations to go
forward. NATO commanders wanted three months to assemble their invasion
force; Clinton aides planned at least one more "last-ditch" peace
mission.
But the episode is a reminder of how uncertain the
outcome of the conflict appeared a year ago, even on the eve of victory;
how fragile NATO's consensus was as the alliance waged the first war of
its 50-year history; and how limited the choices were, even for the
world's only superpower.
NATO Enjoyed Huge Advantage in the Air
NATO's war against Yugoslavia wasn't supposed to be that
hard. All along, Berger said, "we believed that the air campaign would
work."
Moreover, he argued, a ground invasion could have mired
the alliance in bloody, inconclusive and politically divisive combat.
"In the air, we had a thousand-to-one advantage. Once we got on the
ground, we still would have had an advantage, but what was it, three to
one? . . . Milosevic would have been happy to see a force come in on the
ground, because it would have allowed him to wage a war of attrition."
Betting on a low-casualty victory from the air, Clinton
publicly ruled out the riskier option of ground combat on the first day
of the war.
Critics charged that Clinton was unwittingly encouraging
Milosevic to dig in and wait out the bombs.
But Berger insists that taking ground forces off the
table was the right thing to do at that point--because the alternative
was a public debate, within the United States and among NATO members,
that would have divided the alliance and potentially crippled the war
effort.
Even with a thousand-to-one advantage, NATO's air
campaign took longer than most of the alliance's leaders anticipated
when the war began March 24, 1999. Some hoped that Milosevic would back
down after only a few days; he didn't. Bad weather made air operations
difficult; dozens of bombing runs were canceled.
At the same time, the allies argued about which targets
to hit, with French President Jacques Chirac insisting on caution in
striking politically sensitive facilities.
Some officials, including Defense Secretary William S.
Cohen, have contended that the allies' qualms hampered the air war,
delayed victory and endangered allied pilots. But in "Winning Ugly," a
book about the war released Thursday, foreign policy scholars Ivo H.
Daalder and Michael E. O'Hanlon conclude that poor preparation, not
allied squabbling, was the main reason for the slow progress.
Daalder and O'Hanlon quote Adm. James O. Ellis, NATO's
commander for southern Europe, as saying the alliance fell victim to
"short-war syndrome." NATO assumed the war wouldn't last long and failed
to plan for a long campaign. "We called this one absolutely wrong,"
Ellis said, according to the book.
"NATO was clearly losing the war through late April . . .
and could have lost the war entirely," said Daalder, a scholar at the
Brookings Institution in Washington.
Instead, at a summit meeting in Washington at the end of
April, NATO's leaders, in Berger's words, agreed: "We will not lose. We
will not lose. Whatever it takes, we will not lose."
Two escalations followed. One was visible: more
airplanes, more airstrikes, and the first attacks against Belgrade's
electrical power system, which was a "dual-use" (civilian and military)
target that had been off limits.
The other was invisible: a stepped-up debate inside
government councils concerning preparations for a ground war.
Laying Groundwork for Possible Invasion
Gen. Wesley K. Clark, then NATO's supreme commander, had
drawn up contingency plans for invading Yugoslavia a year earlier.
Prodded by British Prime Minister Tony Blair, NATO's leading hawk, the
alliance authorized Clark to update the plans, but Cohen and the U.S.
Joint Chiefs of Staff were skeptical.
In May, Clinton decided to put the option of ground
troops back on the table--if only to threaten Milosevic and build public
support in case an invasion was necessary. The issue would have divided
NATO in March, but after almost two months of an indecisive air war, it
could no longer be ducked.
On May 20, 1999, Clark briefed Clinton and his advisors.
The general presented several options, officials said. The largest was
for a force of about 175,000 troops to take all of Kosovo by land,
mostly from Albania. Other options required smaller forces: the allies
could take only part of Kosovo, establish "safe areas" for refugees and
open land corridors for fleeing civilians. But Clark recommended the
"heavy option."
Clinton agreed to Clark's request to increase the NATO
ground force on Kosovo's borders from about 25,000 troops to almost
50,000. In public, the troops were described as advance units of a
possible peacekeeping force, which was technically true. But the troops
also were intended to start preparing for combat--and to let Milosevic
see that an invasion force was building. As part of the psychological
warfare, one official said, Britain leaked word that it was sending a
heavy tank unit to the region.
Then, on May 31, NATO authorized Clark to begin
strengthening Albania's roads to support heavy tanks. Among other
problems, Berger recalled, "the tunnels in the mountains were smaller
than the tanks that had to go through them." In public, NATO spokesmen
claimed that the road improvements were to help get supplies to Kosovo
refugees, but in fact they were an essential part of Clark's war plan.
At about the same time, Deputy Secretary of State Strobe
Talbott warned Russia's special envoy, former Prime Minister Viktor S.
Chernomyrdin, that Clinton was seriously considering ground
troops--deliberately prompting Chernomyrdin to carry the warning to
Milosevic.
The warnings were "very explicit," a senior U.S. official
said. The State Department even arranged for two U.S. generals to brief
Chernomyrdin.
Chernomyrdin wasn't just alarmed. He was "apocalyptic,"
the U.S. official recalled. He warned that an invasion would cause a
terrible crisis between NATO and Russia, and predicted that the Serbs
would prove tough fighters in the defense of their homeland.
"Chernomyrdin kept using one phrase over and over," the
official recalled. "He said if there were a ground invasion, it would
lead to a wave of blood--a sea of blood. . . . And you know what? That
was fine. We wanted him to think it was (a) likely to happen and (b)
going to be awful, because he worked all the harder in getting it
fixed."
As Chernomyrdin and Finnish President Martti Ahtisaari
flew to Belgrade bearing NATO's threats, Berger was wrestling with what
the alliance would need to do to carry them out--and how much time it
had. To launch an invasion across Albania's mountains before the onset
of winter in October, Clark had asked for a decision by mid-June.
Berger listed three options in his June 2 memorandum to
Clinton.
The first, he said, was to "arm the Kosovars; but that
would cause a chain of events that would produce a war that would last
for years."
The second option was to wait until spring--but that
would require NATO to supply and protect thousands of refugees inside
Kosovo through the winter.
The third option was a major ground invasion.
Not All NATO Members on Board
"It was a pretty depressing memo," Berger said. "I said
we basically should go ahead with what Clark had proposed if this [the
Chernomyrdin mission] failed."
Berger also recommended that the president go public with
his decision; dispatching 100,000 or more troops to Albania could not be
done without open debate. "We had about a week to do some very heavy
lifting with [Capitol Hill] and the American people and the allies," he
said.
Would Clinton have agreed? "Yes. The president, I think,
had made clear to me in principle that we could not lose."
Would NATO have gone along? "We would not have had a
consensus," Berger said, meaning some of the alliance's 19 countries
would have refused to participate. Officials said they were confident
that Britain, France and Germany would have joined, but Greece was
almost sure to refuse and Italy was a question mark. The United States
would have pressed forward nonetheless, they said--a decision that could
have meant ending NATO's formal sponsorship of the war and forming a new
coalition on the spot.
In Belgrade, the Yugoslav and Serbian capital,
Chernomyrdin and Ahtisaari presented NATO's terms to Milosevic: a full
withdrawal from Kosovo, deployment of a NATO-led peacekeeping force, the
return of all refugees. Milosevic agreed.
"I was positively surprised," Ahtisaari said. "I was
prepared to have negotiations that would have lasted longer."
U.S. officials were amazed as well. They had expected
Milosevic to turn down the mediators. Clinton aides already were
planning to send one more diplomatic mission to Belgrade, direct from
the United States, to give Milosevic his final chance.
Officials initially were skeptical that Milosevic had
really agreed. Not until June 10, after Yugoslav military officers
signed a detailed agreement to allow NATO troops to enter Kosovo, did
the U.N. Security Council officially declare the war over and NATO halt
its bombing.
U.S. Still Unsure Why Milosevic Gave In
Why did Milosevic give in? U.S. officials still don't
know for sure, and offer a mix of possible answers.
Perhaps it was the damage inflicted by the air war,
although the actual impact of the bombing has been debated even within
the Pentagon. Or perhaps it was the growing threat of a ground invasion.
Diplomacy helped; most officials believe Milosevic's
recognition that he had failed to divide NATO enough to stop the air war
and that Russia wouldn't stop the air war for him were key factors. And
in the Chernomyrdin-Ahtisaari talks, NATO offered Milosevic enough
leeway to allow him to tell his countrymen that he was not capitulating.
The peacekeeping force in Kosovo was formally placed under the United
Nations' authority, not NATO's, and the force was confined to Kosovo as
opposed to Serbia proper.
There was another factor, U.S. officials contend: The CIA
and other allied intelligence services were tracking down the bank
accounts and business interests of Milosevic and his closest supporters,
seeking to freeze their assets and disrupt their financial dealings.
Berger refused to comment about those reports, but
acknowledged: "His own cronies were beginning to pressure him. We saw
the noose tightening."
"Milosevic, in the final analysis, is a survivor," one
senior official said. "He made a very hardheaded calculation about his
chances of survival physically and politically and concluded that he
could turn this into a Pyrrhic victory for NATO--that he could survive
the loss of Kosovo for a period of time, then whittle away at allied
resolve, whittle away at the situation on the ground, whittle away at
his own opposition, and come back and fight another day.
"And guess what?" the official said, smiling, for that is
largely what Milosevic has done.
Times staff writer Tyler Marshall contributed to this
report.
---
Saturday: Without a solution near on Kosovo's final
status, U.S. and allied troops are likely to remain for years.

Copyright 2000 Los Angeles Times




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