Title: Message
 
"However there can be no doubt that its origins can be traced back to the results of American mendacity and covert operations during the conflict in Bosnia. And no one yet knows quite what will replace the old alliances in the future."


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BBC News / Friday, 22 June, 2001, 16:53 GMT 17:53 UK

Deceiving your allies

The Bosnian Muslim army was covertly supplied with
arms by the US during the 1990s

In an investigation across six countries,
Correspondent has uncovered a series of
incidents which have tested the Western
Alliance to breaking point. Dan Hebditch,
associate producer on the programme, reports.

The Bosnian war was the first major test of
the West's resolve in the post-Cold War era,
and one that it unambiguously failed.

Prevarication, competing national agendas and
lack of moral courage on the part of politicians
and diplomats worsened an already horrific
situation, while on the ground UN
peacekeepers with inadequate support and
confusing orders wrestled with a situation for
which they were ill-trained.

Into this already complicated situation came
the ultimate "wild card", the United States of
America, the world's only superpower. A small
group at the head of America's foreign policy
elite intervened covertly in what it had
previously called "Europe's problem".

It was driven by a mixture of media-fuelled
public opinion, simplistic moral outrage and
personal ambition to make a name in the "only
game in town". Its easy answer for Bosnia's ills
was "lift and strike" - re-arm the Bosniaks
(mostly Bosnian Muslims) and Croats and bomb
the Serbs.

At first arms were sent to Bosnia via Croatia,
but the Croats were reluctant to arm the
Bosnian army with sophisticated weapons, so
America took it upon itself to deliver arms
directly to the Bosnian Muslim Army - the ABiH.

These covert air drops began at the start of 1995.

The most well documented were the
drops at Tuzla in the north of Bosnia, where
they were observed by members of the UN
Nordic Battalion stationed close to the
dropping zone.

The drops contained vital, high value supplies: Anti-tank guided
weapons to counter Bosnian Serb armour, Stinger surface-to-air
missiles to ward off helicopters, night vision goggles and most
importantly Motorola radio sets to allow the ABiH to operate
more efficiently in large scale offensive operations.

However these air drops took place in the face
of Operation Deny Flight, the UN-imposed and
Nato-policed no-fly zone over Bosnia. Faced
with sighting reports from the UN on the
ground Nato denied that any such activity had
taken place and launched an investigation
whose conclusions rubber-stamped this.

However, it is now known that the incident
was not as simple as Nato tried to make out.
On the nights of the drops US Navy Awaca
surveillance planes rather than Nato aircraft
with their multi-national crews were monitoring
the skies over Bosnia. In addition, the Nato
investigation teams were manned only by
Americans and didn't bother to interview
anyone who actually witnessed the drops.

Nato had been manipulated to allow the US to
conduct its own unilateral policy in the Balkans.

The air drops were only the tip of the iceberg.
A team of retired US officers planned the
bloody Croatian "liberation" of the Kraijina and
the subsequent invasion of western Bosnia by
the Croatian Army in the summer of 1995.

The US also provided intelligence to the
Croats, flying unmanned reconnaissance
drones off the Adriatic island of Brac. More
significantly the US launched a huge signals
and electronic intelligence gathering operation
in Croatia to provide targeting information not
for Nato or the UN, but for Croatia alone.

UN negotiator and former Norwegian Prime
Minister Thorvald Stoltenberg felt betrayed:

"I'd never criticise the Americans for saying
this was a European issue and must be solved
by the Europeans," he says.

"My criticism is that they did not then go
outside the field and sit down and watch - they
were standing on the sideline shouting into
the players."

American intelligence-gathering in the region was
conducted on a huge scale. At any one time over
100 operators from across the spectrum of US intelligence
agencies were on the ground in Bosnia.

They were deployed not only in
non-governmental organisations (NGOs) but in
UN civilian and military agencies as well. This
intelligence-gathering was aimed as much at
the UN as the Serbs, and intelligence was
passed directly on to the Bosnian Government.

This information was often used to ratchet up
the pressure on UN commanders to launch
punitive air strikes on the Serbs.

The scope of these activities included bugging
UN Commanders and diplomats.

Former UN Commander in Bosnia General Sir
Michael Rose was aware that the Americans were
secretly bugging his office:

"We were always very careful in what we said
in that office. And if we did say something,
it was with deliberate intent."

All of this intelligence-gathering activity was
supposed to be concealed from America's allies
in the UN and NATO.

Britain especially has a very close link with
American intelligence, but in late 1994, this
supply of intelligence to the British was
temporarily cut off, causing panic in Whitehall.

In the end the US lift and strike policy
succeeded - but at a cost. The Croatian Army
broke the Serbs in the west, Nato aircraft
destroyed Bosnian Serb logistics and command
facilities whilst UN artillery on Mount Igman
dominated the Serb guns that had held
Sarajevo under siege for so long.

The warring parties were then bullied into the
Dayton Agreement that underpins the shaky
peace in Bosnia today.

Was the US policy a success?

Senior European negotiators believe that with
US backing the war could have ended two
years earlier, but US desire to see the Serbs
punished meant that they instead encouraged
the Bosnian Government to continue fighting.
The price in human terms? Over 15,000 dead
and nearly 600,000 refugees.

American unilateralism in Bosnia has led to a
diplomatic backlash.

Europe feels it can no longer rely on the US in
times of crisis. Instead, it has begun to hedge
its bets, first with the Anglo-French St Malo
Agreement and now with the so-called "Euro army".

There is a great reluctance on the part of
western politicians to talk about the
significance and the future of the Euro army.
Indeed normally loquacious political and military
figures beat a hasty retreat when approached
by Correspondent.

However there can be no doubt that its origins
can be traced back to the results of American
mendacity and covert operations during the
conflict in Bosnia. And no one yet knows quite
what will replace the old alliances in the future.

* * *
Allies and lies: Correspondent, Sunday
24th June at 1915 on BBC 2.

Reporter: Sheena McDonald
Producer: David Hebditch
Editor: Fiona Murch

* * *

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