<http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=832> Bosnia, Hillary's Playground


by Srdja Trifkovic

http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=832

At a time when the U.S. power and authority are increasingly challenged
around the world, the incoming team sees the Balkans as the last
geopolitically significant area where they can assert their "credibility" by
postulating a maximalist set of objectives as the only outcome acceptable to
the United States, and duly insisting on their fulfilment. We have already
seen this pattern with Kosovo, and it is to be expected that we'll see its
replay in Bosnia under the new team.

Now that intervention is  <http://www.newsweek.com/id/174523> "an American
tradition,"  Hillary Clinton is getting ready to practice some more in the
Balkans – as if her husband's contribution in the 1990s had not brought
sufficient misery to the former Yugoslavia. She wants to place the Balkans,
and specifically Bosnia, near the top of her list of foreign priorities.
Barack Obama's foreign policy and national security team includes a number
of influential figures, and notably Vice-President-elect Joseph Biden, who
are committed to the establishment of a centralized, unitary Bosnian state
dominated by
<http://www.islamonline.net/servlet/Satellite?c=Article_C&cid=1230121258404&;
pagename=Zone-English-News/NWELayout> Muslims. Mrs. Clinton's commitment to
that goal is of an altogether different order of magnitude, however. 

There have been strong pressures from the West, ever since the signing of
the Dayton Accords 13 years ago, to reduce the authority of the Republika
Srpska, to question its legitimacy and to label it a "genocidal creation"
unworthy of existence. Prime Minister Milorad Dodik was able to weather the
latest storm – caused by the pro-Muslim slant of the "international high
representative" (i.e. unelected governor, jointly appointed by Brussels and
Washington) Miroslav Lajcak and his crew – but the political momentum in
Washington has taken an alarming turn for the Serbs in general and for the
Republika Srpska (RS) in particular.

Her "framework for peace" in the Balkans is the same as her husband's and
that applied by her  <http://www.russiatoday.com/news/news/35247> friend and
role-model, Dr. Albight: unqualified U.S. support for Muslims in Bosnia and
Kosovo against their Christian neighbors. During the primaries Mrs. Clinton
listed a number of fact-free, Balkan-related foreign-policy
"accomplishments" based on her husband's legacy. Among them she repeatedly
invoked her  <http://www.newsweek.com/id/128977> embelished mmories of a
"dangerous" trip to Bosnia in 1996, when she was supposedly threatened by
Serb sniper fire at uzla airport – although the Bosnian war had ended six
months earlier, and video footage shows smiling schoolchildren greeting her
in Tuzla. Her exact reasons for wanting to abolish the Bosnian Serb Republic
are likely personal and psychological rather than rational, but her motives
are less important than the fact that this is indeed what she wants. 

A hint of what is to come was provided by the Clinton family confidante
Richard Holbrooke, slated for a key role at State under new management.
Together with the former Bosnian "high representative" Paddy Ashdown, he
authored an alarming article, "The Bosnian Powder Keg," published in several
key daily newspapers on both sides of the Atlantic on 22 October 2008.
Anticipating Obama's victory, Holbrooke and Ashdown presented a plea that
"the new US administration gets engaged" and renews its pledge "to Bosnia's
survival as a state, by maintaining an effective troop presence and …
finding ways to untie Bosnia's constitutional knot." This last phrase is a
clear code word for the liquidation of the entities.

Holbrooke was the chief U.S. negotiator at Dayton in 1995. He boasted a year
later: "We are re-engaged in the world, and Bosnia was the test." This "we"
meant the United States, not "the West" or "the international community."
The interventionists prevailed then, their narrative dominates the public
commentary now, and they are coming back to the White House tomorrow.

Heralding the new spirit, the New York Times
<http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/14/world/europe/14bosnia.html?pagewanted=all
> pompously headlined "Fears of new ethnic conflict in Bosnia" on December
13. Presented as an analytical feature, the article was in fact a pro-Muslim
plea for more American intervention to "unify" Bosnia-Herzegovina as the
only way to
<http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/12/17/MNRD14NLU1.DTL>
avoid another war. The article further claimed that "leaders across Bosnia
expressed hope that Mr. Obama would be more engaged in Bosnia than President
Bush has been," whereas in reality such hopes are entertained only in the
Muslim camp. Its clear purpose was to start preparing the political and
ideological ground for the new Administration's policy of "untying Bosnia's
constitutional knot." 

Hillary Clinton's commitment to cutting that knot should not be doubted. The
U.S. manstream media is doing its bit, maintaining
<http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1868131,00.html> an almost
daily feed of largely fact-free stories on how, "once again, Bosnia is in
deep crisis, with tensions running high … There is even talk of a new war.
Might this be a sudden test for the new Obama Administration?" 

It is fortunate that there is little appetite in Europe for rekindling the
Balkan powder keg wkith a "sudden test." Several attempts by Washington to
impose risky or even reckless strategies on its European partners have
failed lately thanks to Germany's, France's and Italy's prudence –ost
notably an attempt by the Bush administration to put Ukraine and Georgia on
fast track to  <http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=150249> NATO
membership by offering them Membership Action Plans (MAPs). 

Trusting Europeans to be reasonable is not enough. A long-overdue proactive
PR and diplomatic strategy by the RS authorities is urgently needed. Prime
Minister Dodik should act to improve the flow of information to the RS
authorities that warrant a response, especially the challenges to its status
and legitimacy. It is, indeed, absurd for the United States to wage a "war
on terror" and at the same time to return to Bosnia
<http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=98348249>
Algerian-born militants released from Guantanamo. 

In addition, the government in Banja Luka needs to take an active interest
in the ongoing as well as forthcoming cases at The Hague Tribunal for the
Former Yugoslavia (ICTY), and specifically to help with their funding. It is
clear that unfavorable outcome of those cases – especially the ones
including charges of "genocide" – would be eagerly used by the enemies of
the RS to renew calls for abrogating Dayton.

Every time people like Ashdown and Hollbrooke regurgitate the old mantra
about disruptive Serbs and virtuous "Bosniaks," it is necessary to reassert
that the RS is an essential factor of stability in Bosnia-Herzegovina and
the Western Balkan region, and that those calling for its liquidation (under
whatever name) are effectively aiding and abetting the
<http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/12/26/americas/islam.php> forces of global
jihad.

All along, an old question remains unanswered by the unitary Bosnia
partisans: If Yugoslavia was untenable and eventually collapsed under the
weight of the supposedly insurmountable differences among its constituent
nations, how can Bosnia – the Yugoslav microcosm par excellence – develop
and sustain the dynamics of a viable polity? Mrs. Clinton may go on
supposing ex hypothesi that if there is a "Bosnia" there must be a nation of
"Bosnians," and she may even try to impose her vision on that long-suffering
corner of the Balkans. That she will fail goes without saying. The only
question concerns the price of that failure, and the identity of those
footing the bill.

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