U.S. troops in Bosnia: Wimpier even than the French.

AuthorBassuener, Kurt W.

THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION has committed itself to prosecuting Saddam Hussein and other high-ranking Iraqi Ba'athist leaders before a war crimes tribunal like that established for the former Yugoslavia. But America's unwillingness to follow through on such commitments in the Balkans is undermining our credibility. The continued freedom of Bosnian-Serb war criminals Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic is a standing indictment of American seriousnes-stand resolve.

Karadzic, the former Bosnian Serb political leader, was indicted in 1995 for ordering the siege of Sarajevo and the deaths of some 8,000 Muslim men and boys after the fall of Srebrenica in July 1995. He and his military commander, Ratko Mladic, along with Saddam, stand as the most prolific butchers of Muslims in the post Cold War decade. Yet Karadzic has been living for most of the past seven years on Bosnian territory controlled by the United States and France. True, Karadzic is said to be well guarded. But his is a low-rent operation compared to What the United States will likely face in rooting out Saddam's cronies in post-war Iraq. If the United States can't catch such a big fish in the small pond of Bosnia, what can be hoped for in much larger Iraq?

Still more disturbing, a lack of fortitude rather than capability is the heart of the problem. At the outset of the NATO mission in Bosnia in 1996, the Clinton administration placed a high premium on avoiding casualties. They feared arrests might spark an uprising. Those fears allowed Karadzic to pass openly through U.S. Army checkpoints at that time. Later, the State Department supported his arrest, but the Pentagon opposed it. Last year, the U.S. general then commanding NATO peacekeeping forces, Gen. John Sylvester, wanted to arrest Karadzic, but he could not get the support of U.S. intelligence agencies.

Failing to bring Karadzic and Mladic to justice avoids trouble in the short term. But it keeps the Bosnian kettle at a simmer and virtually guarantees that American forces will remain tied down there indefinitely. What's more, there's good evidence that even the short-term costs would be minimal. When British Prime Minister Tony Blair came to power in 1997, he initiated a policy of forcibly arresting war-crimes indictees in the British sector of Bosnia. The British have now arrested 15 indictees with nothing remotely approaching the violent...

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