U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE 95/09/21 DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
From: Dimitrios Hristu <hristu@corbett.harvard.edu>
Subject: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE 95/09/21 DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
I N D E X
Thursday, September 21, 1995
Briefer: Nicholas Burns
FORMER YUGOSLAVIA
Secretary's Meeting with Asst. Secretary Holbrooke re:
Review of Situation in Bosnia/Holbrooke Itinerary ...... 1,3,4,8-9,11-12
Secretary's Meetings in New York on Bosnia ............... 1-2
Bosnian Serb Compliance with NATO/UN Requirements ........ 2
Situation in Sarajevo/Safe Areas/Fighting ................ 2-3,6-7
Contact Group Role in Peace Process ...................... 4-5
Status/Next Steps of the Peace Process ................... 5-6
Congressional Consultations re: Bosnia/Peace Implementation 9-11
[...]
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
DPB #143
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1995, 2:07 P.M.
(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)
MR. BURNS: George?
Q You said yesterday the Secretary is going to meet with Mr.
Holbrooke today.
MR. BURNS: Yes.
Q Did they have their frank exchange yet? (Laughter)
MR. BURNS: George, I wouldn't characterize this as a frank
exchange. They had a very useful and productive meeting this morning.
(Laughter) They had a nice meeting this morning, a very good meeting.
The Secretary met with Dick Holbrooke at 9:00 a.m. this morning in
the Secretary's office. A number of us were there. And Ambassador
Holbrooke reported to the Secretary on his view of where the situation
stands in Bosnia as a result of his travels through the region and his
shuttle diplomacy among the various capitals.
The Secretary and he discussed next steps. They had a second
meeting later on, and there will be further meetings in Washington this
afternoon about this subject of Bosnia. We are, of course, now looking
to the future and hoping very much that the momentum that the United
States has been able to give to the peace process can be sustained; and,
indeed, it might even be speeded up. That's our very great hope for the
future.
Q Can you talk about meetings next week in New York, Bosnia-
related?
MR. BURNS: I still do not yet have confirmation on specific
meetings for next week, so I'm not able to talk about specific meetings;
but the diplomacy has turned, I think, towards New York. There will be
a number of leaders
from the Balkans in New York for the opening of the U.N. General
Assembly next week. Secretary Christopher will be there. I think all
of his Contact Group Ministerial counterparts will be there as well.
So I'm certain that there will be a number of meetings, but I don't
have anything specific to announce for you.
Q Can I follow that? For better or worse, a lot of Dick
Holbrooke's attention since Geneva revolved around lifting the siege of
Sarajevo, getting beyond the exclusion zone, and then of course stopping
or trying to stop the Bosnian-Croatian advance in central and western
Bosnia. Does the focus now shift back to the agenda and to following up
on Geneva -- that is, the more political aspects of diplomacy? Will
that be the focus in New York? Is that fair to say?
MR. BURNS: I think it's a fair question, and the way I would
answer it is to say two things.
First, the United States is pleased that the United Nations and
NATO were able to reach the judgment yesterday, last evening, that in
fact the Bosnian Serbs had withdrawn a sufficient number of weapons and
types of weapons to have met the requirements of the agreement.
That is a very good thing because it opens up the prospect that
Sarajevo can now be a safe city. The people of Sarajevo, after four
years of war, can actually have a peaceful winter. So we are encouraged
by this.
As the President said in his statement, however, last evening,
we'll be watching very closely, and the Bosnian Serbs must refrain from
all offensive -- any offensive -- military operations within the
Sarajevo zone. They must continue to adhere to every aspect of the
agreement. The roads must remain open. The airport must remain open.
The humanitarian and civilian goods -- food and medicine, and furniture
and tools, and that kind of thing must continue to flow into the city.
That's very important.
Now, hoping that the situation in Sarajevo will remain stable, yes,
Joe, we're going to turn our sights once again the larger perspective of
the peace process in Bosnia, which has as its starting point now the
meeting in Geneva on September 8 which laid down the fundamental
principles. Now we've got to work towards a peace conference. We've
got to work towards a situation where the parties elect to sit down
together and talk about their differences and talk about how they can
resolve those differences and form a permanent peace.
To date, until today, the parties -- Croatia and Bosnia, Serbia,
the Bosnian Serbs -- had been talking through the United States and to
the United States, to our negotiating team, about the Contact Group Map
and Plan, about the constitutional challenges that will face a future
Bosnia-Herzegovina that we hope will result from a peace conference.
I think this phase will continue for some time -- this phase of the
United States and our Contact Group partners being, in effect, the
intermediary among the parties; but we hope to change that. So at some
time in the future -- and it's very hard to predict when that will be in
the future; it could be soon and it could be later -- some time they
will elect to down together at a peace conference. That is our
strategic objective here. That's what Secretary Christopher was
discussing this morning with Deputy Secretary Talbott and Peter Tarnoff
-- the Under Secretary of State -- and Dick Holbrooke, and others.
As I said, those discussions are continuing here. There will be
further discussions around town this afternoon. That's where we're
headed.
Q On that matter, can you tell us who's attending the White
Houses meeting this afternoon, besides Mr. Holbrooke and General
Shalikashvili?
MR. BURNS: I don't want to put myself in the position of
announcing a White House meeting or confirming a White House meeting,
much less saying who will attend. Obviously, there's a high level,
David, of interest in this issue and participation by very senior people
in the Government; and there will be meetings today and tomorrow, but
it's not my place to announce those meetings.
Q Where is Secretary Christopher right now?
MR. BURNS: He is sitting at his desk, seven --
Q What type of seat?
MR. BURNS: How many floors away is this? Is this the Second
Floor? Five floors above us. He's in his office. (Laughter). He's
with a group of people, continuing the discussions that we began this
morning on Bosnia.
Q Can you give us a time?
MR. BURNS: Excuse me?
Q At 2:30 he'll still be there?
MR. BURNS: No. He will not be there at 2:30. He'll be elsewhere
in the city at 2:30, but I can't confirm where that location might be.
(Laughter)
Q We're not far.
MR. BURNS: Excuse me?
Q We're not far away.
MR. BURNS: It depends on your perspective. (Laughter)
Q Last night, in the Secretary's speech, he indicated that some
members of the Holbrooke team would be heading back to the region soon.
Can you tell us if anyone's heading back and who they are?
MR. BURNS: Yes. I think this has been in the press this morning.
A couple of members of Dick Holbrooke's team will be returning to the
region this weekend -- Chris Hill and Roberts Owen. They are the key
members of our team who deal with constitutional issues, and also with
the Contact Group Map on the land issues.
I'm not at liberty to give you their itinerary; I don't have their
itinerary. I'm not sure I'll be at liberty at any time in the next two
days to give you their itinerary. We normally haven't done that with
Dick's delegation in the specific sense.
The Secretary will be going to New York on Sunday night, and Peter
Tarnoff and Dick Holbrooke will accompany him to New York for those
meetings.
Charlie.
Q One presumes you'll get to the stage of peace talks. Does
the United States have a view of its role? That is to say, would you
accept a role just as a member of the Contact Group, or would you want a
stronger unilateral role, or would you move the Contact Group out
altogether and you convene it, or leave the three to convene it? Does
the U.S. have a position on it?
MR. BURNS: I don't believe that the Contact Group or the parties
have decided on a specific logistical framework for a peace conference.
We certainly have not decided on the venue for a peace conference --
where it will held or when it will be held -- but, Charlie, I think it's
fair to say that the United States has assumed a leadership role.
We've assumed a leadership role, certainly, since July -- since the
London Conference -- and we'll continue that. We're going to work very
closely within the Contact Group to pursue these issues.
The relationship we have with the other members of the Contact
Group is an important ingredient for our success, the success that we've
had to date. I imagine that the Contact Group will stay together
throughout this process as an intermediary among the parties, led by the
United States.
Q Nick, would you argue with the assessment that Mr. Holbrooke
has had some success in his consultations but has been unable so far to
convince the parties to have direct negotiations?
MR. BURNS: I think a literal answer to that question would be -- I
wouldn't argue with it, but I think there's a lot more behind that
question, Sid.
It's important, after four years of war, to know that we've only
had three weeks of peace discussions, of a real peace process that has
the legitimate prospect of succeeding some time in the future. In that
respect, you might say that we are certainly not at the middle of that
process, we're not at the end; we might be at the end of the beginning
of it -- a beginning phase of it.
If what is behind your question is a literal request for "where are
we today," we're not at a peace conference. But if there is any
implicit criticism that somehow we should have achieved more, I would
beg to differ.
What we have achieved so far is the following in the last two and a
half months. It's useful to resume this. The West, led by the United
States and NATO has stopped the Bosnian Serb offensive all over Bosnia;
not only in Bihac but also most particularly in Eastern Bosnia -- in
Gorazde.
The West has relieved the stranglehold, for the most part, of
Sarajevo and permitted a situation to develop where the people there
have a chance to live in peace this winter.
The United States has also initiated a peace process which has had
a very successful first meeting, where first principles have been agreed
upon, and we are now driving towards a peace conference.
So I'm just taking the opportunity of the question to review where
we are in time as of September 21. We've made tremendous progress.
There's more hope now than there has been in four years for some kind of
positive outcome in Bosnia.
Q I should clarify. Does the United States think it's now time
for a peace conference and the parties do not?
MR. BURNS: No. If the United States thought it was time for a
peace conference, we would have asked the parties to convene at some
city -- which we have not done.
Secretary Christopher, Ambassador Holbrooke, Under Secretary
Tarnoff have been very clear with the parties -- all of them have been
involved in these discussions -- that they need to agree on a common
agenda for a peace conference. They need to make further progress on
the issues that will lie at the heart of a peace conference before we
can put our weight -- "we" in the Contact Group -- behind a peace
conference. So that lies at some point the future -- the convening of a
peace conference.
We have not yet attempted to convene one and will not do so until
the parties have made more progress.
Steve.
Q Are you on the threshold, do you think, in this interim
period between the framework and the actual peace conference of reaching
a cessation of hostilities or a cease-fire?
MR. BURNS: I can't say that we're on a threshold, Steve. I don't
believe we're that close.
We certainly hope that the cease-fire around the 20-kilometer zone
around Sarajevo -- within that zone, excuse me -- will be expanded to a
nationwide cease-fire. In fact, that is one of the objectives of the
agreement that was reached last Friday evening with the parties. We've
not seen that happen. There is continued fighting in Central and
Western Bosnia although, as I said yesterday, we do not believe that
Banja Luka will be placed under military siege.
But, certainly, the fighting there continues. There is fighting in
Bihac which continues. There has been some sporadic shelling and
gunfire around Sarajevo itself -- around the city environs.
So we are a ways from that. We certainly want to reach that point.
Now, is it an absolute precondition for a peace conference? We've never
set that down as a condition.
In fact, I would just remind you. We had a Geneva meeting while
NATO was bombing the Bosnian Serbs. We had a very successful round of
shuttle diplomacy while that was happening. We'll take a peace
conference whenever we can get it, whenever the parties are ready for it
and the time is right.
We would like to have a nationwide cease-fire. That's up to the
parties, and we're urging them towards that.
Bill.
Q To follow on that subject. There was some very good news
today in the wires that the Croatians had stopped their offensive; in
fact, were in retreat in northwest Bosnia; that the Muslims were also
stymied by Serb defenses.
My question is, does it appear that rather than cease-fire that the
war is coming to a standstill throughout Bosnia? And would that be
something that would promote the peace conference?
MR. BURNS: Let me tell you what we hope and then I'll tell you
what we think.
What we hope is that the parties will turn away from fighting
throughout Bosnia and turn towards negotiations.
What we believe is that the fighting continues sporadically in
Central and Western Bosnia. What appears to be happening is that the
Bosnian Serbs are establishing defensive positions west of Banja Luka
and that they're putting a considerable amount of military resources,
personnel, and hardware into that defense of their central Serb city.
We would hope that the fighting would now halt completely and that
the peace negotiations might be given further impetus.
Q Are you disturbed at all by -- there was a report of at least
1,000 paramilitary Serbs crossing the border heading into the Banja Luka
area. Is that disturbing or destabilizing?
MR. BURNS: Any description of a force like that is certainly
disturbing to any government like ours that wants the situation to
become more peaceful and less militaristic and less hostile, less
violent.
Yes, Mark.
Q Nick, did Holbrooke give you any sense of the proportion of
ground that he's already covered -- all the issues that would be taken
up in a final agreement, and the amount of time that he needs, or that
his people need, to act as intermediaries before face-to-face talks can
begin?
MR. BURNS: Yes, he did. This is a little like trying to follow
events in Russia in early 1992. You've got to make sure that you're
dealing with updated maps. In this case, Dick Holbrooke did bring what
he thought was an updated map into the Secretary's office this morning.
A good deal of their conversation early this morning centered around a
map.
Ambassador Holbrooke described for the Secretary how he thought the
map had changed; how successful in many ways the Bosnian Croatian
offensive had been in a military point of view in acquiring a lot more
real estate over the last eight days than they had acquired over the
last four years..
They had a specific discussions of some of the diplomatic
challenges that now flow out of the changed configuration of the map --
where the forces are. So that was a big part of their meeting this
morning, and he did bring that assessment to the Secretary.
Q Did he give an assessment of the amount of progress that he's
made so far? And what still remains to be done and how long it will
take to do that?
MR. BURNS: Yes, he did. That was the purpose of the meeting this
morning, to really present his views on those three questions.
Q And what were those views?
MR. BURNS: Ah, that's a different question. This was a private
discussion, not open to the press, in the Secretary's office this
morning.
Obviously, Dick Holbrooke was giving the Secretary his confidential
views on his appreciation of the situation. The Secretary, in turn,
gave his staff his own views as to how the situation must now be handled
by the United States. The Secretary will obviously be in touch with the
President and others here in this city about his advice for how we
proceed. But that's all confidential. That's advice that's going to be
given and, I think, received privately.
Q You were there on our behalf?
MR. BURNS: No, I was there on the Secretary's behalf. Now, I'm
here on his behalf to communicate all this to you. You were not
represented this morning, but I'm glad to say what I can say.
We're in a period where it's appropriate for us now to assess what
has been accomplished and what has happened over the past month -- these
incredible events that have changed the map as well as the political
situation and the psychology of the situation. We're sitting back now
thinking about that, reflecting on where to go next.
One thing is constant, and that is that there is a peace process
that has been begun and we want to drive it forward. That's Secretary
Christopher's strategic view of the situation.
Q Has Holbrooke, since his return to the States -- meaning the
last 48 hours, I guess -- had to talk to Milosevic to keep him
restrained or is he not worried about Milosevic sending troops in
anymore?
MR. BURNS: We believe that with the Croatian and Bosnian
commitment not to attack Banja Luka, and with the slowing down of the
military offensive in the West -- in the central part of the country --
there's certainly no reason for the Serbian Government to involve itself
militarily. We never thought there was a reason for them to do that,
and we've called upon them not to do that.
Q The question was, have you called upon them not to do that in
the last 48 hours?
MR. BURNS: I know that our Charge d'Affaires in Belgrade has
certainly made that point to the government there. I don't believe
there have been any personal conversations with Milosevic in the last 24
to 36 hours.
Q (Inaudible) going over to the Balkans -- Roberts Owen, and
who was the other?
MR. BURNS: Chris Hill.
Q This morning, General Shalikashvili addressed the size of a
U.S. contribution to the peace implementation force should a peace
accord be reached. Is there a sense of how soon U.S. troops would
actually have to be on the ground once an accord is signed?
MR. BURNS: This is really a very important question for those of
us here. I know it's an important one for you as well.
I think what is clear and what is easy to answer is that an
international peace-implementing force will not be deployed until there
is a peace to safeguard. There is not now a peace to safeguard, and
that peace can only come as a result of a peace conference.
Now, when will that happen? We just don't know. At some point in
the future, we hope. We hope the parties get there. What size should
the force be?
Secretary Christopher spoke on the record this week about this.
Secretary Perry has spoken to this, as well as number of others.
Really, the honest answer is, we don't know and we won't know until we
know what the shape of the peace is and therefore what requirements flow
out a peace settlement for a military safeguarding of that peace.
Where will the deployments have to be made? What will the mission
be of these forces? Until we can answer those questions, the Pentagon
and NATO will not be able to assess the manpower required for that
mission.
We have talked in the past about, certainly, a sizable
international force. Certainly, we think that NATO would play a central
role -- not an exclusive role, perhaps, but a central role -- in peace
implementation.
Q Can I follow on that? As part of a peace treaty eventually
both combatant forces will have to redeploy at some point because the
maps will change, and there's no doubt there will be troop movements.
Does the U.S. have a view at what point NATO peacekeeping troops,
including American troops, would go in? Would they go in before the
redeployment of local forces to give confidence to them to redeploy, or
after they've been redeployed so that there will be less danger to the
peacekeepers?
MR. BURNS: That has not yet been decided. That question will be
answered when the peace conference appears to be on the verge of
success.
Q New topic?
MR. BURNS: Any more on Bosnia? David.
Q Does the President have the authority to send up to 25,000
U.S. troops to be involved in such a force without going to Congress
first? I take it he does.
MR. BURNS: When we thought in July that there was a prospect or a
possibility of a NATO extraction force in which the United States would
play a leading role, there were consultations with the Congress.
Now that we are on the verge of another situation where there may
be a need for a force to go in and implement a peace, as opposed to a
defeat or a withdrawal, certainly the Administration will consult all
along the way with the congressional leadership on that issue. That has
begun.
There have already been a number of conversations by senior
officials of this government with senior members of the Congress on this
issue. What we cannot yet advise the Congress, though, David is how
many troops are we talking about, which troops and for which mission.
Q (Inaudible) having chats with people and asking about whether
there has to be a vote in the Administration's view, there doesn't, is
that right?
MR. BURNS: I don't believe we've thought that at any point along
the way when we were considering the other alternative that there had to
be a vote. There certainly is an obligation on the part of the
Executive Branch to consult.
Mark.
Q Regardless of any action that Congress may or may not take,
is this Administration committed to sending in that force to help
implement a peace agreement?
MR. BURNS: This Administration is publicly and privately committed
to the parties and to our allies that we will be part of a peace
implementation force, yes.
Bill, still on Bosnia?
Q Yes. I'm on Bosnia. Regarding the meeting this morning, can
you tell us about the mood of those who were participating? Is this all
seen as a success as we see it? Was there jubilation, and does this
process -- this plan -- is this on track? Has this come off as planned
pretty much?
MR. BURNS: I'm glad you asked that question, because it gives me a
chance to maybe knock down some expectations. No champagne yet.
(Laughter) I think the mood -- certainly, the Secretary's mood -- I can
speak to that -- as well as others in the room was one of determination
that we have come a long, long way since mid-July -- the low point when
Srebrenica and Zepa fell -- that the United States has made a tremendous
difference through our diplomacy and through our leadership in military
circles; and that our American pilots and American military technology
has made a tremendous difference.
There's a certain sense of satisfaction that we have helped to turn
the situation around. However, there is no gloating here. There is no
sense that we have achieved any kind of ultimate diplomatic success,
because we haven't. The peace conference has not even been convened
yet, much less successfully ended. Peace has not broken out. There's
still fighting. People still have to live in safehavens.
So I think the mood is one we need to press forward. We need to
keep this up. We need to continue our efforts diplomatically. We'd
like the situation now to really focus more on the diplomacy than on the
fighting, and that's our counsel and our advice to the parties.
Q The game plan is on track, I take it.
MR. BURNS: I think our game plan -- our strategic objective of
convening and successfully concluding a peace conference is ahead of us,
yes.
[...]
(The briefing concluded at 3:02 p.m.)
END
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