U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE 95/10/16 DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
From: hristu@arcadia.harvard.edu (Dimitrios Hristu)
Subject: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE 95/10/16 DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
I N D E X
Monday, October 16, 1995
Briefer: Nicholas Burns
[...]
FORMER YUGOSLAVIA
Proximity Talks: Site Selection .......................5-6,9-10,12
Peace Agreement: Implementation Force, UN Troops ......10-13,15
Road Blockage; Cease-fire Violations ...................13,15-16
Detention of Turkish Journalists by Bosnian-Serbs ......13
Human Rights Violations: A/S Shattuck Travel ..........13-14
Contact Group Mtg in Moscow; DepSec Talbott Arrival ....14-15
Holbrooke Whereabouts, Travel Plans ....................14,16
Alleged FRY Army Cross-border Actions ..................15
[...]
TURKEY
Parliamentary Vote; President Demirel Postpones US
Trip .................................................25
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
DPB #156
MONDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1995, 1:10 P.M.
(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)
[...]
Q Nick, you mentioned about the Bosnian conference. Has a
selection for Site X been made?
MR. BURNS: It has not. Planning for Site X continued throughout
the weekend, and the Secretary and his advisers are meeting in an hour or
so to review that decision -- to review the options that are in front of
him. There are a couple of sites that have been identified, and he hopes
to make a decision on this within the next 24 hours.
Q Are people going down and looking at these places?
MR. BURNS: They're going down, up and sideways, looking at all
these places.
Q You have Pat Kennedy and his folks --
MR. BURNS: Pat Kennedy is in charge of this project for the
Secretary, yes.
Q But, I mean, they're actually going to places.
MR. BURNS: Yes.
Q They've been there.
MR. BURNS: Pat and a couple of other people have been to a number
of sites, looking at the sites, trying to assess their suitability. We
would like this to be a site that is large, that has good housing
facilities for the heads --
Q And high fences.
MR. BURNS: Very high fences so the press can't scale them.
Exactly.
Q And they can't get out.
MR. BURNS: And they can't get out. That's the reverse.
Q Can you talk a little bit about the timing of all of this?
There was a piece in the paper this weekend that talked about U.S.
concern about not being able to reach a peace agreement in time to get
troops in place before the winter. How much of a concern is that?
MR. BURNS: I think that's probably unavoidable at this point. The
winter is almost upon them in the Balkans. It's usually a severe winter,
and it comes earlier than our winter, and any look at the calendar will
tell you that even if these proximity peace talks are successful very
quickly, there are a couple of other steps. A final peace agreement
would have to be signed probably elsewhere, and only at that point would
NATO be in a position to deploy a military force to help implement the
peace.
So even by the very best and most optimistic scenario, I think we're
talking here about if in fact troops are to be deployed, they will be
deployed in the winter. I was puzzled at that article. Not at the
people who wrote the article but some of the people who spoke in the
article on behalf of the U.S. Government.
It is likely that if U.S. forces are to be deployed, they would be
deployed in some part of the winter that stretches from November to
April, in that part of the world. And there's really no way around that,
and I'm sure that the military will do its very best job once it is given
the orders by the President and by the NATO leadership to proceed.
We hope we get to that point, because that will mean that there have
been successful proximity talks here, and a successful conclusion to the
peace conference and the signing of a peace treaty.
Q So you could not foresee signing some sort of peace agreement
and then having an interim before implementation troops were on the
ground?
MR. BURNS: No, I think the plans are once the peace treaty is
signed among these parties, then the implementation force would proceed
to help implement it within days -- not in a matter of weeks, and
certainly not in a matter of months, and you can't wait for the ice to
thaw. You've got to get out there when the peace occurs.
Q Would you deny that there were some elements in the government
who were thinking, perhaps, about just that scenario?
MR. BURNS: I've never heard that type of scenario in all the
briefings that I've received and all the conversations that I've been in.
The scenario -- let me just make sure I get it right, Carol -- that
somehow there be a peace agreement and then you'd wait a couple of months
until the weather got better? Never heard of it, except in this article.
That's why I was puzzled by it.
Q Well, what would be the harm in letting the natural weather
conditions impose the cease-fire. There are certain dangers in putting
troops in, although Willy Claes said it could be done. But why not? Why
not wait til just before the thaw, giving more time for negotiation and
planning and thinking this thing through?
MR. BURNS: Because the war's gone on for many years. We want to
stop the war as soon as we can. The cease-fire is in place throughout
most of Bosnia, but it's not going to be permanent unless these parties
can agree on a peace, and you want to use every day you can to spare
further bloodshed -- to prevent further bloodshed.
It makes a difference if the war ends permanently in December, as
opposed to March or April. It certainly does make a difference.
Q But you would have to acknowledge that this policy, beside the
humane desire to see the war end, is driven partly by the fact that you
know the British and the French and the others do not want to go through
another winter of this peacekeeping, under the current arrangement. They
would rather have a settlement and bring in peace.
So the weather does drive the diplomacy a bit, doesn't it? You're
faced with a sort of a deadline. The Europeans have said, "Not another
winter, please. We can't go through it this way."
MR. BURNS: You're referring to the United Nations forces.
Q Yes, that the U.S. will have to -- "If you expect us to go
through another winter, you'd better be part of it."
MR. BURNS: No, our objective here is to make peace as quickly as it
is possible to make it. That's our objective, and the United Nations has
assured us, as well as other members of NATO and the Contact Group, that
the United Nations forces will remain until a peace agreement is signed
and until another force arrives to take its place.
We're just going to operate as quickly as we can, but this is kind
of a surreal discussion. It may be that once the proximity peace talks
are convened, it takes a long time to conclude them. It may be that they
don't succeed at all; that they fail, in which case we'll have to think
of other options.
We don't believe that the success of these talks should be assumed,
and that therefore the deployment of a NATO military force is something
that absolutely will happen. It will only happen if the parties reach a
peace agreement which is signed.
Q I'd like to follow, if I could, back to the winter imposition
of peace. Nick, what's the difference between having a cease-fire
imposed by snow and ice and a cease-fire imposed by NATO troops?
MR. BURNS: Because cease-fires have not lasted. There have been 30
or 40 of them over the last four years. None of them have lasted. All
of them have been violated, and people have died as a consequence, and we
have a responsibility to use our influence to minimize the number of
people who are killed and to hasten the end of this war.
Q But they almost never fight in the winter.
MR. BURNS: I'm sorry. I don't believe you can say that. I mean,
you haven't seen some of the major offensives in the winter as you've
seen in the summer, but people have continued to die; shells have
continued to be fired. Remember what happened last winter in February
and March in Tuzla and in Gorazde. There was certainly shelling of both
of those cities as well as Sarajevo. We don't want to see a recurrence
of that, Bill.
Q Nick, there's a report that the Serb are blocking the road
access into Gorazde, which would seem to be against the current cease-
fire. Do you have anything on that?
MR. BURNS: I have not seen that report. The latest information we
had from the United Nations this morning was that the road from Sarajevo
to Gorazde was open. What we understand to be "open," it means that
there has been some mine clearing; that U.N. vehicles have traveled from
Gorazde to Sarajevo. I don't believe that that road is open to civilian
traffic, however, but I've not seen reports that it's been closed by the
Bosnian Serbs.
Q Mr. Burns, as you know, two Turkish reporters are imprisoned
by the Bosnian Serbs, and it's now one week they're in prison. Do you
have a comment on that?
MR. BURNS: I don't know the facts surrounding this case. If they
have been imprisoned by the Bosnian Serbs, then obviously we would call,
along with Turkey and others, for their immediate release. But I don't
have the specific facts in this particular case.
Any more on Bosnia?
Q What's going on in Sansi Most? Did General Shalikashvili have
success in his trip to Sarajevo to get the Muslims to back off?
MR. BURNS: Thank you, Bill, I do have something to say on that
issue. The Secretary decided late last week that the United States
wanted to look further into the question of the alleged human rights
abuses and atrocities in and around Banja Luka. He therefore asked our
Assistant Secretary of State John Shattuck to travel to the region, which
Mr. Shattuck has done. He is today in the region. He is interviewing
refugees from Banja Luka. He's in the town of Zenica.
He intends to interview as many people as he can in the limited time
that he will have there, personally. He will then be having discussions
with the Bosnian Government, the Croatians and others. He will be
linking up, at least by phone, with Dick Holbrooke, who is in Moscow
today. Dick Holbrooke has been representing the United States at the
Contact Group meeting on Bosnia there.
This is an indication of how seriously we take the allegations of
brutality in and around Banja Luka. Assistant Secretary Shattuck will be
reminding everybody he sees that the international community will look
into these allegations very seriously and very comprehensively. We
support the activities of the U.N. War Crimes Tribunal, and we intend to
make sure that those who are found responsible for the allegations of
summary executions, of rapes and of other murders in and around Banja
Luka will be held responsible by the War Crimes Tribunal and the
international community.
As I said, Assistant Secretary Holbrooke is in Moscow. He stopped
in Paris before traveling to Moscow. He had conversations with a number
of high-level French Government officials, including President Chirac, in
Paris this morning. Tomorrow he'll be going to Belgrade, and he'll
resume, I think now, his fifth shuttle mission between Belgrade, Sarajevo
and Zagreb over the next couple of days.
His objective in this round of talks is to prepare a specific agenda
for the Proximity Peace Talks that begin on October 31.
Q And Moscow, I know he's there now, but you sort of skipped
over that one.
MR. BURNS: There was a Contact Group meeting today chaired by
Deputy Foreign Minister Ivanov.
Q (inaudible) Moscow?
MR. BURNS: Let me just take them one at a time. That meeting, I
think, at least the first part of the meeting, is concluded. They will
meet again tomorrow morning, and I think they culminate in a lunch there
in Moscow before he leaves.
Before he leaves, he will see Strobe Talbott and Walt Slocombe, the
Under Secretary of Defense, and others who will be arriving in Moscow
tomorrow morning. Their delegation -- the Talbott-Slocombe delegation --
will pick up with the Russians the question of NATO-Russia cooperation,
coordination, on an implementation force for Bosnia -- a military force
for Bosnia -- the conversations that were begun by Secretary Perry eight
days ago in Geneva.
Michael.
Q Does the United States have a view on who was mainly
responsible for the cease-fire violations of the past week? Both the
United Nations and media reports from the area suggest that it was
primarily the Bosnian Government and the Croatian forces who were doing
the advancing. Does the U.S. have a view about this?
MR. BURNS: I think it would depend on what moment you take the
snapshot of the action. There have certainly been instances over the
past week where the Bosnian Government has taken the initiative in
military action, even after the cease-fire took effect last Wednesday.
On a couple of occasions we've seen the Bosnian Government initiate
military action.
There have been instances during that time and in the days leading
up to it, where it's clear that the Bosnian Serbs began military action.
It depends on what town you're talking about, because there has been
fighting not only in the northwest but in some towns south of Sarajevo,
although that has been more limited.
So I think the fair and objective answer is, "Both of them."
They're both responsible for violations of the cease-fire. They both
should be held accountable. This is a point that General Shalikashvili
made yesterday -- that we call on both sides to stop the fighting -- and
he made that point to the Bosnian Government in his private meetings with
them. We have made that point publicly as well.
Q One other question on that. There were reports also over the
weekend of military activity by the Yugoslav army across into Bosnia and
some threats that the Yugoslav army might intervene on behalf of the
Serbs -- Bosnian Serbs. Can you confirm that there was such activity,
that such threats were made, or is there any indication of any possible
intervention by the Yugoslav army?
MR. BURNS: I cannot confirm those reports. We have seen the same
reports. We have discussed those reports with the Serbian Government in
Belgrade. I cannot confirm, and I do not in fact believe, that there
have been any such troop movements across the border. But it's still a
question we're looking into, as you might imagine.
Q Nick, if I can go back to my last question, is the fighting
increasing or decreasing in the Sanski Most area, and will Dick have to
spend his time addressing this issue when he goes back himself?
MR. BURNS: The best source on this question is the United Nations,
and the general assessment of the United Nations is the cease-fire is
taking hold throughout most of Bosnia-Herzegovina. However, there is
still fighting today in the area of Sanski Most, and we continue to make
the point -- and Dick Holbrooke will do that in his shuttle mission --
that we believe that all fighting should stop, and that these countries
should prepare themselves for peace talks.
[...]
Q The Turkish Prime minister lost a confidence vote in
parliament. The President of Turkey canceled his trip to Washington
which was on Wednesday. Do you have a comment on the current --
MR. BURNS: I understand that President Demiral has postponed the
first part of his trip which was to have taken place in Washington -- the
first part of his trip to the United States. Yes, we certainly
understand from our embassy in Ankara that there was a vote in the
Turkish parliament that went against Prime Minister Ciller.
Turkey is an important ally. We would certainly hope and trust that
the Turks themselves, the Turkish politicians would now decide on the
proper course of action to establish a government.
Q Thank you.
(Press briefing concluded at 2:05 p.m.)
END
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