U.S. Department of State 95/11/06 Daily Press Briefing
From: hristu@arcadia.harvard.edu (Dimitrios Hristu)
Subject: U.S. Department of State 95/11/06 Daily Press Briefing
Office of the Spokesman
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
I N D E X
Monday, November 6, 1995
Briefer: Nicholas Burns
[...]
FORMER YUGOSLAVIA
Proximity Peace Talks in Dayton .........................2
--Mtgs. of Contact Group ................................2-3
--Draft Documents to Parties: Annexes on Human Rights,
Refugees, Displaced Persons; Annex on Commission to
Preserve Nat'l. Monuments ............................3
--Federation Issues .....................................3
--Arrival of EU Administrator, Mayors of Mostar .........3
--Special Rapporteur of UN Comm. of HR: Mtgs. w/Parties .3
--EU Negotiator Carl Bildt's Mtgs. ......................4
--Russian Amb. to U.S. Lavrov's Mtgs. ...................4
--Status of Two Missing French Pilots ...................4
--Status of CSM Correspondent David Rohde ...............4-5,14-16,18-21
--Talbott/Lodel Discussions in Dayton ...................5,20-21
--A/S Shattuck Travel to Region .........................6,13-14
--Leaked Draft Document on Constitutional Arrangements ..6-7,9
--Issue of Eastern Slavonia .............................10-12
--Tudjman's Return to Dayton Talks ......................12
--Indicted War Criminals/War Crimes Tribunal ............8-10,13,16-18
--Press Access to Srebrenica, Zepa, Banja Luka, etc. ....14
[...]
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
DPB #165
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1995, 1:20 P.M.
(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)
[...]
Q How about an update on Dayton, with particular reference to
the stories about Karadzic and Mladic?
MR. BURNS: I'll be glad to give you what I have.
I have spoken this morning with Carl Bildt, with Dick Holbrooke,
and with Wolfgang Ischinger, who is the German Ambassador who represents
Germany in the Contact Group.
The Contact Group has been meeting daily in the morning since
the Dayton talks began last Wednesday, and they met again today to plan
their day. That meeting is led by Holbrooke, Bildt, and Ivanov. I can
tell you that throughout the weekend there were a series of meetings,
and these meetings cover the entire range of issues contained in the
General Framework Agreement and its Annexes.
I can confirm that on Friday afternoon the Annexes on Human Rights,
on Refugees and Displaced Persons, and the Annex on the Commission to
Preserve National Monuments were all given to the parties. This
followed the action on Thursday in which the first four agreements,
including the General Peace Agreement, were given to the parties. That
has concentrated the work of the parties on some specific draft
documents from the United States, the European Union, and the Russian
Federation.
I can also say that through the weekend a lot of attention was
given to Federation issues. In my discussion with Ambassador Ischinger
this morning, he told me that after he and Dick Holbrooke chaired a
Federation meeting with President Tudjman and President Izetbegovic they
asked Michael Steiner, who is a German participant, and Dan Serwer, who
is an American, to chair together a working group on Federation issues.
They have had a series of meetings with the Bosnians and Croatians on
that. They have produced an ambitious draft, which we hope will make a
quantum leap forward in the work of the Federation in improving
coordination between the two Federation members. The talks that have
been held so far encourage us to believe that significant progress on
Federation issues can be made.
I would also note that the European Union's Administrator of
Mostar, Mr. Hans Koschnick, a German, will arrive tonight in Dayton,
along with the two Mayors of Mostar, the Croatian and Moslem Mayors; and
we are hopeful that the three of them, working with Mr. Steiner and Mr.
Serwer, will be able to lead the process at Dayton towards much greater
progress in confirming the statute of the city of Mostar and in
confirming Moslem-Croatian cooperation in the administration of Mostar.
I was told by Carl Bildt this morning that a Mrs. Elisabeth Rehn,
who is the Special Rapporteur of the U.N. Commission on Human Rights for
the former Yugoslavia, spent all day Sunday meeting with the separate
parties on human rights issues. In addition to meeting with Carl Bildt
and with Dick Holbrooke, she met President Izetbegovic, Foreign Minister
Milutinovic, Foreign Minister Granic, and other participants in the
Dayton talks. She stressed the need for adherence to international law,
on human rights, and for complete access to those areas -- Banja Luka,
to be specific -- where the international community believes there may
have been massive violations of human rights over the last month.
Carl Bildt had an exceedingly busy weekend of meetings. He meets
with his EU team daily, as well as with the Contact Group. He had
individual meetings over the weekend with President Milosevic. He had a
dinner with Foreign Minister Granic, and he had a lengthy discussion of
constitutional issues with the Bosnian delegation.
The Russian Ambassador to the United Nations, Sergey Lavrov, also
visited Dayton yesterday to pursue a number of issues with all the
delegations.
I wanted to give you a sense of the types of meetings that are
occurring from a European viewpoint, as well as from an American
viewpoint, because I've been asked to speak on behalf of the European
countries throughout this conference. So, therefore, each day I'll be
giving you a sense of what Carl Bildt and some of the Europeans are
doing, as well as the Americans.
Along those lines, let me also note that Ambassador Jacques Blot,
the French representative on the Contact Group and the French delegate
to these talks, has been raising on a priority basis the fate of the two
French pilots who you will remember were shot down during the NATO air
campaign over Bosnia in September. He has raised their status in very
strong terms on a daily basis with both the Serbs and Bosnian Serbs at
these talks. The American delegation and Carl Bildt's delegation have
also raised, on behalf of the French Government -- in support of the
French Government -- the fate of the two pilots.
Let me talk for a minute about David Rohde, because David Rohde's
status and the problem of his incarceration was a major issue at Dayton
this weekend. David Rohde's family arrived in Dayton late on Friday
evening and spent much of Saturday with Dick Holbrooke and with
Ambassador John Menzies. Holbrooke and Menzies arranged a meeting for
David Rohde's family with members of the joint Serb delegation,
specifically with Mr. Koljevic. They did arrange for the family to
speak with David Rohde by phone from Dayton, and his family was
encouraged that he appears to be in reasonably good physical condition.
Now, on Sunday, yesterday, a United States Embassy official from
Sarajevo, Walter Andrusyszyn, traveled by l3 hours over very dangerous
and icy roads to reach David Rohde, where he is being incarcerated; and
I want to give you a little bit of information on their meeting.
Mr. Andrusyszyn traveled to the town of Bijeljina -- B-i-j-e-l-j-i-
n-a -- which is in northeastern Bosnia. He traveled there to try to
secure the release of David Rohde. He met with him for an hour and a
half and according to Mr. Andrusyszyn, David Rohde appears to be in
relatively good health. But the Bosnian-Serbs, after many
remonstrations from Mr. Andrusyszyn, refused to release him.
I also understand that the International Committee on the Red Cross
was able to get a representative to see Mr. Rohde separately from the
meeting with Andrusyszyn.
Let me just note that the way that the Bosnian-Serbs have handled
the case of David Rohde has been utterly irresponsible. The United
States Government was not apprised for five days as to his welfare or to
his whereabouts. We were informed by a press release from Pale on
Friday evening that he was being held on the charges of tampering with
his press accreditations and taking photographs in illegal places.
This was a kangaroo court which judged him. These are kangaroo
court type charges, well-known from the Communist era, well-known when
Americans and others found themselves in trouble behind the Iron Curtain
in decades past.
We reject the charges again Mr. Rohde. We call for his immediate
release and we will continue to press as hard as we can both in Dayton
and through our Embassy in Sarajevo and through our Embassy in Belgrade
with the Serbian Government for the immediate release of Mr. Rohde.
There is no justification for holding him. He was carrying out
duties assigned to him by his newspaper. He had been in this area
before, and he had shown great courage in unearthing I think for the
first time the evidence that led the international community to believe
that there had been a great injustice done to the people of Srebrenica
in mid July. He played the key role in unearthing the information that
led to the allegations of massive human rights abuses against the Muslim
population of Srebrenica.
We will continue to work on this case directly with the Bosnian-
Serb and Serb leaders at Dayton and in their governments.
Let me also just note before closing that today was a busy day at
Dayton. Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott and Deputy Under
Secretary of Defense Jan Lodel are traveling there to have a series of
discussions with the Russian delegation there and with the other
leaders.
Strobe Talbott will be hosting a dinner tonight for President
Milosevic and President Izetbegovic and for the heads of the other
delegations.
Assistant Secretary of State John Shattuck will be traveling to the
Balkans this evening from the United States. His mission is to again
for a fourth time this autumn look into the allegations of human rights
abuses. He will be visiting a number of places -- I don't want to go
into his itinerary for security reasons -- but his mission is to look
into these allegations to find as much information as he can, hopefully
to find some of the people who have been missing, and to listen to those
who have been made refugees, and try to piece together exactly what
happened in Banja Luka over the last month.
Any relevant information that he develops on this issue will be
turned over to the United Nations War Crimes Tribunal. And when he is
in the region, he will be meeting with our embassies, but also meeting
with the International Committee on the Red Cross, and the other
international organizations who have been able to pursue this story over
the past several weeks.
He will also be looking personally into the case of David Rohde.
He will be meeting with people who, we believe, who, we hope, can effect
Mr. Rohde's immediate release.
Beyond that, the meetings continue in Dayton. You have all seen
some press reports. There was a notable leak of a document over the
weekend. And I would just like to say on that, on the document that was
leaked, it's the first serious leak that we have had since the
conference opened on Wednesday.
It is most unfortunate that someone, some participant, decided to
leak this. Maybe that is not your perspective, but it is our
perspective, because it is quite irresponsible. And this particular
question of a constitution and of a draft paper on constitutional
arrangements, I know personally of four different drafts of that
document that have been written here, that have been reviewed here.
People have commented from the European Union and from Russia,
parties had, and to leak one of the drafts -- I'm not even sure which
one it is -- is really irresponsible. It may even give a misleading
impression of the status of events.
So we certainly would call upon all of the participants in Dayton
to adhere to the rules that they agreed to in coming to Dayton.
Yes, Andrea.
Q Do all four of those drafts have the same provisions
regarding exclusion of Gravic and Mladic or anyone else charged with war
crimes?
MR. BURNS: Well, in general the drafts are -- they are successive.
They are obviously different because they improve each time they are
reviewed.
So, draft one, it might be very different from draft three, and
draft three from draft four.
On that particularly question, Andrea, I think -- I'm just going to
have to leave maybe the press corps to wonder a little bit. We've --
Q But you don't want to leave us with the impression that the
Administration is unclear on that point.
MR. BURNS: No, not at all, but I want certainly to leave in some
doubt exactly which draft may be out there, and I also don't want to
discuss the details of what we know to be an accurate draft, because
that runs contrary to all of the preparations we have made for this
conference.
We said from the beginning we weren't going to talk in detail or
even in general terms about the issues that were being debated. They
should be debated in private.
Q But once there is a leak, and it is obviously a very
important leak, wouldn't it serve all of your interests, our interests,
the public's interest, to feel a little bit more precise about it now
that its out there.
MR. BURNS: That is just what encourages people to leak more, which
we don't want. I can say this, Andrea.
Our own position, the United States Government's position is well
known. Secretary Christopher spoke to it last week. I spoke to it in
the Thursday and Friday briefings last week.
So I don't want there to be any misunderstanding about the position
of the United States Government. But I do want to leave in some
obscurity--
Q Could you just say --
MR. BURNS: I just want to leave in some obscurity what the
specific draft that was leaked said, except for those of you who may
have that draft, and then you are free to quote from it.
Q Could you just restate what the U. S. position is on that
issue?
MR. BURNS: The U. S. position is well known on this issue, and
that is that we cannot foresee a situation developing where in a post-
agreement era, once an agreement has been signed and a new government is
formed, that any indicted war criminals would play a role in command
positions in that government.
Q Nick, (inaudible) that the Bosnian-Serbs are rejecting a
link between war criminal provisions and a peace agreement. Is that
your understanding?
MR. BURNS: I am not going to describe in any way the discussions
that are taking place at Dayton. There are a hundred different meetings
going on every day. There are lots of different discussions, and for me
to leap into that and try to pick out one or two and give you a
description would be highly misleading and irresponsible on my part.
Q But, Nick, Milosevic is being quoted as having, as believing,
that he was misled; in other words, that it was not suggested to him
before arriving in Dayton that he would have to make the concession of
basically getting rid of Karadzic and Mladic altogether.
Is that true? Was he never warned that that concession would be
expected of him?
MR. BURNS: The problem with the way those particular reports were
written over the weekend is that I have absolutely no idea if they are
true, because there is nobody on the record. They are unnamed people
speaking on background saying that Milosevic thinks this, Milosevic
thinks that, quoting other members of the delegation.
Q But you, presumably, are responsible for knowing what Mr.
Holbrooke has said to Mr. Milosevic, and that's what I am asking you
about.
MR. BURNS: Yes, and the problem that we encounter here is that we
are not willing to go into the details of what is being said. We are in
the middle of a negotiation here, so people are likely to say very many
things.
Other people leak things which sometimes are true and sometimes
they are not true. But I don't want to describe for you what people
think, especially the heads of delegations, and I can't describe for you
the pattern, the detailed pattern, of the conversations that have been
held on all these issues.
But certainly they are talking about all these issues. It just
would be unproductive for me to go down the road and start describing
what the conversations are.
Q But I just wanted to ask you whether there is any precedent
for a constitution under which there would be judges on the court who
were not of the same nationality as the country that they were serving.
MR. BURNS: I don't know if there is a precedent or not, David, as
an answer to that question. I don't know. I'm not aware if there is a
precedent for that at all.
Q Nick, the issue, though, is what Milosevic was told before he
got to Dayton not what's being discussed at Dayton, to follow up on
David.
MR. BURNS: But the issue for me is, you are asking me to comment
on what he has said to Dick Holbrooke or to Carl Bildt since he arrived
at Dayton. I can't do that.
Q No, I'm not. I'm asking you whether Milosevic understood
that this was a part of the draft before he got to Dayton; that this was
the U. S. position on Karadzic and Mladic.
MR. BURNS: But see, this is somewhat of a surreal discussion here,
because we don't even know, none of us in this room know what Milosevic
said, because President Milosevic is not on the record in all of the
newspaper accounts cited over the weekend.
I didn't see -- you know, it is very relevant, Judd. I didn't see
one on-the-record quote, thankfully, from any member of any delegation
from Dayton over the weekend.
We have these unnamed sources talking to newspapers. How can I
confirm or deny anything that is being said here?
Q But, Nick, this is what Milosevic said in Dayton.
(Multiple voices.)
Q Here's a question for you. On landing in Dayton, had Mr.
Milosevic already heard from the United States that he would be
expected, in the course of coming to an agreement there, to dump
Karadzic and Mladic?
MR. BURNS: I'm not going to comment on that. I'm not going to
comment for a very good reason. Because it is directly related to
what's happening in Dayton and to all these other issues. Once we go
down that road, we'll open up every issue for examination, which we
don't want to do. These are private negotiations being conducted
privately, and they'll remain that way until there is an agreement or
something else happens at Dayton.
Q Can we try Slavonia?
Q (Inaudible) went straight from Dayton back to Croatia and
said that the talks have only until November 30 to come up with a
solution. After that, whether the talks are continuing or not, Croatia
will feel free to make a move. This is not what Holbrooke said that
Tudjman had agreed to before. What's your reaction to that statement?
MR. BURNS: Our reaction is that there is a negotiating channel to
resolve the Eastern Slavonia problem. In fact, Peter Galbraith and
Thorvald Stoltenberg of the U.N. are in the region today and have been
for a couple of days negotiating this. There is no justification for a
resort to military force to resolve this issue.
There is every opportunity here to resolve it peacefully. I think
all sides, including the Croatian Government, set a date on the first
day that they wanted to resolve it peacefully. That's what we hear from
the Serbian delegation.
If that's the case, then these can only be threats intended to
affect the course of the negotiations. We can sometimes understand
that. The problem is, when threats are made at such a high level, they
take on sometimes a different meaning.
I would just like to say today there is no justification for the
use of force in Eastern Slavonia. This problem can be solved, and we
have every reason to believe it will be solved by diplomats at the
negotiating table. Peter Galbraith and Mr. Stoltenberg have been asked
to return to Dayton by Wednesday evening/Thursday morning.
At that time, the discussions on Eastern Slavonia -- specific at
Dayton -- will resume, and we hope to make progress.
I think that is the appropriate way to look at this problem.
Tom has a follow-up.
Q Is November 30 the deadline or not?
MR. BURNS: It is not for us. There is no deadline. We have not
set a deadline to resolve any of these problems at Dayton. We're
willing to stay at Dayton for a very long time, if there is a reasonable
expectation that we can resolve this or other problems. So therefore to
create an artificial deadline is most unhelpful.
Q Doesn't those remarks, though, make a mockery of the
statement that you announced with great fanfare at Dayton the other day?
How do you reconcile the statement, which you said you were making on
his behalf, and his remarks?
MR. BURNS: I don't agree with the premise of your question. I
think it is not surprising because we've seen these kinds of statements
before. We saw them before Dayton.
We do have a commitment from the Croatian Government that it wants
to support these negotiations. In fact, Galbraith and Stoltenberg flew
back on Tudjman's plane. I can only ascribe these statements to
negotiating tactics. We hope that they are only that.
Our position is quite clear. There is every opportunity to reach a
peaceful solution. There is no reason to seek a military solution.
Q Is there anymore you can tell us, Nick -- this is relevant to
this -- is there anymore you can tell us from Dayton on the Eastern
Slavonia talks, or anything more from Zagreb?
MR. BURNS: There's nothing I can tell you from Dayton. The
leaders at Dayton decided that Galbraith and Stoltenberg would move to
Eastern Slavonia, to talk directly to the Serb population there. That
has happened. You've seen press reports on that.
You've seen some press reports that the local Serbs have not yet
agreed to the solutions being put forward by the United States and the
United Nations. That, also, I would describe to negotiations. We're
just going to have to keep plugging away at this, which I'm sure the two
Ambassadors will do. We remain hopeful that there can be a peaceful
solution.
Roy.
Q On that point, I understand that the Serbs there have
rejected the idea of Croatian sovereignty and they've also boycotted the
talks. But I'm not quite sure what the state of play is. Is Holbrooke
going to them and asking -- rather, Galbraith going to them and asking
them to reconsider? Is anything scheduled? Where does it stand now?
MR. BURNS: Ambassadors Galbraith and Stoltenberg will be working
in Eastern Slavonia. They did today, tomorrow -- Tuesday, and probably
part of Wednesday. They will then return to Dayton where we will resume
discussion of this among the heads of delegation. Certainly, between
Tudjman and Milosevic and others at Dayton.
The fact is we have not yet reached a solution, but we believe that
one is within sight and we'll keep working at it.
Q Are the Serbs boycotting the talks?
MR. BURNS: The local Serbs? It wasn't my impression. I know
there were meetings over the weekend. If they're now boycotting talks,
they should come back to the talks because nothing good will happen for
that population until they agree to negotiate and they agree to
compromise and they agree on some final arrangement to resolve these
problems of sovereignty and of administrative control.
Q Are you not aware that the Serbs did not come to the talks on
the weekend that were scheduled?
MR. BURNS: Pardon?
Q There were meetings scheduled between the Croatians and the
Serbs this weekend, but the Serbs did not show.
MR. BURNS: I know that the two negotiators had talks with the
Serbs. Those are the talks that I was referring to.
We're going to keep plugging away at our attempt to bring both
sides together.
Q Is Tudjman coming back to Dayton (inaudible), and how long
will they stay this time -- one day, two days, two weeks?
MR. BURNS: I don't know the answer to either question. There was
an expectation that he would be coming back, yes, at the end of this
week, but I can't tell you specifically which day. But he's expected
back, on the first question.
Second question: That's going to be up to President Tudjman and, I
think, up to events as well.
Mark.
Q As a matter of policy, has the United States ruled out the
granting of amnesty to any war criminals in the former Yugoslavia?
MR. BURNS: I'm not sure that the United States has the capability
to confer that type of status. To give amnesty to anybody, that's a
question for the local authorities in the state that will emerge, we
hope from the peace talks, a future Bosnia-Herzegovina.
The leaders of that country -- the future leaders of that future
country -- will need to decide on what type of people can hold positions
in that government, both at the national level and at the local level.
It's not a question for the United States to decide, and I don't believe
we have the capability, Mark, to give anyone amnesty or to deny amnesty.
It's just not really pertinent, I think, to what we are capable of
doing.
Q What about the immunity by the War Crimes Tribunal, the
Security Council sets the jurisdiction for the Tribunal?
MR. BURNS: That is a different question than the first question.
On that question, the Untied States, I think, has made very clear that
we believe that the War Crimes Tribunal should be free to do its work.
We believe that the information developed by the Tribunal should lead
wherever it logically should lead.
All those who the Tribunal has a reasonable expectation were
involved in human rights violations and in war crimes should be indicted
and then prosecuted. That's up to the War Crimes Tribunal. Judge
Goldstone is going to be in Washington next week and we're going to have
some conversations with him about all of these issues.
I think that's consistent with what we said in the past, and I
really wouldn't want to take it much beyond that.
Q A new subject?
Q Does Mr. Shattuck have guarantees that he can travel anywhere
he wants to in Serb-held Bosnia to investigate human rights abuses?
MR. BURNS: As a result of his meetings with President Milosevic
last Thursday in Dayton, John Shattuck has a guarantee of access to all
of the sites that are troubling to the United States and to the
international community. He intends to exercise his right of access.
What I don't want to do, though, is tell you where he'll be on
which day because there are some obvious security concerns in the
region. I don't want to make his trip anymore complicated than it
already is.
Q Does that guarantee also extend to reporters now who want to
cover it independently either with him or just on their own?
MR. BURNS: This is a very important question. Obviously, more
complicated now with the disappearance and the arrest of Mr. Rohde.
We have argued -- Dick Holbrooke and John Shattuck -- in successive
meetings with Milosevic and Koljevic that the international press corps
should be given free and unfettered access to Srebrenica and Zepa, to
Banja Luka, to Sanski Most and to other towns where there is a
reasonable expectation that human rights violations occurred.
We have been told consistently by Milosevic and by Koljevic and
others that that will be granted.
There are a couple of journalists -- including, I know the
Washington Post, Christine Spolar, and others -- who have been able to
get access. There is the very unfortunate case of Mr. Rohde who was
going to Srebrenica to exercise that right. We had been told that he
would be given that right, and he has been detained on trumped-up
charges, fallacious charges.
I think what we need to do is deal with the case of Mr. Rohde.
We're arguing for his immediate release. We will not stop arguing for
that until he is released.
I think that other journalists have to be, frankly, wary of these
arrangements and have to take every precaution that they can to make
sure that their trips are set up and agreed to in advance. By saying
this, I'm in no way implicitly criticizing Mr. Rohde. I think he did
everything that he could have to establish a mission for his trip and an
itinerary for the trip. We believe he's been detained unjustly.
I just think it would be irresponsible for us not to mention to
other journalists who are going in that, with the case of Mr. Rohde,
there are some obvious risks here. We are mindful of those. We think
the international press corps should be free to do its job, and that is
to travel to these sites, to look into them independently, and to
provide an objective analysis of what they think happened there.
Q You're saying these are trumped-up charges because he was
traveling within Bosnia-Herzegovina and therefore did not need travel
documents?
MR. BURNS: We're saying they're trumped-up because we know
something about the people who have made them. These are officials from
a government that created the war. I won't call it a government. It's
a group of people in Pale who created the war, who carried out the
massive violations of human rights into which Mr. Rohde was looking.
They then may have had an obvious interest in trying to stop him from
doing his job but that won't happen because Mr. Rohde is going to be
released. We hope he'll be free in the future to carry out his duties
as a journalist.
It won't happen because others among you, in your profession will
follow Mr. Rohde and will look into these charges independently and will
be there. John Shattuck will be there this week; Elizabeth Wren has
visited the area, and the others -- the UN, and the International
Committee of the Red Cross will follow.
They're trumped-up, they're obvious, and they're carried out by a
bunch of people who have no standards of civil rights or press rights
and who, I think, are going to have to face the music one day.
Q How can you be sure he's going to be released?
MR. BURNS: We have been told that he's going to be held for 15
days. He's already been held for eight days. We would hope very much
that at least that would be the extent of it, although our preference is
for him to be released immediately, before the end of the 15-day period.
Q Have you actually been told he would be released at the end
of the 15-day --
MR. BURNS: There have been all sorts of commitments here. We'd be
very unwise to take them literally.
Mr. Andrusyszyn was told by a number of people, in Bijeljina that
he would be released shortly. Well, that was yesterday and it hasn't
happened.
We were told last week that we'd be given direct access to him. It
us three days to get access to him. We were not told for five days
initially why he was being detained, where he was, what his state of
health was. So I think we have to take, with a grain of salt perhaps,
some of these comments. There are a lot of indications that his
incarceration will be limited. We hope it's as limited as perhaps not
beyond tomorrow, but we can't be sure of that.
Q Can I follow on that and ask you what it says about our
relationship with Mr. Milosevic and with Mr. Koljevic, that they can
arrange a phone call for the family to talk to him but they can't
arrange a phone call for themselves to talk to the people who are
holding him to release him. What does that say about Milosevic's
ability to deliver the Bosnian Serbs?
MR. BURNS: I think it's obvious what it says -- that either he is
sometimes able and sometimes unable or sometimes willing and sometimes
not willing.
But, clearly, we're looking for a much greater commitment, and
we're looking for deeds. The actions thus far have been irresponsible
by the Bosnian Serbs -- totally irresponsible. We are looking for
cooperation in Dayton, Ohio, as well as in the region.
Q Nick, I'm wondering if you would be surprised -- if you
follow my logic here. Milosevic has become a central character in the
Bosnian talks. Holbrooke spent hours and hours of time with him
establishing these in the ground rules. He represents the Bosnian
Serbs.
This brackets the talks. Secretary of State Christopher, after the
talks concluded on the first day, says that he cannot conceive of a
settlement that includes the two Bosnian Serb leaders. Therefore, would
it be surprising that the man who is so important to the talks and
represents the Bosnian Serbs would come to those not knowing that the
Secretary of State couldn't conceive of a peace agreement that included
them?
That is a very complicated attempt to get you to answer the
question. Was he told before he arrived what the Secretary of State was
thinking about Mladic and Karadzic?
MR. BURNS: I can't put myself in the position of Spokesperson for
President Milosevic. I can't tell you what he was thinking. I can't
tell you everything that he understood to be part of this process and
understood not to be part of the process.
Q Would it surprise you --
MR. BURNS: I can tell you this. The way to look at the Dayton
talks is not as an isolated peace conference but as a logical extension
of a shuttle mission that began in August. This is just the latest
round of the shuttle mission -- a shuttle by foot and not by aircraft.
Everything in the documents that have been passed over to the
parties on Thursday and Friday of last week -- everything -- had been
talked about in advance. Everything had been negotiated in advance.
Not negotiated to their satisfaction; not agreed to. But everything had
come up in the negotiations, including the question of the makeup of a
future government, including the question of human rights that we have
spoken about, including the question that we spoke about last Wednesday,
Thursday, and Friday of war criminals and the right of indicted war
criminals to take part in a future government.
I would say that there are probably very few surprises in Dayton,
Ohio. But what we have in Dayton, Ohio, is a negotiation. So people
who purport to speak on behalf of the Bosnians or the Bosnian Serbs or
the Serbs say all sorts of things in the newspaper without attaching
their names to it. It's very difficult to sort that out, Steve, and
it's very difficult for me to respond to leaks on an authoritative
basis.
Q Apart from this journalist episode, apart from the alleged
leak, what you haven't given us so far today is any sense -- are they
negotiating seriously? Are they getting anywhere on the other documents
that they have? Is there something that you would characterize as
progress or lack of progress, or what is happening?
MR. BURNS: That's a fair question. Let me just say, Jim, in
response that I think -- and perhaps we played an unwitting part on this
on Friday -- there was an impression, I think, in some of the media over
the weekend that the weekend was filled with football games and soccer
matches and bowling and swimming. Those are activities that a number of
people engaged in, but I understand these were 18-hour days on Saturday
and Sunday; that there were lots of intensive meetings; determined
negotiations. I think all parties are very determined, serious,
applying themselves, working very hard. Obviously, these are
negotiations. They're not agreeing on everything.
I hope that you don't have the impression that somehow they took
the weekend off. They didn't. They were at Dayton, within the confines
of that base. For the most part, I know the Bosnian Foreign Minister
and the Bosnian President spent a little time outside the base on
Saturday, but that was the minority of the time.
I would describe them as determined, serious -- very serious --
discussions.
Q Do you foresee any circumstances under which the United
States would be willing to have diplomatic relations with a new Bosnian
entity in which there were war criminals in any positions of authority?
MR. BURNS: That's a question that's difficult to answer, David.
It's difficult, in this sense: It's hard to make iron-clad promises or
assurances about the future when you don't know exactly what the future
holds.
But I think in the case of indicted war criminals, we have made our
position clear. We have not changed our position since last week. It's
the same position today as it was last week. We don't believe these
people should be in command positions in any future government.
Q Mr. Milosevic knows that and knew that before?
MR. BURNS: I think that is well known to all the parties.
Q Could we go back to the question of the trial? You said that
there was a kangaroo court. Was there actually a trial? And, if so,
can you give us some of the details?
MR. BURNS: Oh, there wasn't -- Roy, you know the area better than
I do. There certainly was not any trial that you and I would understand
from our experience in a democratic country. These were security thugs
who detained a person. They charge him with these dubious violations of
Republica of Srpska law, and they say you're guilty and you have to
spend time in jail.
This is not an uncommon experience in that particular part of the
world, but it is one that we can criticize very clearly.
Q But the Bosnian Serbs have claimed that they were turning him
over to the judicial authorities and therefore they implied that there
actually was a court hearing. I was just wondering, since you had
consular access, if you could tell us what you know about that court
hearing.
MR. BURNS: Let me cite a few facts to maybe spice up some of what
you're hearing from the Bosnian Serbs.
Mr. Rohde was not fully apprised during the five days of his
incarceration of what the charges were against him. He had no access to
counsel. He had no access to the United States Government, and he
should have had access to the United States Government. He didn't know
what his rights were and what his rights weren't because he's not in a
democratic country. He's not with a group of people who have any
appreciation for democracy or decency or standards of international law.
It is most unfortunate that he was subjected to this. He appears
to be in reasonably good health. That's what Mr. Andrusyszyn has
advised us based on the one and a half hour meeting that was held. But
he has been denied his basic rights; he deserves those basic rights.
The best way to give him his rights -- give him back his rights -- is to
release him so that he again be a free man.
Q But coming back, was there a trial -- was there a proceeding
of some kind? Do you know what day it was and --
MR. BURNS: I don't think we know the answer to that question.
I've gone through all reporting cables from our Embassy in Sarajevo
which describe in great detail everything he told Mr. Andrusyszyn. I
don't believe there's any kind of a trial that you and I would recognize
to be trial. He was simply informed of these charges and told he was
guilty and told he was going to be incarcerated.
Q How can you then just express hope that he'll be released in
a week's time, having served already a week? Under their own law, it
doesn't sound like it qualifies for a legal sentence?
MR. BURNS: I can't express any degree of certainty about his
release because we're dealing with people who are unreliable and
irresponsible.
It's our hope that he'll be released based on some of the
conversations that we've had. But actions are a lot more important than
words in this situation.
Q Was he allowed by the authorities to go around? Everybody
who knows something about Bosnia, and Bosnia itself...
MR. BURNS: To go --
Q To go around -- knows that no journalist can travel around in
Bosnia Serb-held territories without an official escort. You cannot go
to areas which you are not admitted to.
MR. BURNS: I just don't know the answer to the question of whether
he was escorted or not escorted. I just don't know.
Q But did he have a permit to travel on Bosnian Serb
territories?
MR. BURNS: I don't know if he did.
Q It's not the first time an American reporter has been taken
into custody without benefit of legal counsel and sentenced arbitrarily
abroad. In the old days, as you mentioned earlier, this used to be a
major thing. Nick Daniloff is one case that comes to mind -- and
sometimes at the higher levels, you even sort of stop the diplomacy
until these things are cleared up because they become sort of symbols of
how ineffective diplomacy can be.
Has anybody thought of putting a more hard ball on this, because
since you've got three representatives of this government or this group
which you describe as irresponsible, anti-democratic, etc. -- since
you've got them in Dayton and they want to reach an agreement,
obviously, or they wouldn't be there, have you thought of maybe
toughening your stance in Dayton? I mean, taking -- and not just David
Rohde, but I'm thinking of the two French pilots who are missing.
MR. BURNS: Roy, I can assure you that we take the case of Mr.
Rohde very seriously, that we are going to pursue it and continue to
pursue it until we get satisfaction, which is his release, his
unfettered release, to become a free man again.
We are not going to let a few Bosnian-Serb thugs stop these peace
talks. That would be crazy. That would hold all these talks subject to
the actions of people in that region, people you can't trust, people who
have been irresponsible in the past and I'm sure will be irresponsible
in the future.
So we are not going to stop the peace talks, but we are going to
use every means at our disposal to convince the Serbs and Bosnian-Serbs
that he ought to be released.
Q So that maybe by carrying on in Dayton with negotiations and
the way you are doing it, that it will be read as a signal that they can
get away with this. Because, you know, there is a message in carrying
on.
MR. BURNS: It is not business as usual, and I think they are
hearing from us, from Dick Holbrooke and they'll hear from Strobe
Talbott when he gets out there and they'll hear from John Shattuck.
This is not business as usual. This is a very serious offense and we
hold these people responsible for his welfare until he is released, and
they ought to release him very soon.
[...]
(The briefing concluded at 2:13 p.m.)
END
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