U.S. Department of State 95/11/08 Daily Press Briefing
From: hristu@arcadia.harvard.edu (Dimitrios Hristu)
Subject: U.S. Department of State 95/11/08 Daily Press Briefing
Office of the Spokesman
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
I N D E X
Wednesday, November 8, 1995
Briefer: Nicholas Burns
[...]
FORMER YUGOSLAVIA
NATO-Led Implementation Force ...........................2
Future Roles Of Indicted War Criminals ..................2-3,7-10,16-18
Participation of President Milosevic in the Peace Talks .3-4
Case of David Rohde .....................................4-6
A/S Shattuck's Travel In Region .........................6-7,18
U.S. Support of the War Crimes Tribunal .................10
--Definition of "War Crimes" ............................11
--Provision of Evidence to the Tribunal .................11-16
--Judge Goldstone's Trip to the U.S. ....................13-14
--International Support of the War Crimes Tribunal ......19-21
Human Rights Abuses .....................................22
Reported Constitutional Principles/Division of Territory.22-24
Possibility of a Peace Agreement ........................29,30
Secretary Christopher's Trips to Dayton .................30
[...]
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
DPB #167
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1995, 1:12 P.M.
(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)
[...]
Q The Secretary said last week it would be very difficult for
NATO to deploy troops if Karadzic and Mladic were still around, and
today there is a report in the Times quoting Administration officials as
saying the Secretary misspoke.
Do you want to deal with that one?
MR. BURNS: You want me to answer a question as to whether or not
the Secretary misspoke. That's interesting.
Q It's your job description. (Laughter)
MR. BURNS: Is that it, Norm? (Laughter)
The Secretary's comments, I think, speak for themselves, and I have
spoken about those comments many times in the days after his comments.
The facts are that the United States is going to participate in a
NATO-led implementation force if a peace agreement is reached. We
firmly believe that Mr. Karadzic and Mr. Mladic as indicted war
criminals have no place in a future government in Bosnia-Herzegovina.
In fact, we think that their continued presence in command
positions -- I think those are the words that the Secretary used last
Wednesday in Dayton -- would be inconsistent with any agreement that was
reached by the parties in Dayton.
It is inconceivable to us that they would remain in power after a
peace agreement is reached. This is a very clear position. It has been
enunciated many times in public.
It has also been communicated, by the way, to the parties in Dayton
and it is well known to the participants in the Dayton peace talks.
Q How do you account for the different voices on this issue?
MR. BURNS: Well, it is always hard to account for people who speak
on background and don't want to go on the record. There are lots and
lots of articles that have background comments by Administration
officials. It is very hard to deal with them, because you don't know
who you are talking about.
I can tell you quite authoritatively that we have a clear policy on
this, that it ought to be clear from everything we have said over the
last week, and that we were making these points in private meetings well
before the Secretary spoke last week in Dayton.
Q (Inaudible) accepted by all the parties in Dayton?
MR. BURNS: Would you think that they would be?
Q I assume if you are discussing --
MR. BURNS: I think these are very tough points for some people to
accept, but they are points that are important for the United States,
important for the parties, because we are interested here in two things
coming out of the Dayton peace process.
We are interested in a peace agreement. We are also interested in
seeing that justice is served, and justice will not be served if people
who are indicted for brutalities, for allegations of major war crimes
against the civilian population in Bosnia-Herzegovina, if those people
who are indicted are not held accountable for their crimes, and if they
are not prosecuted for their crimes.
As a member of the United Nations and as the largest and strongest
supporter of the War Crimes Tribunal, the United States has an
obligation and will see it through to the end to assist the War Crimes
Tribunal to do its job.
Q My question is whether, for example, Mr. Milosevic may have
found this so difficult to accept in the context in which it has arisen
that he has threatened to leave and that somehow he had to be talked
into staying?
MR. BURNS: I cannot confirm that he has threatened to leave. In
fact, every report that I have from Carl Bildt and from Dick Holbrooke
is that President Milosevic is fully engaged in these talks.
Just last evening he was invited to a dinner by French Ambassador
Jacques Blot at a restaurant in Dayton, Ohio, a French restaurant, oddly
enough, and they had a good conversation, and today Mr. Milosevic is
back into discussions, very intensive discussions on all the issues --
the constitutional issues, the elections, the refugee issues, the
territorial issues, and the peace agreement issues.
So, Roy, I don't know where these reports are coming from, but,
again, we are dealing here with people who do not want to put themselves
on the record. They are unnamed, pretty murky. They are contradictory,
and I think you can be assured that President Milosevic has been fully
involved in these peace talks from the word go.
Q In other words, this issue has not blocked the talks. In
fact, they are proceeding as if it has already been resolved on this
issue?
MR. BURNS: It's a very important issue. I'm not going to hide the
fact that it is a contentious issue in these discussions. Of course,
you would expect it to be a contentious issue. But the United States
has a very clear position on this issue in these talks.
Now, since we are on the subject of Bosnia, I want to say a few
things about the talks today, but let me start first with David Rohde.
Q Could we pursue this point for a second before you go off on
something else?
MR. BURNS: I'll be glad to come back to it, and I want to do that,
but we spent about 25 minutes on this point yesterday, so I will
definitely come back to it, Sid. But let me just talk about David
Rohde.
Q (Inaudible) since yesterday, Nick. I mean, it's our
briefing.
MR. BURNS: It's my briefing, too, Sid, so let me just say what I
want to say on David Rohde, okay, and then I'll be glad to come back to
it.
We did spend, I would think, Roy, you would agree, we spent a
considerable amount of time on this subject yesterday, and I'll be glad
to go back to it.
On David Rohde, the United States is very pleased, and we are
relieved that he is well and that he has been released by the Bosnian
Serbs. Secretary Christopher called him in Belgrade immediately after
he reached our Embassy there. During that phone call -- the Secretary
was over at the White House -- President Clinton got on the line and
congratulated Mr. Rohde. He congratulated him for his bravery in facing
the ordeal that he had over the last ten days or so. He congratulated
him for his safe release.
The President and the Secretary both asked him about the conditions
of his detention. They said that the American people have supported him
and they thanked him for his bravery.
Now, Mr. Rohde, in all the conversations with the President and
with the Secretary -- and I had a very long conversation with him after
that phone call -- was very grateful to the United States Government
for our support for him, for our effort to have him released.
He said, interestingly enough, and he will probably say this when
he talks to the press in Belgrade -- he said he hoped he hadn't screwed
up the Dayton talks, and he was assured by the President and the
Secretary of State that he had not done so; that in fact the issue here,
which is press freedom, the issue of access to the sites of human rights
abuses in Bosnia-Herzegovina, is a very important one for the United
States, and that in fact I think we thought a good lesson had been
learned by the Bosnian Serbs and the Serb delegation, and that is that
Westerners need to have access to their region in order to investigate
what happened in Srebrenica and Zepa and in Banja Luka.
He told us that he was in good health. He is very tired. He was
deprived of sleep at least one night during his incarceration. He faced
almost continuous interrogation by the Bosnian Serbs who held him, but
he kept his cool and kept his composure and he said he had some
indications from some phone calls that he had last week that his release
might be imminent.
We first learned of his imminent release early this morning in
Belgrade when our Charge d'Affaires in our Embassy in Belgrade was
informed by the Serbian Ministry of Interior that he was to be released.
I understand that President Milosevic instructed the Serbian
Ministry of Interior to drive to the town of Bijeljina, which is where
he was being held, and to get him out of jail, which they did, and to
drive him back to Belgrade.
At that point, when he reached Belgrade, Larry Butler picked him
up, brought him back to the Embassy where he had his phone call with the
President and the Secretary.
He has been given a release by the Serbian Government. In fact, he
was even given a release form that was signed by the Serbian Ministry of
Interior allowing him to stay in Belgrade if he wishes. There are no
restrictions on his activities in Belgrade, although I do expect that he
will be returning shortly to the United States, and he will be remaining
in Belgrade at least for tonight. He is going to be staying with our
Charge, Mr. Butler. He is going to have some chili and some Tuborg
beer, I understand, before he returns to the United States.
I would just conclude discussion of Mr. Rohde by saying, as we look
back at this incident, it was an outrageous example of dictatorial
behavior, of a lack of rule of law in the region governed by the Bosnian
Serbs. It was an outrageous episode.
But thanks to the efforts of our government and thanks to the
efforts of the United Nations, the United Nations was very helpful to us
over the weekend, he is now released, and I think some thanks should go
to President Milosevic for having intervened with the Bosnian Serbs to
have him released.
As for today, at Dayton, I understand from Carl Bildt, with whom I
talked just a minute ago, that President Tudjman is on his way back to
Dayton. He will be arriving in Dayton late this evening.
Mr. Galbraith and Mr. Stoltenberg, the special negotiators for the
problem of Eastern Slavonia, will be staying in Eastern Slavonia. But
with President Tudjman's return to Dayton, there will be an opportunity
to resume at a very high level the important discussions on Eastern
Slavonia.
Carl Bildt also said that the European Union delegation continues
to focus on two issues principally, constitutional issues and federation
issues, and those are a major focus for the European Union today.
Finally, John Shattuck, our Assistant Secretary of State in charge
of human rights, has reached the Balkans. At Secretary Christopher's
request, he has been in Zagreb and in Sarajevo, and he is now trying to
reach Banja Luka.
His mission is to investigate the persistent and, we think,
credible allegations of massive human rights violations by the Bosnian
Serbs in July around Srebrenica and Zepa, and just in the past month
around Banja Luka and Sanski Most.
If he develops information that we think is pertinent to the War
Crimes Tribunal, then of course he will turn that information -- the
United States will turn that information over to the War Crimes
Tribunal.
He will in his talks with Serbian officials hold them to their
commitments that Western journalists, as well as Western diplomats,.
should have access to the sites where we believe these human rights
violations took place.
He was also going out there to argue the case for the release of
David Rohde. But happily, David Rohde has been released today.
That's a general update on the situation in Bosnia, and, Sid, I'll
be very glad to go back to your questions.
Q Can President Milosevic on this constitutional issue -- I
believe it is part of one of the drafts of the new constitution you all
are discussing -- whether indicted war criminals can be -- can hold
elected office.
Can Milosevic support that, and then not hand them over, and still
get absolute sanctions relief?
MR. BURNS: This question of what happens to indicted war criminals
is going to have to be decided in the Dayton Peace Talks. As we look at
a future agreement, we cannot foresee an agreement that would permit
these two people to stay in power, because we think it is simply
inconceivable that they would continue to hold command positions,
authoritative positions in a government after an agreement was reached
because they are indicted. Any international force in the area would
have the obligation to detain them and to arrest them and turn them over
to the international War Crimes Tribunal.
As for the sanctions question, Sid, that is obviously an issue that
is being discussed at Dayton. But under the ground rules that we have
set down for these talks, I really can't get into what is happening on
that issue, what is being negotiated. We'll just have to wait to see
what kind of agreement is reached on that issue at the end of the talks.
Q Nick, can you foresee an agreement in which these two men
could live in quiet retirement in Pale?
MR. BURNS: As I said before, Norm, the United States has several
objectives as we negotiate our way through the Bosnian morass here in
Dayton. One is to reach a peace agreement. That has to be a very high
goal after four years of war. Because of our leadership, there is a
cease-fire and because of our leadership there are peace talks. And
perhaps with our leadership we'll be successful in helping the parties
to achieve that first objective.
But an equally compelling and important objective is justice. One
of the sordid features of the war has been the persistent abuses of
civilians by the Bosnian Serbs. We think that indicted war criminals --
Mr. Karadzic and General Mladic are indicted war criminals by the United
Nations and should face the international community -- we would not want
to see them be able to live out their years in pleasure and in solitude
without having to face their responsibilities.
Collective punishment is not the answer here. Individual
accountability is the answer. If generals gave orders to slaughter
civilians, they ought to answer in an international court. That is why
the United States led the fight to create the War Crimes Tribunal. It's
why we're the biggest supporter of the Tribunal.
Q Nick, a minute ago you said that if they were there --
Karadzic and Mladic -- that the international peacekeeping force would -
- words to the effect -- have to find them and turn them over.
Earlier you stated, and others in the Administration, have stated
that the international peacekeeping force is there to separate the
forces and would not go hunt them down. Which is the policy?
MR. BURNS: It's certainly not inconsistent. Let me take you back
to the Congressional testimony that Secretary Perry and Secretary
Christopher had a couple of weeks ago.
It's very clear to us, as we think through the mandate for the
military force that NATO will field after a peace agreement is signed,
that the central mission for that force will be to separate the warring
parties and to provide for the territorial integrity of the future
state. They will not be engaged in the kind nation-building that
unfortunately our military forces had to perform in Vietnam and in
Somalia.
But Secretary Perry and Secretary Christopher were also quick to
say -- and we've said since -- that if our forces in the course of
performing their duties of separating the parties came across indicted
war criminals, had encounters with them, then we have an obligation
under international law to arrest them and turn them over to the proper
U.N. authorities. That's an obligation we would take very seriously.
I think that's fully consistent, Charlie, with everything we've
said over the last three or four weeks.
Q Just to follow it up, does that mission of arresting them if
they "came across them" extend to going to look for them if they're
hiding or if they get a report that they're in a village up in the hills
somewhere? Does the mission of a NATO force extend to going after them?
MR. BURNS: I think that the future government of Bosnia-
Herzegovina is going to have primary responsibility for dealing with
this issue.
For your hypothetical situation, Charlie, there are 43 people who
have been indicted by the War Crimes Tribunal. We understand that a
great many more indictments are going to come from the Tribunal in the
weeks to come. So therefore it's going to be up to the government that
takes power, that is formed after a peace agreement is reached, to
really have central responsibility for this.
We can't give our military an enormous number of duties to perform
and expect that they can carry them all out effectively. So they're not
going to have primary responsibility for searching for war criminals.
But if they do encounter them, they'll have an obligation, and they will
arrest them. I think that is fully consistent with what the two
Secretaries said a few weeks back.
Q Nick, speaking of that subject, are there any provisions yet
or thought being given to prevent these 41-or-so Bosnian-indicted war
criminals from going on the international lam, so to speak, ahead of an
agreement, ahead of a peacekeeping force being there to deal with them?
MR. BURNS: It's an interesting question, Steve. I don't know
where they would go. There are a few pariah states, I guess, that are
left in the world where they could perhaps hide, but those pariah states
are very far from Bosnia-Herzegovina.
All of the United Nations members -- in Europe, in Central Europe
and in Eastern Europe, in the former Soviet Union -- could not harbor
them under international law. They would be fully obligated by
international law to detain them and arrest them and not allow them seek
refuge in their country.
While we're on to this, I want to restate a couple of points from
our discussion yesterday. And I'm glad, Roy or Sid, to go into this if
you care to, because there was a very interesting article in the New
York Times this morning about United States obligations to the War
Crimes Tribunal. I think it's fair to say that there is a lot of
unhappiness in the Administration about that article because we think it
is factually inaccurate.
But let me just go through this, and I'll be glad to take questions
on it. The United States is the strongest supporter of the War Crimes
Tribunal. That's not just rhetoric. There were some influential
countries that did not favor the establishment of a War Crimes Tribunal.
The United States successfully argued that there had to be in order to
meet this objective of justice at the end of the war.
We have detailed 23 American Government officials to The Hague to
comprise the vast majority of the staff of the War Crimes Tribunal. We
have provided $12.3 million to the Tribunal. We are the sole, large
financial contributor to that organization.
We are providing, and have provided, thousands of pages of
information to the Tribunal -- information that we have independently
collected on suspected war crimes. We are in constant touch with Judge
Goldstone. He's going to be here next week. He's going to be seen at a
very high level of our government.
If the United States has intelligence information pertaining to
human rights abuses, we will find a way to provide that to the Tribunal.
The Tribunal, and only the Tribunal, can decide who has committed a war
crime, who should be indicted, who should be prosecuted for war crimes.
The United States can use our intelligence resources, as well as our
diplomatic resources, to make sure that the Tribunal has sufficient
information to indict and to convict.
I can assure you that if we have any information, whether it's
open-source information, unclassified information, or intelligence
information that we believe is pertinent to the question of war crimes,
we will find a way to get that to Judge Goldstone. That is a message
that we will communicate to him when he's here next week.
We obviously will have an interest in protecting sources of
information, as we always do, pertaining to the intelligence realm. But
we have an obligation to do this, and we will do it.
Q One of the questions that that raises is, how you define "war
crimes." If the Serb army sends in forces and attacks and conquers a
safe area and then subsequently there are war crimes, there's a question
there: Does the fact that the Serb army from Serbia has helped
constitute information that you would want to supply to Justice
Goldstone?
MR. BURNS: Again, Roy, I think the most important thing to
remember here is that the international community -- the United Nations
-- decided that we would not individually try people suspected of war
crimes -- not individually as countries -- that we would establish one
tribunal to establish a standard for what a war crime is, to collect
information, to indict, and to prosecute. That's a very important fact.
The United States cannot independently make a decision to indict
someone for war crimes. We don't have a legal purview to do that. We
have, in effect, turned that duty over to the War Crimes Tribunal. The
Tribunal must decide what constitutes a war crime. I don't think this
is a terribly difficult business, however.
If you look at some of the incidents that are now being
investigated by the War Crimes Tribunal, the fact that 6,000 to 8,000
men and boys disappeared from Srebrenica and Zepa after the slaughter of
both cities in July, and the way that they were exterminated, the way
that they were incarcerated, obviously, in our view, constitutes a war
crime.
The fact that in Banja Luka, just last month, 100 people were
executed in a cement factory by the Bosnian Serb military, in our mind,
constitutes a war crime. There are certainly, unfortunately, plenty of
examples from 1991 and 1992.
So I don't think the question here -- at least, for those of us
working on it in the government, Roy -- is what constitutes a war crime.
I think the Tribunal has had a fairly broad definition of that issue.
The problem is, can you collect sufficient information to indict
and can you then detain people and arrest them in order to prosecute
them.
Q These crimes take place in the context of military support,
under the protection of military support that has come over a period
from Serbia -- from Yugoslavia.
So does the military support constitute evidence, if you have the
evidence, that you would turn over? Or will you only turn over evidence
of a specific crime, in a very limited context?
Q MR. BURNS: We're going to turn over all the information that
we believe fits into the broad definition of a war crime. But in
addition, and as you know from a letter that has been made public by
Judge Goldstone, he has now requested -- made at least 25 additional
requests of the United States for information. If he requests
information of any nature, we'll look at that request seriously. We'll
provide as much information as we can. I told you yesterday that the
political signals being sent through this government -- from the White
House and from the Seventh Floor, from Secretary Christopher -- are, to
all of us in this building, cooperate with the War Crimes Tribunal.
If Judge Goldstone comes to us and asks for specific information
about secondary support, then if we have that information, we'll provide
it.
As I said today, even if that information is in the intelligence
realm, we'll find a way to provide it.
Q Michael McCurry said yesterday some information has been
withheld from the Tribunal for national security reasons. You're saying
now, a way will be found to --
MR. BURNS: I'm saying a way is going to be found. As we reflect
on this question, George, and reflect on the conversations that we've
all had about this over the last couple of days, it seems to us that we
have a obligation, a moral obligation, and a legal obligation to the War
Crimes Tribunal to help it do its work. If that means that some of the
information that would be considered to be national security information
is pertinent, then we'll find a way to get that information to them.
We will -- and I want to be careful to say this -- we will make
sure that the sources of that information are protected. That is an
obligation that we have, and that is standard practice. But we do have
an interest and obligation to assist the Tribunal in any way that we
can.
Q So, Nick, you're saying now that there were items you did not
turn over because of national security reasons, but a decision was taken
in the last day or so -- perhaps since the New York Times article came
out -- that you will now attempt to turn that information over?
MR. BURNS: No, not exactly, Sid. In essence, I believe that we
have met almost every request. We've tried to meet almost every request
that Judge Goldstone has made of us.
It's true that in a recent communication, he pointed out that there
had been a lag time; there had been delays, in some cases up to several
months, between his request and the provision of the information. He
let our people in The Hague know that there were some requests for
information that were still outstanding. I don't think it is fair to
say that we have consciously or consistently decided that we're not
going to produce this set of information to him.
I think what he has requested is a speedier performance from some
parts of the U.S. Government and on certain questions. I think he would
be the first to say -- and I'm sure he'll be glad to tell you when he's
here next week -- that there has been no country that has consistently
provided more information than the United States.
We're not talking about an abrupt change here. We're simply
talking about clarifying for you what the dimensions of our response
will be. That's a very important clarification.
Q Nick, if you've gone over this, just refer me to it. Why is
Judge Goldstone coming next week, and who requested that he come? He
said he would meet with senior officials. Can you tell us who he will
be meeting with?
MR. BURNS: He's coming because we have very close coordination
with him. He is now facing -- he has already indicted 43 people. We
understand that many more indictments will be coming down the road.
We're his biggest supporter.
John Shattuck and others can provide him, we hope, additional
information that will bolster his case. He's been invited here to have
a series of discussions with us on these issues. He'll be seen at a
very senior level. I don't have any specific announcements to make, but
he'll be seen, certainly, at the Cabinet level and at several different
agencies around town. He's a very respected figure. As you know, he's
a South African jurist. He's done a magnificent job under very
difficult circumstances in creating a new Tribunal with very limited
resources, and he faces a major challenge and we support him in that.
Q The Administration has invited him?
MR. BURNS: We've invited him to come, yes.
Q Was it Secretary Christopher's idea?
MR. BURNS: I think it was probably Assistant Secretary Shattuck's
initiative, but it's fully supported by Secretary Christopher.
Secretary Christopher is well aware of his trip and well aware of
everything we're talking about this morning.
Steve.
Q Will the Secretary have time, before he goes to Japan, to
either see Judge Goldstone or to go to Dayton?
MR. BURNS: Unfortunately, it looks like the Secretary will be in
Japan when Judge Goldstone is here. If that is, in fact, the case, then
I would imagine that Deputy Secretary Talbott and John Shattuck and
others would be meeting with him here at the State Department, but he'll
be having meetings at other agencies here in town.
Q Just to really be clear on all of this, though. He is not
going to be given carte blanche on all information the United States
Government may or may not have about war crimes, as I understand what
you're saying.
You're saying that he would make an attempt to meet all of his
requests but there may be certain pieces of information that still would
not go to him?
MR. BURNS: No, I'm not saying that. I'm saying that -- I don't
think it would be useful for him if we emptied out the archives and all
the computers and just gave him millions of pages of information. He
needs to come to us and tell us what he needs; what kind of information
that would help him build a case against a suspected war criminal.
We're going to be responsive to every one of those requests.
In addition to that, we're volunteering information to him.
What I'm saying today is, if we believe that we have information
that is pertinent to the charge of a war crime, even if that information
is in the intelligence realm, we will find a way to supply it to him.
There is a challenge here, as I said before -- it's worth repeating
-- to protect the sources of information that our intelligence community
has, and we will do that. We think it's possible to do that.
I think Judge Goldstone will find that he will have 100 percent
cooperation from this government.
Q Why yesterday you couldn't give us the same statement you are
giving us now?
MR. BURNS: Because yesterday we got into this Kabuki dance over --
I was asked to say --
Q It's a really tough time for you to try to answer it --
MR. BURNS: It was a very tough time for me yesterday.
Q Today is clear.
MR. BURNS: The questions are much more clear today than they were
yesterday.
But with all due respect -- Roy and I have had a very good dialogue
over the last week. Let me just continue it in one respect.
You had an understandable urge to get me to talk about specific
intelligence information. A lot of the questions yesterday were along
the line, "Can you give us intercepts; can you give us this intelligence
information or that?" As you know, I can't talk about intelligence
information.
But when I reflected upon this overnight, I thought we can
certainly give you a clear definition of the type of information that
will be turned over without getting into the specifics. I will not
answer questions that are specific in nature, and you wouldn't expect me
to do that. You would be disappointed in me if I did that. I think you
would. I think deep down you would.
Q Nick, as along we're going back over yesterday and today,
there's one thing that gets us into the dreaded hypotheticals, but I
want to try and bring it up anyway.
MR. BURNS: Okay, Charlie.
Q You've made it clear that you're pursuing two tracks here --
the political/diplomatic peace process in Dayton and also seeking
justice.
You've now said that you're willing to make available, in one form
or another, sooner or later, any information that would help in these
matters pursuing justice.
If you had information that might bring a negative impact on
Dayton, would you produce that in a timely way to pursue the second
track of justice?
MR. BURNS: It's a hypothetical. As you know, we have an
abhorrence of hypothetical questions here at the State Department, but
let me try to help you, Charlie, because we want to be responsive; we
want to be helpful to you.
The best thing I can do is to quote you something that President
Clinton said recently which is pertinent to your question: "These
indictments are not negotiable. Those accused of war crimes, crimes
against humanity and genocide, must be tried and if found guilty, they
must be held accountable." That's President Clinton's quote.
Let me just say that the Tribunal must be free to act in such a way
that if the evidence leads in any direction, they have a right to go
there and they have the right to follow it through; and they have a
right to expect that the United States will help them do that, if we
have pertinent information that can help, wherever it leads at whatever
time.
We're not protecting anybody here. We have no interest in
protecting anyone as part of this process. We have an interest in
achieving peace and justice. The justice part of that equation is very
important.
Q How do you enforce an agreement with the Bosnian Serbs if
they're going to have their own army, their own justice system --
really, it looks like their own state -- even if they agree to it on
paper? Since NATO is not planning to deploy in their territory, and
Karadzic and Mladic would probably seek refuge there, how do you enforce
that?
MR. BURNS: This is not going to be an easy task, Roy. I think
you've asked a very good question, which presents a challenge to
everybody involved. It may be that these indicted war criminals seek
refuge in places where they can't be easily found.
But just like the war criminals from Nuremberg, the international
community is not going to put a timetable on finding them and
incarcerating them. If it takes a year, if it takes five years, the
international community, led by the United Nations, will persist in the
effort to find them.
Roy, it's not going to be possible for the United States military,
if it deploys, to search high and low for these people and have that as
part of their primary mandate. They've got to be responsible for
separating the forces. That's the best way to ensure the peace. But
all of us will have a responsibility to keep these issues alive, and
that's a very important one.
Q But the question is, isn't there some sanction that will be
applied to, say, whatever state or entity decides to give this kind of
sanctuary?
MR. BURNS: That will be determined by the negotiations at Dayton.
I can't sit here and tell you that it will or will not be included in
the final agreement.
What the United States would like to see in the final agreement is
a written obligation and commitment from all the parties to the peace
agreement, if it is reached, that they will cooperate with the War
Crimes Tribunal. That includes the Serbs; it includes the Bosnian Serbs
as well as the Bosnian Government and the Croatian Government.
There has been a Croatian indicted for war crimes, as well as the
42 Bosnian Serbs.
That will be part of a peace agreement. The United States will
argue very strongly that it's an important feature that should mark the
agreement -- and mark the pattern of international behavior after an
agreement is reached.
Q You're saying it's possible, then, that indicted war
criminals could find refuge in the area of Bosnia that the Serbs
control, and they could sign an agreement; everyone could be happy, but
they could still be there?
MR. BURNS: I'm not saying that they should. I'm not saying that
the government should allow that to happen. I'm just speaking
pragmatically and realistically, that we could find ourselves in a
position -- well, the same position that we're in today. There are 43
people indicted and only one or two have been arrested.
The two leading indicted war criminals are at large and,
unfortunately, are at work, as we saw in Banka Luka and Sanski Most over
the last month.
I think the United States will try to use its influence to make
sure that every party that signs this agreement lives up to the
commitments in those agreements, including the commitments on war
crimes. But, in a realistic sense, we will have to deal with the
situation as it unfolds, and we will persist in trying to find these
people.
Steve.
Q This is not a facetious question either. Do you know if at
any time in recent diplomatic history there has been an attempt to run a
peace negotiation and also an investigation, and perhaps more than
investigation, of war crimes that involve people who are trying to make
peace?
MR. BURNS: I think like everything else pertaining to Bosnia over
the last four years, this is a rather unique situation. We do have
these dual objectives -- peace and justice. They are proceeding
simultaneously. We're equally concerned about both.
I can't really, off the top of my head, find a historical precedent
for you.
We don't see any other alternative, Steve. We don't think it would
be right for us to pursue a diplomatic strategy and negotiations and
completely cast aside the question of who is responsible for the
brutalization of the Bosnian Muslim population over the last four years
and the massacre of tens of thousands of people. We can't cast that
aside. We've got to pursue both as best we can. That's what we're
doing.
Bill, I'll go to you next.
Q You're saying that the U.S. wants all parties not only to
agree that war criminals can't hold office but that they will also agree
to hand them over for trial? Would you expect that to be some sort of
side agreement, or actually in the constitution?
MR. BURNS: I don't know what form it will take, because I can't
foresee what all the annexes to the final peace agreement will be.
But in a general sense, it is a point that we are pushing, a very
important point that we think should be included in some way in the
negotiations.
Bill.
Q This, I think, has a bearing. Mr. Shattuck is going into
harm's way, into the stronghold of these war criminals. Is he going to
be going to the burial sites, doing some digging? Who is going to
protect him?
MR. BURNS: Bill, I think one thing you'll appreciate is that it is
a very difficult environment from a security point of view. That's why
I've decided not to talk about his itinerary. You'll understand why I'm
not doing that.
But his mission is to investigate war crimes. To do that, you've
got to go to the sites. I won't be talking about where he's been and
what he has done until after he's done it.
Q Will he be protected?
MR. BURNS: We're obviously taking measures to protect him, given
everything that's happened over the last couple of weeks in that region.
Yes, Andre.
Q Can you expand a little bit on Ambassador Blot's dinner with
Milosevic? And more precisely, whether, as a result of your daily
discussions both on the French and the American side with the Serbs, the
fate of the two French pilots is clearer now? Is this thing moving in
the right direction?
MR. BURNS: Ambassador Jacques Blot hosted a dinner at a French
restaurant in Dayton last night for Milosevic, Izetbegovic, Silajdzic,
Sacirbey, Milutinovic, Holbrooke, Bildt -- the whole crowd there at
Dayton.
I understand from Carl Bildt that the atmosphere was good.
Certainly, the issue of the French pilots has been a consistent
issue for France as well as for the United States -- as well as for
France and other allies at the Dayton talks.
I understand from Dick Holbrooke that we have raised the issue of
the French pilots at every opportunity with the Serbian delegation and
with the Bosnian Serbs who are present in Dayton.
Unfortunately, Andre, I can't illuminate this issue for you any
further than I have. I think the French Government has to speak to
this. But we don't know what happened to these two French pilots who
were shot down in September. We hope very much they are alive.
If they are alive, the Bosnian Serbs have an obligation to turn
them over to France at the soonest opportunity.
Q On the French question -- another aspect of it -- can you say
what the French and British position is vis-a-vis the War Crimes
Tribunal, and how vigorously they think that option should be pursued?
As I understand it, they have never been very enthusiastic about it.
MR. BURNS: I think I'll leave the honor of answering that question
up to my counterparts in Paris and London.
Q But if you're sending them conflicting signals in Dayton, if
you guys are telling them one thing and the French and the British are
telling them something else --
MR. BURNS: I'm not saying that, Sid. I'm not saying any
conflicting signals are sent. I'm not the Spokesman for the Government
of France nor the Government of the United Kingdom. I speak for the
United States, and I can tell you what our position is.
To go to your question -- I'll try to be helpful here. The Bosnian
Serbs cannot be under the impression that there is weak international
support for the War Crimes Tribunal. What they're hearing from the
greatest power at those talks, and a power that has significant
influence to affect events in the Balkans -- the United States -- is
that this is a bottom-line issue for us; that we are going to support
this Tribunal through thick and thin, and that we're going to do it
consistently and effectively.
If they think they can harbor war criminals, if they think we're
going to forgot about this or we're going to negotiate it away as part
of the Dayton talks, they're wrong. These are non-negotiable issues,
from a U.S. viewpoint, at Dayton.
Q What exactly is the bottom-line issue? There's two or three.
MR. BURNS: The bottom-line issue is that the international
community will pursue the question of war crimes, including indictments
and prosecutions. The United States Government will support the
Tribunal in that effort.
Q I don't think there's any question that everyone is going to
support it.
MR. BURNS: So therefore no mixed signals.
Q Yeah. But the question is how it's approached in the
documents or in the talks. Is the bottom-line position that the parties
agree to this or we're out?
MR. BURNS: Again, following the ground rules that we established
here, I'm not going to get drawn into a discussion of what specifically
is being discussed and negotiated at Dayton. That will all become clear
at some point in the future.
Q Why can't you just say it's a bottom-line issue and --
MR. BURNS: It is a bottom-line issue.
Q It isn't clear to me what the bottom-line issue is.
MR. BURNS: Sid, you asked a question of whether or not there would
be conflicting signals coming from the West, the NATO allies, on the
question of human rights abuses. I think not. Because the strongest
and the largest power in that equation, and the host of the peace talks,
is publicly saying today and has said for the last week, this is an
important bottom-line issue. That's a very clear signal that's been
sent to Belgrade and to Pale.
Q Nick, I'm sorry to drag this out. I don't think anybody is
against punishing people who have killed other people under these
circumstances. You're saying it's a bottom-line issue, and it's not
clear to me what the bottom-line issue is?
MR. BURNS: Let's refer back to this entire briefing and
yesterday's briefing. I'll just try to summarize it and perhaps we can
leave this and go on to Panchen Lama and other subjects.
Q There's a reason we keep coming back to it, Nick.
MR. BURNS: Let me just try to answer your question, Sid. I think
I've been very clear and very forthcoming in saying that there is
unqualified, uncontestable, strong support from the United States for
the issue of how to deal with war crimes. It's on the table at Dayton.
The United States put it on the table at Dayton last Wednesday and
Thursday. We believe it should be part of a final peace agreement.
We believe these people should be hunted down and prosecuted and
jailed. I don't know what could be clearer than that.
Q But do you think that should be part of the agreement, that
we think they should be hunted down, prosecuted, and jailed --
MR. BURNS: Sid, you want me to describe the details of an
agreement that does not yet exist. All I can tell you is that the
United States position at these talks is that the issue of human rights
and commitments to work with the War Crimes Tribunal should be part of a
final agreement. We've said that consistently. We've not changed our
view.
But if you ask, "What conditions will be attached to that, what
will the language be?" I can't answer that because I'm not writing the
final peace agreement. That's being done in privacy at Dayton.
When the peace agreement is reached, you'll see it there.
Q Can I just ask you on Banja Luka, that area. A couple of
weeks ago you gave us this fairly detailed rundown. At that point,
there was some 2,000 to 3,000 men missing. Any additional information
on that since there?
MR. BURNS: Unfortunately not. There was a prisoner exchange in
Sanski Most last week. I think 324 Bosnian men and teenage boys were
released as part of that. Some of those people were refugees from Banja
Luka. They were forced from their homes. They were taken captive by
the Bosnian Serbs, and they were forced into labor for the Bosnian Serb
military.
We don't know what happened to many of the husbands and brothers of
the women who made it to Sanski Most and Zenica. We don't know if they
were executed, as were the people who fell after the rape of Srebrenica
and Zepa. We don't know if they have been conscripted. We don't know
if they have been engaged in forced labor, but we're looking for them.
We don't even have a very good, explicit sense of how many of them
there are. But all of the refugees at Zenica have consistently told the
International Committee of the Red Cross and the United States
Government that their husbands and brothers are missing.
These people were driven from their homes and now they're missing.
We have an obligation to help find them. That's why John Shattuck was
sent by Secretary Christopher to the region.
Q The constitution that's under discussion....Picking up where
Steve left off just now....It's kind of unclear to me how this new state
of Bosnia is going to operate. Because I gather that the constitution
provides for two armies in one state, which I don't think exists in any
effective way anywhere on earth.
I know that Mr. Holbrooke has said again and again that this is not
a partition of Bosnia. Two armies in one state implies a partition.
Secondly, I gather that the draft of the constitution that's been
reported already by the Times and ABC News doesn't provide for any
central control of the external borders. It leaves that to the
entities. So it looks like in every way it is actually preparing for
partition.
Can you explain how this is not going to be a partition?
MR. BURNS: I certainly don't want to comment on leaked documents,
so I won't do that. I can't comment on the negotiations for the
constitution because that's off the boards here.
I'll take you back to September when there was an agreement among
the parties on draft constitutional principles that provided for a
unitary state. It provided for a presidency, a high court, and a
parliament. It was quite specific in talking about the distribution of
power in that country. It was quite specific that we're talking about
one country, one seat at the United Nations -- one country with two
groups living in that country and a certain degree of autonomy within
that structure.
But the details of that, Roy, are at the very heart of the
negotiations at Dayton. Of course, you know I can't go into those.
Q David Owen, who has had some experience with this whole set
of negotiations and who knows, I think, what's at stake here in Dayton,
said the other day that it is a partition, basically, and he said "And a
pure ethnic partition." He said, "All the worse for that, but at least
it will bring peace."
MR. BURNS: He's free to say what he wants to say. I would just
note that we've come a long way since July; come a long way since Mr.
Owen stopped being a full-time negotiator. Since he did, the United
States has led the way towards a diplomatic triumph. A cease-fire has
held throughout Bosnia-Herzegovina. The stranglehold on Sarajevo has
been lifted, and the people of Sarajevo are going to have a much better
winter, although under very difficult conditions, than they have of any
winter in the past four years.
We are now on the verge, we hope, of a peace agreement if these
talks succeed. I think we've come a long way.
Q (Inaudible) a partition?
MR. BURNS: We are not on the verge of partition. We hope that the
parties will agree to the creation of a single state.
What I'd like to propose is that -- I'm glad to come back to
Bosnia, but I know there are some other questions out there today.
Let's deal with those. Roy, and others, if you're interested in Bosnia,
we can come back to them.
[...]
Q Can we come back to Bosnia for one moment? You just now
said, if I read my notes correctly, we are now on the verge of a peace
agreement.
MR. BURNS: Well, wait a minute, Roy. I mean not today and
probably not tomorrow.
Q You just said it.
MR. BURNS: No. I was speaking -- I think I was speaking -- I was
speaking in response to your question about Mr. Owen --
Q Yes.
MR. BURNS: -- and his remarks. If you look back at the period
since the United States engaged itself as the leader of the peace
process, July-August, there have been a number of positive things that
have happened. There is a cease-fire. There are peace talks. And
there is a possibility of a peace agreement, and we are on the verge of
that because we have now started the peace talks in Dayton.
It is not at all assured that the peace talks are going to succeed.
It is not at all sure that we are going to have peace. We are certainly
on the verge, we hope, of concluding these negotiations successfully.
But there is much, much that needs to be done over the course of the
next days or weeks at Dayton to get there.
Q Is Christopher planning to go to Dayton any time soon?
MR. BURNS: Secretary Christopher has said consistently that if it
is useful for him to go to Dayton, if that makes sense to the
negotiations, he will go there. I can tell you, he has no specific
plans now to do that.
Q Nick, Reuters had a story yesterday that said the talks will
be successfully wrapped up in a week. Would you care to give us some
guidance on that one?
MR. BURNS: I wouldn't agree with that. I can't confirm it. We
don't know when the talks will be wrapped up either successfully or
negatively. We don't know when the parties are going to make the
fundamental compromises that need to be made, and we are going to stay
there until they have an agreement.
Q Can you tell us how long you expect President Tudjman to be
there this time, or is that confidential?
MR. BURNS: I don't think it is confidential. I just don't think
we know at this point. He is returning tonight. We expect at least he
will be there for a couple of days. As to his intentions to stay for
the duration, I just don't know.
Q Do you expect any breakthroughs in Dayton?
MR. BURNS: I can't point to major breakthroughs. I can point to
the limited success we had on the Federation last week in bringing
Denares (?) of Mostar and the EU Administrator to Dayton, to the return
of 600 refugee families to their homes, people who had been displaced
from the war.
But other than that, we haven't announced any breakthroughs, and
when there is a breakthrough, I think you will know about it.
Q Could we (inaudible) ten days or something, is it possible to
get Secretary Holbrooke in here later this week at all?
MR. BURNS: It is not possible. He is going to remain at Dayton.
Q He'll stay there --
MR. BURNS: He had a good conversation with the President and with
the Secretary today by phone. He briefed them on the status of the
talks. You know, he is the host of the talks. He is in meetings 22-23
hours a day, knowing Holbrooke. He is getting very little sleep. He is
working hard. He is not going to leave. He is not going to come back
and say anything on the record.
Q Thank you.
MR. BURNS: Thank you.
(The briefing concluded at 2:15 p.m.)
END
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