http://www.time.com/time/world/printout/0,8816,166340,00.html

Tuesday, Jul. 03, 2001
Milosevic Throws Down the Gauntlet
The Serb strongman's snarling defiance hints at the political problems
posed by his trial 
BY TONY KARON

Even in the dock, Slobodan Milosevic is going to be a headache for world
leaders. The deposed Serb strongman marked his first appearance before
an international tribunal in The Hague - and the first-ever
international indictment for war crimes of a former head of state - with
predictable defiance. He snarled at the judge and challenged the right
of the U.N.-mandated court to try him, insisting that the proceedings
were simply a propaganda exercise to rationalize what he termed "war
crimes" by NATO against Yugoslavia. Of course, such blather was never
going to shake the conviction of the international community that had
established the court precisely so that the men and women responsible
for the Balkan bloodletting of the 1990s would be personally held to
account. Back home in Yugoslavia, though, Milosevic's antics may yet
strike a chord.

Although a majority of Serbs are happy to be rid of the man who authored
so much of their misery, they have decidedly mixed feelings towards the
International Criminal Tribunal and most would condemn NATO's bombing of
Yugoslavia. President Vojislav Kostunica, for example, makes no secret
of the fact that he believes the tribunal is biased against Serbs, and
had insisted that Milosevic be first processed by the Yugoslav judiciary
before being extradited. It is these sentiments that the former
strongman was trying to tap when he appeared in court Tuesday,
suggesting that the trial may yet become a rallying point for
nationalist Serbs and cause political problems at home for the
post-Milosevic leadership.

Catharsis and discomfort

Then again, such problems may be symptomatic of the widespread denial
that persists among Serbs over some of the crimes committed in their
name in Bosnia, Croatia and Kosovo, and the trial - together with the
recent discovery of mass graves inside Serbia containing bodies moved
from Kosovo, and an increasing willingness of witnesses to come forward
- could also prove cathartic.

Today's Serb leaders, however, aren't the only politicians who are a
little uncomfortable with the proceedings unfolding in The Hague. A
number of Western leaders had to deal with the strongman over the past
decade, reaching deals and accommodations in efforts to stabilize the
increasingly imperfect world of the simmering Balkans. Richard
Holbrooke, Lords Carrington and Owen and other senior Western officials
spent hours behind closed doors on Milosevic's sofa without even the
presence of translators (the strongman had been a banker before he
became president, and prides himself on his command of English). His
performance on Tuesday suggests he plans to do his best to turn his
trial into a political tribunal of his nemeses, and he'll almost
certainly do his utmost to embarrass the Western powers who at different
points in the '90s treated him variously as the guarantor of Balkan
stability and the fount of Balkan instability.

But the discomfort engendered by the Milosevic trial goes far deeper
than the possibility of exposing Western prevarication as the Balkans
unraveled. The very precedent of empowering an international judiciary
to go after those accused of war crimes has many in the corridors of
power alarmed. Washington is opposed to the creation of a permanent
tribunal under U.N. auspices for just such purposes, for fear that such
an institution could be turned against the world's only superpower.
Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger has been even more direct,
calling for limits on "universal jurisdiction" prosecutions. Kissinger,
of course, has some personal cause for concern - a French judge recently
tried (unsuccessfully) to interrogate him over Washington's relationship
to human rights abuses in Latin America during his tenure as President
Nixon's National Security Adviser, and others have mooted indicting him
over the bombing of Cambodia. But his concerns are more generally
related to the transaction of geopolitics.

Destabilizing geopolitics?

Human rights law has never been at the center of the conduct of foreign
affairs, and Kissinger and others believe it could have a destabilizing
effect. For example, there are efforts currently underway in Belgian
courts to indict Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon over the 1982
massacre of Palestinian refugees at the Sabra and Shatila camps in
Beirut - for which a 1983 Israeli government inquiry found Sharon
"indirectly responsible." The Israelis may dismiss this as a propaganda
exercise, but if the rules of immunity and cross-border prosecution
begin to change, such endeavors could complicate efforts to mediate
conflicts, critics argue.

Like the earlier attempts to prosecute former Chilean dictator General
Augusto Pinochet, the Milosevic trial further erodes a time-honored
tradition of peacefully easing dictators out of power by offering them
comfortable retirement on the French Riviera. Would Pinochet or Haiti's
"Baby Doc" Duvalier have handed over power if all they had to look
forward to was court and prison? Unlikely. But advocates of
justice-without-borders and geopolitical imperatives counter by asking
whether the prospect of trial and punishment might not have restrained
their behavior while in power. As complicated as the precedent set by
Milosevic's trial may be in the present, its most fervent advocates see
it as an investment in the future - by sounding a warning that crimes
against humanity will have consequences, no matter how powerful their
perpetrators.




                                    Serbian News Network - SNN

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