Serbophobia Obscures the Facts


"Bosnian Serbs were concerned with protecting the Serbs, not killing the 
Muslims or Croats", Phillip Corwin


Phillip Corwin: Serbophobia Prevents Reaching the Truth


Interview with <http://www.jungewelt.de/2008/07-31/059.php>  Phillip Corwin by 
Cathrin Schütz, Junge Welt

American Phillip Corwin was the highest UN official in Bosnia from spring to 
summer of 1995, serving as Civil Affairs Coordinator and Delegate of the 
Special Representative for the UN Secretary General. Previously, from 1994 to 
the spring of 1995 he held the same office for the region of Eastern Slavonia 
in Croatia. Duke University Press published his memoirs: Dubious 
<http://www.dukeupress.edu/books.php3?isbn=978-0-8223-2126-2>  mandates - A 
Memoir of the UN in Bosnia, Summer 1995.

Q: Richard Holbrooke, Paddy Ashdown and many other Western representatives who 
were involved in the Yugoslav tragedy, unanimously assessed the arrest of 
Radovan Karadzic's as the capture of one of the most brutal war criminals of 
our time. What is your opinion?

PC: Holbrooke and Ashdown used the wars in former Yugoslavia to build their 
careers. Their phrases like "one of the most brutal" and "good Nazi" -- that's 
how Holbrooke characterized Dr. Karadzic just now in the Spiegel interview -- 
remind us of their terrible bias and the severe harm that they caused as 
so-called diplomats. They foment the Serbophobia even now, making a fair 
process against Dr. Karadzic in The Hague impossible.

 

Q: What do you expect from the trial of the former president of Republika 
Srpska in Bosnia before the ad hoc tribunal in The Hague?

PC: In any criminal process the question of the intent is of central 
importance. Based on my personal contacts with Bosnian Serbs, including with 
Dr. Karadzic, I can only say that I am convinced the issue with Bosnian Serbs 
was to protect the Serbs, not to kill Muslims or Croats. Incidentally, the 
Gypsies allied with the Serbs -- they probably still remember all too well the 
treatment they were given during the Second World War by the "good Nazis" on 
the Croat and Muslim side. The Serbs were never threatened by the Gypsies and 
vice versa, the Serbs never undertook anything against the Gypsies. As always 
in the Hague, Dr. Karadzic can't expect a fair trial. He will be accused of 
participating in a 'conspiracy' and they will blame him for the deeds of 
soldiers in the field, whom he didn't know and to whom he never issued any 
orders.


Srebrenica Takeover: 700 Muslims Killed at Worst


Q: One of the main charges is Karadzic's alleged responsibility for the 
genocide of 8,000 Muslim males from Srebrenica. At the time Srebrenica was 
taken over by the Bosnian Serb Army in July 1995 you were the highest civilian 
official of the UN in Bosnia. What really happened?

PC: What happened on July 11 1995 in Srebrenica is part of a greater tragedy 
and cannot and must not be taken out of the context. Those who do are clearly 
doing it with intention to twist things to the detriment of one of the warring 
parties. What happened in Srebrenica was not a single massacre Serbs committed 
against the Muslims, but a series of bloody attacks and counterattacks during 
three years and escalating in 1995. The number of Muslims killed most probably 
was not higher than the number of the Serbs killed in the region during the 
previous years in the assaults of the Bosnian Muslim war commander Naser Oric. 
The number of missing Bosnian Muslims is also exaggerated. All this shows that 
the official reports are of purely political nature.

In May 1995, two months before the last battle for Srebrenica, the Croat army 
led the Operation Lightning in which 90 percent of the Serbs who lived in 
western Slavonia were expelled, i.e. they conducted the ethnic cleansing. A 
month after Srebrenica, 200,000 Serbs were expelled from their ancestral land 
in Krajina region [also in Croatia]. The international community remained 
silent in both cases! Srebrenica must be viewed in the context of events. If 
there really was a massacre -- and it seems realistic to speak about 700 
victims -- then this is a war crime and the perpetrators must be held 
accountable. But the difference between the 700 and the commonly referred to 
8,000 is not numerical -- it is political.

Recommended: Don't 
<http://www.newstatesman.com/europe/2008/08/pilger-kosovo-war-nato-serbs>  
forget what happened in Yugoslavia, by John Pilger (NewStatesman.com)

http://byzantinesacredart.com/blog/2008/08/corwin-interview.html

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