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The Washington Times

*       BOOKS: 'First Do No Harm'


Clear-eyed analysis of 'Harm' done by Balkan war


By  <http://www.washingtontimes.com/staff/doug-bandow/> Doug Bandow |
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 

FIRST DO NO HARM: HUMANITARIAN INTERVENTION AND THE DESTRUCTION OF
YUGOSLAVIA
By David N. Gibbs
Vanderbilt University Press, $27.95, 327 pages
REVIEWED BY DOUG BANDOW

Even as they criticized the George W. Bush administration for invading Iraq,
leading liberals defended Clinton administration war-making in the Balkans.
Sharply challenging this positive assessment is David Gibbs of the
University of Arizona. A man of the left, Mr. Gibbs nonetheless disputes the
nostrums of so-called humanitarian intervention. His assertions are
contentious but well-supported. Attacking Serbia turned out to be neither
humanitarian nor prudent. 

Perhaps Mr. Gibbs' most controversial assertion is that "the containment of
allies remained a major US objective" behind Washington's Balkan policy. Mr.
Gibbs too quickly dismisses the professed humanitarian objectives of allied
officials — Secretary of State Madeleine K. Albright may really have seen
Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic as Hitler reincarnated. Nevertheless,
Mr. Gibbs offers an important antidote to the self-serving propaganda
emanating from Washington and allied capitals. 

Mr. Gibbs' most important success is demonstrating the enormous complexity
of the multiple Balkan conflicts. The bloody disintegration of Yugoslavia
involved a catastrophic mix of murderous local factions, brutal regional
players and foolish Western decisions. Shamefully and tragically, U.S.
policy consistently delayed peace and intensified conflict. 

"First Do No Harm" highlights the many inconvenient truths of the Balkan
imbroglio. For instance, Berlin lit the fuse for the Yugoslav explosion by
backing Croatian and Slovenian independence without insisting upon
protections for ethnic minorities — most importantly Croatian Serbs. Writes
Mr. Gibbs: "In retrospect, Germany's actions contained a heavy element of
miscalculation and showed a tendency to underestimate the destructive
consequences that the intervention might have." 

Even more shocking was Washington's coldblooded and counterproductive
Realpolitik strategy of targeting only the Serbs. Notes Mr. Gibbs: "Franjo
Tudjman was just as racist and aggressive as Milosevic; the persecution of
ethnic Serbs in Croatia was just as morally objectionable as the
Serb-perpetrated atrocities in Kosovo." Little better were the Bosnian
Muslims. Mr. Gibbs explains: "It is true that the Muslim soldiers engaged in
significantly fewer atrocities than did their Serb counterparts, but this
was because the Muslims had inferior weapons, not because of any basic moral
difference between the two sides." 

Whether operating from a cynical desire to ensure America's dominant role or
a naive hope to forge a better settlement, Washington torpedoed proposed
settlements. In early-1992, European mediation led to the Lisbon agreement,
an untidy compromise among Croats, Muslims and Serbs in Bosnia. At
Washington's instigation, the Croats and Muslims reneged "and full-scale war
commenced within two weeks," Mr. Gibbs writes. Peaceful implementation was
never assured, but had the agreement held, years of conflict — and tens of
thousands of deaths — would have been avoided. 

The Clinton administration followed suit when it blocked the so-called
Vance-Owen plan. Notes Mr. Gibbs: "The US role was especially unfortunate,
since a full peace accord might have been feasible at this point." 

Clinton officials also encouraged Operation Storm, Croatia's brutal assault
on the Krajina Serbs. Promoting ethnic cleansing made a mockery of the
Clinton administration's humanitarian pretensions. Notes Mr. Gibbs: "The
Croatian atrocities embarrassed the United States, and some figures sought
to distance themselves from the whole operation, at least in public."
Others, however, rationalized Croatian atrocities. 

Mr. Gibbs never sugarcoats Serbian misbehavior. But here, too, there was "an
element of moral complexity," he explains. Regarding Kosovo, the tendency
was to emphasize Serbian brutality, but "such perspectives ignore the
history of Albanian provocations against Serbs that preceded the repression
of 1989. The imposition of martial law followed years of oppression
orchestrated primarily by the Albanians, with Serbs as victims," he
explains. 

Moreover, the Kosovo Liberation Army engaged in brutal attacks designed to
provoke Serbian retaliation. U.S. and European officials even termed the KLA
a "terrorist organization" — until the Clinton administration decided to
dismember Serbia. As part of its strategy, Washington attempted to impose an
agreement at the conference in Rambouillet, France, which would have treated
all of Serbia as a conquered nation. Europeans admitted that the agreement
was designed for failure; Henry Kissinger called it "a terrible diplomatic
document that should never have been presented in that form." 

Did Rambouillet result from incompetence or the desire to create a pretext
for war? Mr. Gibbs leans toward the latter. In either case, Washington again
hindered the peaceful resolution of a Balkan conflict. 

The Clinton administration assumed that a short bombing campaign would force
Serbian acquiescence. The Milosevic government instead responded by
expelling hundreds of thousands of ethnic Albanians — a war crime, but one
for which the administration shared responsibility. Once the fighting
concluded, allied forces did little to stop ethnic Albanian brutality, which
resulted in hundreds of deaths and the expulsion of a quarter million Serbs
and other religious and ethnic minorities. 

Mr. Gibbs' conclusions undoubtedly will provoke sharp disagreement, but
"First Do No Harm" is a tour de force. He convincingly debunks Washington's
claim of humanitarian intervention: 

"It ignores the fact that the Western states helped provoke the war in 1991.
And the US role in repeatedly blocking peace agreements that might have
ended atrocities without military intervention seems inconsistent with any
humanitarian motivation. These actions were certainly helpful in affirming
the hegemonic role of the United States, and thus in advancing US interests.
But they cannot be defended on moral grounds." 

Mr. Gibbs concludes his invaluable book with a pessimistic assessment of
humanitarian intervention more broadly. Look at Afghanistan, Haiti, Iraq,
Somalia and the Balkans. "On what grounds should we assume that intervention
will improve humanitarian conditions in the target country, rather than
exacerbate them?" he asks. Washington needs to answer that question before
undertaking another war allegedly on humanitarian grounds. 

• Doug Bandow is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute. A former special
assistant to President Reagan, he is the author of several books, including
"Foreign Follies: America's New Global Empire" (Xulon Press).

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