Carl Bildt denies over half the Srebrenica massacre

Author: Marko Attila Hoare
Uploaded: Sunday, 16 August, 2009

Caustic comment on the inaccuracies and double standards that seem to
characterize the Swedish foreign minister's views on events and issues in
the successor states of the former Yugoslavia

In his memoirs of the Bosnian war, Carl Bildt, the foreign minister of
Sweden – which took over the EU presidency on 1 July – has this to say about
the Srebrenica massacre:

‘In five days of massacres, Mladic had arranged for the methodical execution
of more than three thousand men who had stayed behind and become prisoners
of war. And probably more than four thousand people had lost their lives in
a week of brutal ambushes and fighting in the forests, by the roadside and
in the valleys between Srebrenica and the Tuzla district, as the column was
trying to reach safety.’ (Carl Bildt, Peace Journey: The struggle for peace
in Bosnia, Weidenfeld and Nicolson, London, 1998, p. 66 – all subsequent
page references are to Bildt’s book).

The Srebrenica massacre, an act of genocide against the civilian population
of Srebrenica that claimed the lives of approximately eight thousand
victims, including at least five hundred children under the age of eighteen,
has therefore been reduced by Bildt to ‘more than three thousand’, all of
them ‘prisoners of war’, while four thousand of the victims are portrayed as
battlefield deaths. This would be equivalent to claiming that only two and a
quarter million Jewish ‘prisoners of war’ had perished in the Holocaust,
while the rest of the six million had been killed in battle.

This was not a casual slip on Bildt’s part. At the time of the Srebrenica
massacre, Bildt was the EU’s special envoy to the former Yugoslavia. His
massive downplaying of the Serb genocide reflects the EU policy of the time,
which was to collaborate with Slobodan Milosevic’s Serbia and with Radovan
Karadzic’s Bosnian Serb extremists, and to appease their expansionism.
Unlike the US, the EU states staunchly supported the international arms
embargo against Bosnia, which prevented the country from defending itself
from Serb aggression.

In his memoirs, Bildt’s chapter on July 1995, the month when the Srebrenica
massacre occurred, is entitled ‘Success and failure: July 1995'. He believes
that when describing his record as EU peace mediator in Bosnia for the
period of the Srebrenica massacre, the word ’success’ should appropriately
be put before the word ‘failure’. Some might feel that using the word
’success’ in relation to EU policy that presided over a genocidal massacre
of eight thousand people was just a wee bit inappropriate. But not Bildt,
who seems quite proud of his record.

Following the Serb conquest of Srebrenica, Bildt records how he attempted in
London on 21 July 1995 to dissuade the Western states from intervening
militarily to defend a second Bosnian enclave that was being threatened with
a similar fate:

‘[British foreign secretary Malcolm] Rifkind was a little taken aback when I
started his day by saying that Gorazde was scarcely threatened, and even if
this was the case, I did not believe it could be defended by air strikes. We
had to focus on getting the political process going. If we left London with
a bombing strategy but without a political strategy, we would almost
certainly be faced with even more acts of war and suffering. But sooner or
later, we would be forced to return to the political track in any case.
Bombing strategies were all very well, but we should not bomb our political
opportunities to smithereens.’ (p. 67).

When Serb forces based in Serb-occupied Croatia (so-called ‘Krajina’)
attacked the Bihac enclave in north-western Bosnia that same month,
threatening to overrun it and enact another massacre on the model of
Srebrenica, Croatia – which had signed a military agreement with Bosnia on
the 22nd for the defence of Bihac – responded in August with a full-scale
military offensive (’Operation Storm’) against the Krajina area. According
to his memoirs, Bildt made no effort whatsoever to deter the Serb attack on
Bihac – which he barely acknowledges even occurred – but instead attempted
to halt the Croatian counter-offensive. As Bildt records,

‘My public statement was clear: The Croatian offensive against areas
inhabited by Serbs must be condemned in the strongest possible terms. This
attack is occurring after negotiations have commenced, and when the Serbs
are clearly willing to make substantial concessions on both economic and
political matters. This will cast a long shadow over Croatia for many years
to come. The shelling of the civilian population which is now being reported
is particularly serious. It should be recalled that Martic, the ‘president
of Krajina’, was charged with war crimes after the Serb rocket attack on
Zagreb in May. It is difficult to see any difference between this and the
bombardment of Knin, for which President Tudjman must be held responsible.‘
(p. 75).

In other words, the same Bildt who had made no such threat against the
leaders of Serbia and the Bosnian Serbs when they were attacking Srebrenica,
nor when they attacked Bihac, was now threatening the Croatian president
with a war-crimes indictment for launching a counter-offensive against the
Serb forces; a counter-offensive made, moreover, on the basis of an
agreement with Bosnia-Hercegovina’s legitimate government for the purposes
of defending part of its population from conquest and genocide. Bildt
described the Serb-occupied areas of Croatia – defined as ’occupied’ by the
UN General Assembly – as ‘areas inhabited by Serbs’, forgetting that these
areas had had a substantial Croat population before being ethnically
cleansed by the Serb forces in 1991. He found it ‘difficult to see any
difference’ between the Krajina Serb extremists’ wholly gratuitous act of
civilian terrorism against Zagreb’s civilians in May 1995 and the legitimate
Croatian government’s bombardment of Knin, made in the course of a military
offensive against the same Serb extremists who were using Croatia’s
territory to attack the territory of a neighbouring state, with the likely
aim of perpetrating an act of genocide.

We can compare the way in which Bildt attempted to halt the Croatian
offensive against Krajina with the way he had responded to the previous
month’s Serb offensive against Srebrenica:

‘I had no way of knowing who was responsible for what was happening around
Srebrenica, but it was hard to imagine that Milosevic, at any rate, was
unable to influence the course of events. Before going to Geneva that
afternoon, I therefore sent a clear letter of warning to Milosevic. There
was a clear risk, I wrote, that our talks would be completely overshadowed
by what was happening around Srebrenica. The entire situation could take a
turn for the worse. If the enclave were attacked and overrun, this would be
a very serious provocation which might well lead to an escalation of
hostilities throughout much of Bosnia. I thus urged him to do everything in
his power to prevent this.’ (p. 56).

So whereas Bildt threatened Tudjman with a war-crimes indictment – a threat
he was wholly unauthorised to make – he threatened Milosevic with the
possibility that ‘our talks would be completely overshadowed’ !

Bildt goes on to describe how, at the time of Operation Storm, he told the
press:

‘I said it was regrettable that the attack meant that Croatia had chosen
war, not peace, and said that I assumed that The Hague Tribunal would
examine the question of the shellfire against Knin sooner or later, in the
same way that it had considered the question of responsibility for the
missile attacks on Zagreb.’ (p. 77).

Bildt did not accuse the Serb leaders who had just conquered Srebrenica and
Zepa, and who were now trying to conquer Bihac, of ‘choosing war, not
peace’; nor did he threaten them with indictment for war crimes. Rather, his
threats were directed solely against Croatia. He ends his chapter on the
Croatian offensive against Krajina with the following complaint:

‘For me, the conclusion from Srebrenica was not that we should blind
ourselves to atrocities committed by others, but that we had to react
strongly and clearly against all atrocities. In November 1995, The Hague
Tribunal indicted Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic for war crimes committed
in and around Srebrenica. However, as this book goes to print, the Tribunal
has so far not considered anyone responsible for the massive and brutal
ethnic cleansing of the Krajinas in August 1995.’ (p. 80)

Bildt, in pointing out that the Hague Tribunal indicted Karadzic and Mladic
over Srebrenica, omits to mention that he did not call for such indictments
at the time, in contrast to his call for an indictment against Tudjman over
Operation Storm – and this despite his claim that his ’conclusion from
Srebrenica’ was that ‘we had to react strongly and clearly against all
atrocities’. He does not complain that ‘as this book goes to print’, neither
Milosevic or anyone else from Serbia’s leadership had been indicted for
conquering and ethnically cleansing the Krajina region of Croatia in the
first place.

Bildt was, in other words, an arch-appeaser, who actively opposed every
attempt to resist the Serb forces militarily, whether by the international
community or by Croatia. He denies over half the Srebrenica massacre, and
describes its child and other civilian victims as having been ‘prisoners of
war’. He describes the month in which the Srebrenica massacre occurred as a
month of ’success and failure’. Following the fall of Srebrenica, he
attempted to block NATO air-strikes to defend Gorazde. He tried to deter the
Croatian offensive against Krajina by threatening Tudjman, but made no
equivalent threat to deter the Serb assault on Srebrenica. He called for
Tudjman to be indicted for war-crimes, but not for Karadzic, Mladic or
Milosevic to be indicted. He complained in 1998 that Tudjman had not been
indicted, but he did not complain that Milosevic had not been indicted.

Some things never change. On behalf of Sweden’s EU presidency, Bildt has
claimed that ‘Serbia is fully cooperating with the Hague Tribunal’. He
pledged that ‘Sweden would take a pragmatic stand on the Kosovo issue,
taking into account the fact that several EU member-states had not
recognized the independence of Kosovo.’ Also: ‘We want to liberalize the
visa regime with Serbia, but not Kosovo, as a dialogue on visa
liberalization is being conducted with Serbia, not Kosovo’.

In other words, Bildt is saying that the policy of Sweden’s EU presidency
will be: ‘Stuff Mladic’s Bosniak victims. Stuff the relatives of the people
killed by him at Srebrenica, who still want him brought to justice. Stuff
Kosovo and its people. I’m going to go on appeasing Belgrade, just as I did
in 1995.’

No doubt, with Sweden at the helm of the EU, we can look forward to another
glorious episode in the illustrious history of this heroic institution.

Update: Daniel of the Srebrenica Genocide Blog has posted a refutation of
Bildt’s Srebrenica revisionism in full, which I strongly recommend reading

(http://srebrenica-genocide.blogspot.com/2009/07/response-to-carl-bildt.html
).

Posted on the author’s Greater Surbiton weblog
(http://greatersurbiton.wordpress.com), 21 July 2009

 

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