UNSC Genocide Vote Designed to Justify NATO Bombing of Yugoslavia

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This week saw the failure of the UK-backed UNSC draft resolution calling to 
declare the 20-year-old mass murder of thousands of Muslims near the town of 
Srebrenica as genocide committed by the Serbian army; and while some Western 
countries strongly criticize the failure, a Russian expert explains what 
actually might be behind the proposed document.


Saturday, July 11, marked the 20th anniversary of the tragic events in the 
Muslim-majority town of the mainly Serb eastern part of Bosnia.

Back in 1995 thousands of Muslims, mainly men and boys, were murdered in and 
around the town of Srebrenica after it was occupied by the Bosnian Serb militia 
under the command of Gen. Ratko Mladic. The former general is now on trial for 
genocide in the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia 
(ICTY) in The Hague, along with the former President of the Republika Srpska in 
Bosnia and Herzegovina Radovan Karadžić.

 

© AP Photo/ Amel Emric

A Bosnian girl prays next to a coffin containing the remains of her relative 
perished in the Srebrenica massacre, during a funeral ceremony for the 136 
victims at the Potocari memorial complex near Srebrenica, 150 kilometers (94 
miles) northeast of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Saturday, July 11, 2015

The massacre in Srebrenica has previously been classified as an act of genocide 
by the UN International Court of Justice and ICTY, now the draft resolution 
pushed for the same classification, claiming that a failure to adopt it will 
hinder reconciliation in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

However, one of Russia’s most well-known scholars and an expert in the Balkans, 
Elena Guskova, who was there on the ground during the years of the Bosnian war, 
believes that despite the enormity of the crime, there are insufficient grounds 
to consider the killings an act of genocide.

“We can’t talk about genocide here,” she told Rossiya 1 TV show “Vesti on 
Saturday”. “What is genocide by definition? It is the elimination of a 
particular nation on the territory of another country. It is a systematic, 
deliberate killing. There was nothing of the kind on the territory of 
Srebrenica. Those were military actions.”

 

© Screenshot / vesti.ru <http://www.vesti.ru/videos/show/vid/650576/> 

One of Russia’s most well-known scholars and an expert in the Balkans, Elena 
Guskova

She also debated the actual number of those killed, saying that now it stands 
at 8,000, but it is absolutely unclear where this figure comes from and it has 
fluctuated all the time, dropping down to 5,000 and then rising up to 25,000.

“This does not reflect the truth in any way,” she said. “This massacre has 
already become a myth, which can’t be either reviewed or otherwise disputed.”

On Wednesday, when Russia vetoed the draft resolution, Russian envoy to the 
United Nations Vitaly Churkin was very clear in Moscow’s position on the 
document.

 

© Screenshort / vesti.ru <http://www.vesti.ru/videos/show/vid/650576/> 

Russian envoy to the United Nations Vitaly Churkin 

“The project submitted by the delegation of the United Kingdom has turned 
nonconstructive, confrontational and politically motivated. It contained 
considerable imbalances which puts the blame for what happened entirely on one 
nation. An approach, which singles out just one war crime, out of all the 
military offences committed, is absolutely lawless and illegal and can lead to 
the deepening of already painful breakup within Bosnian society,” he said.

Elena Guskova provided her explanation of what might actually lie behind such 
an insistence to lay the blame on one nation.

 

© AFP 2015/ ODD ANDERSEN

Forensic experts from the International war crimes tribunal in the Hague works 
on a pile of partly decomposed bodies, 24 July 1996 found in a mass grave in 
the village of Pilica some 300 km northeast of Sarajevo. The victims in the 
human sculpture is said to be some of the 7000 men missing after Serbs overran 
the Moslem enclave of Srebrenica in July 1995

“If the UK's resolution was voted for in the UN Security Council, the 
consequences would have been rather catastrophic for the Serbians and all the 
Orthodox Slavs in the Balkans. Having blamed only one nation for the genocide 
during the clashes between several nations back in 1990's, one could further 
raise a question of blaming the Serbs for everything that was going in the 
Balkans back then, for all the wars and all the victims.”

“And, as a result, NATO actions in the Balkans back in 1999 could have been 
justified. NATO launched its 78-day bombing of Yugoslavia without the 
resolution of the UN Security Council, and with the resolution on Srebrenica 
they would have had an excuse: if they are guilty we could have bombed them.”

Vitaly Churkin wants to leave it to historians to analyze the turn of events 
that led to the conflict in the former Yugoslavia.

 

© AP Photo/ Amel Emric

Gravestones are seen at sunrise at a memorial complex near Srebrenica, 150 
kilometers (94 miles) northeast of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Saturday, 
July 11, 2015

“Let the historians analyze the peripetia and the genesis of the conflict, 
including the role of different countries and unions, who made the hasty 
decisions, in the emergence of the mere conflict in Yugoslavia. Let the 
scholars help the secretariat of the UN and the international community to 
understand where our organization was too weak to act.”

Guskova however gave her vision of the conflict.

“The Serbian army decided to enter Srebrenica to stop the forays of the Muslim 
army, which concentrated in the UN zone, in the security zone,” she said.

On May 6, 1993 a UN Security Council resolution declared the town a 
demilitarized zone and several hundred Dutch peacekeeping forces were stationed 
near it to allegedly protect the enclave.

© AFP 2015/ Martijn Beekman

People wait under a banner showing portraits of victims during the Srebrenica 
Peace March (Mars Mira), in The Hague on July 11, 2015, in remembrance of the 
victims of the 1995 Srebrenica massacre

“There should have been no army at all,” she added. ”And when this zone was 
declared, then the Muslim army under the factual protection of UN and its Blue 
Helmets, regularly undertook forays killing, destroying and torturing the 
Serbian population. Before 1995, up to 4,500 Serbs were killed. And to prevent 
the murdering of the Serbian population, the Serbian army decided to enter 
Srebrenica. And it did it very quietly.”

“The Serbian army marched through 43 Muslim settlements without destroying a 
single house and without killing a single person. And when they entered 
Srebrenica, they formed a column out of the Muslim officers and allowed them to 
leave Srebrenica for the town of Tuzla. And then there was shooting on the way 
and there were victims. But how it all happened remains unclear to this very 
day.”

Vitaly Churkin also stressed that UN Security Council very conveniently chooses 
an occasion when to convene and when to submit a resolution, leaving out some 
extremely major events.

“Recently there was the 40th anniversary of the end of Vietnam War. Why haven’t 
you convened the meeting of the UNSC then [on April 30]? Why haven’t you 
prepared the draft resolution where you could condemn the carpet bombings of 
Hanoi or the use of napalm or the mass killing of 500 unarmed civilians in the 
village of My Lai by Lieutenant William Calley, among others, who was 
generously paroled by the US president?” he questioned.

“Recently there was the 10th anniversary of the illegal invasion of Iraq by the 
US and the UK [March 19,], which resulted in the death of millions of civilians 
and the cruelest ongoing crisis in the country. Why haven’t either the US or 
the UK suggested adopting the UNSC resolution which would have called things by 
their proper names?”

These questions just hang in the air.

Meanwhile, Churkin was the only delegate to call for a minute of silence to be 
observed in mourning for those who died in Srebrenica 20 years ago.


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