| Title: |
(E) Britain gave butcher 'a green light' to use force |
| Submitted by: |
Nenad Bach |
| Date: |
21-Mar-06 |
| Category: |
History |
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(E) Britain gave butcher 'a green light' to use force, March 21, 2006
The green light of failure
By Tim Luckhurst
The Times March 15, 2006
"Britain gave him 'a green light' to use force. On that
point alone the butcher of Belgrade was horribly right."
SINCE Slobodan Milosevic died some familiar stereotypes have been revived. Like
the one that Serbs wallow uncritically in myths of national superiority and live
with their backs to the world. And that Britain despairs because Serbia lacks
the maturity to accept Milosevic’s guilt and to surrender his henchmen Radovan
Karadzic and Ratko Mladic. Yet these stereotypes conceal Britain’s culpable
complicity in Milosevic’s crimes. It is pleasing to remember this country’s role
in the events that ousted Milosevic from power. British forces performed
heroically in the liberation of Kosovo. They contributed ably to the Nato
airpower that stopped the killing in Bosnia. But it was all too little far too
late.
The names Major, Hurd and Rifkind are spat with venomous fury in Bosnia. They
are reviled in Belgrade too by the democratic minority, who said for years that
Milosevic would buckle when force was deployed against him but were dismissed in
Whitehall.
When Bosnian Serb shells were creating hell in Sarajevo the Bosnian Government
considered taking Britain to the International Court of Justice. British
influence was being deployed to deny Bosnia its UN-mandated right to self-defence.
While powerful voices in Washington demanded intervention, Douglas Hurd and
Malcolm Rifkind denied Serbian guilt. To them successive wars in Croatia and
Bosnia were not caused by Serbian aggression directed from Belgrade by President
Milosevic. They were manifestations of the age-old Balkan instinct for violence.
Ancient tribal loathings were being played out. Each faction was as bad as the
others.
Mr Hurd resolutely opposed international help for tortured Bosnia. Mr Rifkind
fell back on the evasion that 'the furtherance of British interests ought to be
the sole object of British foreign policy'. Mr Major took their advice. Between
them these three are guilty of the worst dereliction of moral duty by a British
government since non-intervention guaranteed Franco’s victory in the Spanish
Civil War.
The men and boys of Srebrenica would be alive today if Britain had supported
prompt intervention. So would tens of thousands in Bosnia, Kosovo and Serbia.
During his trial at The Hague, Milosevic claimed
Britain gave him 'a green light' to use force. On that point alone the butcher
of Belgrade was horribly right.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,6-2086138,00.html
Formatted for CROWN by Nenad Bach
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