09 June 2005
Burns Says Visit Shows Commitment to Good Relations with Balkans
In Sarajevo, under secretary of state also discusses war crimes tribunal
Under Secretary of State R. Nicholas Burns told journalists from three Bosnian
newspapers June 7 that his visit to Sarajevo and two other Balkan cities
signals a continued U.S. commitment to good relations with the region.
The delegation’s major objective is to express “the great desire of the
United States to remain very actively involved, diplomatically and certainly
through the presence of American military forces, to help the people of the
region continue their progress away from war, away from the conflicts of
the 90s, to a better future,” said Burns during his stop in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
He is heading a delegation of U.S. officials from the White House, the State
Department and the Defense Department that is also visiting Pristina, Kosovo,
and Belgrade, Serbia and Montenegro.
“All the peoples in the Balkans have a major opportunity to make a lot of
progress to ensure a more secure and peaceful future, and a future where
your part of Europe is connected with the rest of Europe,” he said.
Burns expressed particular gratitude to the people of Bosnia and Herzegovina
for sending soldiers to Iraq. “We truly appreciate this,” he said. “We need
this expertise in explosive ordnances, and it’s a great symbolic gesture
on your part.”
“We have great hope that this country is on the right course,” said Burns,
calling the progress that has been made “significant,” while acknowledging
the need for further defense, police and economic reforms.
But for normal relations between the Balkan governments and the United States
and the rest of the world to develop, the major war criminals still at large
– Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadzic – need to be sent to the war crimes tribunal
in The Hague to face trial, Burns said.
“We certainly haven't forgotten the fact that these war criminals have been
living freely for ten years after having killed so many people, and we have
said so to the Serb government in Belgrade and to [Bosnian Foreign] Minister
[Mladen] Ivanic today,” he said.
In his delegation’s meeting with Ivanic, Burns explained, “We said please
send a message to the authorities in Banja Luka [Republika Srpska], the Serb
authorities; and we'll give this message to Belgrade -- we'll be there on
Thursday [June 9]. It's their responsibility to find Mladic and Karadzic.
It's their responsibility to send them to The Hague. And until they do that,
they cannot have a normal relationship with the United States, or NATO, or
the European Union. There's no possibility of Serbia coming into the NATO
alliance, the Partnership for Peace, until they turn Mladic over. There's
no possibility of a normal relationship with Banja Luka, until Karadzic and
Mladic are imprisoned.”
“In our view, the Republika Srpska authorities have, on a number of issues,
been obstructionist,” Burns said. They have some knowledge of those supporting
and protecting Karadzic, and they have a responsibility under the 1995 Dayton
Accords and a moral responsibility to all the people of Bosnia “to use that
information to have them arrested. And they haven't done that. So they bear
a large share of the responsibility on that question,” he said.
Later in the interview, Burns spoke of Serbia having the “greatest opportunity”
to face up to its past, particularly some of the “atrocious and appalling
acts carried out by the Serb military” during the Balkan wars of the 1990s.
“If Serbia can face that, if Serbia can find Mr. Karadzic and Mr. Mladic
and send them to The Hague, Serbia can have a new beginning,” said Burns.
Asked about Kosovo’s future status, Burns said that, even though the international
community, led by the United Nations, wants to begin negotiations to determine
the final status of Kosovo, “it's not up to us as outsiders to say what the
future of Kosovo should be. That's up to the Kosovar Albanians and Kosovar
Serbs. It's up to the Serb government as well. And it has to be a negotiation.”
Following is the State Department transcript:
(begin transcript)
Department of State
Washington, D.C.
June 9, 2005
INTERVIEW WITH DNEVNI AVAZ, NEZAVISNE NOVINE AND OSLOBODJENJE
R. Nicholas Burns, Under Secretary for Political Affairs
Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
June 7, 2005
UNDER SECRETARY BURNS: I am here at the request of the Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice. I'm here with a delegation from the State Department, the
White House and the Pentagon. We came here first to Sarajevo. We're in Pristina
tomorrow, and then going to Belgrade. And our major objective on this trip
is to express to the people concerned the great desire of the United States
to remain very actively involved, diplomatically and certainly through the
presence of American military forces, to help the people of the region continue
their progress away from war, away from the conflicts of the 90's, to a better
future.
We have great hope that this country is on the right course. I've been here
many times over the years. There's no question that significant progress
has been made in every respect. And there's no question that further reforms
can be made, defense reform, the police reform, further economic reforms.
Most importantly, the major remaining war criminals can be taken to The Hague
and put on trial, Ratko Mladic, Radovan Karadzic, Mr. Gotovina of Croatia.
There's no reason why this country and this region cannot then have a long-term
association with the European Union. And, speaking as a member of NATO, we
would hope that your country would someday then, after these reforms, apply
for NATO membership and come into our Alliance. That has to be the future
of this region, because the rest of Europe enjoys security, prosperity, peace,
because they've overcome that past. And it's now time for people of this
region to be given the opportunity to do the same thing.
We met with the Tri-Presidency this morning. We met with the Defense Minister.
We walked around and saw the changes of the city. It's a beautiful city.
We saw many of the changes that have occurred over the last few years. And
I think that there's a lot of reason to be hopeful about the future. One
issue that remains that is still in our eyes, and I'm sure in yours, very
difficult, is the issue of these war criminals. We just watched tonight again
this video from 1995. These young men who were innocent civilians and gunned
down and murdered by the Scorpions, by the paramilitary forces. You can't
watch the thing and not be shocked at the brutality of those Serb soldiers.
And you know who ordered this, that whole offensive in summer of 1995, the
spiritual leader of all of this ethnic cleansing and murder was Karadzic,
and the man who gave orders to kill the 8000 men and women in Srebrenica
was Mladic. And so we haven't forgotten in my country the importance of July
11 and the memorial. We intend to send a senior-level American delegation
to be with the people of this country here on July 11 at Srebrenica. And
we certainly haven't forgotten the fact that these war criminals have been
living freely for ten years after having killed so many people, and we have
said so to the Serb government in Belgrade and to Minister Ivanic today.
We said please send a message to the authorities in Banja Luka, the Serb
authorities; and we'll give this message to Belgrade -- we'll be there on
Thursday. It's their responsibility to find Mladic and Karadzic. It's their
responsibility to send them to The Hague. And until they do that, they cannot
have a normal relationship with the United States, or NATO, or the European
Union. There's no possibility of Serbia coming into the NATO alliance, the
Partnership for Peace, until they turn Mladic over. There's no possibility
of a normal relationship with Banja Luka, until Karadzic and Mladic are imprisoned.
And that's an important message for them to bring up. They are the ones responsible,
and so they have to take care of the responsibilities.
The last thing I want to say is that we expressed our great appreciation
to the Tri-Presidency for the fact your country has sent your soldiers to
Iraq, and we truly appreciate this. We need this expertise in explosive ordnances,
and it's a great symbolic gesture on your part, because the United States
tried to be of service to you when our military came in, NATO, in August/September
1995 to help end the war. And we sent a lot of young Americans here as part
of SFOR for nine years. We're very proud of what we did to help your country,
and now you are helping us out now in a very challenging situation for us
in Iraq. And the symbolism of a country that was formerly very fractured,
your country, among ethnic groups, now sending young Bosnian Croats, Bosniaks
and Bosnians Serbs to Iraq, to a fractured country, where the Shi'a and the
Sunni and the Kurds have to undergo now what you'd just begun ten years ago,
learning how to live together in peace, learning how to govern together,
and learning how to be involved in the same government. That's an enormously
powerful symbol. And so we thank you for that, we thank you for the support
you've given our peacekeeping forces on the ground in Iraq.
And the Ambassador just wished to say something.
AMBASSADOR MCELHANEY: I just want to underline that the Under Secretary
met with the Tri-Presidency as well as the Foreign Minister and the Prime
Minister, Mr. Terzic and Mr. Ivanic.
UNDER SECRETARY BURNS: And I was happy to see Prime Minister Terzic, because
I had met with him at the State Department a couple of weeks back. Happy
to answer any questions you have. Ladies first.
QUESTION: You just said that you hope and you see that this country's on
the right path toward Euro-Atlantic integration. However, we all have been
witnesses here that recently Republika Srpska has made major obstacles, for
example, the police reform. And police reform is one of the main preconditions
for membership in the EU. How do you comment on that particular issue?
UNDER SECRETARY BURNS: No, I agree with that thought. The Ambassador knows
far more than I do, is far more expert and may want to say a few words as
well. From my vantage point, having followed the situation and talked to
Foreign Minister Ivanic today and the Tri-Presidency and the Prime Minister,
we're very disappointed that the police reforms have not been completed.
In our view, the Republika Srpska authorities have, on a number of issues,
been obstructionist. I mentioned the war criminals issue, where they "have
not been informed." Surely they have some knowledge, the people in Banja
Luka who are supporting Radovan Karadzic, who might be protecting him, they
have the responsibility under Dayton. But more important, they have a moral
responsibility to all the people of this country to use that information
to have them arrested. And they haven't done that. So they bear a large share
of the responsibility on that question.
AMBASSADOR MCELHANEY: I would just like to say, in terms of reforms across
the board, as the Under Secretary has said, we haven't seen progress that
we expect to see. We spent a lot of money on police reform. We're the major
contributor for police reform; and, as you well know, our involvement in
ICTY is very deep, not just our military but our diplomatic work on this
issue and support for the ICTY. So, these are things that we're going to
continue to press on, and obviously we talked about them today and the Under
Secretary discussed them with the leadership of the government.
QUESTION: In the ten years since the Dayton Accords were signed, it seems
that Republika Srpska is the only institution, I do think, that does not
see any need for any change of the Dayton Peace Accords. Can you, as the
Americans that you are, if you will, godfathers of the Dayton Peace Accords,
can you apply any pressure or force on anybody to sit down and talk about
these changes that are obviously, more than obviously, necessary when it
comes to Dayton?
UNDER SECRETARY BURNS: Well, I think it requires enlightened leadership,
leaders who will recognize that the world is changing very dramatically,
Europe is changing; and, if you look around at your neighbors and look at
all the countries, Croatia, Macedonia, Romania, Greece and Slovenia, and
look farther north to the Baltic countries, all these countries have made
tremendous change and reform over the last 10 to 15 years because they understand
that to be competitive economically, to join NATO in the EU and to have foreign
investment, to have peace and security, you have to open yourself up to the
world, you have to face the past, you have to take responsibility for the
mistakes you've made. This is true of any country; it's true of my own country.
You have to change, to be willing to work and, if the Bosnian Serbs think
that they can stop the world, not change, not face their responsibilities
on the war crimes issue, not cooperate with the others in this country for
defense reform change or police reform, they're only going to hurt themselves
obviously, and their leaders will not be serving their own people. And, I
think -- I just spent eight years living in Europe -- I think the most dynamic
-- it's a very dynamic continent -- and people have to be open to change.
I sense that there are a lot of people in Bosnia opened up to want a better
future. The leaders have to want it, and in Banja Luka they have a lot to
think about.
QUESTION: You have said that you will or have sent a message to Banja Luka
and Belgrade that it's their responsibility to apprehend and arrest Karadzic
and Mladic. Is there any responsibility of NATO, in NATO's direction, I mean,
the United States is a member of NATO? Is there a responsibility when it
comes to NATO soldiers for not apprehending these individuals? I mean, it
is a bit difficult to believe that ten years have passed, and these two individuals
have not been apprehended.
UNDER SECRETARY BURNS: There is certainly a responsibility that NATO and
all of us have to help find these two individuals. And we have been trying.
But, I think you see in the case of Osama bin Laden, as well as these two
individuals, if people have money, if people have protection, if they have
individuals in the country like this and you are willing to hide them, then
people can hide from the authorities. Not forever. Sooner or later they're
going to be apprehended. But they can be successful for a certain period
of time. So, we have a responsibility, and we take that responsibility very
seriously, and they have to be lucky every single day. We just have to be
fortunate one day, the day we find them. But the people who have a greater
responsibility than NATO are the people who signed the Dayton Accords on
November 21, 1995. They took an oath that they would adhere to the war crimes
provisions, that they would turn criminals over to the Tribunal. And the
Bosnian Serbs have failed, as has the Serb government, to do that. They have
a greater responsibility.
It's also quite apparent to us that the authorities in Banja Luka ought
to have some knowledge of who is protecting these people, and who is providing
money and who is part of that network. And we believe that there are elements
in the Serb military, in Serbia-Montenegro, who know where General Mladic
is. In fact, we believe that he's been protected by the Serb military for
a number of years. So let's face it. The greater responsibility rests with
those officials. And we sent them a very clear message. They don't have any
hope of better relationship with NATO until they exercise their responsibility
for this.
AMBASSADOR MCELHANEY: I would just add one point here to what the Under
Secretary said. Some months ago, after hearing since 1995 that there was
no knowledge of these people, seven people were picked up. Now how did that
happen?
QUESTION: There is quite frequently the thesis out there that there's a
terrorist threat coming out of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Quite recently there
was an official from the RS, the RS police director, Mr. Dragomir Andan (who
made these allegations). Does your government have any official knowledge
of these alleged terrorist threats coming from Bosnia?
AMBASSADOR MCELHANEY: If you permit me, I think that I know something about
this. I saw the statements that the police chief, Mr. Andan, made. And my
reaction is the following, I think that terrorism is a world-wide phenomenon.
We're conducting a war against terrorism in the world, and any information
that is helpful to that process doesn't necessarily get announced to the
world. It should be used by the officials who have the capacity to do something
about it if there indeed is a threat. We work very closely here in Bosnia
with police and law enforcement officials, and we know that there is a capacity
here, if there is any credence to these threats, that something will be done
about it.
QUESTION: If I can just follow up, please. So that means that the U.S. Government
trusts or has confidence in Bosnian authorities when it comes to this matter,
this particular matter.
AMBASSADOR MCELHANEY: I don't want to go further into detail about this.
But I think that any useful information along these lines will be looked
at carefully, and there are ways that it can be shared with other governments
and other international institutions to stop terrorism.
QUESTION: There are six, of whom four at least are Bosnian citizens, individuals
who are detained at Guantanamo base. The wife of one of them on Sunday organized
a protest in front of the American Embassy, which is quite natural for a
wife to ask for the release of her husband. But now since the Bosnian government
has shown more willingness to, for example with the sending of this unit
to Iraq, is there a way to make this a bit more transparent for the sake
of these good relations between the two countries? For example, people here
do not know what is going on; it is not transparent. This is a secret, this
whole Guantanamo issue. Can it be explained to the people here? If they're
guilty, they're guilty. If they're not, can they be brought before a panel
or judge, before others, and so on?
AMBASSADOR MCELHANEY: I would just say that we take note of this point,
and we take this all very seriously. As you know, six Algerians were taken
to Guantanamo -- four of whom are Bosnian citizens -- some time ago. They,
as was made known here, are under serious suspicion, and that is what they
are doing there. They will be well treated, and there are processes in place
to ensure that they will be well treated. When we're finished with this investigation,
I would expect that they would be sent back to their countries.
MODERATOR: Last question.
QUESTION: In the past days and months, there were rumors out there about
a new plan that the United States had designed for the Balkans, that is,
for Kosovo and Bosnia-Herzegovina. If there is such a plan, what does it
envision?
UNDER SECRETARY BURNS: This is a good question because it brings us back
to the beginning of the interview. And that is that it seems to us in the
United States that all the peoples in the Balkans have a major opportunity
to make a lot of progress to ensure a more secure and peaceful future, and
a future where your part of Europe is connected with the rest of Europe.
But to do that, you've got to overcome the recent past. In the case of your
country, we have two significant anniversaries this year, Srebrenica, the
commemoration of that horrible massacre, and also the Dayton Accords. And
you're going to find that there's a great deal of interest in your country
because of these two events. And my country is signaling through the trip
of this delegation. We want to signal our commitment to have good relations
with your country. We'll help you to overcome these problems and help you
secure a future working with NATO and with the European Union.
In Kosovo the challenge is much greater, in Kosovo the status quo has been
maintained, the situation has been frozen in place. That was in June of 1999,
since the end of the NATO military offensive against the Serbs. And in that
place, there's no question that the international community, led by the United
Nations, wants to undertake an effort to have negotiations to determine the
final the final status of Kosovo. And it's not up to us as outsiders to say
what the future of Kosovo should be. That's up to the Kosovar Albanians and
Kosovar Serbs. It's up to the Serb government as well. And it has to be a
negotiation. We'll support such a negotiation under UN leadership. And so,
2005 is a year of change for Kosovo. And perhaps Serbia has the greatest
opportunity. Serbia is a very important country in this part of the world.
Serbia is a country that's also afflicted by its past. And even this videotape
shows, by some of the atrocious and appalling acts carried out by the Serb
military during the war, where many people in this country were victims.
If Serbia can face that, if
Serbia can find Mr. Karadzic and Mr. Mladic and send them to The Hague,
Serbia can have a new beginning. And then this entire region would be positioned
to work with your European neighbors in a much better way for your future.
That's the opportunity we want to see. The United States is going to maintain
a very active diplomacy and diplomatic representation here, and we'll maintain
our military commitments that we've made, our NATO military headquarters
here in Sarajevo, which is primarily led by the United States. And certainly
the American military commitment in Kosovo. There's no question that the
United States has credibility in this region; we have an interest in helping
the countries in this region, and so by this trip we are signaling very strongly
our intention to remain very strongly involved in this region.
And I guess I'd just say the following. I've been going to Banja Luka since
1995 during these trips. And what surprised me about the reaction to the
videotape, when Mr. Kostunica showed real leadership. He walked out on the
steps of his office; he denounced the killing of the innocent young men in
1995; he announced the arrest of the Scorpions who committed the atrocities.
And President Tadic said he was horrified and said he'd come to Srebrenica
on July 11. We've heard nothing from the Bosnian Serb leadership. We met
with Foreign Minister Ivanic today, and frankly I felt that he was kind of
trying to deflect the questions that we brought up. But we haven't heard
anything from the Banja Luka leadership. We wish that, in a human way, they
would recognize the horror; and they have some responsibility to help overcome
these acts. So, perhaps the greatest challenge is for those leaders. And
we hope very much they'll meet those challenges, as all of us believe they
should.
(end transcript)
(Distributed by the Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S. Department
of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)
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