U.S. Department of State 95/10/05 Daily Press Briefing
From: hristu@arcadia.harvard.edu (Dimitrios Hristu)
Subject: U.S. Department of State 95/10/05 Daily Press Briefing
Office of the Spokesman
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
I N D E X
Thursday, October 5, 1995
Briefer: Nicholas Burns
FORMER YUGOSLAVIA
Ceasefire Agreement/Convening of Proximity Talks in U.S. . 1-7,9-12,14-17
--Enforcement/Violations of Ceasefire .................... 4,10-11
--Road Access between Sarajevo and Gorazde ............... 15
--Gas and Electricity Services to Sarajevo ............... 15-16
Peace Conference in France ............................... 3
Contingency Plans for NATO Implementation Force/
Russian Cooperation .................................... 12-14,17-18
Withdrawal of 9,000 UN Troops ............................ 4
Fighting in Bihac, Western/Central Bosnia, Sarajevo ...... 8-9
Allegations of Human Rights Abuses ....................... 8
[...]
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
DPB #150
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1995, 1:17 P. M.
(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)
MR. BURNS: Good afternoon. Welcome to the State Department
briefing. I suppose you all want to talk about Bosnia, and I'm ready to
do that. No? Okay. Let's talk about the Comoros Islands perhaps.
I'm ready to talk about any of these issues, so, George, we'll go
right to you.
Q About Bosnia, what do you have?
MR. BURNS: Well, I know you have heard the President. Dick
Holbrooke has also given a press conference in Zagreb. I don't know if
there is going to be a transcript of that available, but I just had a
long talk with him and he basically told me what he reviewed with your
colleagues there. I'll be glad to fill any gaps.
I'll also be able to hand out to you at the end of the briefing
some documents related to this agreement, including the cease-fire
document, a copy of the signatures of those who signed for the Bosnian-
Serbs, those who witnessed for the United States and the Serbian
Government. That will come after the briefing.
As the President indicated to you this morning, today's agreement
in Bosnia on a cease-fire and on the convening of proximity peace talks
in the United States is a major step forward on the road to peace.
This agreement was produced by an intensive diplomatic initiative
led by the United States, and of course assisted by our Contact Group
partners. After all the progress of last month, of September -- the
September 8 agreement on constitutional issues, the September l4
agreement on a withdrawal of heavy weapons from Sarajevo and a cease-
fire there, and also the agreement last week in New York for expanded
constitutional principles -- we in the Administration felt at that time
that the cease-fire issue and the convening of discussions,
negotiations, for a comprehensive peace were the next order for the
parties.
That is why the President and Secretary Christopher sent Dick
Holbrooke to the region directly following the New York talks last week
for an intensive shuttle round during the past six days.
Our fundamental position during the past six days was that we would
help to broker a cease-fire as long as that cease-fire was tied to a
subsequent political process, and that is in effect the agreement that
we have been able to reach with the parties today.
In our view, the Bosnian Government, the Bosnian-Serbs, the Serbian
Government and others have come to the conclusion that the military
situation on the ground was sufficiently ambiguous for them that it was
in their self-interest, it came to be in their self-interest to stop the
fighting.
All of these parties made clear throughout this process, during the
past couple of days, that the active involvement of the United States
was critical to the talks and that it was critical to the upcoming peace
proximity talks.
Our European partners in the Contact Group and the Russian
Government have made clear to us that they fully support the agreements
reached today.
Secretary Christopher and Deputy Secretary Talbott have been
telephoning their foreign ministerial colleagues in the Contact Group
and in Italy. Dick Holbrooke is now in Zagreb and he is meeting with
President Tudjman. He is briefing President Tudjman on this
arrangement. Croatia is not a party to the agreement today, but
certainly Croatia now will be fully expected to live up to all of the
terms of this cease-fire because Croatian forces are active as part of
the Federation military effort in western and central Bosnia.
Now the proximity peace talks that the United States has arranged
will begin, as the President said, on October 25 at a single isolated
site in the United States. These talks will not be held in Washington,
D.C. or in the Washington area. We will be selecting a site in the next
couple of days that will probably be on the east coast of the United
States.
The talks will be convened under the auspices of the Contact Group.
Throughout the talks Dick Holbrooke, Carl Bildt, the EU negotiator, and
Deputy Foreign Minister Ivanov, the Deputy Foreign Minister of Russia,
will co-chair the talks.
I think it is fair to say that these discussions will look and feel
like what you remember from Camp David. The only difference is they
won't be at Camp David and they won't be in the Washington area. But it
will be an isolated site where each of the three delegations -- and
these will be the Heads of State of Serbia, of Croatia, and of Bosnia-
Herzegovina -- each of them will have their own quarters on this site.
The three co-chairs -- Holbrooke, Bildt and Ivanov -- will shuttle among
the three parties, bringing suggestions, proposals, ideas to put
forward, to move the substantive discussions along. And a very
important point, these three leaders will come together at many, many
points during these talks for face-to-face discussions.
I think that in some of the various briefings in Washington this
morning we may have left you with the impression that that will not
happen. That will definitely happen.
So in addition to the shuttling among the parties, the parties will
come together when they are ready for face-to-face negotiations at these
proximity peace talks.
When sufficient progress is made on the substance of these issues,
on all of the issues -- territorial and constitutional -- that make up
the peace negotiations, at some point, and with the agreement of the
parties and the agreement of the sponsors, these talks will shift to
France where there will be what will look and feel like a formal peace
conference.
It is possible that there could be subsequent steps along the way
after the meetings in France. There is no distinct and detailed road
map now, but it is possible that there could be subsequent events that
would finally allow the parties and the sponsors to consummate a final
peace agreement.
This agreement, again, was put together over the last six days.
Dick Holbrooke was in Sarajevo and Belgrade yesterday. He was working
this issue then. During the evening, he had several conversations with
Secretary Christopher and Strobe Talbott, and one of those conversations
was at 4:00 a.m. He went back to Sarajevo again for talks. This
morning he had several hours of discussions with President Izetbegovic.
As I said, he is now in Zagreb. He is reviewing point by point the
cease-fire agreement and our proposals and suggestions for proximity
talks with President Tudjman. I do want to reiterate that we fully
expect, and we don't believe it will be a problem, that the Croatian
Government, which is not a signatory to this agreement today, will be a
full participant in the agreement to stop all offensive military actions
in Bosnia as of one minute past midnight on October l0.
I would then expect between October l0 and October 25 that the
United States peace delegation -- the U. S. negotiating team -- would
conduct another shuttle round in order to further define and sharpen the
issues among the parties to have the parties agree on a detailed and
definite agenda for the talks and negotiations that will begin on
October 25.
And again, just to remind, at the end of this briefing I intend to
make available a couple of documents. One will be a very short document
from the State Department just reiterating what has happened today.
The second will be the text of the cease-fire agreement. It is an
eight-point agreement that was consumated this morning. I will attach
to that the signature page, and on the signature page you will find the
signatures of President Izetbegovic, who signed for Bosnia and the
Federation, of Mr. Karadzic, Mr. Krajisnik, and General Mladic, who
signed for the Bosnian-Serbs, and the witness signatures of President
Milosevic and of Ambassador John Menzies, the American Ambassador in
Bosnia.
Lee.
Q Nick, what does the pull-out of the 9,000 U. N. troops from
the former Yugoslavia mean for the ultimate military peace-keeping
plans?
MR. BURNS: I don't think it is going to have much of an effect at
all. There are tens of thousands of United Nations troops throughout
Bosnia.
We have been notified by the United Nations and some of the member
countries that these withdrawals would occur. I don't believe it will
significantly weaken the ability of the United Nations to police the
cease-fire, which the United Nations will do for sixty days after
October l0. We fully expect that the United Nations will remain in
Bosnia throughout this period of a cease-fire and the period where the
negotiations for peace will take place here in the United States and in
France.
Bill.
Q What's the impediment with the Croatians, or impediments?
And you say we expect that they will conform. Even though they may not
sign, we expect that they will conform and become non-offensive
militarily?
MR. BURNS: I don't want to leave any misunderstanding, and perhaps
I am responsible for this, that somehow there is an impediment with the
Croatians. I don't believe there is.
This was an agreement that was intentionally worked out only
between Bosnia -- the Bosnian Government -- and the joint Serb-Bosnian
Serb delegation in the shuttling.
The Croatian Government has been aware of this, but they were not
party to it. The two warring parties inside Bosnia-Herzegovina are the
ones who are primarily responsible for ceasing offensive operations.
Now, it is absolutely true that Croatia has troops as part of the
Federation forces inside the borders of Bosnia-Herzegovina. Therefore,
it is absolutely necessary for Croatia to stand by this agreement and to
honor all aspects of it; and that is why Dick Holbrooke is in Zagreb
right now.
Q Do they want to?
MR. BURNS: Excuse me?
Q Does Croatia wish to?
MR. BURNS: Well, I think we will certainly know more at the end of
the meeting that Dick Holbrooke is having with President Tudjman, but we
do not anticipate any problems. We have not been told by the Croatian
Government that there will be any problems, and we certainly would not
expect that to happen.
Let me just note one point, too. I want to get back to the cease-
fire for a moment.
The cease-fire will last for sixty days, or until the completion of
the proximity peace talks and the peace conference, whichever is later,
which is another detail that I think we needed to clarify this morning
for you. It's intended to be sixty days; but should the peace
discussions in the United States or France extend beyond sixty days,
then the cease-fire would extend beyond those sixty days with those
discussions.
Carol.
Q Did you mean to say -- is Milosevic coming here?
MR. BURNS: Excuse me?
Q When you were talking about the principals who would be
coming to the peace talks -- ?
MR. BURNS: We expect that the three Presidents will come. As we
have said before, President Milosevic is the Chair of the joint Serb-
Bosnian Serb delegation; and it was always anticipated that he would
take part in peace discussions.
So we would anticipate that he would come. You know, I think it is
probably best to let the official announcements come from each of the
capitals, but we would anticipate that these discussions would include
the three heads of state of the three principal actors with whom we have
been meeting since September 8 in all the multilateral discussions that
we have had.
Q So is it your intention to keep this location secret? Is
that it?
MR. BURNS: No, not at all. No. You know, we are still looking
for the best location. Once we find the best spot, we'll let you know
about it. There is no intention to keep this a secret at all. We just
haven't determined what the best place is.
We are looking for a site and we would be glad to take suggestions
from all of you.
Q Boston. (Laughter)
MR. BURNS: Boston would be a great place. Unfortunately the World
Series may not be in Boston, so Cleveland might be better.
We are looking for a site where we would be able to house the three
delegations from the region, plus the Contact Group delegations that
will be there, and all of the aides for all of those leaders who will be
there, that will be big enough so that there will be a place for them to
walk and exercise, because they may be there for a couple of weeks, or
they may be there for longer than that.
We have not set a date. We have not set a time, a duration of
these talks. You know, it could be a couple of days, it could be a
couple of weeks. So we are looking for
that kind of a site that will afford them some privacy, and also some
room.
Q When you say "Camp David style," that evokes memories of the
two-week news blackout that was in effect while the parties were there
in September of '78. Is there a news blackout contemplated this time?
MR. BURNS: You know, that's a good suggestion, George. (Laughter)
We hadn't really thought of that, but now that you raise it, that's
probably the best way to insure that these talks are successful.
We have spent all of our time -- Secretary Christopher and Dick
Holbrooke have -- thinking about this cease-fire agreement. We have not
given a great deal of time to thinking about all the ground rules that
will pertain to all of us surrounding these talks. We will do that in
the next couple of days, and as we define this further, we'll let you
know about it.
But, thank you. I want to duly note George's suggestion for a news
blackout. (Laughter) That was good.
Q Do you anticipate there will be Bosnian Serbs in the joint
delegation, and, if so, do you have any idea who?
MR. BURNS: I would anticipate that there would certainly be
Bosnian Serbs as part of the joint delegation. There were two Bosnian
Serb officials in New York last week at the meetings at the U.S. Mission
to the United Nations -- the Vice President and the Foreign Minister. I
would certainly anticipate that.
I would not anticipate, however, that two very prominent leaders of
the Bosnian Serbs would be present for these negotiations.
Q You're not giving them immunity.
MR. BURNS: I just wouldn't anticipate for a variety of well known
reasons that they would participate. But it's up to them to decide, to
make that announcement, not me.
Roy.
Q Can you bring us up to date on the situation on the ground?
There are reports that Croatia has sent additional troops in. What are
the Bosnian forces doing, and what are the Bosnian Serb forces doing?
MR. BURNS: The United States is concerned about the recent
increase in the fighting throughout Bosnia: in the Bihac pocket, the
Bihac region, in western and central Bosnia, and just two days ago in
Sarajevo within the 20-kilometer exclusion zone itself.
We have made clear to the Serbian Government, to the Bosnian Serb
leadership, to the Bosnian Government leadership and to the Croatian
Government that the recent increase in fighting is against their self-
interest. It will accomplish nothing in any kind of broad sense on the
ground except to cause further bloodshed.
The ground that was taken the last couple of weeks in the dramatic
Bosnian-Croatian offensive is now being taken back in some respects by
the Bosnian Serb counter- offensive. This just speaks to our
fundamental view that a military solution is unattainable. We were
encouraged in one very important respect by the signing of the cease-
fire agreement because it implicitly acknowledges that a military
solution is not possible.
So we're concerned by the fighting. We're also concerned by the
allegations of human rights abuses that are being uncovered now that
some of the territory previously occupied by the Bosnian Serbs has been
liberated by the Bosnian Government. These are atrocities that
surrounded the fall of Srebrenica and the allegations of mass executions
of young Bosnian soldiers by the Bosnian Serbs.
In addition to that, as we discussed yesterday, we're very
concerned by reports of allegations of Croatian atrocities when the
Croatian troops moved into the Krajina region. Assistant Secretary
Shattuck visited the Krajina last weekend to look into those directly.
The United Nations is investigating those allegations.
We believe that all of these allegations must be fully
investigated, and those responsible for them must be held accountable
for them.
Q Are the Croatians moving additional troops into Bosnia, and,
if so, where and are you trying to stop that, or do you want to
countenance that to prevent the Serbs from recapturing a large portion
of western Bosnia?
MR. BURNS: We have seen reports, and we are following up directly
with the Croatian Government --
reports that a limited number -- I think 100-200 soldiers crossed the
border in the last 24 hours into western Bosnia. This is an issue that,
as I said, has been and will continue to be directly raised with the
Croatians.
Let me just bring you back to Step No. 4 -- Article 4 of the cease-
fire agreement that you will be looking at in a couple of minutes --
because I think it's relevant, Roy, to your question. Pursuant to the
cease-fire, on the effective date that all parties will immediately
insure that all military commanders issue and compel compliance with
clear orders that preclude the following:
A. All offensive military operations.
B. Patrol and reconnaissance activities forward of friendly
positions.
C. All offensive weapons firings, including sniper firing.
D. The laying of additional mines.
E. The creation of additional barriers or obstacles.
I think this wording -- and you'll read this in Article 4,
paragraph 4 -- is sufficiently comprehensive that it's going to preclude
all the types of military activities that we have witnessed over the
last couple of months: the small-scale arms fire, the large-scale
mortar shelling, and the offensive movements of troops all throughout
Bosnia-Herzegovina.
So certainly we're calling upon the Croatian Government, as well as
the others, to honor the letter as well as the spirit of that paragraph.
Q Nick, would you expect President Clinton to meet with the
three Presidents in advance of their talks or to take a direct role in
the negotiations? Because that was what former President Carter did.
MR. BURNS: I think that our concept for this is a little bit
different than Camp David. Our view is that Dick Holbrooke, Carl Bildt
and Deputy Minister Ivanov will be the main negotiators, intermediaries
among the parties.
Whether or not a more senior official opens the conference or
concludes the conference here in the United States is an issue that we
need to consider and look at.
Any announcement, of course, would come -- if the President's involved,
it would come from the White House, but I wouldn't lead you in that
direction.
Q You would not.
MR. BURNS: I would not lead you in that direction at this point,
no.
Q What are some of the pitfalls you see over the next 60 days?
These cease-fire agreements have fallen apart in the past. And what
kind of measures or special measures will the U.N. have in place to
enforce this cease-fire?
MR. BURNS: I'm glad you asked that, because I think it's a
particularly relevant question pertaining to military activities. The
United Nations will continue to have authority on the ground to police
the cease-fire, to police the heavy weapons withdrawal and cease-fire
within the 20-kilometer zone around Sarajevo itself that was negotiated
a couple of weeks back. NATO will continue to have the right and the
duty and the obligation to proceed with its "Deny Flight" operations.
You saw a dramatic demonstration of that yesterday when NATO did not
hesitate to fire three Harm missiles at SAM-6 radar sites when the NATO
planes, the F-18s, were illuminated. So NATO and the U.N. will continue
their military responsibilities and duties.
If there are any violations of either the Sarajevo agreement or
today's agreement, then NATO and the United Nations will be responsible
for enforcing the rules of the road that have been agreed upon. I think
that's a very important point.
I do want to go back to this point, however. This is a 60-day
cease-fire -- 60 days or a longer period if the negotiations in the
United States or the negotiations in France continue beyond the 60 days.
Q Do you regard the U.N. on the ground and NATO in the air as
already having the authority to enforce -- to take enforcement action
against the Bosnians or the Croatians should they violate the cease-fire
or any of these other agreements?
MR. BURNS: I think that on a remote, theoretical plane, of course,
that would be possible. However, the most egregious violations that
have warranted at least NATO military responses in the past have been
exclusively Bosnian Serb.
Q There have been some at least minor ones in recent days by
the others.
MR. BURNS: There have been minor ones, and what we --
Q Are you going to put them on notice that they'll be bombed or
they'll be --
MR. BURNS: We haven't had to resort to that kind of direct threat
with the Bosnian Government or the Croatian Government because these are
friendly governments to the United States and our Contact Group
partners, number one.
Number two, we have been told by the Bosnian Government that there
will not be a repetition of the incident of 48 hours ago when a few
missiles were fired out of Bosnian Government-controlled territory
within the 20-kilometer zone around Sarajevo; that that will not happen,
because that could lead to a provocation that might induce the Bosnian
Serbs to counter-attack, and we don't want to see that happen.
We have put the Bosnian Serbs on warning that any violation of the
cease-fires that have been negotiated will be met with appropriate
response, and that continues throughout this cease-fire period.
Dick Holbrooke is now in Zagreb letting the Croatian Government
know that all offensive activities -- all offensive activities -- must
be stopped by one minute past midnight on Tuesday.
Q Nick, the Secretary had hoped, I believe, to have this kind
of announcement last week at the U.N. when all of these people were
together, and it didn't happen. What has changed in the week that has
passed that allows a cease-fire announcement at this point? Is it just
a matter of negotiating -- more time for negotiating, or has something
happened on the ground?
MR. BURNS: Steve, I can honestly say without any equivocation at
all on my part that that was not an objective of ours last week. We
never believed that a cease-fire was possible last week.
What the Secretary did, however, in his Monday afternoon meeting
with the three Foreign Ministers in New York and also in the Tuesday
meeting that he had with the Contact Group and the Foreign Ministers was
say to them, "Once you have agreed on the expanded constitutional
principles, you should turn your attention to a cease-fire."
So the Secretary put the cease-fire on the table; and, when Dick
Holbrooke left on his shuttle mission, the Secretary's instructions
were, "Pursue a cease-fire."
But I can tell you, there was never any realistic expectation that
there would be a cease-fire last week. Frankly, a lot of us felt that
expecting a cease-fire this week was probably too much for the market to
bear, and that's why we were very pleased that Dick Holbrooke was able
to make the progress that he did.
I can tell you in my own discussions with Dick Holbrooke yesterday,
he rated the chances of success -- and this is in a private
conversation; this is not public spin -- at less than 50/50. But he had
a six-hour meeting with President Milosevic last night, and he had a
multi-hour meeting this morning, and we were able to get the agreement.
It was not easy to reach.
Q I have a question about another issue.
MR. BURNS: Beyond Bosnia?
Q Yes. Different question.
MR. BURNS: Okay. What we normally do is we'll stay on Bosnia, and
then when we're finished with that, we'll go to your question.
Q Do you have anything about the NATO aspects -- how NATO will
get involved in upholding not a cease-fire so much as a final agreement,
and where the Russians come in?
MR. BURNS: I think, as you know, Secretary Perry is in
Williamsburg today. He is discussing with his NATO Defense Minister
counterparts exactly that question: What plan should NATO now make for
a peace implementation force that would be, of course, implemented by
NATO in the event that these negotiations that we have agreed upon today
succeed. And we very much hope they'll succeed.
In addition to that, I think you know as well that we've had a
series of intensive contacts with the Russian Government. The President
was on the phone with President Yeltsin last week on this issue, among
others. Secretary Christopher raised it with Foreign Minister Kozyrev,
and we expect that there will be a high-level meeting this weekend in
Geneva with the Russian Government to pursue this specific issue.
Q Is the idea that the Russians would come under NATO command
or that there would be a rotating command, or can you give any sense of
that very basic question?
MR. BURNS: We know what this arrangement will not be. The Russian
Government will not be under NATO command -- the Russian military forces
will not be under NATO command, number one. They will not be integrated
into the NATO operation, number two.
Number three, there is no possibility of the United States agreeing
to a rotating command for a peace implementation force. What we are
going to be discussing this weekend in Geneva when the Defense Ministers
get together -- and Strobe Talbott will be at those talks with Secretary
Perry -- is something else.
It is a NATO implementation force, and options to be discussed on
how Russia can cooperate with that NATO effort. So I think the proper
sequencing would be Russia and NATO -- not Russia in NATO.
Q (Inaudible) if NATO would be defending -- would be posted in
the Bosnian Government side -- the Bosnian Government entity rather, or
do you anticipate that NATO would also be on the Bosnian Serb side?
MR. BURNS: That question hasn't been answered. We need to see the
shape of the peace before we can define the shape of the peace
implementation mission. So it's not possible to answer that question
right now, Roy.
But NATO is making contingency plans, trying to think through what
kind of force would be required, what numbers of troops would be
required, where those troops would come from; thinking through options
for roles, and we're thinking through very carefully within our
government and now talking to the Russians about what role the Russians
and others outside NATO could play to help enforce a peace.
But I don't think there's anybody on the Russian side or the
American side who thinks that they can be mixed. These have to be
distinct elements within one overall effort.
Q But could you have the Western countries on the one side --
the NATO countries on the one side and the Russians on the other side of
the line? Is that a possible outcome?
MR. BURNS: Say that again.
Q Could you have the NATO countries on one side of the internal
demarcation line and the Russians, perhaps, on the other side of the
internal demarcation line?
MR. BURNS: We're just not at that level of specificity yet. We
haven't gotten into that level of detail, because we're not sure where
the lines are going to be. We don't know what the peace will look like
when it is concluded, if it's concluded, at this peace conference.
Q Nick, at this peace conference, the Serbian butcher, General
Mladic, is he coming for -- to the United States? If he comes, does the
U.S., blame him as a war criminal? What are you planning to do with
him?
MR. BURNS: I don't expect that he will make an appearance here in
the United States. He and Mr. Karadzic are indicted war criminals by
the International War Crimes Tribunal, and I think you know the rules of
engagement inside the War Crimes Tribunal. Member states do have an
obligation to let the War Crimes Tribunal know when there has been a
sighting.
I'd just remind you when totally by surprise several weeks ago
Messrs. Karadzic and Mladic walked through the door of President
Milosevic's office and sat down with Dick Holbrooke -- we were unaware
that they would do that -- the United States reported to the War Crimes
Tribunal following that meeting that there had been this encounter, as
we were obligated to do so under the terms of the War Crimes Tribunal.
I do not expect that either gentleman would be in the United States
for this meeting.
Q Did you report -- did he report again after this latest
meeting in Belgrade that he saw them again?
MR. BURNS: Dick did not see them in Belgrade. No. When Dick was
in Belgrade for six hours of talks with President Milosevic, he did not
meet or see either Karadzic or Mladic. Their signatures, which you will
see on the page that I'm going to pass out, were obtained by President
Milosevic -- I assume in Belgrade, I don't know for sure -- but there
was no contact between the American delegation and those two members.
There was contact, however, between the American delegation and other
Bosnian Serb officials who we have seen in the past and whom I'm sure
we'll see in the future.
Q New subject.
MR. BURNS: David.
Q What exactly do the Bosnians require be done about Gorazde
for them to honor the cease-fire?
MR. BURNS: The Bosnian Government has asked -- and you'll see
this, it's actually paragraph 7 -- that at one minute past midnight on
October 10, all parties will provide for free passage and unimpeded road
access between Sarajevo and Gorazde along two primary routes -- and they
name the two routes in parenthesis -- for all non-military and UNPROFOR
traffic. So not just for local military traffic but for civilian
traffic as well.
I should point, I think, as the President and Sandy Vershbow
pointed out this morning, that the Bosnian Government has conditioned
the beginning of this cease-fire on a very important issue for them, and
that is that full gas and electricity -- utility services -- will have
been restored in the city of Sarajevo by the time that the cease-fire is
due to go into effect.
That is why Ambassador Holbrooke decided we would have five days
between today and the imposition of the cease-fire. We need to work on
that particular aspect of this agreement -- turning on the gas and
electricity in Sarajevo -- and we need to get the word out to all the
various warring factions and the local militias within Bosnia-
Herzegovina that there is a cease-fire to be effected.
Q Is it fair to assume that the U.N. forces on the ground are
going to have to redeploy in order to -- onto the road to Gorazde, for
example, in order to monitor the cease-fire and the other terms?
MR. BURNS: That is something that would seem logical, but I can't
speak for the United Nations. I'm not a military person on the ground.
It's something, I think, that should be addressed to them. But it would
seem obvious that if new facts are going to be created on the ground as
a result of the cease-fire agreement -- namely, two roads being open --
that would have to be monitored by the United Nations.
Q Are there any American personnel at all involved in the U.N.
force or in assisting the U.N. force on the ground as it now stands, and
is it contemplated that any would be going?
MR. BURNS: No. I don't believe there are any United States
military forces on the ground who have been or will be a part of this
effort.
Q Any U.S. -- not military necessarily, anybody?
MR. BURNS: I don't believe so. I don't believe there are any U.S.
Government officials who are now or will be part of the effort to
implement and police this cease-fire on the ground. As you know, we
have troops in Macedonia, and we have some medical personnel in Croatia.
They're part of a field hospital there.
I'm only aware of those two military contingents in the Balkans --
American military contingents.
Q What about the (inaudible) Sarajevo -- experts going over?
MR. BURNS: I don't know, Sid, if American Government experts will
be involved in that. I do know that Ambassador Menzies has been
directly involved in helping to negotiate this provision and will be
monitoring it. I don't know if the Bosnian Government has asked for our
assistance.
There's another positive aspect to this, and that is as a result of
Prime Minister Silajdzic's trip to Moscow over the weekend, the Russian
Government has said that it will be helpful in trying to help restore
gas services to Sarajevo. This is the Russian gas company -- GAZPROM.
Q Nick, if I could follow up --
MR. BURNS: Let's go here first.
Q One question on the proximity talks. Do you hope that they
will result in an initial peace agreement that would be formally signed
in Paris later on, or what exactly do you expect the three Presidents --
MR. BURNS: We haven't worked out the exact transitional details,
but I think our expectation is that these proximity peace talks are
designed to make substantial progress towards a peace agreement. The
heavy diplomatic work, the back and forth, the negotiations, would be
centered on these talks. Then, of course, it will be necessary to
convene in a more formal setting, certainly with higher level officials
from the Contact Group side, at some kind of peace conference in France,
and we'll be working out those details with the French Government.
Q Why does this all have to be -- why couldn't this have been
done all in Paris or a European site? Why do they have to all be
brought here?
MR. BURNS: We discussed this issue with our Contact Group partners
and with the parties. I can tell you that the parties were determined
that the United States continue
to play a central role. We thought that there might have to be several
stages to the effort to make peace; that it might be just too difficult
to convene some kind of grand, formal international conference and
expect all of these difficult territorial and constitutional issues to
be worked out at such a conference.
Therefore, we worked out a two-stage approach, whereby you would
have very private, isolated, private talks in the United States, and
then you'd have the convening of a formal peace conference, perhaps at a
higher level, at some point later on.
We think that having the private talks in a secluded, isolated area
will give us the opportunity to make better progress than if we were at
some larger and more formal setting.
Q Nick, I wanted to follow up some of David's thinking and
questioning. One, a little detail. Did the Muslims decide that Banja
Luka could remain militarized? Did they drop that demand? And what
about the other demands they made?
MR. BURNS: I think the answers to all those questions will be
found in the document that I'll hand out afterwards. The only
conditions that are offered here are the gas and electricity, the
opening of the roads, and, of course, the cessation of all military
activities. But you'll see it in writing, and these are the conditions
to which the two parties have agreed.
Q Then, second, he was talking about the U.N. taking a
peacekeeping role once again, as they have in other, I think, cease-fire
times. Nick, will it be evaluated, or what if the U.N. can handle the
peacekeeping role? What if the weather is such this winter that the
cease-fire remains -- or the situation remains stable, will it be
possible that NATO would not be required until spring or at all?
MR. BURNS: We just don't know what the timetable will be for the
talks in the United States, the subsequent talks in France, and then
when peace finally breaks out completely, the peace implementation
force. We just don't know what the timetable will be. We'll have to
take this one week at a time.
Q Then it is possible that NATO wouldn't even be needed, is it
not?
MR. BURNS: Highly unlikely. I think the three parties have made
clear that the achievement of a
comprehensive peace agreement will be in part dependent upon the
commitment of the international community to deploy military forces to
help implement the peace agreement.
[...]
The briefing concluded at 2:09 p.m.)
END
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