U.S. Department of State 95/10/27 Daily Press Briefing
From: hristu@arcadia.harvard.edu (Dimitrios Hristu)
Subject: U.S. Department of State 95/10/27 Daily Press Briefing
Office of the Spokesman
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
I N D E X
Friday, October 27, 1995
Briefer: Nicholas Burns
[...]
FORMER YUGOSLAVIA
Proximity Peace Talks:
--Serb/Bosnian-Serb Delegation ...........................9-10,12
--Negotiation of Peace Agreement .........................9-10
--Russian Co-Sponsorship/Diplomatic/Military
Participation .........................................10-12
--War Crimes Tribunal/Human Rights Abuses/Atrocities .....10,13-15
-- Assistant Secretary Shattuck's Trip to Region ........16-18
--Milosevic, Izetbegovic, & Tudjman Participation ........13
--U.S. Congressional Support .............................18-21
[...]
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
DPB #160
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1995, 1:08 P.M.
(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)
[...]
Q If there are no questions on that statement, can we go back
to Bosnia? The Secretary will make a presentation. Will he be specific
in that presentation on U.S. views on the critical issues, or will he
speak broadly of them?
MR. BURNS: Let me just run through the Wednesday events. The
Secretary will be arriving in Dayton. He will have bilateral meetings
with each of the three delegation leaders, each of the three Presidents
-- President Izetbegovic, President Milosevic, and President Tudjman.
Q (Inaudible)
MR. BURNS: He has not. We've not set a specific time. I believe
it will be sometime probably in the late morning, but we do not have a
specific time. I would hope to have something for you on Monday in that
regard.
Q Following the three bilateral meetings, the Secretary will
then convene the Proximity Peace Talks. All of the delegations will be
present for that session -- the three Balkan delegations and all the
European delegations, as well, of course, as the United States
delegation.
He will address -- Barry, in answer to your question -- he'll
address the delegates, I think, with a fairly comprehensive statement of
United States views on the importance of reaching a political agreement
at Dayton and what we hope will happen thereafter, to secure a permanent
peace in Bosnia. I think it will be an important statement that will
give you all the details you'll need on how the United States Government
is approaching these talks.
Q Nick, are other people going to make statements or will they
break up after that and go into their respective rooms for the Proximity
Talks to begin?
MR. BURNS: What will be open to the press will be the Secretary's
opening statement. After the press leaves, then there will be, of
course, an ensuing discussion and some statements by the participating
delegations; but that will be in private. That will, in effect, be when
the private discussions begin.
The Secretary will be in Dayton, I would think, for several hours
in the afternoon. He has not yet decided whether he would spend the
night there or whether he would return to Washington. Both options are
under consideration, and we'll let you know when he makes a decision on
that.
Jim.
Q About Dayton, do you have any plans to pipe it back here --
his opening address?
MR. BURNS: As much as you love -- you've been to Dayton?
Q Yeah, I have.
MR. BURNS: We'll look into that, Jim. I think if we can do that
technologically, we'll try to do that.
Q Can you be as free as you can on --
MR. BURNS: I just want to note, John is saying we're going to look
into the possibility of doing that for you.
Q You're making some arrangements for transmitting news. So
far as public access or making statements or whatever, what is available
-- the Secretary's statement? Is that it? Or will there be some
briefing there, for instance, after he sees, or Holbrooke sees these
other folks?
MR. BURNS: For those who will be traveling with the Secretary, of
course, you'll have access to him on the aircraft.
Q Going back, you know he's going to talk to the press?
MR. BURNS: No. Access at some point. I don't know at which point
he'll talk to the press.
Q Oh, I have it.
MR. BURNS: The purpose in bringing press on the plane would be to
make the Secretary available to you on the aircraft. Secondly, you'll
have his opening remarks which will be quite extensive -- these are not
60-second opening remarks -- to the delegates and to the people
negotiating there.
And, third, it wouldn't surprise me if there are other media events
-- I mean, interviews -- given afterwards.
Q (Inaudible)
MR. BURNS: I haven't set anything specifically in that regard.
Q When does the curtain come down so far as -- let's call it a
"Press Room" for want a better name. When does it close?
MR. BURNS: The curtain will come down, I think, late afternoon,
early evening of November 1.
After that, as we have discussed before, the participants in this
conference, including Dick Holbrooke, will not be speaking to the press.
There will be no press events from Dayton.
Q Dick and I, in fact, just about 30 minutes ago, reviewed this
procedure. I'll be glad to go over it again with you.
Starting on Thursday, Dick will be calling in to me and to others
in the Department several times during the day. During my Thursday
briefing, I will have a statement to make about what happened Thursday
morning at the talks. If it's necessary some days to make two
statements or three, I'll do that, if that's necessary. It may not be
necessary for me to do that.
I will be briefing on a daily basis, including I'll have things
over the weekend, if necessary, especially to keeep the wires and the
news -- well, all of you -- informed on what's going on.
We don't expect to deviate from this particular arrangement. We
think it's the best way to conduct these negotiations.
It is entirely possible -- in fact, I would expect that the
Secretary would go back down to Dayton. It is possible the Secretary
might want to make a statement to the press when he does that. It's not
guaranteed, but it's possible.
It's also possible that Dick Holbrooke at certain points in these
talks may return to Washington to report to people here directly. It's
possible he could have something to say when he does that. But we're
not planning to brief out of Dayton. There will be no On-the-Record
statements from Dayton.
All of the participants have taken a pledge that they will not
speak to the media from Dayton.
I can also tell you that we'll have media access to Wright-
Patterson on Monday and on Wednesday. After that, there will be no
media access.
I know that some of you are concerned that perhaps some journalists
will be in the delegations of some of the participating countries.
We've made it positively clear and absolutely clear to all the
delegations that this cannot happen. If we find out that anyone is
trying to report from within Dayton -- Wright-Patterson -- we will
obviously put a stop to that because that violates the agreed procedures
for all delegations.
Q You will enforce it, then?
MR. BURNS: We will absolutely enforce it, Bill.
Q This will be exclusively -- then, everything from Dayton will
exclusively come through you here in this room?
MR. BURNS: That's right.
Q You said it's open Monday -- Wednesday. I mean, it's open
Monday through Wednesday, is what you mean?
MR. BURNS: Well, actually not.
Q No?
MR. BURNS: Let me just review this so there's no mistake. Dave
Leavy, from our Press Office, will be in Dayton. He'll be there
starting this evening. If any of you have questions about logistics and
about press operations, you can call Dave directly at Dayton at the Air
Force base. We'll make his number available to all of you.
We have distributed last night and also again today a set of
instructions for how you can register yourself, how you can set up
technically for Dayton.
On Monday, at 1:00, 2:00, 3:00, and 4:00, he's going to take four
waves of journalists through the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. You
will have access to the exterior of all the buildings and the grounds.
You'll have access to the conference hall inside, the interior.
We are not going to be giving the press access to the interior of
the housing that the delegations will be staying in. That's four waves
on Monday.
Tuesday, the press will not have access to Wright-Patterson until
the delegations begin to arrive, and then you will have access to the
leaders as they arrive by aircraft -- I would imagine now there will not
be a Moscow meeting on Tuesday, October 31, I would imagine afternoon,
early evening.
Then, again, on Wednesday, when Secretary Christopher arrives, you
will be able to cover his arrival at the base. Some of you will be with
him on the aircraft. Then you'll be able to cover the opening of the
conference itself. So that's basically what we've set up.
When the Wednesday events conclude, then the veil will drop and our
press blackout will commence and all further comments will be from this
podium here.
Q Two further logistical questions. Are there going to be
statements at the airport on the arrivals?
MR. BURNS: By?
Q The visiting delegations.
Q Or by the Secretary.
MR. BURNS: Or by the Secretary?
Q Well, the Secretary's Wednesday, but --
MR. BURNS: We have not decided, first, that the Secretary will be
making an airport statement, and on the others I simply don't know. I
think that's something I'll have to discuss with Dick Holbrooke.
Q Are there going to be photo ops at the bilateral meetings
Wednesday preceding the convening of the --
MR. BURNS: At this point we're not planning any photo ops for the
bilaterals. We want those to be entirely private meetings.
Q Well, the problem is if there are no arrival statements and
no photo ops, the only voice we'll have is Warren Christopher.
(Laughter) Not that that --
MR. BURNS: Hey, Judd, that's a good idea. (Laughter) Thank you.
I hadn't thought of it along those lines, though, but that's a good
idea. Thanks. I'll pass that on.
Q I think it's (inaudible). That was --
MR. BURNS: No, actually, I just don't know if Milosevic, Tudjman,
Izetbegovic, Carl Bildt will be making statements at Wright-Patterson.
That's an open question in my mind that we need to look into. I can't
make a commitment that they will --
Q No, I understand.
MR. BURNS: Because I think that Dick Holbrooke will have to talk
to them about that. It's a question that frankly we hadn't decided on
yet.
Q Well, you can't speak for them, but are you opposed to that?
MR. BURNS: I don't want to speak to the question until I have a
conversation with Dick on this.
Q What time is the Secretary's opening statement?
MR. BURNS: It will be some time mid to late morning. I don't have
an exact arrival time for the Secretary yet. I don't have an exact
arrival time on Wednesday. I'll get that to you as soon as I have it.
Q Nick, one last tag, and I thought that was the question. The
time of the Secretary's statement, opening the conference, after his
three little meetings.
MR. BURNS: I don't have that yet.
Q Still not --
MR. BURNS: Still to be determined. We'll get it to you as soon as
we have it.
Q Can we go to substance?
MR. BURNS: Be glad to.
Q How does Holbrooke -- how does the Secretary feel about
negotiating with Milosevic? Do they have any qualms about negotiating?
I'm asking, for those of us who haven't had access to Holbrooke, who has
expressed himself on this point.
(A group was escorted into the briefing room.)
MR. BURNS: Barry, let me get into that, but let me first say -- I
can now officially welcome a group of journalists from Latin America who
are here under a program sponsored by USIA. I believe it's a program
that centers on investigative journalism, and I just wanted to welcome
you. You're most welcome. We're just in the middle of a briefing.
We're now talking about Bosnia.
Barry, it's an important question. I think I can summarize the
attitude of most of our senior people in this government that in any
negotiation, but certainly in a negotiation that attempts to stop a war
completely and forge a peace, you sometimes have to negotiate with
people that you would not ordinarily call your friends.
You sometimes have to negotiate with people who have been
responsible for starting the war -- and you have to negotiate sometimes
with adversaries to conclude a peace. Specifically at the end of wars,
when you do have peace conferences, that is almost always the case.
So we are in a position where we put a very high emphasis on
reaching peace, and to do that we've invited Minister Milosevic here.
Q Nick, to what extent, though, do you believe -- does the
United States believe that a peace agreement is possible without the
direct involvement of Karadzic and Mladic, even though Milosevic has
this signed document, saying that he represents their views?
MR. BURNS: I believe reaching a peace agreement is entirely
possible without the participation of Karadzic and Mladic. They are not
welcome in the United States. They are indicted war criminals by the
United Nations War Crimes Tribunal. They will not come here because of
that fact. We do not want to deal with them directly, and we don't have
to.
The fact is that they have, in effect, turned over their role in
these negotiations to President Milosevic. There is a joint Serb-
Bosnian Serb delegation which he leads. Some of the people in that
delegation will be Bosnian Serbs. Mr. Koljevich and Mr. Buha are two of
them.
But the other two -- Karadzic and Mladic -- will not be here, and
it's certainly possible to negotiate a peace agreement with Milosevic.
Let me just add to the comments and lead back to Barry's question and
say it is not possible to negotiate a peace without Milosevic. Someone
must speak on behalf of both Serbia and the Bosnian Serbs -- someone
authoritative -- and it's not going to be the indicted war criminals,
but it will be the President of Serbia.
That is why all of this talk here in the United States is a little
bit puzzling. How can you arrive at a peace that is negotiated among
the parties if the parties are not present at the peace table. We
didn't elect these people. We didn't draw up the perfect guest list.
We have to deal with reality and the situation as it stands, and the
reality is that Milosevic is the head of the Serbian-Bosnian Serb
delegation.
Q Nick, can I turn Carol's question around and paraphrase what
President Tudjman said in an interview, I think, in New York yesterday,
that no peace is possible as long as Karadzic remains in power. Does
the United States think that there could be peace as long as he and
Mladic remain in power?
MR. BURNS: I think there are separate questions that are at work
here. The first question is how do you arrive at a peace agreement, and
I think it's our strongly held view that that has to happen at the
negotiating table. There will be compromises made at that negotiating
table. There will be hard issues that are fought over there, but we
hope very much that perhaps in a couple of weeks -- perhaps over a
longer period of time -- there will be a peace agreement.
A separate issue, but not entirely separate -- but a separate issue
is the indictment and prosecution of war criminals. There is a process
underway for that, and that is the United Nations War Crimes Tribunal.
So I would just point you to both of those statements as a pretty
good indication of how we look at that particular question, Jim.
Q Nick, what is the effect of President Yeltsin's absence from
this meeting or this meeting not taking place -- does it set back the
peace process or not?
MR. BURNS: First, it's very unfortunate that President Yeltsin has
fallen ill. I think you know that President Clinton has sent him a
message, hoping that he'll have a full and speedy recovery.
Second, it's imperative that the Russian Government be part of the
diplomatic effort, which it is. It's a co-sponsor of the Dayton peace
talks.
We believed it was very important that President Yeltsin decided to
invite the three Presidents to Moscow on October 31 -- important because
it was a dramatic demonstration of the unity that the United States and
Russia feel -- unity together -- on the diplomatic end of this peace
process.
We're hoping through the talks that Secretary Perry and Defense
Minister Grachev are having, to have a similar unity of views on the
military side: what would happen, what kind of participation would
Russia have in the implementation force or, associated with it, after
the peace agreement is signed.
The fact that the meeting was agreed to -- that the three
Presidents intended to go there, and the Russians wanted to have the
meeting -- was a very important fact, which, as Foreign Minister Kozyrev
said just a couple of hours ago in Moscow, has already accomplished part
of the purpose of that meeting.
We're disappointed that the meeting will not take place. We've
decided, of course, to go ahead with our own talks here on November 1.
So I don't think that the cancellation of the meeting, the postponement
of the meeting, will have a fundamental effect, because I already think
some of the positive aspects have been felt by the parties. We
certainly assume and are planning for Russia to maintain its very
intensive involvement on the diplomatic side through the presence of
Igor Ivanov, who will be in Dayton throughout the peace talks.
Q Are you optimistic, Nick, that the talks between Grachev and
Perry will yield an agreement this weekend? There was some progress
reported; also a gap. Have you anything -- are you optimistic about
that?
MR. BURNS: That's really in Secretary Perry's hands and those of
Minister Grachev right now, and they're out at Fort Riley to view the
Partnership for Peace exercise in which the Russian Federation military
is participating. They're continuing their talks. They did as they
went out to Fort Riley, and they'll continue them as they go on to
another base in Missouri tomorrow.
It's hard to say whether or not we're going to have an agreement
with the Russian Federation. We'd like to have an agreement. That's
our very strongly held view, that our ability to implement the peace
will be stronger if the Russian Federation is part of that process --
part of that military process to complement its diplomatic activities.
But if we're not able to get an agreement, of course, then we'll
just have to march on from there and plan what we're planning, which is
a NATO-led peace implementation force. We very much hope to have an
agreement.
Q Can we go back to Milosevic?
Q Could I ask one more question about the Russians? The other
day you used the phrase I don't think I recall you using before. You
described the Russians as co-chairmen of the Proximity Talks.
MR. BURNS: Yes.
Q Are there only two co-chairmen, or are --
MR. BURNS: There are three. I meant to use that phrase, and I'm
glad you raised it. There are three co-chairs of these talks -- the
United States, the Russian Federation and the European Union -- Dick
Holbrooke, Igor Ivanov and Carl Bildt -- and, as you know, during
Holbrooke's last shuttle to the region, he took Bildt and Ivanov on his
plane, and they meet these leaders together as a triumvirate to
establish the precedent for the Dayton peace talks, and the practice of
working together.
Dick will be working through this weekend with a number of these
people on the phone and some of them here in Washington, and he'll be
seeing Mr. Ivanov when he arrives early next week.
Q Can I follow on that, please, Nick? When you're at Dayton --
the question is who is going to be going back and forth to the various
groups -- do the three that you've just spoken of go together? Does
Holbrooke go alone? What is the exact role in the negotiating process of
the other two?
MR. BURNS: That's a question you should direct to Dick on Monday
morning. I'm sure he'll work out some kind of an arrangement with his
colleagues.
Q So far as Milosevic and the Bosnian Serbs, you've made clear
that using Milosevic -- even though there will be some Bosnian Serbs
there -- the main thing is Milosevic can speak for them, and you're
happy with that arrangement.
Now, so far as implementing, the people you're excluding on war
criminal grounds are people who have obviously had a lot to do with the
fighting in Bosnia. How does the State Department feel about Milosevic
being able to implement any agreement, specifically restraining people
that you think are war criminals.
MR. BURNS: Let me just remind you that Milosevic, Karadzic, Mladic
signed an agreement, which I believe was witnessed by a church authority
in Belgrade, to the effect that Milosevic would represent the Bosnian
Serbs.
This was signed, Barry, before the Sarajevo cease-fire was
successfully negotiated, and I think that the Sarajevo cease-fire is a
fairly good precedent, to answer your question. The fact is that was
negotiated with Milosevic.
But you're right -- to implement it, it had to have the active
cooperation of the Bosnian Serb military authorities, namely General
Ratko Mladic. It was and has been successfully implemented. So much so
that I believe today, for the first time in several years, there has now
been a significant civilian convoy into Sarajevo. Life there is
beginning to return to normal.
We would hope that the precedent -- the successful precedential
value of Sarajevo -- will, of course, carry over into implementing any
peace agreement that is reached at Dayton, Ohio.
Q Do you have the clear understanding of the three Presidents
that they will stay in Dayton for the duration of the talks, or have you
heard from perhaps President Izetbegovic that he plans to leave and
leave his Foreign Minister in charge of the delegation at some point?
MR. BURNS: We have a clear understanding from President Milosevic
and President Izetbegovic that they will stay for the duration of the
Dayton talks. President Tudjman has indicated that because of some
events in Croatia, he may stay only for the first couple of days, turn
the Croatian chair over to Foreign Minister Granic and go back to
Zagreb. But he also may return at some point.
So I think we can see that Izetbegovic and Milosevic will stay.
Tudjman may not. But all delegations will be represented at all times.
Q A Milosevic follow-up, if I could, Nick, to Barry's question
and to the others. This man is accused. He is not indicted. He is,
therefore, not yet a suspected war criminal, is that correct?
MR. BURNS: It is correct that he has not been indicted by the U.N.
War Crimes Tribunal.
Q Is he likely -- is he under review that he might be indicted?
MR. BURNS: I don't know. That is a decision that can't be made by
the United States. It can only be made by Judge Goldstone and his
colleagues on the War Crimes Tribunal.
Q But you're not expecting he'd be indicted while he's in the
U.S.?
MR. BURNS: I don't believe that will be the case. I wouldn't lead
you in that direction. But, again, the War Crimes Tribunal is an
independent organization. It doesn't take its instructions from
Washington, D.C., or from Paris or from any place else.
These are independent jurists and lawyers. In fact, I think we've
sent over 20 people from the U.S. Government to be part of this. We've
helped to fund it. We've been the leading financier, funder, of the War
Crimes Tribunal. It's an ongoing concern, and it's independent. So I
think you'd have to go to them for an answer to that question, but I
wouldn't suspect that that would happen while Milosevic is here.
Q Are you sure he hasn't been indicted? I thought they were --
MR. BURNS: No. Milosevic has not been indicted by the War Crimes
Tribunal.
Q No, no. Not Milosevic. Karadzic and Mladic.
MR. BURNS: Karadzic and Mladic have been indicted. I thought
Bill's question pertained to Milosevic. But I would like to repeat a
point that I think is very important. I know that there are some
purists who perhaps stand far away from the negotiations and maybe some
who would like to toss stones at the negotiations -- who believe that
somehow it's possible to have peace in Bosnia without the Bosnian Serbs
and the Serbs.
There won't be peace until the Bosnian Serbs, the Serbs, sit down
with the Bosnian Government and the Croatian Government and negotiate a
peace arrangement. It won't happen. It is a fantasy to think that it
will. The people who believe this are completely separated from
reality.
The fact is that, like it or not, you deal with people who have
made war to make peace, and I think as Americans we can look at the past
four years of war and pin the blame for that war squarely on the Serbs -
- squarely on the Bosnian Serbs, and the allegations of human rights
abuses squarely and directly on the Bosnian Serbs.
We don't like negotiating with some of these people -- the Bosnian
Serb side -- but it's going to be absolutely necessary for them to be
there to make the peace. I'm not talking about Karadzic and Mladic.
I'm talking about some others.
That's an important point to remember. You can't make peace
without the people who have made the war.
Q But not Karadzic or Mladic.
Q The dividing line then is being indicted as a war criminal?
Is that the --
MR. BURNS: That is absolutely the dividing line right now, because
Karadzic and Mladic are not welcome in this country, and we would be
under certain obligations to the War Crimes Tribunal, should they visit
this country. So they're not coming to this country. They've not been
invited, and they will not come. We will not be negotiating peace with
them.
But we will be negotiating peace with Milosevic and Koljevich and
Buha and the others, and it's absolutely necessary to make the peace.
Right now for the United States, peace is the highest objective.
Q What is your judgment at this point in terms of Milosevic's
cooperation and facilitating and trying to (a) identify the magnitude of
the atrocities or the killings in northwestern Bosnia; and (b) trying to
determine whether there are still people alive who were being held in
detention and may be in danger of being killed unless there is prompt
intervention? What tangible steps has he taken in response to repeated
appeals from the U.S. that he intervene in that situation?
MR. BURNS: Let me just begin by saying that the best and most
effective way to end the human rights abuses, to end the summary
executions and the forced expulsions that are occurring and have
occurred in Banja Luka is to have peace talks to stop the war completely
and to have a peace.
That's another answer to those who say don't invite Milosevic to
the United States. Don't give him a visa to come here. The best way to
stop the atrocities is to have him come here to negotiate a peace.
Assistant Secretary of State John Shattuck was sent to Belgrade by
Secretary Christopher this week, and two days ago he met with Milosevic.
He was given a commitment by President Milosevic that the international
community -- and that means the Red Cross, the United Nations, the
United States Government, in the person of Mr. Shattuck, and the press,
the international press corps -- would be allowed into Banja Luka.
Dick Holbrooke and I just talked to John Shattuck at 12:30, and
John has told us -- John's in Zagreb --that he will be going into Banja
Luka this weekend; that the press will be going into Banja Luka; that
Shattuck is facilitating the travel of American journalists into Banja
Luka and into Sanski Most; and that the ICRC and the U.N. will also be
going in.
We have a firm commitment to Milosevic, and now this commitment is,
we think, being met by deed, because they're talking about specific
transport and specific routes -- we are -- with the Bosnian Serbs in
order to get into Banja Luka.
The purpose of having John Shattuck go into Banja Luka, along with
the others -- along with the press -- is to look at the places where the
refugees in Zenica say the tortures, the rapes and the summary
executions, as well as the forced expulsions, took place during the last
three weeks.
Assistant Secretary Shattuck is to conduct a comprehensive survey
of that area, as much as he can, given the security situation that is
quite dangerous, and he is to report back to Secretary Christopher and
Dick Holbrooke, which he will do, I'm sure, sometime over the weekend or
early next week.
We have encouraged the international press corps to look
independently into these allegations, as we have the ICRC. Any
information that we develop as a result of Mr. Shattuck's trip there
will be turned over to the U.N. War Crimes Tribunal. I think that's an
important point.
Let me just go a little bit further and tell you a little bit more
about what he's been doing. Shattuck has also met with Croatian
Government officials, and he has told them that we do have some concerns
about the upcoming Croatian elections, namely we believe that all
citizens of Croatia -- and that includes the Krajina Serbs, the hundreds
of thousands of Krajina Serbs -- who lost their homes, were driven out
of their homes by the Croatian military offensive in August -- all of
them should be allowed, we believe, to vote in the upcoming Croatian
elections, and we are concerned that the Croatian Government will limit
the right of some of these people to vote in those elections.
So he's been in both places. He's looking into both violations of
human rights in the Krajina region, as well as in Banja Luka.
At John Shattuck's encouragement when he was in Belgrade, he put
Serbian officials in touch with the ICRC and the U.N.. He has also put
some of the humanitarian agencies -- other humanitarian agencies,
private -- in touch with the government in Belgrade.
So he's done quite a lot of work over the last couple of days, and
he'll stay in the region. The Secretary has asked him to stay in the
region to pursue these allegations of human rights abuses.
Q Was he due to come back and then, his stay has been extended
now?
MR. BURNS: I heard some reports on radio this morning that he
would be coming back to the United States. He will not be coming back
to the United States. He was not able to get into Banja Luka yesterday
because of fog and low cloud cover. He was going to go in by aircraft.
He is now trying to get in. I don't want to say when he's going to go
in there or how, for obvious reasons.
Q Are there any concerns that, indeed, finding that these
atrocities have taken place will jeopardize the peace talks coming up
next week?
MR. BURNS: I think Mr. Milosevic has answered that question. He
has agreed to give the international community unfettered, he says,
access to these sites. He will be at Dayton, Ohio, because it's in his
interest to be in Dayton, Ohio, starting next Tuesday afternoon.
I think a much more important point is that we have an obligation
to pursue allegations of human rights abuses, wherever they may lead and
whenever they occur. The fact that these abuses occurred during the
last three weeks may be an inconvenience for some people, but it's not
for us.
Shattuck has been in the region three times in the last month,
twice in the last two weeks, specifically to look into these
allegations.
Q Nick, on your concerns about the Croatian elections, what
does this tell you about the Croatian Government's willingness and
ability to reach out beyond the forces of war and reconcile its people,
especially on the verge of peace talks?
MR. BURNS: It tells us, I think, what we already know and which
I'm sure you already know. This is a major challenge. It's going to be
a major challenge to have successful peace talks at Dayton. A lot of
people think that Secretary Christopher and Dick Holbrooke are going to
have an easy time of it over a couple of days.
I think, especially based on the briefing that the Secretary has given
yesterday -- the Secretary went outside of Washington to a U.S.
Government facility and received a five to six hour briefing on the
peace process -- I think the major thought that I bring away from that
particular briefing is how difficult these negotiations are going to be,
in part because of the question you just raised. We are facing major
challenges, as are the parties, to put back together some semblance of
civil life in these countries after four years of warfare.
Q Nick, can I try on the congressional question? Does Congress
-- do --
Q Could I just -- for one second. East Slavonia -- will East
Slavonia take part in the Croatian elections? Did Shattuck raise the
issue?
MR. BURNS: John Shattuck made the point -- and I know that our
Embassy in Zagreb is following up on this --- that all people who were
citizens of Croatia, even those who may have been displaced by the war -
- and there are many thousands of people who have been over the last
four years -- all of those people should, in our view, be able to take
part in these elections.
Regarding Eastern Slavonia, this is a very important question that
is on the agenda for Dayton. There is a diplomatic channel, mechanism,
available now to the Serbs and to the Croatians to resolve this problem.
And I just want to say again, there can be no excuse and no reason to
try to resolve that problem through military force, because there is a
diplomatic channel available to resolve it.
Q I'm trying to figure out how you're going to resolve your
problem with Congress. Where do you stand now? Where does the
Administration stand now? Do you need authorization of Congress, or
will you simply welcome an expression of support to send troops?
MR. BURNS: The President said in his letter to Senator Byrd a week
ago today that he would welcome an expression of support from the United
States Congress.
Q So you don't need congressional authorization?
MR. BURNS: We very much hope that the Congress will support the
deployment of American military forces as part of a NATO operation.
American forces would be under American leadership and American command
to Bosnia in order to insure the peace agreement. The reason for that
is very simple: We think the United States has a vital national
interest in limiting this war and stopping it and insuring it does not
spread to our allies in Western Europe.
We believe that only NATO can resolve the problems that will be
associated with implementing the peace, and NATO will be ineffective and
perhaps prevented from doing so without the participation and leadership
of the United States. That's the argument that the Administration is
putting before Congress and the American people.
I think, Barry, that last week you saw the two Secretaries --
Christopher and Perry -- go up to Capitol Hill, testify four times.
That was the beginning of the Administration's campaign, its attempt, to
convince the Congress to support us. We'll continue to make that
effort; indeed, the Secretary has met and talked to a lot of people in
the Congress this week about this very issue.
Q I understand, but you have not -- I know you welcome support.
You haven't responded to whether the Administration needs authorization
from Congress. You don't think so, evidently -- the Administration.
MR. BURNS: I know that in the President's letter, if you look at
the language in the letter to Senator Byrd and also in the Secretary's
comments on Capitol Hill, the President retains his constitutional
authorities as Commander-in-Chief. I think all of our answers to this
question are either prefaced with that or they're followed up with that.
In this case I'm following up with that particular point. It's an
important point.
Q It's an important point, so fine. So you don't need -- the
President has the authority under the Constitution. He doesn't need it
-- he doesn't need to have that -- I'm trying to think of the word --
need to have that expressed, let's say, by Congress in each instance,
right?
MR. BURNS: The President clearly and the Secretary clearly wish
that Congress will choose to support this action.
Q I understand. But he has intrinsic power or constitutional
authority without having to lay out specifics for any particular
situation. The fact that the Constitution makes the President the
Commander-in-Chief means he can send American troops to Bosnia under a
well-planned arrangement in no emergency circumstance and needn't have
congressional authority to do that, but he'd like them to say it's okay.
MR. BURNS: The best way to describe this situation, Barry, is to
say that, of course, the President retains his constitutional
prerogatives. Point one.
Point two: We think it's important that the Congress express
itself on this issue. Congress has a right and an obligation to do
that. The Secretary and others are willing to do whatever it takes to
convince the Congress that this is the right thing to do. It's in our
national interest to do that -- whatever it takes in terms of going up
to Capitol Hill -- briefing, having special meetings, having phone
conversations.
We hope that at the end of the day, once a peace agreement is
signed and once then the United States and the American people
specifically face the question -- "Will we be part of the effort to
enforce the peace, to keep the peace? -- we hope that the answer from
Congress will be yes.
Q All right. You're following the course set by friendly
senators, like Senator Byrd, for instance. Send them a letter and ask
them to support you, and you think that will be enough to carry the day.
Is that the calculation, that you can make a case for the need to send
troops, and you think you needn't ask Congress for anything beyond that
-- authorizing. You feel that that will persuade and Congress will give
you some expression of support. Do I understand correctly?
MR. BURNS: What we hope to happen, Barry, is that we will continue
to make the case to the American people and to Congress of why it's
necessary for the United States to deploy military forces to Bosnia in
the event of a peace agreement and only after a peace agreement is
signed.
We would hope that by the time that point is reached, if it is
reached, the Congress will have concluded -- at least, the majority of
Congress will have concluded -- that it is in our interest to do this.
And that, therefore, an expression of their support, whether it's a
resolution, whatever, would be an important way to signal unity in this
country as our young people would go off to Bosnia to protect the peace.
We think there is every reason to do this. We can't believe,
actually, and it's just hard to imagine, that after stopping the war in
eastern Bosnia, after bringing a cease-fire to Sarajevo, after having
negotiated a peace agreement and having been the main party as a
catalyst towards that peace agreement, the United States would then
elect to walk away from our self interest and our obligation to see the
peace ensured. That's the basic argument that the Administration will
continue to make to the American people.
Q A follow-up to Barry. Barry, you finished? Okay. During
the peace process, as the details become available, will the
Administration go to the Congress and brief them, keep them advised on a
day-to-day or, at least, weekly basis so that they, let's say, are able
to make an informed decision at the time that a peace treaty may come?
MR. BURNS: When significant things happen during the course of the
Dayton negotiations, of course, we'll keep the Congressional leadership
apprised of them and fully informed. I don't know, Bill, if it's going
to be day-to-day. I'm not sure how much we'll have to say day to day.
It's likely that the first couple of days will be spent studying
the documents that the United States would have given the parties. As
you know, when the talks convene on Wednesday, the United States will
present to the parties draft outlines of agreements in each of the major
areas -- a draft peace agreement, agreements on constitutional issues,
on elections, on separation of forces, on refugees, on reconstruction.
All of that's going to happen. That's the work the Secretary reviewed
yesterday and that Dick Holbrooke will put the finishing touches on this
weekend.
[...]
(Press briefing concluded at 2:04 p.m.)
|