Exchange on Open Letter to EU Governments

Kurt Bassuener July 29th, 2010

On July 16, in response to the Open Letter to EU Governments calling on them to not take any additional steps toward Serbia’s EU integration until Ratko Mladic is arrested and transferred to The Hague, DPC (which co-wrote and organized this campaign) received a letter from Caspar Veldkamp, the Director of the Netherlands Foreign Ministry’s Department for Eastern and Southeastern Europe.  The Netherlands had long been the holdout against granting Serbia an SAA without full cooperation with the ICTY.  In last month’s meeting of EU foreign ministers, they - including the Netherlands - assessed that the cooperation was sufficient to begin the SAA ratification process.  Mr. Veldkamp asked that we pass his letter on to all of the appeal’s signatories.  His letter and the response to Mr. Veldkamp, written by DPC senior associate Bodo Weber, Steve Albert and myself, sent today, are both posted here.

Albert, Bassuener, Weber response to Caspar Veldkamp, 7-28-10

Veldkamp letter to DPC 7-16-10

Volkskrant op-ed: Mladic Must Be Arrested!

Kurt Bassuener June 21st, 2010

Last Monday, in advance of the EU foreign ministers’ meeting, Srebrenica survivor and author Emir Suljagic and DPC Senior Associate Eric A. Witte had an op-ed in Dutch daily De Volkskrant calling on EU governments to demand Serbia’s handover of Gen. Ratko Mladic to the ICTY.  Below is the English-language of the article which ran in the paper on June 14.

Mladic Must Be Arrested!

De Volkskrant (Netherlands)
14 June 2010

Emir Suljagic and Eric A. Witte

There was a time in recent Dutch politics when the weight of genocide in Bosnia was enough to bring down a government. The international community’s failure to protect civilians in Srebrenica is now almost 15 years removed.  But the effort to bring to trial Ratko Mladic, that genocide’s lead architect, is an issue for today.  It faces a major test on Monday, and once again the Dutch find themselves on the front lines. 

In July 1995, the Bosnian Serb Army overran the UN Safe Area of Srebrenica. International fecklessness left Dutch soldiers as the last hope for tens of thousands of Bosniaks who had survived the initial Serb onslaught in April and May 1992 and taken refuge in the town. Serb forces under the command of General Ratko Mladic deported women and children. Then, between July 11 and 16, they butchered some 8,000 men and boys in a series of massacres. As a result of Mladi?’s genocidal operation in Srebrenica, the Bosniak community in the eastern part of the country has effectively ceased to exist in all but name. The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, established with Dutch support and hosted in The Hague, subsequently charged Mladic with genocide and other crimes.  Nearly 15 years on, he remains a free man.

Over this period, Mladic’s general whereabouts have been known.  Unreformed elements of the Serbian military, civilian intelligence, and security services, amid stretches of complicity at the highest echelons of government, offered him protection. But even as Serbia was unwilling to confront powerful nationalist and criminal elements in its own midst to bring Ratko Mladi? to justice, it continued to progress toward European Union membership.  Two years ago, the EU invited Serbia to sign a Stabilization and Association Agreement, a major stepping stone toward EU candidate status.

Just as it appeared that the EU and its member states would allow Serbia to gain membership while a man wanted for genocide was roaming its territory, survivors of Srebrenica took heart when Dutch Foreign Minister Maxime Verhagen made clear that The Netherlands would block Serbia’s SAA by refusing to ratify it until Mladic was arrested and brought to trial. 

Serbia’s history of cooperation with the ICTY demonstrates that it has only undertaken the most difficult cooperation in response to firm conditions on aid and steps toward Euro-Atlantic integration. For years, despite some improvement, Serbian governments have continued to hinder the work of the ICTY, chiefly through extensive activities of its diplomatic and intelligence communities. Many promises have been broken.  On 31 December 2003, current President Boris Tadic promised that Mladic would be arrested during 2004.  This year his justice minister made a similar pledge.  Past claims that Mladic was out of the country or otherwise out of the reach of the authorities have been later disproved through photographs and other documentation. 

On Monday EU foreign ministers will meet, and many of his colleagues will press Foreign Minister Maxime Verhagen to relent on Serbia’s SAA.  Foreign Minister Verhagen has signaled that Mladic’s arrest is no longer the bottom line, and that the government could ratify Serbia’s SAA if ICTY Chief Prosecutor Serge Brammertz merely notes Serbian cooperation.

For its principled stand to date, with only Belgium offering tacit support, the Dutch government has faced tremendous pressure from a number of EU member states, the EU institutions, and increasingly, Washington. These actors argue that what reforms Serbia has made should be rewarded with EU candidate status now.  Underlying this pressure is a belief that justice for genocide in the 1990s should not be a priority.  In any case, Serbia’s boosters argue, the government is doing all it can to make the arrest, and the Dutch policy has been tried now without results.

Yet there are indications that the Dutch stance was responsible for the July 2008 arrest of Mladic’s fellow genocide fugitive, wartime Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic.  Since that time, EU officials and various governments have undercut Dutch leverage by assuring Serbia that the Dutch government would eventually give up, and the SAA could be approved even without Mladic’s arrest.  The resulting ambiguity has discouraged Belgrade from making the last politically difficult arrest. 

Principled and astute Dutch leadership is now at risk.  Ratko Mladic is 68 years old, and without firm reiteration that his arrest is the condition for ratification of Serbia’s SAA, Belgrade has every incentive to let him live out his old age as a free man.  If the current Dutch caretaker government allows this to happen, it would be sacrificing its legacy as guardian of justice in a city and country that has come to embody the very concept.  It also would be depriving a new governing coalition from weighing in on a shift in policy that has enjoyed broad parliamentary support. 

In July 1995, before the international community abandoned civilians to slaughter, it abandoned Dutch peacekeepers.  In the effort to bring to justice the man most responsible for the crimes at Srebrenica, the international community is echoing this act.  Unfair as it may be, the Dutch are once again the bearers of final hope for the victims of Ratko Mladic.

Emir Suljagic is a Srebrenica survivor.  Eric A. Witte is a Senior Associate of the Democratization Policy Council.

Mladic Conditionality Open Letter Update

Kurt Bassuener June 16th, 2010

Unfortunately, EU foreign ministers decided on Monday to allow the ratification process for Serbia’s Stabilization and Associate Process to begin, despite the fact that the ICTY Chief Prosecutor believes Gen. Ratko Mladic to be in Serbia and he believes efforts toward his arrest and transfer for trial are insufficient. A BIRN report on the open letter, along with another by Human Rights Watch, is linked here.  Another BIRN article after the decision quoted DPC’s Bodo Weber thus:

“The EU’s foreign ministers opted for a compromise that sacrificed conditionality and risks that the chief architect of the Srebrenica massacre will escape justice forever.”

In the meantime, the open letter to EU governments gathered a number of additional signatories since its publication last Friday.  Below is an updated list.  The individual signatories at the Bosnian Community Centre in Dublin are appended below the letter.  We are particularly pleased that two Irish legislators, Senator David Norris and MP Joe Costello, the Labour Party Spokesman on European Affairs, have both added their names.

This is particularly significant since the next step in this process is the actual parliamentary debates and votes in the 27 EU member states.  As the Srebrenica massacre’s 15th anniversary approaches, legislators should ask their governments serious questions as to whether granting Serbia the benefits that accrue from the SAA without full cooperation with the ICTY will help achieve the ends of the entrenchment of rule of law, democratic control of the security forces, and that country’s taking EU conditionality seriously.  We will update readers on these parliamentary discussions.

Also pertinent to the Srebrenica genocide, I would like to direct readers to an innovative project being undertaken by the OSA Archive at the Central European University in Budapest (full disclosure: I am an alum, back when CEU had a Prague campus).  The Archive, a repository which has collected documentation on (inter alia) human rights violations in the wars in the Balkans, has opened an exhibition with a forensic reconstruction of the 1995 genocide.  I quote from their Communiqué on the exhibition:

Yet, even after fifteen years, Ratko Mladi? remains at large and out of reach of law enforcement officials. We, the keepers of the Balkan Archive at OSA, archivists and historians, curators and organizers of the commemorative exhibition, of various nationalities, know that the book of the Srebrenica massacre cannot be closed. The relatives, all human beings, those who are directly or indirectly involved in or touched by the tragedy, cannot find peace until the case is concluded, until – at least legally – justice is done. We ask all decent human beings not to rest until the individual who can be held chiefly responsible for the mass murders is brought face to face with his judges.

Their website is

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www.osaarchivum.org

Open Letter to the Governments of the European Union
 

We, the undersigned, are writing to express our concern that General Ratko Mladic will escape justice. Nearly a decade and a half after he was indicted for genocide by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), Mladic is still at large.

We support the insistence of the Government of the Netherlands that the apprehension of persons charged with carrying out genocide in Europe be a condition for the ratification of the Stabilization and Association Agreement with Serbia, a crucial step towards joining the European Union.

Insistence on conditionality led to the transfer of Radovan Karadzic to The Hague. Continued insistence will help ensure that Ratko Mladic faces justice.

In applying for membership in the European Union, President Tadic of Serbia promised that General Mladic would be apprehended. He acknowledged that arresting him was an obligation under international law. We urge you to make any further steps towards membership in the E.U. conditional upon the fulfillment of that obligation.
 

Signatories:
Payam Akhavan, Professor of International Law, McGill University, Montreal, Canada; formerly Legal Advisor, Office of the Prosecutor, ICTY, The Hague
Steve Albert, former Editor of BosNet, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Ahmet Alibasic, Lecturer, Faculty of Islamic Studies, Sarajevo
Vlado Azinovic, Secretary General, Atlantic Initiative in Bosnia-Herzegovina
Nina Bang-Jensen, Public International Law and Policy Group, Washington, DC
Kurt Bassuener, Democratization Policy Council, Sarajevo
Nidzara Beganovic, Sarajevo
Owen Beith, Freelance and human rights activist, London
Carl Bethke, Lecturer, Leipzig University
Sonja Biserko, Belgrade
Dusan Bogdanovic, Belgrade
Bosnian Community Centre, Dublin (individual signatories listed below)
Dr. Colm Breathnach, Dept. of Geography and Sociology, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow
Darko Brkan, CA Why not? (UG Zasto ne?), Movement Dosta!, Sarajevo
Tobias Bütow, Schwarzkopf-Foundation Young Europe, Berlin
Hajra Catic, President, Association Women of Srebrenica (Zene Srebrenice), Tuzla
Norman Cigar, Professor, former Consultant at the ICTY, Virginia
Joe Costello, Member of the Irish Parliament and Labour Party Spokesman on European Affairs, Dublin
Isabelle Delpla, philosopher, Université Montpellier III France
Tanya L. Domi, Adjunct Assistant Professor of International Affairs, School of International and Public Affairs Columbia University
Azra Dzajic-Weber, Berlin
Douglas Ebner
Rev. John Feighery, Dublin, Ireland
Justice Richard Goldstone, first Prosecutor of the ICTY
Mladin Grbin, Glasgow
Dr. Michael Haltzel, Senior Fellow, Center for Transatlantic Relations,
Johns Hopkins University SAIS, Washington, DC
Marshall Harris, former State Dept official, Alston and Bird LLC, Washington, DC
Florence Hartmann, Journalist and former Spokesperson to the ICTY Chief Prosecutor
Nader Hashemi, Assistant Professor of Middle East and Islamic Politics, Josef Korbel School of International Studies, University of Denver
John W. Heffernan, Director, Speak Truth to Power, Robert F. Kennedy Center for Justice and Human Rights, Washington, DC
Marko Attila Hoare, Kingston University, London
Paul Hockenos, Global Editor, Internationale Politik, Berlin
Carole Hodge, Writer, Glasgow
Jan Willem Honig, Senior Lecturer in War Studies, King’s College London, Professor of Military Strategy, Swedish National Defence College
Jim Hooper, Managing Director, Public International Law and Policy Group, Washington, DC
Alain Horic, Literary Editor, Montreal
Ivana Howard, Balkan policy analyst, Washington, DC
Nedad and Nasiha Hrvacic, Ireland
Valerie Hughes, Ireland Action for Bosnia and Herzegovina, Dublin, Ireland
Biba and Muja Imamovic, Ireland
Bianca Jagger, Founder and Chair, Bianca Jagger Human Rights Foundation, Council of Europe Goodwill Ambassador
Cécile Jouhanneau, Ph.D. candidate, Institute for Political Science, 
Paris
Erdin Kadunic, Bosnian Academic Circle, Munich
Tomasz Kamusella, Thomas Brown Lecturer, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland
Chris Keulemans, writer, artistic director Tolhuistuin, Amsterdam
Ben Kiernan, Director, Genocide Studies Program, Yale University
Daniel Kofman Professor, University of Ottawa.
Thierry Laborde-Ombasic Paris
Roger Lippman, Editor, Balkan Witness, Seattle
Branka Magas and Quintin Hoare, The Bosnian Institute, London
Noel Malcolm, Professor, Faculty of History, Oxford University
Dzenita Mehic-Saracevic, Washington, DC
Hatidza Mehmedovic, Association Srebrenica-mothers (Srebrenicke majke)
Fadila Memisevic/ Belma Zulcic, Section of Bosnia-Herzegovina - Society for Threatened Peoples, Sarajevo
Alan Mendoza, Executive Director, Henry Jackson Society, UK
Stjepan Mestrovic, Professor, Department of sociology, Texas A&M University
David Muhlstock, Professor, Dawson College, Montreal
Andrew J. Nathan, Class of 1919 Professor of Political Science, Columbia University, New York
Maja Nenadovic, Amsterdam
Lara Nettelfield, Postdoctoral Fellow, Institut Barcelona d’Estudis Internacionals and Assistant Professor, Simon Fraser University (Canada)
Senator David Norris, Irish Parliament, Dublin
Sadija Ombasic, Paris
Andras Riedlmayer, Editor of International Justice Watch
Philipp Ruch, Center for Political Beauty, Berlin
Elisabeth Samarcq, Lille
Craig Scott, Professor of Law, Osgoode Hall Law School, Director, Nathanson Centre on Transnational Human Rights, Crime and Security, Toronto
Dr. Inela Selimovic, Sarajevo
Brendan Simms, Professor of the History of European International Relations, University of Cambridge
Ivo Skoric, Rutland, Vermont
Alison Smith, International Criminal Justice Program Coordinator, No Peace Without Justice, New York
Dzemal Sokolovic, Professor
Dr. Gregory H. Stanton, Research Professor in Genocide Studies and Prevention, Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution, George Mason University, Arlington
Sean Steele, Ireland Action for Bosnia, Dublin
Chuck Sudetic, Writer
Emir Suljagic, Srebrenica survivor, Author, Advisor to the Mayor of the City of Sarajevo
Garret Tankosic-Kelly, Sarajevo
France Théoret, Writer, Montreal
David Tolbert, President, International Center for Transitional Justice, former deputy prosecutor, deputy registrar ICTY, former Registrar STL
Patricia Wald, former Judge at the ICTY
Peter Julian Walsh, Ireland Action for Bosnia and Herzegovina, Greystones, Ireland
Bodo Weber, Democratization Policy Council, Berlin
Dr. Mark Wheeler, former OHR/OSCE, former Head of ICG Sarajevo office, Sarajevo
Julie Wornan, Paris
Tilman Zülch, President, Jasna Causevic, Society for Threatened Peoples International, Göttingen
Said Zulficar, Network for Colonial Freedom

Bosnian Community Centre, Dublin:
Razija Ademovic, Semso Alibasic, Edisa Becirovic, Ramo Becirovic, Edin Dizdarevic, Hajrija Durmo, Mirza Durmo, Medin Ejublovic, Mehan Ejubovic, Salkuna Ejubovic, Selmin Fale, Azra Kadragic, Damir Kadragic, Dzemila Karaman, Ismet Karaman, Izudin Karaman, Edin Mustic, Emir Mustic, Sead Mustic, Emir Omerovic, Enver Ramic, Fatima Ramic, Ifeta Ramic, Izet Zahirovic, Medina Zukanovic, Suljo Zukanovic

Open Letter to the Governments of the European Union

Kurt Bassuener June 12th, 2010

On Monday, an open letter was sent to the attention of the governments of the European Union, calling on all of them to insist on the arrest and transfer of Gen. Ratko Mladic, indicted for genocide, to the ICTY before any further steps toward EU membership can be taqken by Serbia.  Please find the letter and list of signatories, which includes former senior ICTY personnel, prominent academics, civic activists, political figures, and other concerned persons, below.

Open Letter to the Governments of the European Union

We, the undersigned, are writing to express our concern that General Ratko Mladic will escape justice. Nearly a decade and a half after he was indicted for genocide by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), Mladic is still at large.

We support the insistence of the Government of the Netherlands that the apprehension of persons charged with carrying out genocide in Europe be a condition for the ratification of the Stabilization and Association Agreement with Serbia, a crucial step towards joining the European Union.

Insistence on conditionality led to the transfer of Radovan Karadzic to The Hague. Continued insistence will help ensure that Ratko Mladic faces justice.

In applying for membership in the European Union, President Tadic of Serbia promised that General Mladic would be apprehended. He acknowledged that arresting him was an obligation under international law. We urge you to make any further steps towards membership in the E.U. conditional upon the fulfillment of that obligation.
 

Signatories:

Payam Akhavan, Professor of International Law, McGill University, Montreal, Canada; formerly Legal Advisor, Office of the Prosecutor, ICTY, The Hague
Steve Albert, former Editor of BosNet, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Ahmet Alibasic, Lecturer, Faculty of Islamic Studies, Sarajevo
Vlado Azinovic, Secretary General, Atlantic Initiative in Bosnia-Herzegovina
Nina Bang-Jensen, Public International Law and Policy Group, Washington, DC
Kurt Bassuener, Democratization Policy Council, Sarajevo
Nidzara Beganovic, Sarajevo
Owen Beith, Freelance and human rights activist, London
Carl Bethke, Lecturer, Leipzig University
Sonja Biserko, Belgrade
Dusan Bogdanovic, Belgrade
Dr. Colm Breathnach, Dept. of Geography and Sociology, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow
Darko Brkan, CA Why not? (UG Zasto ne?), Movement Dosta!, Sarajevo
Tobias Bütow, Schwarzkopf-Foundation Young Europe, Berlin
Hajra Catic, President, Association Women of Srebrenica (Zene Srebrenice), Tuzla
Norman Cigar, Professor, former Consultant at the ICTY, Virginia
Joe Costello, Member of the Irish Parliament and Labour Party Spokesman on European Affairs, Dublin
Isabelle Delpla, philosopher, Université Montpellier III France
Tanya L. Domi, Adjunct Assistant Professor of International Affairs, School of International and Public Affairs Columbia University
Azra Dzajic-Weber, Berlin
Douglas Ebner
Rev. John Feighery, Dublin, Ireland
Justice Richard Goldstone, first Prosecutor of the ICTY
Mladin Grbin, Glasgow
Dr. Michael Haltzel, Senior Fellow, Center for Transatlantic Relations,
Johns Hopkins University SAIS, Washington, DC
Marshall Harris, former State Dept official, Alston and Bird LLC, Washington, DC
Florence Hartmann, Journalist and former Spokesperson to the ICTY Chief Prosecutor
Nader Hashemi, Assistant Professor of Middle East and Islamic Politics, Josef Korbel School of International Studies, University of Denver
John W. Heffernan, Director, Speak Truth to Power, Robert F. Kennedy Center for Justice and Human Rights, Washington, DC
Marko Attila Hoare, Kingston University, London
Paul Hockenos, Global Editor, Internationale Politik, Berlin
Carole Hodge, Writer, Glasgow
Jan Willem Honig, Senior Lecturer in War Studies, King’s College London, Professor of Military Strategy, Swedish National Defence College
Jim Hooper, Managing Director, Public International Law and Policy Group, Washington, DC
Alain Horic, Literary Editor, Montreal
Ivana Howard, Balkan policy analyst, Washington, DC
Valerie Hughes, Ireland Action for Bosnia and Herzegovina, Dublin, Ireland
Bianca Jagger, Founder and Chair, Bianca Jagger Human Rights Foundation, Council of Europe Goodwill Ambassador
Cécile Jouhanneau, Ph.D. candidate, Institute for Political Science, Paris
Erdin Kadunic, Bosnian Academic Circle, Munich
Tomasz Kamusella, Thomas Brown Lecturer, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland
Chris Keulemans, writer, artistic director Tolhuistuin, Amsterdam
Ben Kiernan, Director, Genocide Studies Program, Yale University
Daniel Kofman Professor, University of Ottawa.
Roger Lippman, Editor, Balkan Witness, Seattle
Branka Magas and Quintin Hoare, The Bosnian Institute, London
Noel Malcolm, Professor, Faculty of History, Oxford University
Dzenita Mehic-Saracevic, Washington, DC
Hatidza Mehmedovic, Association Srebrenica-mothers (Srebrenicke majke)
Fadila Memisevic/ Belma Zulcic, Section of Bosnia-Herzegovina - Society for Threatened Peoples, Sarajevo
Alan Mendoza, Executive Director, Henry Jackson Society, UK
Stjepan Mestrovic, Professor, Department of sociology, Texas A&M University
David Muhlstock, Professor, Dawson College Montreal
Lara Nettelfield, Postdoctoral Fellow, Institut Barcelona d’Estudis Internacionals and Assistant Professor, Simon Fraser University (Canada)
Andras Riedlmayer, Editor of International Justice Watch
Philipp Ruch, Center for Political Beauty, Berlin
Elisabeth Samarcq, Lille
Craig Scott, Professor of Law, Osgoode Hall Law School, Director, Nathanson Centre on Transnational Human Rights, Crime and Security, Toronto
Dr. Inela Selimovic, Sarajevo
Brendan Simms, Professor of the History of European International Relations, University of Cambridge
Ivo Skoric, Rutland, Vermont
Alison Smith, International Criminal Justice Program Coordinator, No Peace Without Justice, New York
Dzemal Sokolovic, Professor
Dr. Gregory H. Stanton, Research Professor in Genocide Studies and Prevention, Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution, George Mason University, Arlington
Sean Steele, Ireland Action for Bosnia, Dublin
Chuck Sudetic, Writer
Emir Suljagic, Srebrenica survivor, Author, Advisor to the Mayor of the City of Sarajevo
Garret Tankosic-Kelly, Sarajevo
France Théoret, Writer, Montreal
David Tolbert, President, International Center for Transitional Justice, former deputy prosecutor, deputy registrar ICTY, former Registrar STL
Patricia Wald, former Judge at the ICTY
Peter Julian Walsh, Ireland Action for Bosnia and Herzegovina, Greystones, Ireland
Bodo Weber, Democratization Policy Council, Berlin
Dr. Mark Wheeler, former OHR/OSCE, former Head of ICG Sarajevo office, Sarajevo
Julie Wornan, Paris
Tilman Zülch, President, Jasna Causevic, Society for Threatened Peoples International, Göttingen
Said Zulficar, Network for Colonial Freedom

“Are We There Yet?” New DPC Policy Brief on Bosnia

Kurt Bassuener June 2nd, 2010

The international community’s collective approach toward Bosnia and Herzegovina has failed to gain any traction, as it remains based on false assumptions. The governments comprising the Peace Implementation Council’s Steering Board (PIC) have not been able to summon the will to confront the actual challenges posed by Bosnia.
 
The collective international posture lurches between frenetic diplomatic activity in search of a short-term deliverable and passivity. This has allowed Bosnian political actors with unfulfilled agendas to operate without constraint, even calling the survival of the state into question.
 
As the October general elections approach, the spectrum of possibilities, from improvement to further worsening of the situation, is wider than at any point since Dayton was signed. While fear among B-H citizens is more salient than ever recent incidents all point to the potential for both planned and spontaneous outbursts of violence.
 
Nevertheless the EU, the US and others can still exert positive influence in Bosnia this year. On how this is achieved and what can be done to create the conditions for progress in 2011 and beyond that would lead to  a self-sustaining democratic Bosnia read DPC’s new policy brief: “Are we there yet? - International impatience vs. a long-term strategy for a viable Bosnia,” authored by Senior Associates Bodo Weber and Kurt Bassuener.

Balkan Tango - article in Internationale Politik

Kurt Bassuener March 9th, 2010

In the February edition of the German foreign policy journal Internationale Politik’s English version, IP Global, Bodo Weber and I have written “Balkan Tango - The EU’s disjointed policies compound Bosnia’s paralysis.” In it, we argue that the international community’s policies toward Bosnia - and the EU’s in particular - are in disarray and without a strategic goal or plan.  This has accelerated Bosnia’s downward slide, which began four years ago.  To get out of this dynamic, we argue that the United States must first shift its own policy and make an effort to develop a coalition within the EU to restablilize the country, and then develop a more long-term approach.  We believe getting Germany onside is essential to developing critical mass within the EU.

The most recent Peace Implementation Council Steering Board meeting on Feb 24-25 (see the PIC Communique here) wasn’t encouraging from that persepective.  The issue of a referendum by the Republika Srpska didn’t even rate a mention in the communique, since doing so would mean a Russian footnote.  For some continental EU members, Germany prominent among them, maintaining consensus was more important that drawing the line…

Letter to High Representative Valentin Inzko

Kurt Bassuener December 10th, 2009

Below is a sign-on letter addressed to HR Valentin Inzko, calling on him to impose the extension of international judges and prosecutors in the Court of BiH, whose terms expire on Dec 14th.  A number of Peace Implementation Council (PIC) members are resistant to such a move, fearing the reaction of the RS Premier Milorad Dodik.

Should these personnel NOT be extended, a number of investigations and cases would need to be re-started.  Furthermore, the viability of the Court of BiH may well be in question.  

The letter below, with former HR Christian Schwarz-Schilling and a number of European politicians, international justice professionals, civil society actors, and other concerned persons was conveyed to the High Representative today, and also sent to the attention of the PIC Ambassadors. 

Please note that a number of additional signatories have been added since the letter was initially delivered on Thursday afternoon.  These signatories, as of 1800 hrs Friday, 11 December, are integrated into the overall list.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Dear High Representative Inzko,

The entrenchment of the Rule of Law has been a key focus of the international community’s postwar engagement in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The inclusion of international judges and prosecutors in the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina, sitting in the special chambers for War Crimes and Organized Crime, are essential components in this effort, as the Chief Prosecutor and President of the Court attested to you and the Peace Implementation Council (PIC) Steering Board last month.  These professionals are required to complement the work of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), as well as the domestic struggle against organized crime and corruption. Should the international judges and prosecutors not have their mandates renewed by December 14th

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, a number of ongoing cases will have to be restarted.  Years of effort toward ensuring justice will have been wasted.

More than half of the international personnel serving in the Court last year have left, uncertain that their contracts would be extended.  Domestic authorities have made no provisions to fund these positions or fill them with Bosnian and Herzegovinian professionals.  The result would not only affect a number of ongoing and pending cases in both chambers, but perhaps the viability of the Court of BiH itself.  That seems to be precisely the objective of a number of Bosnian politicians, who are wary of investigation and potential prosecution at the Court.  

We the undersigned wish to express our deep concern that most PIC Steering Board members are counseling against extension of these judges’ and prosecutors’ mandates for reasons of political convenience and expediency, wishing to avoid additional friction following the failed “Butmir process” of talks on constitutional reforms.  Such a stance not only threatens to undermine the rule of law in Bosnia and Herzegovina, but is politically shortsighted as well.  The political conflicts these PIC members hope to avoid will certainly occur in any case - after they have further weakened their own ability to address them by their clear failure to respond on this matter, which is widely recognized as pivotal.

As High Representative, you have the executive authority and moral responsibility to act to protect the Dayton Accords and the achievements of over a decade of efforts to entrench rule of law in Bosnia and Herzegovina.  On Human Rights Day, we believe the most significant action towards fulfilling that responsibility would be the imposition of the simple changes to the law that would extend the mandates of the international legal personnel at the State Court for an additional three years. We therefore urge you, in your capacity as High Representative, to take this step.

Sincerely,

SIGNATORIES

Former High Representatives

Dr. Wolfgang Petritsch 

Dr. Christian Schwarz-Schilling

International Parliamentarians/Politicians

Marieluise Beck, MP Bundestag, Bündnis90/Grüne, Berlin

Franziska Brantner, MEP, Group of Greens, European Free Alliance

Cem Özdemir, Co-Chair Bündnis90/Grüne

Jelko Kacin, MEP, Liberal Democracy Slovenia, ALDE Group

Diana Wallis, MEP, Liberal Democrats Party, ALDE Group

NGOs and Civil Society Organizations/Leaders

ACIPS, Sarajevo

Ahmet Alibasic, Lecturer, Faculty of Islamic Studies, Sarajevo

Kurt Bassuener, Democratization Policy Council, Sarajevo

Sonja Biserko, President, Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia

Darko Brkan, CA Why not? (UG Zasto ne?), Movement Dosta!

Dr. Svetlana Broz, Director NGO GARIWO, Sarajevo 

Tobias Bütow, Schwarzkopf-Foundation Young Europe

Center for Advanced Studies, Sarajevo

Center for Civic Cooperation, Livno: Zulka Baljak, Managing Director, Kata Marijan Krzelj, Program Manager

Jelena Golubovic, Belgrade Center for Human Rights; Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, Canada

Ljuljjeta Goranci Brkic, General Manager, Nansen Dialogue Center, Sarajevo

Mirela Grünther-Djecevic, Heinrich-Böll-Foundation, Head of country office for Bosnia-Herzegovina, Sarajevo

John W. Heffernan, Director, Speak Truth To Power, Robert F. Kennedy Center for Justice and Human Rights, Washington, DC

Helsinki Committee for Human Rights, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Sarajevo

Jim Hooper, Managing Director, Public International Law and Policy Group, Washington, DC

Tim Hughes, former Head of Investigation and Verification Department, Independent Judicial Commission (IJC); Washington, DC

Valerie Hughes, Ireland Action for Bosnia and Herzegovina, Dublin, Ireland

Human Rights Centre, University of Sarajevo.

Human Rights House of Sarajevo

Biljana Kovacevic-Vuco, Chairperson, Lawyers’ Committee for Human Rights (YUCOM), Belgrade

Branka Magas and Quintin Hoare, The Bosnian Institute, London

Alma Masic, Head of Office, Youth Initiative for Human Rights, Sarajevo

Dzenita Mehic Saracevic, Community of Bosnia

Andrej Nosov, Heartefact Fund, Belgrade

Zoran Pusic, president of the Civic Comittee for Human Rights, Zagreb

Philipp Ruch, Center for Political Beauty, Berlin

Vehid Sehic, President, Citizens’ Forum, Tuzla

Mirsad Tokaca, Director of the Research and Documentation Center (RDC), Sarajevo

Vesna Terselic, Director, DOCUMENTA - CENTRE FOR DEALING WITH THE PAST, Zagreb

Transparency International, Bosnia and Herzegovina

Peter Julian Walsh, Ireland Action for Bosnia and Herzegovina, Greystones, Ireland

Bodo Weber, Democratization Policy Council, Berlin

Justice and Human Rights Professionals/Academia

Vlado Azinovic, Ph.D., School of Political Science, University of Sarajevo

Nina Bang-Jensen, Public International Law and Policy Group, Washington, DC

Annika Björkdahl, Associate Professor / Docent, Department of Political Science, Lund University, Sweden

Tanya L. Domi, Adjunct Professor of International Affairs, Columbia University

Kelly M. Greenhill, Assistant Professor, Tufts University and Research Fellow, Harvard University

Tomasz Kamusella, Thomas Brown Lecturer, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland

Jeremy Kinsman, former Canadian Ambassador and High Commissioner, currently Regents’ Lecturer, University of California, Berkeley

Dr. Zvonimir Kubinek, Chair of the Advisory Board, Missing Persons Institute, Sarajevo

Professor Noel Malcolm, Oxford University

Andrew J. Nathan, Class of 1919 Professor of Political Science, Columbia University, New York

Lara Nettelfield, Post Doctoral Fellow, Institut Barcelona d’Estudis Internacionals; Assistant Professor, School for International Studies, Simon Fraser University Vancouver

Ambassador Mark Palmer, former US Ambassador to Hungary

Dr. Olga Martin-Ortega, Senior Research Fellow, Centre on Human Rights in Conflict
University of East London

Andras Riedlmayer, editor of International Justice Watch

Prof. Dzemal Sokolovic, Institute of Comparative Politics and Rokkan Center for Social Studies, University of Bergen, Norway

Professor Chandra Lekha Sriram
Chair in Human Rights and Director, Centre on Human Rights in Conflict, School of Law, University of East London

Iva Vukusic, Sense Agency, The Hague

Andrew Wachtel, Dean of the Graduate School, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, USA

Jon Western, Ph.D., Five College Associate Professor of International Relations Mount Holyoke College and the Five Colleges, Inc.

Concerned Individuals

Steve Albert, former editor of BosNet, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Neven Andjelic

Diego E. Arria, former Representative of Venezuela to the UN

Nidzara Beganovic, Sarajevo

Maja Drnda, Barcelona, Spain

Douglas Ebner

Rev. John Feighery, Dublin, Ireland

Marshall Harris, former State Dept official, Alstan and Bird LLC, Washington, DC

Ivana Howard, MA in Democracy and Human Rights in SEE, Sarajevo

Zlatko Hurtic (international development expert), Sarajevo

Senka Jahic, Berkeley, California ,USA

Raza Jahic Micic, Iteon consulting, San Francisco, California, US

Senada Kreso, Sarajevo

Selma Mustovic, New York City, USA

Sabrina Pryce

Prof. Inela Selimovic, St. Mary’s College, Notre Dame, Indiana, US

Conor Smith Gaffney, Chicago, Illinois, USA

Hope is not a plan: DPC - Clingendael Roundtable

Kurt Bassuener December 3rd, 2009

On October 1, the Clingendael Institute in The Hague and DPC hosted a policy roundtable entitled “The Future of International Involvement in Bosnia and Herzegovina: What is the Strategy?,” involving policymakers from PIC members and policy analysts from Europe and North America.  It readily became that there was no strategy.  Two months later, the ill-planned and -executed “Butmir process,” announced on October 2nd, has collapsed.  The Clingendael roundtable proceedings,  linked here as a PDF document, can give readers a sense of why these talks were doomed to failure as devised.

The authors of the summary, Clingendael’s Marianne Rogier, the University of Amsterdam’s Maja Nenadovic, my colleague Bodo Weber and myself, also added a postscript to the summary, which I paste in its entirety below.

Postscript by the Authors

The round-table failed to produce concrete recommendations to be put forward to the next PIC meeting as initially envisaged by the organisers. However, we would like to seize the opportunity of this report to issue our own assessment of the current situation, taking into account the recently launched “Butmir process” and the last PIC steering board meeting in the form of a post-script. The following only represents the views if the authors of this report, and not the opinions expressed by the 1st October roundtable participants.

- The Dayton instruments, an executive OHR and operational Chapter VII EUFOR, must remain until BiH’s constitutional and governance structure has evolved to the point they are no longer required. There is no expiration date. Furthermore, these instruments should be used as needed. Since their credibility has been allowed to diminish, it may be necessary to resort to them to show BiH actors that the will is still there to use them.

- There is a clear necessity to differentiate the role of the High Representative from the EUSR. Both functions have different goals and require different tools to fulfil them. The OHR will remain until Bosnia shows itself consistently capable of functioning and reforming itself in the interest of its citizens. This is of particular importance at a time when attempts are being made against the territorial integrity of the state. The EUSR’s role is to support Bosnia’s EU integration process. Hopefully, both processes are self-reinforcing ones, and should go in parallel. We firmly believe that they should not be sequenced: Bosnia may still need the OHR while progressing on the European path. Both instruments may have to be reinforced, but not at the expense of each other. Furthermore, we believe that further clarification is needed on what type of mandate and power a “reinforced EUSR” will have. The EU is currently reorganising its foreign policy under the new Lisbon Treaty, and will have to come up with concrete proposals on what role it foresees for the EUSR in Bosnia.

- We note that the “5+ 2″ approach has been reaffirmed by the November meeting of the PIC Steering Board as the hurdle for OHR’s closure. We agree that no action to close the OHR should be undertaken so long as those conditions have not been fulfilled. We urge the PIC steering board members to hold this line, and not hollow-out these conditions for expediency’s sake, as has been the case with international conditionality with BiH before.

- International engagement must continue to achieve meaningful constitutional and governance reform, but should expand beyond the standard “let’s make a deal” approach with local political leaders. There needs to be a much more sustained, concerted effort to engage citizens directly on these issues in order to apply pressure from below on what amount to oligarchic and unrepresentative structures. The Bosnian population needs assurance that the country will not be allowed to dissolve, and nor will the necessary constitutional and governance reform be undertaken without popular consent. The EU and NATO also need to clarify what types of structural changes would need to be seen implemented (beyond the standard acquis communautaire) to achieve BiH’s Euro-Atlantic integration.

In addition to these specific points, we would like to stress our deep concern regarding the current deteriorating situation in Bosnia and the lack of adequate response by the international community. We are profoundly worried at the indications that some wish to see the country partitioned, and fear that they might feel encouraged by the appeasing attitude advocated by some EU states. Have we forgotten that the main war aim of the Bosnian Serbs was to detach Republika Srpska from the rest of the country? If this is allowed 14 years after Dayton, after unprecedented international investment of political, human and financial capital to reconstruct a multiethnic, democratic Bosnia-Herzegovina, this would constitute an admission of ignominious defeat. Such a policy would reward ethnic cleansing, war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide in the heart of Europe and with the support of the European Union. Is this the message that we want to send to future generations and to the world ridden with other secessionist conflicts? Can the EU’s still nascent Common Foreign and Security Policy afford such a resounding failure on its own doorstep?

Bosnia can not be compared to Kosovo or Montenegro. There is no valid argument, either political or legal, to support Republika Srpska’s independence. Furthermore, such a process would not be a peaceful one: it would most certainly throw the whole region back into conflict and instability. It is thus time to take a resolute stand to protect the peace that we have been building in the past 14 years, to protect the values for which the European Union stands, and to avoid any further conflicts in the region.

Sarajevo, The Hague, Amsterdam, Hanover, 27 November 2009.

Get your homework done: Weber/Bassuener op-ed

Kurt Bassuener November 18th, 2009

On Monday, the online journal Global Europe published an op-ed by DPC Senior Associates Bodo Weber and Kurt Bassuener calling for German and American leadership on Bosnia policy.  Among the recommendations was the separation of the High Representative, who has a peace enforcement role, from the EU Special Representative, who has an EU enlargement facilitation role.  The article notes the potential of Germany to lead the EU out of its current policy dead-end.

The full article can be found online here.

Suddenly there is talk about war again - Die Zeit

Kurt Bassuener November 3rd, 2009

 (posted for Bodo Weber): 

The latest issue of the German weekly Die Zeit, published last week, carries an op-ed by me in which I argue that after the failure of the “Butmir process” initiated by  the EU’s Swedish Presidency it is time for the EU to finally take serious course in its policy towards Bosnia and that such a turn will demand Germany to take the lead. You can go to the link here for the article. An English version of the text is below.

Suddenly there is talk about war again

Die Zeit

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, 29.10.1009    Bodo Weber

This week the trial against Radovan Karadzic finally opened. Bosnia-Herzegovina may reach the soccer world championship in South Africa. And in all postwar countries of the former Yugoslavia, politics revolves around EU-integration. Sounds like successful calming and stabilization of Europe’s most recent theatre of war? Wrong.

High-level representatives of the European Union and the U.S. are currently en route to Bosnia-Herzegovina as crisis managers. For three and a half years ethnonationalistic rhetoric is escalating there and preventing political reform. For the first time in over a decade, the terms “war” and “violent conflict” have been resurrected in public debate. In this process Milorad Dodik, prime minister of the Republika Srpska (RS), the Serb entity in Bosnia is acting as the most vociferous agitator. He maintains an authoritarian regime with nationalistic populist speeches and regularly snubs the international community.

The international community had planned to stabilize the post-war state with the help of a semi-protectorate, but then initiated a phase-out. Its rationale: Over a decade after ending the war it was time for Bosnians and Herzegovinians to take over full responsibility for their country. From this view, the existence of international watchdogs is itself basically undemocratic. This putatively self-critical argumentation obscures two crucial problems: First, the international community wanted to get rid of the Bosnian problem child. And second, it wanted to hide the fact that at no point over the last fourteen post-war years has it developed a strategy for a long-term political stabilisation of the country without authoritarian international control.

One of the causes of the problems lies in the very Dayton-Agreement that secured the ending of the war in 1995. The Dayton post-war order has contained the aggressive effects of ethnic nationalism, it restored security and freedom of movement. The war armies have been dissolved, the military removed as a conflict factor.

But peace came at a special price: Instead of a functional Bosnian post-war state Dayton created a weak, dysfunctional and unsustainably expensive state; a complex state structure in which the constitution secures the decentralization of power and the predominance of ethnic political parties. At the same time, it sets hurdles too high for reaching substantial constitutional change from within, even though the majority of the population has long turned its back on the political elites.

The international community had tried to take corrective action through the Office of the High Representative (OHR). Its head was equipped with the authority to enforce laws or suspend them and to fire state officials whose ethnonationalistic policy and rhetoric represented a threat to Dayton. But this strengthening of the OHR was less motivated by the will to develop a real strategy for political stabilisation than by the wish to end the expensive and not very effective engagement in Bosnia in the foreseeable future.

When the U.S. took the Balkans off its top priority list after 9/11, the complete responsibility for the region fell to the EU. Without further ado, it declared the EU integration process to be the new statebuilding strategy. The High Representative additionally became the EU Special Representative for Bosnia. Europe put the EUFOR military mission in place for securing peace, thus turning Bosnia into one of the first test cases for its common European foreign and security policy. This sounded good – except for one shortfall: Brussels never had a strategic discussion on whether the prospect of EU membership could be a sufficient incentive for the local political elites in the southeast European countries (especially Bosnia) to take on the necessary economical and political reforms.

As the gap between the EU’s pretension and the Bosnian reality widened, “Bosnia-fatigue” inside the union grew. Instead of reacting politically Brussels turned on the bureaucratic autopilot and in 2006 decided to flee forward: The EU ascribed political maturity to the domestic elites and announced the imminent closure of the OHR. As the political elites’ zeal for reform vanished with the announcement of the pullout the EU dropped a central condition for signing an association agreement with Bosnia. The immediate consequences were: The expected reform dynamics did not take place. Two High Reps perished, the OHR sank into ineffectiveness. The EU lost the rest of its authority in Bosnia.

Brussels takes comfort in stating that the outbreak of a new war is unthinkable, if not for other reasons then because there do not exist ethnic armies any more. That is correct but still diverts from the real dangers. Bosnia lacks reliable state actors that could prevent an outbreak of violence.  Neither does there exist a de-politicized police nor a judiciary that could function in a way that guarantees the rule of law without external assistance. Without these instruments and a state monopoly on force, it is very realistic to imagine a local outbreak of violence as trivial as a clash between fans of two rivalling soccer teams to escalate into a regional ethnic conflict. And there is no lack of weapons in Bosnia even today.

Despite all that the EU remains politically motionless. Inside the union advocates of a harder approach (mainly Britain and the Netherlands) are standing vis-à-vis supporters of a softer course (lead by Sweden). But none of the European governments is prepared for a reinforced engagement in Bosnia. And yet the EU would neither need to reinvent the wheel nor invest additional resources. In Bosnia today, authoritarian-nationalistic forces are substantially weaker than they had been a few years ago. The recent political escalation is less the expression of a new strength of the political elites then of the power vacuum left over by the EU.

What then, should the EU do? It has to reengage. And it has to understand that both forceful interventions into the Bosnian sovereignty and the existing European military contingent will still be necessary through the course of the EU integration process. What is necessary is political will and a long-term perspective that will give the population security and curtail the elites’ space for manoeuvring and manipulation. With its current politics of ignorance, Europe risks generating considerably higher political costs in the long term.

Germany could take a leading role within the EU and thus bring the community back to a serious course in Bosnia. Both the emergence of the EU’s Common Foreign and Security Policy and Germany’s pretension to become a global player are inseparably linked to the Srebrenica genocide and Europe’s failure in Bosnia. That should actually be motivation enough for Germany. It remains to be seen in the upcoming weeks and months whether the new conservative-liberal government is going to move away from the Bosnia-fatigue of its predecessor. It then also remains to be seen how big the discord between pretension and reality in the German foreign policy will be.

Bodo Weber is a Berlin-based Senior Associate of the Democratization Policy Council (DPC)

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