[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (1999, Book II)]
[July 30, 1999]
[Pages 1354-1359]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]
Remarks in a Discussion With Regional Independent Media in Sarajevo
July 30, 1999
Postwar Bosnia
[The discussion began with a Sarajevo journalist thanking the President
for his action in Bosnia and his support for democracy. He asked about
the leadership of President Slobodan Milosevic of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Serbia and
Montenegro) and U.S. efforts to help deliver indicted war criminals to
the U.N. War Crimes Tribunal.]
The President. Let me answer the second question first because I
think it leads us back to the first question. We were the principal
supporter of creating this War Crimes Tribunal, and we have made very
strong contributions to it, financial contributions. And we have worked
hard to cooperate with it. So the answer to that is, we have cooperated
strongly.
We also have been a part of an operation in Bosnia that has
arrested, I think, about 29 of the 80 people who have been indicted. In
the case of Mr. Mladic and Mr.
Karadzic, they're not in the American
sector. And when the United Nations accepted the mandate of going into
Bosnia, the mandate was that they could and would arrest any people who
had been indicated by the War Crimes Tribunal if they, in effect, came
across them, but they wouldn't start another war to get them. That was
basically the mandate. And I think we should continue to do everything
we can to arrest people. But I think if--there's no question that the
effectiveness, the impact, of both those men has been, in effect, ended
or dramatically reduced.
Now, to go back to your first question. You said, is
Milosevic the only nationalist politician
who's causing problems? I don't think you could go that far, but I
believe that basically the misery of Bosnia, the war, the 4-year war,
and what happened in Kosovo is because of his 12-year rule and because
he had a policy to gain and enhance his power based on selling Greater
Serbia to people, the idea that anybody who wasn't a Serb was an enemy,
had no political legitimacy, that their religion was no good, their
ethnic background was no good, it was okay to disregard them and uproot
them, and maybe okay to kill them.
And here in Bosnia, 250,000 people died, and a quarter of a million
people were made refugees. In Kosovo, because we acted more quickly, not
so many people died. We know of 10,000, although there are a lot of mass
graves that have been dug up, and people have been moved, so we don't
know for sure. But 800,000 or more refugees--most of them have gone home
in Kosovo, unlike Bosnia, where, because the thing went on longer here,
they are taking longer to go back.
So I say, you know, each--the politicians, when they run for office,
there are all kinds of shades, you know. There are people who may be
nationalists but still prepared to work with
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people of different ethnic groups, different religious backgrounds. And
I think that the difference is that he
was willing to have ethnic cleansing and even mass killing to achieve
his objectives. And I think that's wrong.
Then you asked me if I thought Bosnia, the people could actually be
reconciled. Yes, I believe so, but I think we have to keep giving people
something to work for. It's not enough to go around and tell people,
after this sort of killing and bitterness, that, ``Now, be nice
people,'' you know, ``Just do the right thing.'' You have to give them
something positive, some reason to work together.
And what I saw today, with the Bosnian Presidency, was that they
were--you know, sure, there's still tensions. There are all these
refugee-return issues, for example--big issues out there. But they were
much more comfortable together and, obviously, had more in common than
they did 2 years ago. And I think that's a plus.
Montenegro
[After describing current conditions in Montenegro and noting U.S.
support for the territorial integrity of the Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro), a Montenegrin journalist asked the
President if he would support Montenegrin independence or work against
it.]
The President. Well, first of all, you have asked a very good set of
questions because--but I think I need to back up and say, we very much
appreciate the role that Montenegro has played in these last difficult
months. It has been in a very hard position. It has been vulnerable to
invasion, as you pointed out. And the government of President
Djukanovic maintained a position of
independence and the position that Montenegro should acquire more and
more autonomy and should be a democratic and multiethnic society; that's
what we believe.
Now, here's the problem. Obviously--and you've pointed out quite
properly that we shouldn't punish Montenegro with withholding aid,
reconstruction aid for example, just because it's part of Yugoslavia;
and that's a good example of the dilemma.
Here's what I'm interested in. I want the people of Montenegro to
have maximum freedom and maximum self-determination. But I don't think
it's a good idea for the United States, or for Western Europe generally,
to get in the business of redrawing national borders right now. Who
knows what is going to happen in the future? I think--we need to stand
for a certain set of principles.
But what I want to say to all the ethnic groups of the Balkans, and
all of southeastern Europe, is that we have to build a future in which
your safety, your right to freedom of religion, freedom of speech,
access to education, access to a job, does not depend upon your living
in a nation where everybody inside the nation's borders has the same
religion you do and the same ethnic group you do. And in the past, when
outside powers have attempted to redraw the lines of the Balkans and
impose that, the results have been very painful for the people here.
It's led to a lot of suffering.
So I don't want to strip any people of their democratic aspirations,
and I don't think it's right for the United States to do that. But I
also don't think it's right for us or for any other outside power to
come in and, in effect, say, ``Well, because we don't like Mr.
Milosevic, we're going to redraw all the
national boundaries,'' because the real trick here is to preserve
democracy, self-determination, freedom from religious or racial or
ethnic persecution in all these countries, without regard to the
national borders.
And what we need is--and let me just make one other point. If we had
the right sort of economic and political integration in southeastern
Europe and then the right ties between southeastern Europe and the rest
of Europe--central and Western Europe--then it wouldn't matter so much
one way or the other.
That is, if you knew human rights were going to be protected, and if
you knew everyone in this region was going to be tied together
economically and politically, across national borders, and that the
region would be tied to Europe and would have a future with the emerging
European institutions, then the actual status--whether you were
independent or autonomous, for example--wouldn't be nearly so important.
And what I've been afraid of--the reason I've been reluctant to say
anything about territorial borders is, there is a whole history in the
20th century of disaster happening in the Balkans because of outside
powers redrawing the national borders. We have to change the nature of
national life and the nature of international cooperation, and then I
believe, over the next few years, whatever is right about the national
[[Page 1356]]
borders will settle down. The people will somehow determine that, not
outsiders. That's what I think will happen.
Serbia
[The journalist pointed out that the Serbian infrastructure and economy
had collapsed. He asked how stability could return while Serbia was
denied financial aid and the how the President planned to deal with
strong anti-American sentiments in Serbia. He also asked about past
meetings between the President and Mr. Milosevic.]
The President. In Paris.
Q. [Inaudible]--in Paris, yes. So I----
The President. And he was, of course,
in the United States, at Dayton.
Q. Yes, but you met him in Paris. And I think that you will never
meet him again because he is now an indicted war criminal. But I want to
ask your personal impression about Mr. Milosevic. How do you keep him in
your mind--as a rival, stubborn rival? You hope, now, for almost----
The President. Let me answer you that. You asked, first of all,
about aid to Serbia because the Serbs have been hurt very badly by this
war. And then you ask about----
Q. The anti-American mood.
The President. ----the anti-American feeling, and then my personal
impressions of Mr. Milosevic.
The international community has taken the position that we would
support humanitarian assistance to the Serbian people, because we
realize that we have very badly damaged Serbia, economically, and
stretched the social fabric in this conflict. We would like very much
to--the United States, in particular, would like to participate in the
rebuilding of Serbia, because we have many Americans of Serbian heritage
and because we want to make it clear that we're not anti-Serb; we were
against Mr. Milosevic's policies. But we
do not believe at this moment we can or should go beyond the
humanitarian aid, for the simple reason that if we do, it will
strengthen Mr. Milosevic's hold on power. So it's a terrible dilemma.
But the people of Serbia need to find some way to change their
government.
He has been charged by the War Crimes
Tribunal. The evidence is overwhelming. The reason we acted so quickly
in the case of Kosovo was because of the horrible experience we had in
Bosnia, and I was President for 2 of those years. It was a nightmare,
and we only got the international community galvanized to take action
after Srebrenica. So I think that, if the people of Serbia want us to be
involved beyond humanitarian aid, then there needs to be a change in the
government.
Now, in terms of anti-American feeling, I can only say I understand
it, even though we didn't act alone and all of our European allies
agreed with us. We have the largest military, and we dropped the most
bombs. And unfortunately, there were some innocent civilians killed in
the bombs, and I feel terrible about it, and I understand it.
But I just would ask the people to consider the position I was in.
When I first became President, I tried talking with Mr.
Milosevic for 2\1/2\ years. And tens of
thousands of people died in Bosnia. Here, we knew they had a plan. We
knew that the Milosevic government had a plan to systematically uproot
the Kosovars, to kill, to loot, to destroy the property records in a
very systematic way. And we did not want to wait another year or 2 and
let all these people die and all these refugees be created and then not
come home.
If you look in Bosnia, here, we're sitting here in Sarajevo, and
over a million people have still not come back. In Kosovo, because we
moved immediately, 90 percent of the refugees have already gone home.
So if the Serbs are mad at me, I understand that, and I accept it as
part of the inevitable consequences of a terrible conflict. But I want
them to know they can continue to be mad at me, but the United States
does not hate Serbia. We do not have anything against the Serbian
people. Our country is a better country because we have so many Serbs in
America. And I want to be involved in the reconstruction of Serbia, and
I want Serbia to have a leading role in southeastern Europe in the
future.
But we have got to put an end to ethnic cleansing. The politics that
have driven Mr. Milosevic's government
and power for the last 12 years have got to be put aside. The idea of
racial or religious superiority has got to go into the dustbin of
history.
And I'm very sympathetic with it. It had a big hold on America--you
know, the idea that whites were superior to blacks had a big hold
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on America. We didn't elect a Catholic President until 1960 in the
United States. I understand these things. But you can't--we've reached a
point now where we can no longer sanction this sort of slaughter. And I
think it's a good thing for the world. So the people can be mad at me,
but they need to know Americans have nothing against Serbs. We opposed
what Mr. Milosevic did.
And the third question you asked me was about my impressions of Mr.
Milosevic. I am reluctant to say much,
you know, because at home people are always psychoanalyzing me. You
know, they meet President Clinton, ``Why was your President, President
Clinton?''
I think he is a very intelligent
man. I think that he can be charming. But I think there are two problems
that he has, that have proved fatal. Number one, he has built his
political power on the idea of the religious and ethnic superiority of
Serbs and their inherent right not only to be a part of but to
completely dominate whatever he decides is Greater Serbia. He thought it
was what is generally the Republic Srpska, now, in Bosnia. He took the
autonomy away from Kosovo, which it once had. Now you have Hungarians in
Vojvodina, and you have the Montenegrins worried, because he basically
has created this fear, this paranoia, in the Serbian population, and
then he fed it, like a fire, with the bodies and lives of others.
Now, you know, there were other excesses in this region. The others
are not pure. But he created this whole
thing, and he drove it home in Bosnia, and then he drove it home in
Kosovo. And I think he had--in other words, I think he had a dark and
terrible idea.
The other thing I observed from watching him is, perhaps because of the tragedies of his own
life--he had terrible tragedies, you know, as a child, with his parents
and all--I feel very badly about it, but I don't think he feels the way
normal people would feel when they make decisions that cost people their
lives.
I know, you see, I know when I ordered those airplanes to fly over
Serbia, I knew innocent people would die, and I hated it. And the only
reason I did it was because I knew I was saving many, many tens of
thousands of people's lives, more than would die.
I think to him it doesn't matter.
That's the only thing I can conclude. After watching 250,000 people die
in Bosnia and seeing these stories of these children raped and these
children--they were draft-age boys--killed en masse, and these people
wrapped up in a circle and burned alive, and it happens over and over
and over again--I can only conclude that he has no--for whatever reason,
he doesn't have normal feelings.
So those are my two problems with Mr. Milosevic. I think this idea of ethnic and religious
superiority is the biggest threat to civilization in the world today,
not just in the Balkans--Northern Ireland, the Middle East, Africa, you
just go right down the line, everywhere in the world. In the United
States--we had a guy go crazy the
other day and kill a bunch of people of different races in the United--
did you see it? In two States?
Q. Yes.
The President. Killing these people. Why? Because he belonged to some crazy religious cult that
convinced him he had the right to do that.
So that's what I feel. I think it's quite a tragedy because
he's an intelligent man, and he can be an
engaging man. And I talked to him in Paris, and I thought we had an
understanding. I was quite surprised actually in the beginning--he knew
after what I did in Bosnia that I would do this. So I don't know how he
could have thought I was bluffing him after what we went through in
Bosnia, when I said, ``If you do what you intend to do in Kosovo, this
is what I will do.'' He should have been under no illusion. I think he
thought maybe the other Europeans wouldn't stay hitched.
But I made a decision--I agonized through 2 long years of what we
went through in Bosnia, and I was not about to let all those people die
again. I just was not. I couldn't do it. So, anyway, that's my
impression. I think it's quite a tragedy really, because he has a lot of
ability.
Q. Thank you.
Bosnia After the Dayton Accords
Q. Mr. President, we talk about--what is the basis for the optimism
regarding peace Stability Pact for the Balkans if we know how little
politicians from the former Yugoslavia work on the implementation of the
Dayton peace agreement?
The President. I would make two points. First of all, I think both
here and perhaps in Europe and the United States, we tend to
underestimate how much progress has been made in Bosnia
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since Dayton. That is, there are common governmental institutions;
there's a common currency. After the economy was completely destroyed,
it's been growing at about 40 percent a year since then. I realize it's
got a long way to go because it was at nothing. The shared institutions
have functioned in many ways. So I do not believe that we have made no
progress. I think the biggest problem with the Dayton agreement is we
still have 1.2 million refugees who haven't come back. And the return of
refugees in areas where they are minorities is still very slow.
But if you look at the leadership of Mr. Dodik in the Republic of Srpska, for example, I think he's
been quite a progressive, cooperative person. I met with both Prime Ministers today, as well as the three Presidents.
So what I draw from watching what has and what hasn't happened since
Dayton is that we need more help to this whole in governance, that is,
what kind of legal changes do you have to make to get people to put
their money in your country and put your people to work? How do you
fight, more effectively, crime?
But the crime problems in the Balkans--you know, that we have
organized crime all over the world now--it's not just here. So it's just
really a question of do you have the capacity to fight it. You shouldn't
feel that there's something wrong, intrinsically wrong with your region
because you have this organized crime problem. It's everywhere in the
world. So the real issue is, do you have the capacity to fight it? We
have to build that. So I think that's important.
Now, in addition to that, the reason I'm optimistic about the
Stability Pact is that I think that the experience of Kosovo, coming
after the experience of Bosnia, was very sobering for me and for the
European leaders. And I think we saw clearly that if we didn't want
another Balkan war, we had not only to take a strong stance against Mr.
Milosevic and against ethnic cleansing;
we had to offer a better future for all the people of the region. There
had to be a way to bring people together around a common economic and
political future within the region, and then a way to bring the region
closer together with the rest of Europe and to keep us involved in a
positive way.
So that's why I'm optimistic. I think that all these people who came
here today, I think they understand that. I don't think they're kidding.
I think they really know that.
Well, let me make one other point, back up if I might. In 1993, when
I became President, I realized that we had fought two World Wars in
Europe; that we had had this long cold war with communism in Europe;
that before the 20th century, Europe for hundreds of years had been
afflicted by wars as people sought advantage of land; and that for the
first time ever, we now had a chance to build a Europe that was
democratic everywhere, that was drawing together in a common political
and economic union and that was at peace; and the biggest threat were
the religious and ethnic conflicts of the Balkans.
I think now, after all this work of the last 6 years, we now know
that unless we build a common economic future and a common political
future, we're going to have--there will someday be another Balkan war.
And that's why I'm optimistic, because I think we have learned our
lessons, and I think we are ready to make this common commitment.
One more. Yes, let him ask one more, and then we've got to go.
Corruption in Southeast Europe
Q. With new power, we have new problem, corruption. Does the
international community intend to fight against our corruption?
The President. Yes, but a lot of it is you have to do it yourself,
and we have to help you fight against it because--and you see this
everywhere. Again, a lot of former socialist states convert to
democratic states and privatize property, but when we privatize--when we
have private property in America, we also have strong economic
institutions to preserve the integrity of the economy, to keep
dishonesty out. We have strong, sophisticated law enforcement
institutions, and even we still have problems. Everybody has problems.
So, I think you should--you shouldn't feel that there's something
wrong with your country because this vulnerability is everywhere. And we
have to--we will help you--we have to help you fight corruption. But you
shouldn't feel that there's something really badly wrong with you; you
should just fight it.
And one of the most important things is a free press. Keep in mind,
in any society, most people are honest. In every society on Earth, most
people are honest. And in most societies, the people who do turn to
crime don't do it unless they have--they feel like they have no
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other choice. That is, in any society, there are only a small percentage
of people who deliberately decide to make money illegally.
But this is a worldwide problem we face, this corruption problem
now. And if you will fight it, we will help you. And the press has got
to be a major part of the battle.
Thank you.
Note: The discussion was recorded at 6 p.m. at Treca Gimnazija (Third
High School) for later broadcast. In his remarks, the President referred
to indicted war criminals Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic; President
Milo Djukanovic of Montenegro; Prime Minister Milorad Dodik of Republika
Srpska; Prime Minister Edhem Bicakcic of the Federation Government
(Muslim and Croat); Presidency Chairman (Serb) Zivko Radisic, Presidency
Member (Croat) Ante Jelavic, and Presidency Member (Muslim) Alija
Izetbegovic of Bosnia-Herzegovina; and Benjamin Nathaniel Smith who
allegedly killed two and wounded seven in Illinois and Indiana before
committing suicide on July 5. The transcript was made available by the
Office of the Press Secretary on July 30 but was embargoed for release
until July 31. A tape was not available for verification of the content
of this discussion.