![]() Walker 382 The Naumann-Clark Mission 385 The return of the kla 388 War fever and the icty 391 Fraudulent evenhandedness 395 Račak and Walker 403 The Račak case 409 The Rambouillet set-up 418 The u.s. Humanitarianism 187 Bosnia and Croatia: June 1993 to December 1995 191 Bombing threats renewed 193 To ensure failure 196 The demise of Owen-Stoltenberg 202 The Muslim-Croat alliance 206 The Contact Group 208 The Contact Group plan 210 Isolating Bosnia’s Serbs 214 The end of the ceasefire 218 Rapid reaction 223 Hijacking the u.n. 225 Operation Deliberate Force 230 Dayton 238 Realpolitik in Croatia 241 Finishing off the Vance Plan 242 Operation Flash 248 Operation Storm 253 The Babić maneuver 261 4 Humanitarianism Fulfilled 271 Bosnia’s Unsafe Areas 275 The origins of the Srebrenica crisis 278 The demilitarization agreement 284 Extending the “safe areas” 289 unprofor’s quagmire 294 The Goražde crisis 296 Bihać 301 The safe areas and the end of the ceasefire 305 Srebrenica endgame 308 The genocide that wasn’t 314 The Srebrenica narrative enshrined 323 5 Kosovo: The Denial of Sovereignty 329 Bosnia redux 331 Overturning Westphalia 333 Serbia and Kosovo 340 Serbia and Albania 344 Return of the Contact Group 347 The icty joins the fray 353 Belgrade in the crosshairs 356 Alliance with the kla 361 The Milošević-Holbrooke agreement 369 6 Kosovo: The set-up 381 Enter Mr. recognitions 112 Sabotaging a last-ditch peace effort 116 Enter Cyrus Vance 121 2 In Search of the Good War 121 Bosnia: April 1992 to May 1993 125 The Greater Serbia thesis 126 Reversing cause and effect 130 The media mobilize 134 Celebrating the victim 140 The Izetbegović myth 145 Demonizing the jna 149 Assigning blame for the carnage 154 Meting out punishment 158 The London Conference 162 The u.n.-nato partnership 169 Exit Carrington, enter Owen 173 The Karadjordjevo Conspiracy 182 New opportunity for nato 188 3 Peacemaking v. To the Memory of My Father Tibor Szamuely 1925-1972 table of contents Acknowledgements 11 Introduction 13 1 Yugoslavia: Destroying States for Fun and for Profit 43 Origins of the Crisis 43 Targeting the Yugoslav federal government 49 Playing to the western audience 51 Slovenia and Croatia make their move 53 Ineffectuality runs rampant 61 The United States intervenes 62 The Mesić issue 68 The ‘hour of Europe’ 71 Meeting at Brioni 76 Inventing a new doctrine 80 Bosnia heads toward the precipice 82 Sabotaging the sfry presidency 86 Pressure for recognition 91 The Carrington Plan 92 The non-arbitration commission 99 The Badinter maneuvers 102 Badinter v. ![]() Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this book may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the written permission of both the copyright owners and the authors of the book. isbn e-isbn e-isbn nur 563 0 967 5 (pdf) 968 2 (ePub) 689 / 754 / 828 © George Szamuely / Amsterdam University Press, Amsterdam 2013 All rights reserved. BOMBS FOR PEACE NATO’s Hum anitarian War on Yugosl avia George Sza muely a mster da m univer sit y pr ess Bombs for Peace Bombs for Peace nato’s Humanitarian War on Yugoslavia George Szamuely amsterdam university press Cover illustration: Dragan Antonic, Belgrade Cover design: Maedium, Utrecht Layout: Hanneke Kossen, Amsterdam Amsterdam University Press English-language titles are distributed in the us and Canada by the University of Chicago Press.
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