| Michael Benson on Mon, 19 Jun 2000 16:53:48 +0200 (CEST) |
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| <nettime> NYTimes on Milosevic |
This little item of interest just in from the NY Times:
June 19, 2000
Informal Talks Reported on Exit
Terms for Milosevic
By STEVEN ERLANGER
PRAGUE, June 18 --
The Clinton
administration is exploring
with some of its NATO
allies and Russia the
possibility that President
Slobodan Milosevic of
Yugoslavia be allowed to
leave office with
guarantees for his safety
and his savings, senior
American and NATO
officials say.
The discussions are
delicate and informal, the
officials stress,
emphasizing that the
administration is not
preparing any offer to Mr. Milosevic -- who has been
indicted by an international war crimes tribunal -- and will
not make one.
On the other hand, "if we were presented with a hard and
fast offer that would get Milosevic out of power, we'd have
to think very hard before saying 'no,' " a senior
administration official said.
Another senior official said that the United States would
condemn any proposal that would allow Mr. Milosevic to go
anywhere but to the war crimes tribunal in The Hague.
"That's the policy," the official said. "But 'Would we act to
stop it or quietly acquiesce?' is another question," the official
said, then added carefully: "There has been no formal
discussion of this -- that I am aware of."
Mr. Milosevic raised the question of his future last summer,
after the war over Kosovo ended, officials say. But
Washington rebuffed any discussion of a deal.
Various proposals have been raised to Washington and
Athens in recent weeks by emissaries saying they come from
Mr. Milosevic, the officials said. But what is less clear is
whether they are fully authorized, and whether Mr.
Milosevic is serious about doing a deal, or simply trying to
"see how the ground lies," an American official said. "What
we would never do is make him an offer, because he'll just
pocket it."
Any deal, even without clear American fingerprints, would
also put Vice President Al Gore into a difficult position
during the presidential campaign and could undermine the
international tribunal that indicted Mr. Milosevic.
It is also not clear why Mr. Milosevic would choose to leave
power now, the officials caution. While his position is slowly
disintegrating, along with Yugoslavia's economy, his current
seat is probably the safest place for him. "It would be hard
for him to trust assurances from anyone, inside or outside
the country," an official said.
Within his ruling party, Mr. Milosevic has said that it is
important to wait out the Clinton administration, and that a
President George W. Bush would be more "realistic" toward
Serbia and carry less personal animosity from the Kosovo
war.
Still, President Clinton raised the issue of Mr. Milosevic's
future with the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin, at their
recent summit meeting, Russian officials have told some
NATO-country officials. According to the Russians, Mr.
Putin told Mr. Clinton that Miami seemed as good a place
for Mr. Milosevic as Moscow, the officials said.
The Clinton administration has made the ouster of Mr.
Milosevic one of its main policy goals and regards him as the
central obstacle to democratization and stability in
southeastern Europe. Secretary of State Madeleine K.
Albright has told her top aides she wants Mr. Milosevic out
of office before she goes, yet Mr. Milosevic has frustrated
Washington, outflanking the opposition.
"There is keen interest in these proposals in Washington,"
said a NATO-country official. "They can't be seen to be
shopping. But they are sending signals that should a clear
proposal come, it would be seriously entertained. And that
shows they're serious. If you write about it, it will be full
denial. But it's the best solution for everyone, and they could
spin it as victory, as his head on a platter. There is a strong
argument that democracy should be put ahead of the
person."
Greece is one of the countries actively exploring the
possibility of a deal for Mr. Milosevic's ouster, which could
mean exile abroad for him and his family or, less likely,
pledges of safety inside Serbia from any successor
government that promises not to extradite him.
Orthodox Greece provided humanitarian aid to Serbia and
Kosovo even during the air war and has acted as a
go-between for NATO and Belgrade in the past.
Last month, Mr. Milosevic saw the former Greek foreign
minister, Karolos Papoulias, and some important Greek
businessmen, including some with close ties to the United
States. Mr. Milosevic is said to have asked to see former
Prime Minister Constantine Mitsotakis, whom he trusts, but
officials say that they are looking for more signals of
seriousness from Belgrade before Mr. Mitsotakis would be
authorized to go.
While Mr. Milosevic is beleaguered and unpopular, and the
country is having severe economic problems, the Serbian
opposition is weak and there are no signs of potential
insurrection. The army and the police have not cracked.
Russia and China, which opposed NATO's use of force in
Kosovo and have interests in Serbia, have been willing to
help Mr. Milosevic and his government with credits, loans
and energy supplies.
On the other hand, the officials say, Mr. Milosevic is
showing signs of nervousness. He is not seeing a broad range
of people or traveling widely inside the country; there is
evidence of a grain shortage that will drive up food prices;
and there have been a series of assassinations of senior
officials and criminal leaders, none of them solved, that
indicate instability.
The opposition is becoming more of a widespread movement
inside Serbia, with opinion polls showing a growing desire for
change and an end to international isolation, even if the
current leaders of the opposition are not popular themselves.
Furthermore, international sanctions against Yugoslavia are
becoming better coordinated and seem to be biting those
close to the government. Just last week, officials say,
Cyprus, a favored spot for Serbian money and money
laundering, finally agreed to shut down the office of
Beogradska Banka on technical grounds.
Mr. Milosevic and his family are believed to have large
amounts of money in foreign banks, although the size and
location of the holdings are not known.
Mr. Milosevic seems tired and irritable, the officials say, and
they note that his speeches have a kind of ideological fury
more reminiscent of the views of his influential wife, Mirjana
Markovic, a professor of sociology who founded the
Yugoslav United Left Party.
Some in his own party are said to be looking beyond him,
and the security of his family -- especially his son, Marko,
who is involved in a wide range of business activities -- is a
concern.
Marko Milosevic, although on a list of individuals banned
from travel to European Union countries, was recently in
Greece on a false diplomatic passport, one official said, and
he is now believed to be in Japan, possibly on his way to
China.
As for Mr. Milosevic's conviction that a Bush administration
would be more realistic and less emotional toward him, a
Bush foreign policy adviser cautioned that there was no
agreed policy, and that the situation in Serbia could change a
lot in six months.
"But Milosevic should take no comfort from the prospect of
a Bush administration," the adviser said. "There will be no
sense of letting bygones be bygones. The strategy may
change in different ways, and it will be worked out with the
Europeans. But the idea that a bunch of Kissingerian
realpolitikers will focus energy elsewhere and let him mind
his own business is not something he should bank on."
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