Greater Serbia.
I think this is more than a civil war,Christopher said.
TheThey have in mind a Greater Serbia. They're looking to the south to
aggression of the Serbs, I think, is quite transparent.
We're taking these steps because the United States has an important
His comments represented the fullest assessment yet of what the United
States views as Serb military objectives. Last week, as Serbs advanced
on Gorazde, U.S. spokesmen explained away allied inaction saying they
did not know Serb intentions.
Christopher was following up on Clinton's announcement of Wednesday
that he was proposing to NATO allies and Russia -- another major player
in efforts to negotiate a peace -- that NATO vastly expand its threat
of air strikes against Serb positions, tighten enforcements of economic
sanctions and step up humanitarian relief efforts.
Clinton and Christopher both stressed that the objective of a bolder
new allied effort would be to force the Serbs to the peace table, but
said air strikes could also raise the price for continued attacks on
besieged Moslem enclaves like Gorazde even if they could not stop them
entirely.
NATO was expected to take up the Clinton proposal soon. Although
Christopher said he thought discussion would begin Friday, NATO
officials said no date had been fixed.
Allies like Britain and France, who have peacekeeping troops in Bosnia,
have in the past opposed increased NATO air strikes, as has Russia, an
ally of the Serbs.
Hollings and others rubbed some political sore points by saying the
administration seemed more interested in allied government support than
that of the Congress, and noting it had backed away from comparable
U.S. commitments in Somalia, Haiti and Rwanda, where only blacks were
involved.
Christopher said the administration was consulting Congress regularly
and that the difference between Bosnia and the other trouble spots was
national interest.
We have a strategic interest in preventing a broader European
he said.
We have an interest in stemming the flow of refugees and bringing the
vast tragedy to an end.
even a cautious secretary oflike him must press for
state
a strong, robust position to ensure
that this conflict does not spread.
This aggression began in 1992 on somebody else's watch,he said in
in very close consultationwith the
on the verge of being outragedat broken Serb
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