Editorial note: Mr. Kuhner's opinion of Gen. Gotovina is not shared by this website.
Balkan justice joust
The Washington Times - October 24, 2004
By Jeffrey T. Kuhner
The Bush administration is now demanding that the chief prosecutor for the
International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, Carla Del Ponte,
bring her prosecutions to an end.
Washington is insisting that war crimes cases relating to the Balkan wars of the
1990s be tried either in domestic courts or be given an amnesty. This shift not
only marks a dramatic change in U.S. policy toward the ICTY, but more
importantly, it is a fatal blow to the power and credibility of Mrs. Del Ponte.
In a recent interview, Undersecretary of State for Arms Control John Bolton told
me Washington is deeply concerned that the ICTY, rather than fostering ethnic
reconciliation, has emerged as a threat to regional stability. "There is a very
real risk that the ICTY prosecutions will not resolve the situation in the
Balkans," Mr. Bolton said, "but will create new animosities that lead to
tensions in the future."
He emphasized the Bush administration is demanding war crimes cases at The Hague
be sent back to national domestic courts. Mr. Bolton and other senior State
Department officials are finally realizing what Mrs. Del Ponte and her fellow
left-wing globalists have refused to acknowledge: The ICTY has degenerated into
a politicized tribunal that has failed to live up to its original mandate.
The irony is that the Clinton administration was largely responsible for
creating the ICTY. Washington, however, now realizes that it has unleashed a
Frankenstein monster. Instead of being an impartial body that seeks to punish
those who committed or ordered war crimes, the tribunal has become a vehicle by
which Mrs. Del Ponte has sought to rewrite the history of the Balkan wars. She
has abused her office by issuing deeply flawed and weak indictments. The most
obvious example is the bogus indictment against fugitive Croatian Gen. Ante
Gotovina, the commander of a 1995 military operation that effectively ended the
Croatian-Serbian conflict.
As Mr. Bolton notes, the problem with the ICTY is that it has no democratic
accountability. Hence, there are no checks or balances against the misuse of
power. Therefore, the Bush administration has concluded the only solution is to
kick war crimes cases back to national domestic courts.
"That is why our strategy with respect to the ICTY is to bring these
prosecutions to an end and to return responsibility to Serbia, Croatia and to
the other nations," Mr. Bolton said, "because, after all, many of the alleged
crimes were carried out in their name and they need to confront that reality.
They need to make the decisions whether to prosecute or not to prosecute Serbs
or Croats respectively."
The senior Bush administration official emphasized that "responsibility" for
trying alleged war crimes "should rest on the shoulders of the people who have
to live with the decisions they make."
Ultimately, the United States rightly believes that the ICTY has become not only
an undemocratic institution, but a direct threat to the development of democracy
throughout the former Yugoslavia. Its greatest flaw is that, by virtue of being
an international tribunal with little accountability, it is retarding the growth
of independent judicial bodies and the rule of law within Croatia, Serbia and
Bosnia. For viable democracies to take root in the stony soil of the Balkans, it
is imperative to cultivate fully functioning legal institutions.
"One of the downsides of any distant court is that it takes away responsibility,
and I don't think that is conducive to the political maturation of societies
that we hope will become democratic and realize that they have to confront
actions that their prior governments took," Mr. Bolton said. "So that is why our
approach to the ICTY and with the Rwanda tribunal is to make and create
institutions in the respective countries and to turn that authority back over to
them."
The record is now clear: The ICTY has been a dismal failure. The trial of the
former Serbian strongman, Slobodan Milosevic, continues to drag on with no end
in sight. Notorious Bosnian Serb leaders Gen. Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadzic
remain at large. The Gotovina indictment threatens to destabilize Croatia.
Bosnian Muslims and Kosovo Albanians feel they will never receive justice. Serbs
perceive the tribunal as being biased against them.
Mrs. Del Ponte has managed to accomplish what no other person has before:
Temporarily unite the warring peoples of the former Yugoslavia in their
opposition to her. She is the Lady Macbeth of the Balkans, an unscrupulous
political climber with delusions of grandeur. And like Lady Macbeth, Mrs. Del
Ponte's lust for power has led to her downfall.
Washington is right to yank her off the stage.
Jeffrey T. Kuhner is editor of the Ripon Forum magazine
and communications director at the Ripon Society, a Republican think tank.
Original URL: http://washingtontimes.com/commentary/20041023-105636-4172r.htm
Copyright 2004 The Washington Times
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