2006-03-09

The ICJ genocide trial, 2: Was there a policy?

There is certainly a lot to be added to the first installment, on the question of whether genocide took place, and I invite people to take up the question in the comments (for the sake of people who might be looking this up in the future, I will ask people to be sure that their comment gets posted to the topic to which it pertains). For now, I want to take up the next question, which is whether genocide, if it is shown to have occurred, was the result of policy on the part of SRJ.

In a way, the question is at least a little bit circular: the "intent" provision of the Genocide Convention is most often interpreted as meaning that there cannot be a genocide without a policy. But there are two problems that immediately come forward here:

1) Even where a policy exists, it is very rare that this policy is stated in a conventional way that allows for documentation. The documentation of the Wannsee Conference (1942), for example, while it is usually taken as evidence of the announcement by the Nazis of the "Final Solution," is in fact vague on the question of what, other than deportation, this "solution" would entail (and its report was not a published document). Even the centrality of the Wannsee Conference is disputed: Christian Gerlach, for example, argues that a recently found document is more determinative and sets an earlier date. I am not about to resolve this historians' dispute -- what I want to point out out is that the dispute indicates a problem, which is that decisions to commit genocide do not lend themselves to documentation and publicity. The Nazi case takes place in the context of a regime which was sure of its power at the time and held closely to bureaucratic form, conditions which do not apply to the states of the former Yugoslavia. Even in Rwanda, where there is plentiful evidence of intent, this evidence takes the form of media material. There are no parliamentary resolutions or (written) executive decrees. So any evidence related to the existence of a policy has to be indirect.

2) To the extent that a policy can be said to have existed, there remains the question of whose policy it was. In the strictest bureaucratic sense, Serbia and the Serb parastate in Bosnia-Hercegovina were separate entities. To further complicate the matter, many of the worst atrocities were carried out by paramilitary groups (White Eagles, Tigers, Scorpions, and other critters) which had no legal status. The core of the case presented by the BiH advocates lies in demonstrating the ways in which all of these elements were connected. These are all facts that, in the parlance, "everybody knows," but that sort of qualification does not necessarily reach the required standard of legal proof. Alain Pellet of the BiH legal team himself raised the possibility that SRJ may have been "merely" an accomplice rather than a direct participant with intent in the genocide. But he raised this possibility more or less as a null hypothesis, in the process of attempting to show that the military and police forces of RS were "totally dependent on SRJ and have to be considered as organs of SRJ." Here, too, the evidence has to be indirect: the strategy depends on showing logistical, command and financial links between SRJ institutions and perpetrators.

Demonstrating links was the central concern of BiH attorney Magda Karagianakis, who spoke of the role of the Serbian interior ministry in training, arming and commanding the RS military (VRS) and paramilitaries. One well known example was broadcast to great publicity last year: the video recording showing prisoners who had been taken by the military being executed by members of a paramiltary unit. In addition to evidence from the plaintiffs' attorneys showing that VRS was financed directly by the regime in Belgrade, there remains Slobodan Milošević's interesting complaint at the time of his initial arrest, in which he denied that he had taken money missing from the state budget for personal or party use, claiming instead:
"As for the resources spent for weapons, ammunition and other needs of the Army of Republika Srpska and of Republika Srpske Krajine, those tasks for reasons of state, as a state secret, could not be shown in the budget, which is a public document. The same applies to appropriations for the supply of security forces, and especially the special antiterrorist forces --"from needles to locomotives" -- from light weaponry and equipment to helicopters and other resources which remain in place, and which were not revealed to the public for reasons of state secrecy."
Similarly, the ongoing financial relations between the legal military and Ratko Mladić raises the issue of how close the informal contacts between institutions were, as do more recent revelations of the connections between state security and paramilitary groups. These sorts of statements and findings do not offer a high level of precision, but a lot of them cumulatively contribute to an argument that a variety of forces operated with a shared goal, and with some level of coordination.

The defence has a number of potential answers to arguments along these lines. One would be that in a war atmosphere characterised by general criminality and confusion, chains of command did not function (a similar argument is offered by Kosta Čavoški on behalf of Radovan Karadžić, but it will not help in this case -- he tries to shift blame to Milošević by way of Mladić). Another would be that the interior ministry and its forces represented rogue elements not controlled by state policy, but this argument faces the problem of finding more rogue than nonrogue elements as it develops the theory. On his first day of presentation, SCG advocate Radoslav Stojanović argued for a separation between the actions of the Milošević regime and the interests of the state and its citizens. This argument may have considerable political validity but it is not clear that it can translate to a legal argument.

My assessment would be that if ICJ finds that genocide took place, it will be hard for them not to find also that there existed a policy in which SRJ was engaged.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Fascinating case and hard to see which way it will go, but I think your post and the Milosevic quote pretty much make clear that there was a policy and clearly identifiable command and control responsibility.

I don't think there needs to be a policy of genocide per se, but a policy of removing the non-Serb population from areas required by the JNA RAM plan (i.e. NW BiH and the Drina valley). It is easy enough to prove that the implementation of this plan assumed a genocidal character, because it depended upon destroying "in whole or in part" the non-Serb peoples that stood in its way.

Also, the role of Jovica Stanisic and the Federal Directorate of Supply and Reserves is a key link and his dept. organised the logistics for much of the ethnic cleansing in these areas (buses, etc), which went hand in hand with the Interior Ministry's coordination of paramilitary forces on the ground.

Incidentally, I have often wondered whether General Kukanjac's failure to do his bit of the RAM plan - joining up Eastern Hercegovina with NW BiH via the Konjic region - was one of the key factors in Bosnia' survival.

Overall, I think it is indisputable that the Serbian government was running the show, at least as far as Serbian paramilitaries and the JNA were concerned. Nobody seriously believes the Arkonovci, White Eagles et al were simply volunteers helping their brethren. Their deployments were too strategic. For example, you can trace the route of Arkan's men from Bijeljina, where the first killings took place, down the Drina valley in the summer of '92. At the end, when Serb forces were in disarray, it was these same men who tried to make a stand in Sanski Most to protect Prijedor, but they were no match for the Bosnian Army by that time hvala bog.

By rights the case is provable; it will come down to political will on the part of the ICJ.

Anonymous said...

Im interested in your opinion on the argument that what occured in the former Yugoslavia was much more a case ethnic groups fighting one another than about nation states fighting one another.

Is this claim closer to the truth than the countries based one and is it relevant to the case and how?

I'd also like to ask your opinion on whether Bosnia would have a case against Croatia at the international court seeing as regular HVO troops were stationed inside Bosnia without the permission of the Bosnian central government.

That and Herceg Bosna.

I like your division of the political, legal and moral. Its the best way to approach all of this.

Rest assured even if you dont get many comments on this that many people will come to E Ethinia to read your view.

Eric Gordy said...

Thanks for your kind comments!

On the question of whether the war involved ethnic groups or nation states, I am not sure that I am very comfortable with either one. I think it was more about a group of politicians trying to preserve their power, and using both ethnic and national ideas (plus the general sense of powerlessness and search for blame that became widespread while SFRJ was declining in the 1980s) to mobilise people behind them. Once these people got a little bit of success, the process produced so much insecurity and mutual position that people were forced to take refuge in ethnic and national communities, even if they were not inclined to do so before. So I have a little bit of sympathy with Mr Stojanovic's argument as a political one, even though I do not think it works very well as a legal argument: he seems to be asking why people are being held accountable now, when they have finally succeeded in getting rid of the folks who brought the whole disaster on?

BH could probably make a case against Croatia, but it seems to me, especially since the two countries are friendly with one another now, that a court is not the best place to sort out their grievances. To take another example: when Montenegro apologised to Croatia for the damage done in the attacks in and around Dubrovnik, one of the things they offered was compensation for the damage done to the airport in Cilipi. Croatia made a counteroffer -- they would take part ownership of the airport in Tivat instead (and promise to invest in improving it). What this does is create a community of interest, where not only is Croatia compensated, but both Croatia and Montenegro develop an ongoing common interest in maintaining friendly relations and developing the tourism industry to their mutual benefit. This sort of thing seems like a good sign of responsibility oriented toward the future, and it might make someone other than lawyers rich.

Anonymous said...

I agree with you on the power elite theory. Actually I suppose my comments were written to allude to the inconsistancy of it all.

Mind you, consistency in the Balkans (of either 'domestic' or international players) has never been primarily in the mind of the policy makers.

No kindness about my comments. You deserve credit for the blog, your knowledge on the Balkans and perhaps most of all your affection (that one can read between the lines) for the region and the people living in it.

Cheers