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More worrisome is the possibility of further Serbian aggression provoking wider conflict. Serbs loathe, and oppress, the ethnic Albanians of Kosovo province, which is also home to 209,000 Serbs; some analysts predict that the Albanians there will rebel or that Belgrade will try to drive them out as soon as the Bosnian question is settled. Either eventuality could spur Albania to intervene. Hungary has massed troops at its southern border to protect 385,000 ethnic Hungarians in the Serbian province of Vojvodina. A Serbian effort to annex parts of Macedonia could prompt a response by Russia, Bulgaria or even...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Atrocity And Outrage | 8/17/1992 | See Source »

Even so, as the images of atrocity flicker across the world's television screens, the U.S. and its allies find themselves forced to mull over the unattractive military options available that might put a crimp in Serbian aggression -- or at least send a message of retribution to Belgrade. In the long run, the international community must develop a new ethic, and new institutions to match, concerned less with the sanctity of borders than with the rights of people. Until it does, the dilemma posed in Bosnia is likely to be repeated elsewhere, again and again...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Atrocity And Outrage | 8/17/1992 | See Source »

Tired of waiting for the world, desperate Bosnia is in a noose: the more it tugs, the more it chokes. The death struggle was brought home to outsiders last week after besieged defenders tried to break through Serbian lines surrounding Sarajevo. The thrusts not only failed but provoked intensified Serbian fire that closed down the city's airport, cutting off U.N. relief shipments. Bosnian soldiers who scaled Trebevic Mountain in the hope of outflanking the Serbian guns may have at least tasted a moment of gallows humor: before being driven back, they reached the bobsled run built...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dilemma For the World | 8/17/1992 | See Source »

Perhaps "the threat or use of force," as the old formula goes, would not bring Bosnia's Serbs to heel. But proposing military targets for air strikes in the Serbian heartland might make Milosevic think twice, give his many Serbian political opponents a more persuasive voice and ease the heat on slowly strangling Bosnia. At the least, it would send a message about where the West stands. At bottom, this may not be a universal U.N. concern, but it is a European crisis and, more to the point, a Western responsibility. As such, it is also a job that will...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dilemma For the World | 8/17/1992 | See Source »

...Iraq remains high on the August agenda, Yugoslavia, with its millions of innocent victims displayed daily in the media, has become Issue No. 1. Rarely is a nation presented with a clear, unequivocal moral issue to decide. Washington faces one now: to act or not to act to end Serbian aggression and the human agony it is inflicting. This question is uncluttered by direct American national interests, because the U.S. has none in Yugoslavia. If Bush decides to risk American lives in any form of military action there, it will be only because the U.S. accepts a moral obligation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Guns of August Echo | 8/17/1992 | See Source »

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