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December 4, 2018

Bosnia: Inhumane Genocide or Devastating War?

When determining the nature of a war, we often look at the events leading up to it. Whether it be economic instability, political inaptness, or social and cultural determinants, it can be figured out. However, approximately 25 years ago, the Bosnian War was not considered a genocide, due to the severity of the conflict and the implications that the term genocide carried at the time. By definition, a genocide is “the deliberate and systematic destruction of a racial, political, or cultural group.”1 In this state, however, genocide failed to be the term used to describe the atrocities that occurred during the Bosnian War. Instead, the term ethnic cleansing was utilized as a facade to divert the public from the real problem of this war. And indeed, the cover-up worked for a few years. Nonetheless, the debate whether Bosnia was suffering a genocide or simply ethnic cleansing still existed well after the war ended. So, the question remains, did Bosnian Serbs ever engage in genocide? And if so, why did the U.S. delay its response to aid Non-Serb Bosnians in this time of crisis?

In June of 1991, prior to the war’s beginning, Bosnia held a referendum on independence and voters chose to secede from Yugoslavia. Slobodan Milosevic was one of the Serbian Presidents of Bosnia at the time. Convinced by their leader, Bosnian Serbs chose to separate from Bosnia as well and create their own state within Bosnia.2 This was not agreed to by all Bosnians, but Milosevic was persistent and manipulated the political, or national, identity of Bosnia. By this year, Bosnia’s population consisted of 44 percent Bosniak, 31 percent Serb, and 17 percent Croatian.3 Nonetheless, Serbs wanted to dominate Bosnia. Milosevic utilized a method similar to Hitler’s, in which he made Serbs appear the dominant race in Bosnia. He emphasized the difference in religion, which was a crucial component of each group’s identity. Serbs were practitioners of Orthodox Christianity, whereas other Bosnians largely practiced Islam.4

Serbian leader, Slobodan Misolevic | Courtesy of misolevic.co

Any group that did not belong to the Serbian religion was then utilized as a scapegoat by Serbs in order to highlight their inferiority. The conflict began with demeaning slurs and escalated into violent hate crimes. Serbs wanted to make Bosnia homogeneous, so they took to military action. Additionally, they had an advantage because they obtained their arsenal from the “Serb-dominated Yugoslav National Army.”5 By 1992, this became what some considered to be a Civil War taking place between Bosnia’s different ethnicities. However, the reality was that Serbs were systemically killing off Non-Serbs living in Bosnia. These Non-Serbs consisted of Croats and Muslim Bosnians.

Initially, the Bosnian War, as most countries called it at the time, was deemed a war between different ethnicities, where Serbs were just trying to reclaim the land they believed to be rightfully theirs. The Yugoslavian army was Serb-dominated, and it therefore backed all Serbian procedures at the instruction of Slobodan Milosevic.6 Edicts, or official orders, were issued by the Serbian war presidency. In Celinac, a northern Bosnian town, this began by imposing a curfew on Non-Serbs from 4 p.m. to 6 a.m. Moreover, Non-Serbs were not allowed to:

“meet in cafes, restaurants, or other public places, bathe or swim in the Vrbanija or Josavka Rivers, hunt or fish, move to another town without administration, carry a weapon, drive or travel by car, gather in groups of more than three men, contact relatives from outside Celinac (all household visits must be reported), use means of communication other than the post office phone, wear uniforms: military police, or forest guard, nor sell real estate or exchange homes without approval.”7

Local factories “introduced quotas to limit the number of Muslim or Croat employees to 1 percent of the overall workforce.”8 In Eastern Bosnia, they forcibly evicted Non-Serbs from their towns, often with no warning. By the end of 1993, the Serbs controlled close to three-fourths of Bosnia.9

This was how the Serbs turned to ethnic cleansing, which was considered “the expulsion of a group of people from a geographical area and not the actual physical destruction of that group.”10 Serbs followed the idea of “Say nothing; do these things; do not describe them” as Holocaust historian Raul Hilberg put it. This was the general idea when genocide was practiced.11

Injured Bosnian woman is brought to a hospital | Courtesy of Reuter

That was the reality that many countries, including the United States, refused to recognize. The Bosnian War of 1991-1995 was, in fact, a genocide. This became clear with the Srebrenica Massacre, one of three towns that the Bosnian government still had control over. The United Nations had placed peacekeeping forces here in 1993 in order to protect Non-Serb Bosnians fleeing from the war. These forces, however, were not enough when the Serb army forced its way into the town.12 Srebrenica was the place where Serbs crossed the line between ethnic cleansing and genocide, “the deliberate and systematic destruction of a racial, political, or cultural group.”13 Serbs systematically exterminated Non-Serbs by taking Bosnian women and girls and placing them in concentration camps. In these concentration camps, these females were stripped of their dignity and rights. They were raped and sexually assaulted often until they became impregnated with Serbian seeds. This was done with the aim to eliminate the Bosnian race and to increase the Serb population.14 As for the male Bosnians, sometimes Serb forces “forced fathers to castrate their sons or molest their daughters.”15 All the men, ranging from newborns to the elderly, were either killed on the spot or taken to mass murder sites to be executed. The murders committed towards Bosnians in Srebrenica range between seven and eight thousand. No matter the action, Serbs had a deliberate policy of destruction and degradation to ensure that the Non-Serbian Bosnians knew that they were below the Serbian race.16

“The purging of Non-Serbs was not only an explicit war aim of Serb nationalists; it was their primary aim.”17

Serbian heads sent to the forces | Courtesy of Flickr

Through this massacre, Serbs participated in war crimes as well as crimes against humanity. War crimes are the violation of laws of war, which was done because Serbs killed prisoners of war.18 Crimes against humanity is the mass killing of a large number of the civilian population, and “a form of genocide that occurs during wartime.”19 Genocide focuses on the mass killing of a particular group, which in this case was the Non-Serb Bosnians.

In 1995, the Srebrenica Massacre, along with the Sarajevo market bombing, finally caught the attention of international forces. Humanitarian intervention took place. The United States along with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) aided Bosnian and Croat forces by bombing Serb positions as well as providing a ground offensive. This led to Milosevic agreeing to enter peace negotiations hosted by the U.S., which “resulted in the creation of a federalized Bosnia divided between a Croat-Bosniak federation and a Serb republic.”20

But why did it take the United States four years of the Bosnian War and Serbians demeaning other Bosnians to intervene in the war? The U.S. was aware of this genocide occurring and made no advance to aid Bosnia until it was too late and thousands died. At the time, they claimed they never realized the war was actually a genocide occurring. Instead, they looked to the European Union to fix the problem. However, well into the Balkan Wars, European weaknesses were exposed. Still, the U.S. decided to rely on European Union to claim responsibility in a solution to the Bosnian War, knowing that their leadership was nonexistent. Essentially, they appeared to avoid any sort of involvement in Bosnia. They just stood by, allowing it to happen.21

In our day and age, we tend to have a clear idea of the term “genocide.” However, in 1991, when the Bosnian War was just beginning, the United States did not step up to its title of a global leading power. They did not attempt to stop Serbians from first demeaning and subjugating other Bosnians, then killing several thousands of them due to oblivion from the U.S.’s part. It is important to define situations for what they are, rather than hiding behind terms due to the fear of their power.

Today, we see the Bosnian War as what it was, the Bosnian Genocide. The Serbian Army in Bosnia participated in terrorism, ethnic cleansing, as well as genocide against Non-Serbs.

 

  1.  The Encyclopedia of Criminology and Criminal Justice, 2014, s.v. “Genocide,” by Laurence A. French.
  2. Samantha Power, A Problem From Hell (New York, NY: Basic Books, 2002), 247.
  3. “Bosnian Genocide,” History.com, August 21, 2018. Accessed November 20, 2018. https://www.history.com/topics/1990s/bosnian-genocide.
  4. Tony Barber, “The Bosnian Crisis: Serbs, Croats and Muslims: who hates who and why,” Independent Minds UK, August 9, 1992. Accessed November 20, 2018. https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/the-bosnia-crisis-serbs-croats-and-muslims-who-hates-who-and-why-tony-barber-in-zagreb-traces-the-1539305.html.
  5. Samantha Power, A Problem From Hell (New York, NY: Basic Books, 2002), 249.
  6. “Bosnian Genocide,” History.com, August 21, 2018. Accessed November 20, 2018. https://www.history.com/topics/1990s/bosnian-genocide.
  7. Samantha Power, A Problem From Hell (New York, NY: Basic Books, 2002), 250.
  8. Samantha Power, A Problem From Hell (New York, NY: Basic Books, 2002), 250.
  9. “Bosnian Genocide,” History.com, August 21, 2018. Accessed November 20, 2018. https://www.history.com/topics/1990s/bosnian-genocide.
  10. “Bosnian Genocide,” History.com, August 21, 2018. Accessed November 20, 2018. https://www.history.com/topics/1990s/bosnian-genocide.
  11. Samantha Power, A Problem From Hell (New York, NY: Basic Books, 2002), 249.
  12. “Bosnian Genocide,” History.com, August 21, 2018. Accessed November 20, 2018. https://www.history.com/topics/1990s/bosnian-genocide.
  13.  The Encyclopedia of Criminology and Criminal Justice, 2014, s.v. “Genocide,” by Laurence A. French.
  14. Leona Pallansch, “Identity Politics, Subject Bosnian War,” (Lecture, Introduction to Global Affairs, St. Mary’s University, October 29, 2018).
  15. Samantha Power, A Problem From Hell (New York, NY: Basic Books, 2002), 251.
  16. Samantha Power, A Problem From Hell (New York, NY: Basic Books, 2002), 301.
  17. Samantha Power, A Problem From Hell (New York, NY: Basic Books, 2002), 251.
  18. The Columbia Encyclopedia, 2018, s.v. “war crimes,” by Paul Lagasse.
  19.  The Encyclopedia of Criminology and Criminal Justice, 2014, s.v. “Genocide,” by Laurence A. French.
  20. “Bosnian Genocide,” History.com, August 21, 2018. Accessed November 20, 2018. https://www.history.com/topics/1990s/bosnian-genocide.
  21. Samantha Power, A Problem From Hell (New York, NY: Basic Books, 2002), 323-327.

Ariana Melendez

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53 comments

  • Juliana Montoya

    This article is very informative about how the “war” was actually a genocide and it was very sickening to find out how they would commit war/ humanitarian crimes. Bosnia was very much in the state of a massive genocide and it was extremely similar to what had happened in Germany during World War 2. I also found it disappointing how the United States did not do anything about the situation until many years later when millions of people had already died.

  • Thiffany Yeupell

    For the Bosnian Genocide to occur due to Serbian nationalism truly is troubling, for its parallels to Germany and the Holocaust are evident, even referenced by the leader Milosevic, in the late years of the 20th century. This historic and gruesome moment is closer to the present day than it was to the actual Holocaust itself. With the world getting close to the modern age we are currently experiencing and about to reach a new millennium, the very idea that such atrocities were committed against the Bosnians at this time proves that history can repeat itself and much quicker than we would like to admit. But the lack of response and intervention from other nations, especially from the U.S., is unacceptable, given that the nation has established itself as a superpower that would ‘police’ the globe. But alas, a push was needed to head in the right direction, a push too late as the Bosnian Genocide had established itself.

  • Madelynn Vasquez

    A very informative article, heavy topics such as war and genocide are always so heavy to talk about from an outside perspective because we always see it for what it is; war and genocide. This article was very well-written and shed light on the severe discrimination that the people of Bosnia went through. It was both surprising and not surprising to learn about this but also that there wasn’t a whole lot of media coverage to show what was happening over there.

  • Savannah Alcazar

    The first thing that captured my attention was the image at the beginning; it made me anxious to see what it was about. The article enlightened me to events in Bosnia that I was unaware of prior to this article. I could not believe they used the term “ethnic cleansing” to make their actions seem less like genocide. The images used throughout the writing were powerful. I think they speak for themselves when thinking about how terrible the Bosnian War/Genocide truly was. Very good article!!

  • Luis Jaen

    These crimes against humanity that were brought upon both the Bosnian and Croatian population in Yugoslavia is actually inhumane and tragic. The actions taken by the Serbian military were very closely mirroring the Nazi party yet, in the international spectrum, there was very little action to help the non-Serbian people. There should more people talking about this.

  • Shriji Lalji

    I was unfamiliar with this Inter-Bosnian conflict. In an ideal world the international powers would act sternly with speed. Although international engagement is alway a controversial issue, in this case of genocide it is clearly the right thing to do. One could argue the countries which are aware of the realities but stand by stagnant, are just as guilty as those committing the crime. Often times in politics governments will use clever short titles for certain programs to make it sound appealing.

  • Mark Dominguez

    Prior to reading this article, I had never heard of the horrendous genocide that took place during the Bosnian War. The belief system that the Bosnian government had was beyond terrible, it is disheartening that thousands of Croatians and Bosnians lost their lives and were targeted because of what they stood for. It is bizarre that an event that parallels The Holocaust had occurred after World War II and the consequences that resulted from it.

  • Leopoldo Martinez-Milland

    It is so interesting to read about a genocide happening as recent as the 1990s as it did in Bosnia. Just by reading this, I’m surprised the Bosnian War does not get mentioned as much as the very much known genocide of that Jews that happened in Germany in the 1940s. That does show me, however, that there is probably things like this happening in our world currently but just simply isn’t getting the mainstream coverage. Ariana Melendez did an excellent job taking us into the horrors that non-Serb Bosnians went through during this time. It’s just very unfortunate to see that it took four years of this horror plus the death of thousands to put a stop to this.

  • Victoria Davis

    Reading this article brings so much awareness to me how I was not aware of these events going on in Bosnia. It was such a good informational article to read although I can imagine this was a very hard article to write. It is so sad to think that these kinds of horrific things are going on in the world right now while are biggest problem is getting good grades in college.

  • Victoria Davis

    Reading this article brings so much awareness to me how I was not aware of these events going on in Bosnia. It was such a good informational article to read although I can imagine this was a very hard article to write. It is so sad to think that these kind of horrific things are going on in the world right now while are biggest problem is getting good grades in college.

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