3A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 2, 1995 4 i a U communiy disagrees on importance o Serb airstrikes ly Joyce Barretto ment with as little combat as possible. ,or the Daily Jacobsen, however, suggested that With negotiations underway among through airstrikes, the United States "risks 3osnian factions, the debate over the becoming identified with one side of the iecessity of U.S. intervention contin- conflict,"increasingthechanceofattacks ies in Congress and on campus. on the American soldiers, he said. NATO began bombing Serb targets Tanter said the United States has no ast month in retaliation fora Serb shell- choice but to take part in peacekeeping ng of a Sarejevo marketplace. The implementation. "The U.S. is the leader irstrikes continued until the Serbs of the western world. ... Military in- igreed to demilitarize their stronghold volvement comes with the role of being Af Banja Luka. a great power," he said. "I think the airstrikes gave impetus to Many members of Congress from he negotiations and contributed to pres- both parties oppose sending U.S. troops ure to bring about an agreement," said to Bosnia. Whether they will attempt to )olitical science Prof. Harold K. Jacobsen. prevent the deployment is still unknown. Rackham graduate student Jennifer "If the United States is not willing to Tilton said, "If it's true thafthe bombing commit enough intervention ... then ed to the peace talks, NATO should feel they are wasting their time and re- 'ery silly for not having done it earlier." sources," said Engineering junior Ken Political science Prof. Raymond Patterson. anter disagreed. "I think that the With the help of U.S. mediators, the irstrikes weren't as important as mili- Bosnians, Croats and Serbs have agreed ary victories on the ground by the gov- on a constitution providing a shared ,rnment of Croatia," he said. presidency and parliament, both made President Clinton is urging Congress up of two-thirds Muslim-Croats and tnd the American people to support the one-third Serbs. Bosnia will remain a teployment of 25,000 U.S. troops in single state, but the issue over how the Bosnia. The President's position is that territory will be divided is unresolved. 4ATO's recent bombing campaign, in Assistant Secretary of State Richard ddition to Croatian gains, make it pos- Holbrooke is in Serbia negotiating a ible to limit the peacekeeping assign- cease-fire. AP PHOTO A wounded Serbian volunteer guard member is carried away as a Bosnian Serb soldier looks on along front line positions on Mt. Manjaca yesterday. a Distrust thireatens aliance inBosni From Daily Wire Services KULEN VAKUF, Bosnia- Herzegovina - In the complex patch- work of the Balkan war, this riverfront swatch is a peaceful one. Bosnian Serb rebels have been chased away, ending three years of occupation. And hun- dreds of mostly Muslim residents are lining up to rebuild their ruined homes. But trouble on a narrow bridge that spans east and west belies the village's long-awaited tranquillity. An uproar over a barricade of sandbags and barbed wire illustrates how distrust is tearingat the seams of the Croat-Muslim allian in Bosnia-Herzegovina - and threat- ens to unravel delicate U.S.-led peace talks in the region. A Bosnian police officer, working crossword puzzles on a concrete stocp, guards the bridge's unobstructed east- ern entrance. Overhead, a Bosnian flag dangles from a broken electrical wine. On the river's west bank, beyond rickety planks that fill a treacherous gap in the bridge, a Croatian army sol- dier patrols a shoulder-high mound of sandbags and barbed wire. Above him, a Croatian flag flaps in the autumn breeze. "All of this over here is Croatia, and all of that over there is Bosnia," the soldier, Mile Smolcic, said. "I've ward adjustments are going to be made to the map." The mangled Kulen Vakuf brilge, built years ago as a local link for villag- ers, has been transformed by the Croatian army into a self-proclaimed international frontier - even though the internationally recognized border between Bosnia and Croatia is four miles away. The two sides are not warring across the disputed divide - the Croatis and Bosnians are allies against the rebel Serbs - but the Croatian arn has orders not to allow Bosnians to pass the fortification into the village's western side. The order has infuriated retrning Muslims, who make up 95 percent of the population. "We don't care who is Musln and who is Croat - we just want to live again in our town," said Mahmut Vajzovic, among the first villagers to return home. "We want freedom of movement. We've had enough of this war." The emotional standoff here, though involving only a small village ina small corner of northwest Bosnia, reflects deepening - and potentially calami- tous - fissures in the fragile Muslim- Croat alliance, the greatest diplomatic achievement of the 41-month-old Bosnian war. The bridge dispute strikes atthe heart of Bosnian insecurities aboiut their Croatian allies, who have Icng been suspected of having eyes for Bosnian territory. Over the summer, Croatian President Franjo Tudjman reportedly drew a map on the back of a dinner napkin showing Bosnia meted out be- tween Croatia and Serbia, and even today, Croatian government officials do not rule out such a scenario. "Croatia would rather have Bosnia- Herzegovina remain as a whole state, but if that is not possible... Croats there would have no other option than to create some sort of connection with Croatia," said Bosiljko Misetic, Croatia's deputy prime minister. "Croats can't just continue giving up forever in Bosnia." For the past few months, Muslims and Croats in Bosnia have been on the same warring side, thanks to a U.S.- brokered agreement betweco Tudjman and Bosnian , President Alija Izetbegovic, who heads the Muslim-led but secular Bosnian govermnent. The so-called Bosnian-Croat federa- tion turned a chaotic three-way war-in which Serbs, Croats and Muslims in Bosnia were fighting one another-into a two-sided conflict. Withoat the federa- tion, the current U.S.-led peace effort would be impossible; its cpllapse, ana- lysts say, would send the tals into a free fall andprovokeabloody landrush-across Bosnia by all three ethnic groups. In talks with Tudjman yesterday, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Richard Holbrooke again raised the issue of the federation, which U.S. mediators con- sider a cornerstone of any peace settle- ment but which skeptics believe Tudjman pays only lip service to. "For four years Tudjnn has wanted __________ -sU an I tEI iUU : . Uea y aIE 3i n.tu -.:--