Category: Daniel Serwer

Stevenson’s army, October 23

– Atlantic writer sees end of Netanyahu, notes his policy of “propping up Hamas.”

– Haaretz says the PM is blaming the IDF.

-Economist sees Israel’s window of legitimacy for responding shrinking.

– Politico reports on pro-Israel lobbying.

– Some Members may be primaried over Israel.

– CNN poll shows support for Israel.

– WSJ says ground attack has high costs.

– Dan Drezner applauds new Venezuela policy.

– Tom Edsall reviews views on constitutional flaws

-Politico says conservatives are now attacking cyber’s CISA.

My SAIS colleague Charlie Stevenson distributes this almost daily news digest of foreign/defense/national security policy to “Stevenson’s army” via Googlegroups. I republish here, with occasional videos of my choice. To get Stevenson’s army by email, send a blank email (no subject or text in the body) to stevensons-army+subscribe@googlegroups.com. You’ll get an email confirming your join request. Click “Join This Group” and follow the instructions to join. Once you have joined, you can adjust your email delivery preferences (if you want every email or a digest of the emails).

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Stevenson’s army, October 22

-WSJ has extraordinary video analysis demonstrating Gaza rocket struck hospital.

– NYT reveals Ukraine commando raids in Crimea.

– WaPo tells how a woman rose to top ranks in CIA

– FP tells of small country intelligence operations

-WaPo tells how Israelis countered Russian info ops in Africa

– WaPo reports on Hamas military manuals

My SAIS colleague Charlie Stevenson distributes this almost daily news digest of foreign/defense/national security policy to “Stevenson’s army” via Googlegroups. I republish here, with occasional videos of my choice. To get Stevenson’s army by email, send a blank email (no subject or text in the body) to stevensons-army+subscribe@googlegroups.com. You’ll get an email confirming your join request. Click “Join This Group” and follow the instructions to join. Once you have joined, you can adjust your email delivery preferences (if you want every email or a digest of the emails).

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What Serbia and Croatia are trying to do

I spoke via Zoom at Krug 99 in Sarajevo this morning. Here is pretty much what I said:

  • It is a pleasure to join you, if only virtually, for this Circle 99 session. It has been more than 25 years since I attended one in person, though I enjoyed the privilege virtually two years ago.
  • I was focused then mainly on the political and constitutional situation inside Bosnia and Herzegovina. That has not improved.
  • I’ll again focus today on Bosnia, but in the regional context. And I’ll get, as I know many would like, to the question of American policy towards the end.
The Serbian world in Montenegro…
  • The primary regional factor is Belgrade, which is trying to create what some there now term the “Serbian world.” President Vucic wants to control the political fate of Serbs in neighboring countries. That includes not only Bosnia and Herzegovina but also Montenegro and Kosovo.
  • He is using his security and intelligence forces, financing, disinformation, and the Serbian Orthodox Church to overcome resistance and ensure that serious, Western-aligned democracies cannot emerge on Serbia’s periphery.
  • He has been most successful in Montenegro, where he exploited genuine unhappiness with President Djukanovic and the long-ruling DPS. That discontent empowered an avowedly pro-European opposition that is reaching out to Belgrade and its proxies for support.
  • The irony is that Djukanovic presided, with dignity, over a mostly peaceful and entirely constitutional transition that is bringing his hypocritical opponents to power.
…and Kosovo
  • In Kosovo, Vucic’s overt political effort to control the Serb population is conducted through the Lista Srpska. But he also uses the Serbian secret services and their allies in organized crime to ensure that the Serb population, especially in the north, stays loyal to Belgrade, not Pristina.
  • We saw that combination at work September 24, when Lista Srpska and the secret services attempted an armed uprising. The Kosovo police and KFOR foiled that.
  • Vucic since then has leaned heavily in the direction of Russia and China. He no doubt fears that the US and Europe will demand that he apologize for the September 24 insurrection and promise it won’t happen again.
  • The media campaign against Albanians inside Serbia is intense, as is Vucic’s use of the media to support his increasingly autocratic role.
As well as in Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • In Bosnia and Herzegovina, Vucic has in Milorad Dodik someone who is part proxy and part rival. Belgrade backs Dodik’s efforts to separate the Serbs from Sarajevo authority. But Vucic won’t want Dodik to fulfill his ambition of declaring independence.
  • That would put Serbia in a difficult position. It could not recognize Republika Srpska for fear of the European and American reaction. Vucic will be careful not to allow Dodik to outflank his ethnonationalism by declaring independence and demanding annexation of Republika Srpska by Serbia.
  • That said, Vucic has edged closer to Dodik as he moves increasingly into the orbit of Russia and China. Preventing successful democratic governance in Bosnia and obstructing its path towards Europe are Vucic’s aim. Dodik serves that purpose well, so long as he doesn’t go the final mile.
Croatia’s role
  • What about Croatia? How does it fit into this picture?
  • Zagreb, like Belgrade, wants control over its co-ethnic population inside Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is willing to cooperate with Belgrade to that end, cozying up as well as Moscow.
  • Zagreb’s objective, however, is not secession but the third entity, de facto if not de jure. It wants political representation of Croats inside Bosnia and Herzegovina loyal to Zagreb, not Sarajevo.
  • The irony here is that the Bosnian Croats did not ask for the third entity at Dayton, because they got a better deal: half the Federation and one-third of the state.
  • But they failed to take political advantage of that situation and now are looking to exploit the High Representative to achieve their maximalist political goals.
The HiRep at risk
  • His electoral decisions have favored Zagreb’s ambitions. He has ignored the European Court of Human Rights decisions that would counter group rights, like Sejdic-Finci and Kovacevic.
  • At the same time, the HiRep has made himself persona non grata with Milorad Dodik, by countering Dodik’s efforts to remove Republika Srpska from Sarajevo’s authority.
  • The failure of the international community to respond effectively to Dodik’s challenge risks vitiating the HiRep’s role and ending any hope that he can play a constructive role in dismantling the group rights that plague Bosnia’s politics.
  • This is nub of the issue for both Serbia and Croatia. Zagreb and Belgrade want group rights and the constitutional provisions to protect them to prevail over individual rights, thus ensuring a permanent hold on power for ethnic nationalists friendly to Croatia’s and Serbia’s interests.
Washington and Brussels are not the answer
  • That brings me to Washington and Brussels. The Americans and Europeans, who for a long time regretted the group rights granted at Dayton and backed the European Court decisions against them, are no longer fighting that fight.
  • They seem content to allow Bosnia to wallow in its current dysfunctional state, so long as no major violence erupts.
  • Lenin asked a good question: “what is to be done?”
  • My colleagues and I in the diminished Balkan-watching world in Washington will continue to speak up for individual rights, for Bosnia and Herzegovina’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, and against Serbia and Croatia’s efforts to monopolize politics among their co-nationals inside Bosnia.
  • But the center of gravity of Bosnian politics is properly inside Bosnia, not outside it.
Bosnia is the center of gravity
  • The media and civil society can play a vital role. I’d like to see them mobilize as many voices as possible to press for implementation of the European Court decisions.
  • Anything that reduces the salience of group rights and increases the commitment to individual rights would constitute progress.
  • Ideally, the Bosnian state should have all the authority required to negotiate and implement the acquis communautaire while everything else is delegated to the municipalities (opstine).
  • I’d like to see the entities and cantons, which are the power-sharing embodiment of ethnic identity and division, gradually disempowered and eventually eliminated.
  • But that is an American’s version of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is your vision that counts.
  • Democracy is not an easy system to manage. It requires courage and commitment. The majority of Bosnians showed lots of courage and commitment during the war.
  • I hope they can summon that same spirit in 2023 and beyond.
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Stevenson’s army, October 21

– Israeli defense minister has a 3 point plan for Gaza.

– Biden administration has cautioned Israel on its plans.

– WH explains its new budget request. Here’s the letter.

– Here’s excerpt from new book on Lumumba killing.

– SAIS grad Rafael Kruchin explains Brazil reaction to Hamas.

 And via Adam Tooze, look at this 1932 picture of Manhattan:

My SAIS colleague Charlie Stevenson distributes this almost daily news digest of foreign/defense/national security policy to “Stevenson’s army” via Googlegroups. I republish here, with occasional videos of my choice. To get Stevenson’s army by email, send a blank email (no subject or text in the body) to stevensons-army+subscribe@googlegroups.com. You’ll get an email confirming your join request. Click “Join This Group” and follow the instructions to join. Once you have joined, you can adjust your email delivery preferences (if you want every email or a digest of the emails).

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Stevenson’s army, October 19

This from Dahlia Scheindlin and Yezid Sayigh is well worth listening to, even if 4 days old.

Border crossing still closed.

– US denies Israeli reports that Biden promised to join fight against Hezbollah.

– But US may be pressuring Israel on ground war.

– US forces already facing drone attacks

– WaPo says Hamas may have surprise weapons.

– FT says Israel may follow lessons learned from earlier Gaza fighting

-Disputes over Gaza hospital deaths

– FP on Israel’s intelligence failure

– Possible outcomes of House speaker drama

– Biden chooses Kurt Campbell as Deputy SecState

– HuffPost warns of “mutiny” and dissent cable at State

– US & EU can’t resolve steel tariff fight

-I used to say the Ag committees, like the appropriators and armed services panels, could overcome politics to get bills done. Not this year, apparently.

My SAIS colleague Charlie Stevenson distributes this almost daily news digest of foreign/defense/national security policy to “Stevenson’s army” via Googlegroups. I republish here, with occasional videos of my choice. To get Stevenson’s army by email, send a blank email (no subject or text in the body) to stevensons-army+subscribe@googlegroups.com. You’ll get an email confirming your join request. Click “Join This Group” and follow the instructions to join. Once you have joined, you can adjust your email delivery preferences (if you want every email or a digest of the emails).

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Stay out, open up, resign

Israel doesn’t have good options for dealing with Gaza, but some are worse than others. A ground invasion is among the worst. The Israelis are hesitating for good reasons. I trust President Biden urged them to desist. I hope he is also insisting on a real and substantial solution to the humanitarian crisis, over and above the modest shipments agreed so far.

Stay out

The Israeli army is poised with about 300,000 troops on the boundaries of Gaza. But its leadership knows better than anyone else how perilous and counterproductive a ground assault is likely to be. Everything will be booby-trapped, resistance will be fierce, and many Hamas fighters and leaders will have fled with half the civilian population to the south. Besides, success in annihilating Hamas will saddle Israel with the unenviable task of deciding who will govern the day after, or re-imposing its on-the-ground occupation.

The Israelis may hope to establish a base inside Gaza from which it can raid the rest of the territory, rather than reoccupying it. But it is not clear why that is better than raids from outside. Gaza is small (25 miles long and 6 miles wide). With complete command in the air, the few extra miles don’t really matter. Hamas has the home advantage. Why isn’t it better to leave Hamas to stew in the ruins and strike them whenever the opportunity arises?

Open up

In the 12 days since the Hamas atrocities inside Israel, Gaza has been almost completely isolated. The Israelis I understand have allowed in some water, but no electricity, fuel, food, or medical supplies. They have conditioned humanitarian aid on release of the dozens of hostages that Hamas captured in Israel and dragged back to Gaza.

That as I see it is a war crime, as it targets civilians. Or, if Israel wants to claim that it is targeting Hamas and that the civilians are just collateral damage, the embargo of humanitarian aid is disproportionate to the military objective and therefore still a war crime. It is also likely counterproductive. Populations subject to cruel and unusual punishment aren’t going to wake up and throw off their oppressors. They are far more likely to make common cause with them.

Israel needs to move quickly and decisively to relieve the general population, even as it attacks Hamas. The only real alternative is to chase the population into Egypt, but Cairo is alert to that possibility and is not allowing people out through the Rafah crossing. Even once it is open to some Americans and others, permits will be hard to get. The Egyptian Foreign Minister was on BBC two days ago offering to send Gaza’s civilian population to the UK if London insists on letting it out.

Resign

Judicial accountability for the conduct of this Gaza war lies in the future. But there is no doubt about the political responsibility for the security lapses and military abuses that occasioned it. Prime Minister Netanyahu and National Security Minister Ben Gvir should be resigning now. They failed in their obligation to protect Israelis. So too should Ismail Haniyeh, Hamas’ senior political leader, and Yahya Sinwar, its Gaza leader, who share command responsibility for the truly heinous attacks on Israeli civilians. They have also failed in their obligation to protect Gazans.

The Gaza health authorities claim an Israeli missile was responsible for the hit on a hospital in Gaza, killing more than 500 people. The Israelis and Americans say an errant Palestinian Islamic Jihad missile hit the hospital. Its leader–Ziyad al-Nakhalah–should also be resigning. PIJ participated fully in the October 7 attack on Israel.

Of course none of these resignations will be forthcoming soon. All these folks are determined to exact revenge and declare victory. One can only hope that the people of Israel and Gaza will hold them accountable at the first opportunity.

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