FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: George Bogdanich
A voidablewar@aol.com

"Yugoslavia: The Avoidable War"

Documents Misguided Intervention In The Balkans

 

Could the violent break up of Yugoslavia have been avoided? What role did Western intervention play in the tragedy that consumed the multi-ethnic country? "Yugoslavia – The Avoidable War," a two and half-hour film, addresses these questions in a well-documented, but powerful indictment of misguided intervention in the region.

"Yugoslavia: The Avoidable War" had its world premiere at the New York International Independent Film and Video Festival where it won the award for the Best Social Documentary in September. Since then, successful screenings have been held at the World Affairs Council in Boston, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy Tufts University, NYU Film School, University of California at Berkeley, the University of Michigan, Goucher College and at many churches.

The documentary which took four years to produce, and which was completed during the recent Western intervention in Kosovo, investigates how serious errors and misjudgments made by Western powers – particularly Germany and the United States -- helped spark the violent break up of the former Yugoslavia in 1991 and continue to destabilize the region as the millenium approaches. Produced by Frontier Theatre and Film Inc., "Yugoslavia the Avoidable War" documents the role of Western intelligence agencies in providing aid to armed separatists and reveals how Western governments supported different sides in an ethnic conflict while portraying themselves as peacemakers. Most compelling are the candid statements of the decision-makers themselves, including former EC Mediator Lord Peter Carrington, former US Secretaries of State James Baker and Lawrence Eagleburger, as well as Germany’s former foreign minister, Hans Dietrich Genscher.

"What the international community -- the Europeans, the Americans the UN -- did, made it sure there was going to be conflict," states Lord Peter Carrington, the EC mediator, who along with UN envoy Cyrus Vance warned against diplomatic recognition of separatists states such as Croatia and Bosnia, before a political settlement could be achieved. "US intelligence agencies were unanimous in saying that if we recognize Bosnia it will blow up," says former State Department official George Kenney. Yet, according to former acting US Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger, domestic political considerations -- the 1992 election campaign between William Clinton and George Bush – led to the tragic decision to recognize Bosnia without a political settlement between the Muslims, Serbs and Croats. The film makes a powerful argument that the US drew the wrong lesson of from the Bosnian conflict to justify intervention in the civil war that simmered in Kosovo.

The manipulation of news coverage by the warring sides is explored in compelling footage and in interviews with veteran journalists such as David Binder of the New York Times and John MacArthur, columnist and publisher of Harper’s Magazine, as well as authors Susan Woodward and Ted Galen Carpenter. The documentary offers powerful evidence of US involvement in "Operation Storm" the Croatian army’s violent expulsion of the ethnic Serbian minority in 1995, an action which had an eerie parallel with the expulsion of Albanian refugees in Kosovo by Serbian forces following NATO intervention on the side of the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA). Compelling candid interviews from military officers including UN Commanders Sier Michael Rose, Lewis MacKenzie and former Pentagon Chief of Staff General Colin Powell elucidate how Western policymakers blundered by taking sides and by relying on military means to settle political problems.

Co-producers of the documentary are George Bogdanich New York based documentary film maker and Martin Lettmayer a German television producer based in Munich, who is currently working on a documentary in Central America.