Press Accounts: [US Media: The New York Times] [2 of 6]

Call Number
377-0-1:5/5

General information

Call No.:
377-0-1:5/5
Part of series
HU OSA 377-0-1 David Rohde Collection on Srebrenica: Subject Files
Located at
Archival boxes #5 / No. 5
Date
1995
Level
Item
Primary Type
Textual
Language
English

Content

Form/Genre
News item
Contents Summary
Allies seem near accord to bolster Bosnia force.
Bosnian Serbs insist that NATO forgoes airstrikes.
Calling history to arms: Serbs invoke their past.
Balkan accord: for some Bosnians the return is just a dream.
US envoy in Bosnia criticizes both warring sides.
Bosnian Serbs are playing the hostage card.
The Serbs free more UN captives.
The Bosnian Government claims it will not deal with the Chief UN envoy.
NATO's bombing and the Serb hostage-taking mark a turning point in the war.
NATO gives UN officials veto on air strikes in Bosnia.

Subject / Coverage

Spatial Coverage
Goražde
Pale
Sarajevo
Srebrenica
Tuzla
Subject
Akashi, Yasushi
Albright, Madeline
Annan, Kofi
Bahto, Hamid
Bildt, Carl
Boutros-Ghali, Boutros
Chirac, Jacques
Coward, Gary
Delić, Rasim
Dole, Bob
Doutriaux, Yves
Ganić, Ejup
Holbrooke, Richard
Janvier, Bernard
Karadžić, Radovan
Kerry, John
McCurry, Michael
Milošević, Slobodan
Mladić, Ratko
Šaćirbegović, Muhamed
Smith, Leighton
Smith, Rupert
Stoltenberg, Thorvald
Collection Specific Tags
Bosnian Serb Army, Clinton administration, Hostages, NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization), NATO air strike, Peace negotiations, Refugees, Return of displaced persons, Shelling of Sarajevo, UN captives, UN Safe areas, UNHCR (United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees), United Nations, UNPROFOR (The United Nations Protection Force), UNSC (United Nations Security Council), Visoko area, Wartime negotiations