ȱ
˜œ—’ŠDZȱž››Ž—ȱ œœžŽœȱŠ—ȱǯǯȱ˜•’Œ¢ȱ
ŽŸŽ—ȱ˜Ž‘›Ž•ȱ
™ŽŒ’Š•’œȱ’—ȱž›˜™ŽŠ—ȱŠ’›œȱ
™›’•ȱŗǰȱŘŖŖşȱ
˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ
ŝȬśŝŖŖȱ
   ǯŒ›œǯ˜Ÿȱ
ŚŖŚŝşȱ
ȱŽ™˜›ȱ˜›ȱ˜—›Žœœ
Pr
epared for Members and Committees of Congress

˜œ—’ŠDZȱž››Ž—ȱ œœžŽœȱŠ—ȱǯǯȱ˜•’Œ¢ȱ
ȱ
ž––Š›¢ȱ
In recent years, many analysts have expressed concern that the international community’s efforts
since 1995 to stabilize Bosnia are beginning to come apart. They noted that the downward trend
has been especially evident since 2006, with the election of leaders with starkly divergent goals.
Milorad Dodik, Prime Minister of the Republika Srpska (RS), one of the two semi-autonomous
“entities” within Bosnia, has obstructed efforts to make Bosnia’s central government more
effective and has at times asserted the RS’s right to secede from Bosnia. On the other hand, Haris
Silajdzic, a member of the central government collective presidency from the Bosniak ethnic
group, has condemned the Republika Srpska as an illegitimate product of genocide. He has called
for the abolition of the entities and a dominant central government. Efforts to reform Bosnia’s
constitution have been at a standstill, although talks between the leaders of the largest Bosnian
political parties in late 2008 and early 2009 gave a glimmer of hope of progress.
There has been a debate about the future role of the international community in Bosnia. The
Office of the High Representative (OHR), chosen by leading countries and international
institutions, oversees implementation of the Dayton Peace Accords, which ended the 1992-1995
war in Bosnia. An EU peacekeeping force, called EUFOR, is charged with keeping the peace in
Bosnia and overseeing the Bosnian armed forces. The international community has vowed to
close OHR after Bosnia meets a series of reform objectives, ending direct international oversight
of Bosnia. After OHR’s closure, international support for Bosnian reforms would be limited to aid
and advice from the United States, European Union, NATO, and other institutions, with the
prospect of eventual NATO and EU membership. An EU Special Representative (EUSR) would
remain in Bosnia, although the post would likely have a smaller staff than OHR. In addition, it
would likely be limited to an advisory and reporting role, lacking OHR’s powers to veto
legislation and remove local officials.
There has been pressure within the EU to scale back EUFOR, which has a current strength of
about 2,100 troops. Citing the improved security situation in Bosnia, France and other EU
countries have called for EUFOR to be sharply reduced in size and limited to an advisory
function. Although this plan has not yet been formally approved, France and other countries may
decide to withdraw their forces unilaterally, due to constraints imposed by deployments to
Afghanistan and other countries.
Some observers are concerned that the combination of increasing internal tension within Bosnia
and a declining international role could seriously set back over a decade of peace in Bosnia,
perhaps leading to violence and the destabilization of the region as a whole. They call for greater
international engagement in Bosnia, including an increase in EUFOR’s capabilities and strong
powers for the EUSR, if OHR leaves. The United States has strongly supported Bosnia’s
integration into Euro-Atlantic institutions. However, the U.S. role in the country has declined in
recent years as the EU role has increased. Some observers have called for the Obama
Administration to appoint a special envoy to the Balkans to re-energize the U.S. role.

˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ

˜œ—’ŠDZȱž››Ž—ȱ œœžŽœȱŠ—ȱǯǯȱ˜•’Œ¢ȱ
ȱ
˜—Ž—œȱ
Background ..................................................................................................................................... 1
Current Situation ............................................................................................................................. 3
Political Situation ...................................................................................................................... 3
Economic Situation ................................................................................................................... 4
International Role in Bosnia............................................................................................................ 5
U.S. Policy ................................................................................................................................ 6
Policy Concerns and Issues for Congress ................................................................................. 7

’ž›Žœȱ
Figure 1. Map of Bosnia and Herzegovina.................................................................................... 10

˜—ŠŒœȱ
Author Contact Information ...........................................................................................................11

˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ

˜œ—’ŠDZȱž››Ž—ȱ œœžŽœȱŠ—ȱǯǯȱ˜•’Œ¢ȱ
ȱ
ŠŒ”›˜ž—ȱ
Before the breakup of Yugoslavia in
Bosnia at a Glance
1991, Bosnia and Herzegovina was
Area: 51, 209 sq. km. (slightly smaller than West Virginia)
one of Yugoslavia’s six republics. It
Population: 4.59 million (July 2008 est.)
had an ethnically-mixed population.
The rise of hard-line nationalism in
Ethnic Composition: 48% Bosniak (Muslims of Slavic origin), 37.1%
Serbia under Slobodan Milosevic
Serb, 14.3% Croat, Others 0.6% (2000)
and a similar movement in Croatia
Gross Domestic Product: $19.36 billion (current exchange rates,
led by Franjo Tudjman in the late
July 2008 est.)
1980s and early 1990s posed a grave
Political Leaders:
threat to Bosnia-Herzegovina’s
Bosnian central government
unity. Bosnia’s own republic
government was split among
collective Presidency: Nebojsa Radmanovic (Serb), Haris Silajdzic
(Bosniak), Zeljko Komsic (Croat)
Bosniak (Slavic Muslim), Croat and
Serb nationalists. The secession of
Chairman of the Council of Ministers: Nikola Spiric (Serb)
Slovenia and Croatia in June 1991
Republika Srpska (largely Serb entity)
upset the delicate balance of power
President: Rajko Kuzmanovic
within Yugoslavia. Milosevic
conceded Slovenia’s independence
Prime Minister: Milorad Dodik
after a few days, but Croatia’s
Federation of Bosnia-Herzegovina (largely Bosniak and Croat entity)
secession touched off a conflict
President: Borjana Kristo (Croat)
between Croat forces and Serb
Prime Minister: Nedzad Brankovic (Bosniak)
irregulars supported by the Serb-
dominated Yugoslav Army. Bosnian
Source: CIA World Factbook 2008.
Serb nationalists demanded that
Bosnia remain part of a Serbian-dominated Yugoslavia. Bosnian Croat nationalists threatened to
secede if Bosnia remained in Yugoslavia.
Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic, a Bosniak, worried about the possible spread of the conflict
to Bosnia, tried to find a compromise solution. However, these efforts were made very difficult
by the Milosevic and Tudjman regimes, both of which had designs on Bosnian territory. In
addition, Izetbegovic’s hand was forced by the European Community (EC) decision in December
1991 to grant diplomatic recognition to any of the former Yugoslav republics that requested it,
provided that the republics held a referendum on independence, and agreed to respect minority
rights, the borders of neighboring republics, and other conditions. Izetbegovic and other Bosniaks
felt they could not remain in a Milosevic-dominated rump Yugoslavia and had to seek
independence and EC recognition, even given the grave threat such a move posed to peace in the
republic. Bosnian Serb leaders warned that international recognition of Bosnia-Herzegovina
would lead to civil war.
In March 1992, most Bosniaks and Croats voted for independence in a referendum, while most
Serbs boycotted the vote. In April 1992, shortly before recognition of Bosnia by the European
Community and the United States, Serbian paramilitary forces and the Yugoslav Army launched
attacks throughout the republic. They quickly seized more than two-thirds of the republic’s
territory and besieged the capital of Sarajevo. At least 97,000 people were killed in the war.1

1 Associated Press wire service dispatch, June 21, 2007. This estimate is based on a detailed database of war dead and
(continued...)
˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ
ŗȱ

˜œ—’ŠDZȱž››Ž—ȱ œœžŽœȱŠ—ȱǯǯȱ˜•’Œ¢ȱ
ȱ
Approximately 2.3 million people were driven from their homes, creating the greatest flow of
refugees in Europe since World War II. Serbian forces attacked Bosniak and Croat civilians in
order to drive them from ethnically mixed areas that they wanted to claim. Croats and Bosniaks
were initially allied against the Serbs, but fighting between Croats and Bosniaks broke out in
ethnically mixed areas in 1993-1994, also resulting in “ethnic cleansing” by both sides. Bosniak
forces also engaged in ethnic cleansing against Serbs in some areas. In addition to the inter-ethnic
bitterness it created and the damage it caused to Bosnia’s economy, the war also greatly
strengthened organized crime groups and their links with government officials, an important
stumbling block to Bosnia’s postwar recovery.
The war came to an end in 1995, after NATO conducted a series of air strikes against Bosnian
Serb positions in late August and early September. The strikes were in response to a Bosnian Serb
refusal to withdraw its artillery from around Sarajevo after an artillery attack on a Sarajevo
marketplace caused many civilian deaths. Bosniak and Bosnian Croat forces, now better equipped
and trained than ever before, simultaneously launched an offensive against reeling Bosnian Serb
forces, inflicting sharp defeats on them. The Bosnian Serbs agreed to a cease-fire in October
1995, as did the Croats and Bosniaks, after strong international pressure. Serbian President
Slobodan Milosevic, Croatian President Franjo Tudjman, Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic, as
well as representatives of the Bosnian Serbs and Croats, met at the Wright-Patterson Air Force
base in Dayton, Ohio in November 1995 to negotiate a peace agreement mediated by the United
States, the EU, and Russia. On November 21, 1995, the presidents of Serbia-Montenegro,
Croatia, and Bosnia-Herzegovina, as well as Bosniak, Croat and Serb leaders in Bosnia, initialed
a peace agreement. The final agreement was signed by the parties at a peace conference in Paris
on December 14.
Under the Dayton Peace Accords, Bosnia-Herzegovina remains an internationally recognized
state within its pre-war borders. Internally, it consists of two semi-autonomous “entities:” the
(largely Bosniak and Croat) Federation of Bosnia-Herzegovina and the (Bosnian Serb-dominated)
Republika Srpska (RS). Under the accords, the Bosnian Federation received roughly 51% of the
territory of Bosnia-Herzegovina, while the Republika Srpska received about 49%.
Each of the entities has its own parliament and government with wide-ranging powers. Each
entity may establish “special parallel relationships with neighboring states consistent with the
sovereignty and territorial integrity” of Bosnia-Herzegovina. Most powers are vested in the
entities; the central government has responsibility for foreign policy, foreign trade and customs
policy, monetary policy and a few other areas. Decisions of the central government and
parliament are nominally taken by a majority, but any of the three main ethnic groups can block a
decision if it views it as against its vital interests. The Federation is further divided into ten
cantons, each of which has control of policy in areas such as policing and education.
A U.N.-appointed Office of the High Representative (OHR), created by the Dayton accords,
oversees civilian peace implementation efforts. The High Representative is supported by the
Peace Implementation Council (PIC), a broad umbrella group of 55 countries and agencies. As
the PIC’s size and composition makes it unwieldy for decision-making, the PIC provides ongoing

(...continued)
missing developed by the Research and Documentation Center Sarajevo. The RDC estimated that the real figure could
be increased by about another 10,000, as research continues. Some earlier estimates for the dead and missing, for which
the methodological bases were unclear, were over 200,000.
˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ
Řȱ

˜œ—’ŠDZȱž››Ž—ȱ œœžŽœȱŠ—ȱǯǯȱ˜•’Œ¢ȱ
ȱ
political guidance to OHR mostly through a Steering Board composed of key countries and
institutions, including the United States, Russia, France, Germany, Britain, Italy, Canada, Japan,
Turkey, and the EU Commission and Presidency.
At a December 1997 PIC conference in Bonn, Germany, the international community granted the
High Representative powers (known as the “Bonn powers”) to fire and take other actions against
local leaders and parties as well as to impose legislation in order to implement the peace
agreement and more generally bring unity and reform to Bosnia. The High Representative also
holds the post of the European Union’s Special Representative in Bosnia. A peacekeeping force,
at first NATO-led, but led by the EU since 2004, implements the military aspects of the accord.2
Since 1997, the United States and other Western countries have pressed local leaders in Bosnia to
build the effectiveness and governing capacity of the Bosnian central government. The United
States and the EU have maintained that the Dayton institutions have proved to be too
cumbersome to provide for the country’s long-term stability, prosperity, and ability to integrate
into Euro-Atlantic institutions. Some successes have been scored in this area, including merging
the armed forces and intelligence services of the two entities, and creating central government
institutions such as border and customs services, and a state prosecutors’ office and ministry of
justice. However, even these achievements have required pressure on local leaders or even direct
imposition of changes by the High Representative. International efforts have had the support of
Bosniak politicians, but usually have faced strong resistance from Serbian ones, as well as from
some Croat leaders.
The state consolidation process suffered a serious setback in April 2006, from which it has not
recovered. A constitutional reform package pushed by the United States and EU was defeated in
the Bosnian parliament by a narrow margin. The relatively modest proposal would have replaced
the three-member collective central government presidency with a single presidency, increased
the powers of the Prime Minister, and strengthened the central Bosnian parliament.
ž››Ž—ȱ’žŠ’˜—ȱ
˜•’’ŒŠ•ȱ’žŠ’˜—ȱ
In recent years, many analysts have expressed concern that the international community’s efforts
to stabilize Bosnia are beginning to come apart. The problem became acute after the failure of the
constitutional reforms and the October 2006 Bosnian general elections. in which voters chose
their representatives to the central Bosnian parliament and to the three-member Bosnian
collective presidency, as well as for some entity-level offices. The campaign was notable for its
nationalist tone. This rhetorical struggle has continued and intensified in the past few years. One
prominent participant in raising the political temperature in Bosnia has been Haris Silajdzic, the
Bosniak member of the central government presidency and leader of the Party for Bosnia and
Herzegovina. He has condemned the Republika Srpska (RS) as an illegitimate product of
genocide. He has called for the abolition of the entities and a stronger central government.

2 For the text of the Dayton accords, see the OHR website at http://www.ohr.int.
˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ
řȱ

˜œ—’ŠDZȱž››Ž—ȱ œœžŽœȱŠ—ȱǯǯȱ˜•’Œ¢ȱ
ȱ
Silajdzic’s main antagonist has been Republika Srpska Prime Minister Milorad Dodik. His party
emerged with a dominant role in the RS after the 2006 vote. Since then, Dodik has tried to
distance the RS from cooperation with Bosnian central authorities and the High Representative.
He has responded to Silajdzic’s rhetoric by stating that the RS reserves the right to secede from
Bosnia, although he has stopped short of actually calling for secession. Moreover, until the end of
2008, Dodik firmly rejected reviving constitutional reform efforts.
Pressure by the European Union and the United States in 2006 and 2007 to put Bosnia’s entity
police forces under greater central government control met with sharp opposition by RS leaders,
for whom the police are a key power base. In 2008, Bosnian leaders eventually agreed to a less
ambitious police reform package that focused on greater coordination between entity police
forces.
Some hopes for breaking the deadlock on reforms in Bosnia rose in December 2008. Sulejman
Tihic, head of the largest Bosniak party, the Party for Democratic Action; Dragan Covic, the head
of the largest Croat party, the Croatian Democratic Community; and Dodik, signed an agreement
to amend the Constitution, resolve disputes over state property, and agreed on the terms for
holding Bosnia’s first post-war census. The agreement excluded Silajdzic, who condemned it.
Indeed, Tihic may have pushed for the agreement as part of a long-standing struggle with
Silajdzic over leadership of the Bosniak community. Dodik may see the agreement as a way to
increase pressure for the termination of the Office of the High Representative (OHR).
A follow-up agreement in January 2009 called for the establishment of four unspecified territorial
units within Bosnia. It appears that each ethnic group would have one unit largely under its
control, with a separate district for Sarajevo. Observers have speculated on whether the
agreement appears to scrap the Federation, and sets up a de facto third, Croat entity. The views of
the leaders differ on the borders of these units. Dodik remains adamant that the RS will remain as
it is, and may gain territory, and expresses indifference to how the rest of Bosnia is divided. Tihic
and Covic have raised the possibility of exchanges of territory between three largely Serb, Croat,
and Bosniak units.
It should be noted that agreements in principle in Bosnia often do not result in concrete action.
The parties to the agreement do not have the necessary two-thirds majority in parliament to push
through constitutional changes. The period for effective action may be short, as campaigning for
the 2010 elections, which could start in late 2009, may negatively affect the willingness of
Bosnian politicians to make compromises.
In February 2008, the Bosnian central government’s State Protection and Investigative Agency
(SIPA) forwarded a document to Bosnian prosecutors alleging corruption by Dodik and other
senior RS officials in the handling of construction contracts. Dodik blamed the charges on an
alleged plot by Deputy High Representative and U.S. diplomat Raffi Gregorian to depose him. In
what was perhaps a response to the move, Dodik brought the negotiations to a halt on February
21 by demanding that Tihic and Covic recognize a right by the RS to secede from Bosnia. Dodik
said he was considering the withdrawal of all officials from the RS from central government
institutions and a referendum on independence.
Œ˜—˜–’Œȱ’žŠ’˜—ȱ
Bosnia’s economic growth has been hampered by Bosnia’s cumbersome governing structure,
excessively large and expensive government bureaucracies, and long-standing problems with
˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ
Śȱ

˜œ—’ŠDZȱž››Ž—ȱ œœžŽœȱŠ—ȱǯǯȱ˜•’Œ¢ȱ
ȱ
organized crime and corruption. Bosnia’s public sector amounts to nearly 50% of the country’s
GDP. Observers have noted that the Republika Srpska has moved more quickly on economic
reforms than the Federation, due to a less cumbersome governing structure in the RS. The
Federation has also been plagued by infighting among politicians that has delayed some
privatization projects and driven away foreign investors. Runaway public spending in the
Federation, including on veterans’ benefits, threatens to bankrupt the entity. In contrast, Dodik’s
hegemony has simplified matters in the RS, while at the same time allegedly fostering high-level
corruption.
Nevertheless, despite these problems, living standards have improved in Bosnia in recent years;
real wages increased by 44% between 2000 and 2007. Real GDP increased by 30% in the same
period, and by an estimated 5.0% in 2008. However, the global economic crisis is expected to
sharply curtail growth in 2009. Remittances from Bosnians living abroad amounted to nearly 20%
of GDP in 2006, and will likely be heavily affected by the downturn, as will falling prices for
some of Bosnia’s key exports, such as steel and aluminum. Unemployment in Bosnia is very high
at 23%, and may increase as a result of the downturn.
On the other hand, Bosnia may face less of an impact than other eastern European countries
because it is less heavily indebted than many countries in the region. However, in recent years,
Bosnia’s growth had been fueled in large part by increasing credit inflows and rapid credit
expansion. Bosnia’s current account deficit amounted to 12.7% of GDP in 2007. The fact that its
currency, the convertible mark, is tightly linked to the Euro through a currency board system may
help Bosnia to weather global financial shocks. The currency board system has kept inflation
relatively low in Bosnia, at a rate of 3.8% in December 2008, on a year-on-year basis. Inflation is
not expected to be a major issue in the near future, due to the global environment, in which
deflation may be a greater concern.3
—Ž›—Š’˜—Š•ȱ˜•Žȱ’—ȱ˜œ—’Šȱ
There has been a debate about the future role of the international community in Bosnia. The
Peace Implementation Council (PIC) has appeared eager to end the direct international oversight
of Bosnia through the OHR. This may partly be due to “political fatigue” after having played
such a prominent role in the country for over 13 years. Since 2007, the High Representative has
been reluctant to use his wide-ranging powers to impose legislation and fire obstructionist
officials, due to a lack of political support for such actions by leading countries in the PIC. In
January 2009, Miroslav Lajcak abruptly announced his resignation as High Representative to
become Slovakia’s foreign minister. He expressed frustration at the ineffectiveness of OHR’s
powers. On March 13, 2009, Valentin Inzko, formerly Austria’s ambassador to Slovenia, was
approved by the PIC as the next High Representative.
The international community’s desire to move away from direct oversight may be designed to
encourage Bosnian leaders to take greater responsibility for their country. Direct international
tutelage will have to be eliminated if the country is to join NATO and the EU, the members of
which are all fully sovereign states. The PIC has agreed to close OHR after a series of objectives

3 Milan Cuc, “Bosnia and Herzegovina: On the Road to EU Accession,” IMF Survey, December 2008, 199; Economist
Intelligence Unit Country Report: Bosnia and Hercegovina, February 2009; Oxford Analytica, “Bosnia: Politicians
Ignore First Signs of Downturn,” November 6, 2008.
˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ
śȱ

˜œ—’ŠDZȱž››Ž—ȱ œœžŽœȱŠ—ȱǯǯȱ˜•’Œ¢ȱ
ȱ
have been met. These include a decision on dividing state property and defense property between
the central government and the entities; implementing the Brcko Final Award (which made the
town of Brcko a self-governing unit within Bosnia); ensuring fiscal sustainability; and
entrenching the rule of law. The PIC and OHR have demanded specific action and legislation
from the central and entity levels to meet these objectives. It is hoped that Bosnia can meet these
conditions before the end of this year. If OHR is withdrawn, an EU Special Representative will
remain, although the post will likely have a small staff and may be limited to an advisory and
reporting role, without the powers to veto legislation and remove local officials that OHR has
had.
There has also been pressure within the EU to scale back the international military presence in
Bosnia. The EU-led peacekeeping force in Bosnia, dubbed EUFOR, has a current strength of
about 2,100 troops.4 The EU is considering a plan to sharply reduce EUFOR to about 200 troops.
Under the plan, the force would have exclusively a training and advisory mission, with no
peacekeeping functions.
The plan has caused controversy within the EU. France and other EU countries backed the move,
citing the improved security situation in the country. Supporters of EUFOR withdrawal may have
also been motivated by a desire to ease the burdens on their armed forces, which may have units
deployed in Afghanistan and other places. Other EU countries remain concerned about the
negative political signal that could be sent by a rapid downsizing of the force at a time when
political tensions in Bosnia are high and reforms are foundering. Observers are concerned that
some current force contributors may withdraw their troops from EUFOR in the near future with
or without a formal EU decision.
As direct control declines, the international community expects to continue to encourage reform
in Bosnia by providing aid, advice, and the eventual prospect of joining NATO and the EU. In
November 2006, NATO leaders invited Bosnia to join its Partnership for Peace (PFP) program,
which provides Bosnia with assistance in improving its armed forces and making them
interoperable with NATO. At their April 2008 summit in Bucharest, the Allies agreed to upgrade
its relationship with Bosnia by launching an Intensified Dialogue. However, the Alliance has
stopped short of granting Bosnia a Membership Action Plan (MAP), which is designed to prepare
a country for NATO membership. In June 2008, Bosnia signed a Stabilization and Association
Agreement (SAA) with the European Union. The SAA offers Bosnia increased aid and advice and
recognizes it as a potential membership candidate.5
ǯǯȱ˜•’Œ¢ȱ
The United States has strongly supported Bosnia’s integration into Euro-Atlantic institutions.
However, the U.S. role in the country has declined in recent years. There have been no U.S.
peacekeeping troops in Bosnia since 2004, when a NATO-led peacekeeping force was replaced
by the current EU-led force. Some observers have claimed that the U.S. political role in Bosnia
has also declined, particularly since the failure of constitutional reforms in 2006, despite strong

4 For background on EUFOR, see CRS Report RS21774, Bosnia and the European Union Military Force (EUFOR):
Post-NATO Peacekeeping
, by Julie Kim.
5 For more on Bosnia’s progress toward closer ties with the EU, see the EU Commission’s November 2008 progress
report at http://ec.europa.eu/enlargement/pdf/press_corner/key-
documents/reports_nov_2008/bosnia_herzegovina_progress_report_en.pdf
˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ
Ŝȱ

˜œ—’ŠDZȱž››Ž—ȱ œœžŽœȱŠ—ȱǯǯȱ˜•’Œ¢ȱ
ȱ
U.S. pressure on the Bosnian parties at the time. Although the Office of the High Representative
is dominated by EU countries, U.S. diplomats play significant roles. The current Deputy High
Representative is Raffi Gregorian, an American diplomat. As Deputy High Representative, he has
also been in charge of enforcing the Brcko Final Award. If OHR is eliminated, it is unclear what
role the United States will play in subsequent EU-led efforts to assist Bosnia’s reform efforts.
The United States provided large amounts of aid to Bosnia in the years after the 1992-1995 war,
as the country was rebuilding. However, aid totals gradually declined thereafter, and current US
aid to Bosnia is modest. In FY2008, the United States provided an estimated $33.26 million in aid
to Bosnia, including $27.73 million in assistance to promote political and economic reform in
Bosnia. Also included in the total are $3.292 million in Foreign Military Financing (FMF);
$0.952 million in International Military Education and Training (IMET) aid; and $1.243 million
in Non-Proliferation, Antiterrorism, Demining and Related (NADR) funds. For FY2009, the Bush
Administration requested $37.845 million in total aid for Bosnia. This amount included $29.485
million in aid to promote political and economic reform; $5.585 million in FMF, $1 million in
IMET funding; and $1.775 million in NADR aid.6
U.S. aid has focused on strengthening state-level institutions in Bosnia. The United States
provides assistance to Bosnia’s state-level police organizations to fight organized crime and
terrorism. U.S. aid also is aimed at improving the functioning of Bosnia’s judiciary; improving its
border controls; and creating a better legal and regulatory environment for economic growth and
investment. The objective of U.S. military aid is to unify Bosnia’s military more effectively and
improve its capabilities so that it may become interoperable with NATO. Bosnia has already sent
explosive ordinance disposal teams to serve in Iraq.
˜•’Œ¢ȱ˜—ŒŽ›—œȱŠ—ȱ œœžŽœȱ˜›ȱ˜—›Žœœȱ
The international community appears to have decided to further reduce its role in Bosnia, and
indeed to hold out the timetable for that reduction as an incentive for the local parties in Bosnia to
make progress on key issues. This is expected to work together with the other main incentive,
Euro-Atlantic integration. However, it is unclear whether these incentives are strong enough for
Bosnian leaders (particularly Dodik) to change their policies.
Many observers believe a more active use of the long-dormant Bonn powers by OHR to force
changes is unrealistic because it would provoke strong resistance by the RS. OHR would not have
the strong backing from many PIC countries (especially Russia) to deal with such resistance, and
some believe EUFOR lacks the military capability and political will to deal with unrest. Those
favoring a more active international role in Bosnia call for OHR’s closure to be delayed until the
objectives laid out by the PIC have been met. They say that the EU Special Representative that
will remain after OHR’s closure should be given powers to sanction Bosnian leaders if necessary,
as well as power over the disbursement of EU funding to Bosnia. They call for EUFOR to
increase its capabilities and to engage in patrolling and other activities to enhance its profile.7
Given the EU’s recent actions, however, the political will for such a policy appears to be lacking.

6 FY2009 International Affairs (Function 150) Budget Justification, http://www.state.gov/f/releases/iab/fy2009cbj/
7 International Crisis Group, “Bosnia’s Incomplete Transition Between Dayton and Europe,” March 9, 2009, at the ICG
website http://www.crisisgroup.org/home/index.cfm
˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ
ŝȱ

˜œ—’ŠDZȱž››Ž—ȱ œœžŽœȱŠ—ȱǯǯȱ˜•’Œ¢ȱ
ȱ
It is possible that the international community may have encouraged the investigation of Dodik
for corruption in order to undermine him politically or put pressure on him to make compromises.
However, it is unclear whether Dodik’s power could truly be threatened by such actions. In fact,
they may have provoked him to take a more confrontational stance instead of compromising.
Moreover, it can be argued that Dodik’s opposition to a stronger central government reflects the
preferences of most Bosnian Serbs, and therefore any successor to Dodik would follow similar
policies. Indeed, many in the RS might see an attack on Dodik as a de facto attack on the RS’s
autonomy or even existence, which Serbs in the RS overwhelmingly support.
One important consideration is what policy objectives the international community realistically
expects to achieve in Bosnia and its analysis of the consequences of failure. Avoiding widespread
violence or even the breakup of Bosnia would presumably be the most basic international
objective. Large-scale violence would put EUFOR in danger and likely require a U.S. and NATO
military response, at a time when forces are severely stretched due to missions in Afghanistan,
Iraq, and elsewhere. In addition, neighboring Serbia and Croatia could be pulled into such a
conflict. This could also implicate NATO, as Croatia is expected to join the Alliance in April
2009. Serbia’s recent movement toward European integration could also be halted and conflict
between Serbs and Albanians in Kosovo could revive.
Such an outcome would most likely follow if the RS attempted to secede from Bosnia and
Herzegovina, and Bosniaks tried to prevent such an action by force of arms. Observers are
divided on whether the current impasse, caused in part by RS obstructionism, could eventually
destabilize the country even without a provocative act such as secession. If the United States and
other international actors conclude that such a nightmare scenario is unlikely to unfold, they may
continue to follow their current approach, even if it does not bear fruit in the short term, in part
due to a lack of alternatives and in part due to their focus on more pressing international issues.
The international community has not considered trying to broker a peaceful breakup of Bosnia.
This is despite the possibility that Bosnia’s shortcomings as a state may not be primarily due to
the inherent flaws of the Dayton accords, the alleged lack of skill of international overseers, or the
foibles of particular Bosnian politicians. Instead, it can be argued that many of the failures
ultimately stem from a more fundamental problem – the fact that at least a large minority of the
population (Bosnian Serbs and many Croats) never wanted to be part of an independent Bosnia.
International rejection of partition is in part due to strong opposition by the Bosniaks, who would
have the most to lose in such an arrangement. A mainly Bosniak Bosnia would be a small,
landlocked country surrounded by less than sympathetic neighbors. In contrast, Bosnian Serb and
Croat nationalists would hope for support and eventual union of territories they control with
Serbia and Croatia respectively.
The United States and other Western countries may feel that they owe the Bosniaks a lingering
moral debt, due to the perceived indecision and tardiness of the international community in
averting or ending the 1992-1995 war, in which the Bosniaks were the main victims. Perhaps at
least equally importantly, there are concerns that a partition of Bosnia could be destabilizing for
the region as a whole, given that Kosovo and Macedonia have ethno-territorial problems of their
own. Leaders in the Balkans often look to the example of others in the region as justification for
their own positions and actions.
The international community’s more ambitious goals include strengthening the central
government and encouraging other political and economic reform to bring Bosnia into Euro-
Atlantic institutions such as NATO and the EU. Bosnia’s deep-rooted structural problems may
˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ
Şȱ

˜œ—’ŠDZȱž››Ž—ȱ œœžŽœȱŠ—ȱǯǯȱ˜•’Œ¢ȱ
ȱ
prevent rapid success in these areas in the near future, unless NATO and the EU decide to
advance Bosnia’s candidacies even in the absence of marked improvement in hopes such moves
themselves would help stabilize the country.
Some observers have called for the Obama Administration to appoint a special envoy to the
Balkans. On February 13, 2009, Representative Howard Berman introduced H.Res. 171, which
called for a U.S. “Special Envoy to the Balkans who can work in partnership with the EU and
political leaders in Bosnia and Herzegovina to facilitate reforms at all levels of government and
society, while also assisting the political development of other countries in the region.” The
resolution also called on the OHR not to be closed unless the PIC can “definitively determine”
that the five conditions and two principles have been met. It also suggests that the EU rethink its
plans to draw down EUFOR and should ensure that the EU Special Representative will have the
tools to “manage effectively post-OHR Bosnia and Herzegovina.” Some observers believe that
such an envoy could help to energize what they see as a moribund international effort in the
region. Others are skeptical, saying the envoy would unnecessarily duplicate existing efforts, and
therefore would find little to do. The House Foreign Affairs Committee reported H.Res. 171, as
amended, by unanimous consent on March 25.
˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ
şȱ



˜œ—’ŠDZȱž››Ž—ȱ œœžŽœȱŠ—ȱǯǯȱ˜•’Œ¢ȱ
ȱ
Figure 1. Map of Bosnia and Herzegovina

Source: CRS.
˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ
ŗŖȱ

˜œ—’ŠDZȱž››Ž—ȱ œœžŽœȱŠ—ȱǯǯȱ˜•’Œ¢ȱ
ȱ
ž‘˜›ȱ˜—ŠŒȱ —˜›–Š’˜—ȱ

Steven Woehrel

Specialist in European Affairs
swoehrel@crs.loc.gov, 7-2291




˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ
ŗŗȱ