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Obnoxious for Peace
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Richard Holbrooke is a
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person many people can't stand. Though he may be no more ambitious or
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egotistical than a lot of career-minded Washingtonians, he is exceedingly
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transparent about it. Physically large, he can be seen in photographs towering
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over his rivals--and sometimes elbowing them out of the picture frame. A
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courtier worthy of Shakespeare, Holbrooke is legendary for his flattery and
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back stabbing, and even for buttering someone up and sticking the knife in at
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the same time.
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Those who
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tend to roll their eyes at the mention of Holbrooke's name will find much
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eye-rolling material in his book To End a War: From Sarajevo to Dayton and
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Beyond , which is about his role in negotiating a peace settlement in
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Bosnia. In places, Holbrooke's account reads like a self-nominating speech for
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secretary of state or the Nobel Peace Prize, distinctions for which his stomach
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audibly growls. Holbrooke seldom declines the chance to fluff up someone who
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might be useful to him in the future, especially if that someone is a
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journalist. Roger Cohen of the New York Times is "astute." Stephen
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Engelberg, also of the Times , is "impressive." William Pfaff of the
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International Herald Tribune is "insightful." Holbrooke suffers from a
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strain of narcissism that impels him to quote himself, frequently and at
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length, including from diaries, articles, TV interviews, faxes, and private
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letters to the president. His name-dropping is out of control. At one point, he
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offers the odd boast that it was his idea to send Ron Brown on a trade mission
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to Bosnia--the mission that led to the death of the commerce secretary and 34
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others.
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But those who fixate on Holbrooke's insufferability do him
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a serious injustice. Holbrooke lacks subtlety, modesty, and discretion. He can
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be vain, pompous, and ridiculous. We know this. But he also managed to carry
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off, almost by sheer force of personality, an accomplishment that eluded
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governments, world leaders, and multilateral organizations for four years: He
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ended the war in Bosnia. The story he tells is really about performing a kind
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of jujitsu with his own personality, channeling his dubious personal
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qualities--his bullying, his egomania, and his impatient ambition--toward the
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noble (and perhaps Nobel) end of peace in the Balkans. One of the lessons his
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book teaches is that in politics, self-interest isn't the opposite of public
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interest. To the contrary, ego can be the engine that makes political and
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diplomatic accomplishments possible. By the end of the book, I couldn't help
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liking and admiring Holbrooke--not despite his evident flaws but in a curious
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way because of them.
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Holbrooke's intervention in the Balkans is a rejoinder to the social
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historians' conceit that individual actors don't really matter. In the summer
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of 1992, Holbrooke went to Bosnia as a private citizen, with a refugee aid
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organization, and saw horrors such as Muslims being driven out of the town of
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Banja Luka, where their families had lived for four centuries. He resolved to
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try to do something about it. As part of candidate Clinton's foreign policy
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brain trust, Holbrooke prodded him to take an interventionist stand, which
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Clinton did. After the election, Holbrooke wrote a memo to Warren Christopher
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and Anthony Lake advocating the strategy known as "lift and strike"--lifting
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the arms embargo that prevented the Muslims from defending themselves, and
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bombing the Bosnian Serbs. He also asked for the job of special negotiator on
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Bosnia. Holbrooke's rival Lake made sure none of this happened. The Bosnia job
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went to someone else. Holbrooke was kept away from the issue and on the
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periphery of foreign policy-making in general. Eventually he was named
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ambassador to Germany. Clinton's tough talk stopped.
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But Holbrooke still cherished hopes of
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involving the United States. Offered the post of assistant secretary of state
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for European affairs, a job he considered beneath his dignity, he took it for
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the sake of directing American diplomatic efforts in the Balkans. As he pushed
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and prodded, wheedled and connived, the crusade became more personal. Early in
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his shuttle diplomacy, three colleagues, including his top deputy, were killed
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in a gruesome road accident for which the Bosnian Serb warlords were indirectly
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to blame. This tragedy spurred him in his hazardous ricocheting between
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Belgrade, Zagreb, and Sarajevo and helped bring about better-late-than-never
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NATO airstrikes in 1995. When he was dissatisfied with official policy,
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Holbrooke undermined it. For instance, he was supposed to take advantage of the
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bombing to demand a cease-fire by all sides. In fact, he encouraged the
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Croatian-Muslim Federation to keep fighting, since it was making territorial
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gains that he thought would make a territorial settlement easier.
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Holbrooke
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does not waste a lot of time on the question of whether intervening in Bosnia
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was in our national "interest." In answer to former Secretary of State James
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Baker's view that we didn't have a dog in that fight, he asserts the United
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States had a Samaritan's obligation to stop ethnic cleansing. The Europeans
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having failed, we were the only ones who could do anything about it. Inside the
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administration, he fought off objections from the military. Spooked by anything
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that smacked of "mission creep" or "nation building," the Pentagon resisted
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sending American troops to Bosnia and has refused to allow them to become
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involved with refugees, elections, or human rights. Holbrooke continues to
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argue for what he calls a "maximalist" interpretation of our military role. He
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views it as a scandal that the Bosnian Serb war criminals Ratko Mladic and
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Radovan Karadzic have yet to be captured and brought to justice.
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The narrative climaxes in Dayton, Ohio, where the
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combatants sat around an Air Force base for three weeks and reached a peace
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accord. Holbrooke is a proponent of the intuitive, improvisational school of
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negotiation. He played tennis with Franjo Tudjman, drank shots of plum brandy
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with Slobodan Milosevic before lunch, enacted hysterical scenes of feigned and
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real anger, and essentially sat on the heads of the various participants until
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they cried uncle. Here the story becomes especially gripping and takes an
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unexpected turn. It is the president of the Bosnian Muslims, Alia Izetbegovic,
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who turns out to be the biggest obstacle to peace, unwilling to make even
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meaningless concessions. On the other hand, the brutal but undeniably charming
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Milosevic, the man most responsible for starting the Yugoslav civil war, saves
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the accord with territorial concessions at the last moment.
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Surely Holbrooke pursued
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peace in the Balkans in part for the glory involved. And as one not afflicted
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with false modesty--or any other kind--he clearly enjoys his plaudits
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immensely. But by the end of the book, the issue of Holbrooke's motivation no
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longer looms very large. From an early stage, he found himself drawn into
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something larger than himself, something more compelling than his own career.
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As the object elevates him, his pettiness melts away.
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