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Reverbiage.com is an NPR news feed aggregrator. It reads the latest news from NPR.org, and automatically organizes them by keyword. There are visualizations using world maps and interactive timelines.

U.S. Returns Bosnians From Guantanamo

Dec 16th, 2008 · The United States has repatriated three Guantanamo prisoners to Bosnia. They are three of the five detainees that a federal judge had ordered the government to release. He said the government had only an unreliable tip that the men were planning to engage in terrorism with al-Qaida and he urged the Justice Department not to appeal his ruling.

Keywords: federal · terrorizing · United States · detainees · Justice Department · Prisons · Guantanamo · Repatriation · Bosnian · bosnia · al Qaida · unreliable

Former U.N. Prosecutor On Karadzic's Trial

Jul 31st, 2008 · Former Bosnian Serb president Radovan Karadzic stands before the war crimes tribunal in The Hague on Thursday. Deborah Amos talks with Richard Goldstone — a former U.N. war crimes prosecutor who filed genocide charges against Karadzic back in 1995 — about the Bosnian genocide and the charges Karadzic faces.

Keywords: crime · Trial · president · U.N · prosecutors · genocide · tribunal · 1995 · Radovan Karadzic · Karadzic · Bosnian Serb · Bosnian

Ambassador Recalls 1995 Meeting With Karadzic *

Jul 23rd, 2008 · After living as a fugitive for more than a decade, former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic was arrested Monday on charges related to genocide and war crimes during the Bosnian war. U.S. Ambassador Richard Holbrooke discusses a meeting he had with Karadzic in 1995.

Keywords: crime · ambassador · fugitive · genocide · 1995 · Radovan Karadzic · Karadzic · Bosnian Serb · Bosnian · Ambassador Richard Holbrooke

Timeline: The Life of Radovan Karadzic

Jul 22nd, 2008 · Former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic was arrested Monday on charges related to genocide and war crimes during the Bosnian war. He had been living as a fugitive for more than a decade. Here's a timeline of key events in his life.

Keywords: crime · fugitive · Timeline · genocide · Radovan Karadzic · Karadzic · Bosnian Serb · Bosnian · radovan

Bosnian-Serb War Fugitive Arrested After 13 Years

Jul 22nd, 2008 · In Serbia, one of the world's most wanted war criminals was arrested Monday. Radovan Karadzic, the former leader of Serb nationalist forces in Bosnia, was captured in a raid. He had been a fugitive since his indictment on war crimes charges more than a decade ago.

Keywords: crime · world · fugitive · criminal · Serbian · Serbia · Radovan Karadzic · Bosnian · bosnia · Nationalists

Clinton Backtracks on Bosnian Trip Danger

Mar 25th, 2008 · Sen. Hillary Clinton's (D-NY) 1996 trip to Bosnia has come under scrutiny. Clinton said last week that, as first lady, she flew into an air base in Bosnia "under sniper fire," citing the visit as evidence of her foreign policy experience. Now she says she misspoke with regard to the risks she faced on the trip.

Keywords: policy · lady · evidence · dangerous · Sen · foreign · N.Y · 1996 · Clinton · sniper · Hillary Clinton · Bosnian

Sarajevo 1914 Echoes in Pakistan *

Dec 31st, 2007 · In the summer of 1914, a Serbian nationalist named Gavrilo Prinzep went to the Bosnian capital of Sarajevo to view the Archduke Ferdinand of Austria and his bride, the Duchess of Hohenberg. Prinzep, a 20-year-old student, brought along a homemade bomb and a magazine pistol. The first time he saw the royal entourage approaching, Prinzep readied his bomb but lost his nerve. Later in the day, after another would-be assassin had disrupted the Archduke's planned route, Prinzep got another chance. This time he stepped from the crowd with his gun and shot the Archduke and Duchess dead. That assassination more than 90 years ago dominated the news worldwide, much as the murder of Benazir Bhutto has done. In both cases, many Americans wondered why an event so far away should be such a big deal. Both slayings were dramatic and brazen, carried out in broad daylight against public figures of international renown and consequence. But the victims were not their respective countries' actual leaders, only prospective ones. And the meaning of their deaths for the United States seemed obscure. If most Americans had not even heard of them, what difference could their demise really make to us? Of course we know now what followed Prinzep's political act. An international crisis escalated into the multi-front conflagration known as the Great War (and later as the First World War). It cost the lives of millions and profoundly altered history -- not only in Europe but around the globe. It also set the stage for the even greater catastrophe that was the Second World War, the effects of which are still reverberating in our time. For the moment, the consequences of Bhutto's death are on an entirely different scale. Her party and supporters are devastated, the national elections may be postponed and the chances for a healthy Pakistani democracy have been set back. But so far the damage done is primarily to one country and its hopes. The greater danger arises if, as the current unrest continues, repression follows and exacerbates the crisis. Many fear the country could descend into chaos, empowering elements of violent jihadism present in the current political mix. That would have profound implications for the U.S. mission in Afghanistan, and that's just for starters. Pakistan is the only country with both a nuclear arsenal and an immediate prospect of takeover by Islamic militants. And that implies a worst case scenario in our century quite worthy of comparison to those of the last. A Pakistani government or military beholden to such radical forces might use these weapons of mass destruction against longtime rival India -- or against others farther away in Israel, Europe and the United States. Missiles are not the only means of delivering smaller nukes, especially if a rogue state were in league with terrorists willing and able to provide alternative means. It is also possible that such a government might merely threaten to use its nuclear warheads, provoking a pre-emptive strike. Several countries that might consider themselves potential targets already have nukes of their own. So the next weeks and months in Pakistan and its region may well pose diplomatic challenges of exactly the kind the world's leaders failed to meet in 1914. Prinzep's act set off an explosion that had been in the making for generations. The Balkans of 1914 bred tension and hostility and the rest of Europe seemed eager to catch the fever. The volatile ingredients included ethnic and religious conflict, the competing ambitions of great powers and the deadly momentum of a long-running arms race. All these deadly elements are present today in the region on the rim of the Arabian Sea; and they are just as present among the more distant powers that choose to play here. The tragedy of 1914 was not just that the worst happened but that it might have been prevented. Diplomats who could have sought accommodation delivered ultimatums instead. Governments and peoples that might have seen a larger picture were driven to presume the worst of each other. So every nation mobilizing and rushing its forces to the front believed it did so in its own defense; and each such action was interpreted by the other side as a provocation (and as proof their suspicions were correct). Today the rivalries of old, dead empires seem antique to us, and much in the world has changed. Today's conflict is not so much about territory as about resources, less about politics than culture. But we still suffer from smallness of vision in trying to resolve these conflicts, and we are captives of our outdated concept of victory -- just as Europe was in 1914.

Keywords: Israel · Afghanistan · violent · terrorist · national · Europe · militants · politics · world · country · Americans · devastation

Balkan War Stories Told in St. Louis ****

Nov 25th, 2007 · St. Louis is home to an estimated 50,000 Bosnians, many of whom fled war in the Balkans. Stories from war survivors are the focus of a new exhibit at the St. Louis Holocaust Museum.

Keywords: Survivors · Balkans · Louis · exhibit · Bosnian · Louis Holocaust Museum

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