Without having to state who was the morally superior president at the time, we should recognize our role in the biggest political blunder of the 20th century in Serbia/Bosnia.
Wait.
Chamberlain.
Maybe the second biggest.
You are, of course, free to hold and voice whatever opinion you choose, but posting erroneous and misleading articles and expecting no negative feedback is just asking a little much, don't you think?
The author's central thesis matches Serb-nationalist revisionist thinking on the matter of Bosnia's Muslims - back in 1992 Serbia went to war with Bosnia's Muslims on the basis of their being 'Turks', not the boogeymen who would emerge from Afghanistan later.
Furthermore, the author mistakenly attributes Al Quaeda's 'internationalization' to the Bosnian conflict - rather than attibuting the Al Qaeada presence in Bosnia to Al Quaeda's organizational aim of extending it's reach globally during the early 1990's - in addition to Bosnia, Al Quaeda was active in Somalia, and was working on setting up operatives in America itself while operating itself out of the Sudan, rather than Afghanistan.
Getting back to the 4,000 Mujahadeen in Bosnia, they mostly came from organizations allied with Iran - and it is conveniently forgotten that Iran and Al Quaeda have never had congruent views of Muslim Fundamentalism - each sees itself at the head of the purported Muslim Caliphate to be emplaced after the revolution is complete, and the two fought each other by proxy in Afghanistan to the detriment of the Afghanis caught between them.
Al Quaeda used Bosnia more like it uses Palestine - they could give a rat's ass about the people there, but will happily set up charity organizations in order to gather funds for non-charitable purposes and send small groups of personnel to make recruiting materials to gather men for the main effort elsewhere.
The main point with the Bosnian conflict, however, is that Amercia was fighting terrorism - and the terrorism in that instance was directed from Belgrade.
Now I realize that this goes against the conventional wisdom on these threads, but the subscribers to the conventional wisdom on these threads tend to support an agenda more in line with foreign interests (Serbia first) than on in line with our interests: law and order and accountable governance rather than paramilitary states who make up their own rules as they go along.
Rant away, Konjin. You say my time has past, but I will outlive the Republika Srpska and everything Milosevic inflicted upon this world. History is rendering a different verdict than you are.