Washington - The US envoy and architect of the peace deal
that ended the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina called former Bosnian Serb
leader Radovan Karadzic an 'evil' man whose arrest was 'historic.'
'He was the most evil man I have ever met in my life,' Richard
Holbrooke, the US ambassador who brokered the 1995 Dayton Accords to
end the 1992-1995 ethnic war, said on CNN.
Serbian authorities arrested Karadzic on Monday after he spent 12
years on the run and amid increasing international pressure on
Belgrade to turn war crimes suspects over to the UN tribunal in The
Hague. Karadzic faces crimes against humanity and genocide charges.
Holbrooke spent weeks travelling throughout the Balkans in a
frenzy of 'shuttle diplomacy' aimed at securing a peace deal, an
effort aided by a NATO air campaign to turn back advances by the
Bosnian Serbs and drive them to the negotiating table.
Holbrooke compared Karadzic to Adolf Hitler, describing him as
'dangerous' and 'charismatic.'
Karadzic's arrest 'is a huge historic day for anyone who cares
about justice,' the former diplomat said. Holbrooke was at the time
the State Department's top official for European affairs under
president Bill Clinton.
Holbrooke went on to become the US ambassador to the United
Nations. After leaving office, he served as Democratic presidential
nominee John Kerry's foreign policy adviser in the unsuccessful 2004
bid and more recently on Hillary Clinton's staff.
Holbrooke's name has been floated as possible candidate to become
the next secretary of state if Barack Obama defeats Republican John
McCain in the November 4 presidential election.
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