Secret - the true story behind the Srebrenica report
By
Alain van der Horst 
HP/De Tijd
December 12, 2003
Unable, unprepared and unwilling.
The survivors of 'Srebrenica' are suing the government of 
the Netherlands. In contrast to the Netherlands Institute 
for War Documentation [NIOD]
statement in 
its report about the drama, they believe that the Dutch 'blue-helmets' could have acted to prevent 
the murder of thousands of Muslim men.
How did the NIOD arrive at the conclusion that the 
Netherlands should not be blamed? And why has the production of the report not 
been examined thus far, nor the friction in the investigation team brought out 
into the open?
1 - Wherein all the Dutch participants feel rehabilitated
Angry and bitter, the 'Women of Srebrenica' walked out of 
the Hague [parliament building's] Rol Chamber while NIOD director Hans Blom was 
presenting 'his' report to the nation about the fall of the enclave on the tenth 
of April, 2002 [1]. "A done deal," he was to say later. "The (TV) director had 
already switched to the nearest camera before they stood up." Blom showed his 
hand with that remark. At the least you could say that he had very little 
respect for the viewpoint of the Bosnian survivors of the tragedy which he and 
his team had analyzed. This stood in sharp contrast to his circumspect approach 
to those Dutch political and military participants.
Last year November the 'Women of Srebrenica' and Dutchbat 
interpreter Hasan Nuhanovic [2] [3] [4] initiated legal proceedings 
against the country of the Netherlands because it had done nothing to protect 
the Muslim refugees after the fall of Srebrenica. And last month it became 
public that the 'Mothers of Srebrenica' also consider the Dutch government 
co-responsible for the death of thousands of Muslim men. Their suit is for 875 
million euros. The families and survivors, who are represented by an 
international legal team, say that they have an abundance of evidence and they 
will not shun the courtroom. They deny the conclusion by the Netherland's 
Institute for War Documentation (NIOD) [5] of Hans Blom, which states that the 
Netherlands had done what it could do.
The promised and long-anticipated translation into Bosnian 
of the report Srebrenica. A 'safe' area [6] won't take much longer. It will 
undoubtedly inflame the indignation in Bosnia-Herzegovina about the way in which 
the Netherlands waved away its own involvement. The catastrophe is anything but 
forgotten in Bosnia, while it's been declared history in Holland. The fall of 
Srebrenica may be a "black page" in the country's history, to use a much-loved 
metaphor from ex-premier Wim Kok, but that's all it is considered. Only when the 
government decides that the Netherlands must show its heroic and/or humanitarian 
face by sending a military contingent to some flashpoint on the globe, does 
somebody or other toss in the S-word: "Remember Srebrenica". That stands for 
naïveté, defeat, awkwardness, political failure, soldiers who cannot fight, 
inability, shame and also for some seven and a half thousand deported and 
murdered men, a beer-swigging minister and a dancing crown prince. In the first 
few years after the fall Srebrenica was called our national trauma. But a trauma 
should be followed by a diagnosis, and that came in a more than six 
thousand-page report, counting the appendices, Srebrenica. A 'safe' area.
The Netherland's Institute for War Documentation, formerly 
called 'Rijksinstituut' (RIOD), took nearly six years of research to analyze the 
most gripping occurence for the Netherlands since the Second World War. On the 
eleventh of July, 1995 the Muslim enclave protected by the Dutch UN 
'blue-helmets' fell into Bosnian Serb hands; on the tenth of April, 2002 NIOD 
director Blom presented his version of the events.
And then silence descended. Did ex-Minister of Defence 
Joris Voorhoeve's wish come true -- after the evacutation of the enclave he 
commented hopefully that the "book of Srebrenica" would someday be "closed"? It 
became so quiet that it might be called remarkable. Was the oeuvre that the NIOD 
had delivered simply so excellent that there was nothing more to say? That 
doesn't seem to be the case - after all, the survivors themselves say that the 
Dutch could certainly have intervened. But the question of how good the report 
actually is has never been asked. There have been various stories dribbling out 
concerning the manner of working inside the research team, about the quality of 
the investigation and its goals. But it has never come to a serious debate. That 
might have to do with the fact that the world of Dutch historians is so small; 
everyone knows everybody; everybody meets everyone else continually. This fact 
makes it difficult for the colleagues of the Srebrenica research team to express 
their opinions. Off the record some historians have even spoken of fear of the 
'academic mafia' that cannot be crossed.
THE STORIES SURROUNDING THE CREATION OF THE NIOD REPORT 
JUSTIFY THE QUESTION WHETHER OR NOT IT ACTUALLY HAS THE VALUE THAT HAS BEEN 
ASCRIBED TO IT
Whatever the facts may be, the stories about the 
development of the NIOD investigation into the fall of Srebrenica were so 
worrying that they justify the question - retrospectively - whether the NIOD 
report actually has the value that has been ascribed to it.
After its publication a high-ranking military officer 
was dismissed (Lieutenant-General Van Baal), but his reputation has since been 
restored. A Cabinet fell, too, the second Kok Cabinet, but the careers of its 
members have continued quite well since. The ex-Prime Minister turned in his 
resignation to the Queen at the time, but immediately made it clear that no one 
should even think of considering it as an admission of guilt. His wishes were 
catered to, even though it was a strange thing to demand. If Kok had truly 
wanted to accept his responsibility, as he proclaimed, then he could have done 
so just as well in 1995, for even some seven years after the fall of Srebrenica 
the NIOD did not present any new facts concerning his behaviour nor that of his 
ministerial team.
Dutchbat III, the Dutch batalion that could not prevent 
"the largest mass murder on European soil since the Second World War", felt 
rehabilitated by the NIOD report. Yes, what had happened was terrible, and their 
actions had certainly not always been appropriate, but in the long run the 
military (and political) Netherlands could not have done anything. After all it 
was the cruel Bosnian Serb General Ratko Mladic who had made the decision to 
slaughter as many Muslim men as possible from what had become the open-air 
prison of Srebrenica. Among the all's-well-that-ends-well sounds that quickly 
followed the charged final chords of the years of NIOD investigation in the 
Netherlands, there were only two dissonant notes. Of the Cabinet members, the 
morally superior Jan Pronk had enraged Kok by declaring that "the politicians" 
and indeed he himself had failed. And the then well-admired Mient Jan Faber, 
secretary of the IKV (the Dutch Inter-Church Council) had prepared his own 
counter-investigation [7 http://www.domovina.net/srebrenica/page_006/broch-nl.pdf,
no longer on line] in which 
a certain amount of Dutch guilt was ascertained. However, after a few strong 
bursts of interest from the media, both were quickly forgotten. More to the 
point, the resignation of the Cabinet (albeit just before its term in office 
was due to end anyway) drew all the attention. In the aftermath the 
Netherlands was drawn more and more to the politics of Pim Fortuyn.
2 - Wherein the question arises how independent the NIOD 
actually was
That doubts have arisen concerning the value of the NIOD 
report is not primarily a result of its content. Logically there is not much to 
be said about that. The subject is simply too immense and too complex. No one 
other than the authors of the report could possibly have enough time, money or 
resources even to start a critical analysis of the utilized information it 
contains. Even the important article on the report in the Journal of History (Tijdschrift 
voor Geschiedenis), no. 2, 2003 'The Srebrenica Drama' offers no direct opinion 
on its validity. And this journal is full of contributions from competent 
historians. In the latest edition of Contributions and Annoucements concerning 
the History of the Netherlands (BMGN), the in-house publication of the Royal 
Dutch Historical Society, attention is paid to the NIOD report. Two of the 
reviewers (J.W.L. Brouwer and Jan Willem Honig [8] ) are very critical: the 
investigation took too long, the report appeared too late, is sloppy and has no 
clear structure of inquiry. But the 'discussion file' is closed with a 
rationalization from Hans Blom. He can do that with impunity because it is not 
possible to hold him to account concerning the content. His report cannot be 
read due to its size; therefore, it is practically impossible to check it, and 
in fact it is unreviewable - a complaint that actually has been made against 
other historical oeuvres such as Het Koningrijk der Nederlanden in de Tweede 
Wereldoorlog (The Kingdom of the Netherlands in the Second World War) and the 
historical volumes concerning the Dutch cabinets since 1945.
The reasons to entertain serious doubts about the NIOD 
report come from a different field. In the first place it seems that the 
investigation primarily served a political goal instead of being aimed at 
discovering the truth. In the second place, the situation in which the 
investigation took place was from a scholarly viewpoint so bizarre and 
unfavorable that it had to affect the result. No one paid any attention to that. 
Only the sociologist and columnist J.A.A. van Doorn reacted quickly in Trouw 
when the report was published and he was irritated by the flow of maddening 
details without any possibility of distinguishing between main themes, auxiliary 
subjects or trivia. There was no general index. The index of personal 
names was messy. Names were switched or badly spelled. The page numbers given 
were not correct.
Why did no one ask themselves how the NIOD report had 
actually been produced? Why has no honest answer been given to the question of 
what the real reason was that the publication of the report was postponed three 
times? Why has not one government representative ever even suggested that it 
would be smart to examine the NIOD's methodology? Why did the Cabinet act so 
surprised, on the day the report was presented, when officials from various 
ministries had already been given the agreed preview (which had been arranged 
between the NIOD and the ministries at the time of the acceptance of the 
assignment) of the text that the investigators produced? How independent 
actually was the NIOD? Should the reconstruction of the fall of Srebrenica have 
been handled in this manner? These matters have never been approached. Not in 
the first days after the presentation when everyone made things easier for 
themselves by relying on the conclusions and press releases [9]. Nor later, 
when a different political constellation had arisen to power and there had been 
time enough to peruse the NIOD's thick volumes.
It may at the very least be called remarkable. The whole 
investigation was surrounded with a rabid secrecy and until this day the people 
involved remain stubbornly silent about what they went through in those six 
years of toil. Those who approached them were stone-walled ("I don't feel 
like discussing it." "There is nothing to tell." "The result is all that 
counts."). During the past year several of these people have been contacted by 
HP/De Tijd. They refuse to cooperate. Evidently the investigators do not feel 
required or empowered to say anything about their manner of working, although it 
is normally not usual for people in the academic world to do their work with 
their lips shut tight. Only when the text of this article was presented to them, 
did some of them decide to react. NIOD director Hans Blom declared that he found 
this article "poor", "full of elementary [factual] mistakes, full of unjustified 
suspicions and suggestions," but he "refrains from giving any commentary."
In relation to the matter of Srebrenica itself, so terribly 
much has been said and written and shown and suggested and proven, that the 
truly interested person has either lost the scent completely or become 
exhausted. Cynically enough, that seems to have been the point when the bright 
idea first saw the light of day in the Trêveszaal [a room in the Hague 
parliament buildings - FT] in 1996 - according to the account of Hans van Mierlo 
who, cost what it may, wished 'his' purple Cabinet [Holland's first-ever 
coalition government of social-democrats, liberal-democrats and conservatives - 
FT] to be a success. - to order "an independent and historically scientific 
investigation" into the overrunning of what had been advertised by the United 
Nations as a 'safe area' in war-torn, disintegrating Bosnia and Hercegovina.
Although it has never been officially admitted, few of 
those involved doubt anymore that the political move to place the NIOD at the 
head of the Srebrenica investigation, was at least partly engendered by the 
necessity of diverting attention. Starting up an independent investigation which 
would 'get to the bottom of things', has helped the sitting government of this 
country out of a tight place more than once -- what comes to mind are the 
Menten affair and the Lockheed scandal.
Even more to the point, although retrospectively difficult 
to imagine, the fact that the political situation in the Netherlands in 1995 was 
crumbling had an influence as well. The first purple Cabinet was nothing short 
of revolutionary; [conservative] VVD and [social-democrat] PvdA governed 
together, without the [christian-democrat] CDA. Both PvdA leader Wim Kok and VVD 
leader Frits Bolkestein had stuck out their necks to make this most unusual 
collaboration possible. The 'purple experiment' (that's what it was really 
called) simply had to succeed, but the continual commotion about Srebrenica 
threatened to eclipse everything. In other words, the government desperarely 
needed a lightning rod with an aura of independence. There is no proof for it, 
but the actual conclusion ('The government is not to blame') comes very close to 
the envisioned outcome ('This government is not to blame'). "No good guys, no 
bad guys," as Commander Karremans said by accident -- it had all been bad luck.
3 - Where it becomes apparent that nobody at the NIOD 
understood the matters to be investigated
Could it have really been the intention of the Cabinet to 
keep the outcome of this investigation into Srebrenica under control without 
that becoming apparent to unsuspecting outsiders? It clarifies matters to look 
back at a number of clues in that direction.
At any rate it is evident that those who commisioned the 
Srebrenica investigation (the first Kok Cabinet) and those who accepted the 
assignment (called RIOD at the time) in the summer of 1996, one year after the 
withdrawal of Commander Karremans and his blue-helmeted troops, needed one 
another. It did seem that the Cabinet was quite interested in smothering the 
constantly recurring discussion about the Dutch failure and in avoiding a 
politically dangerous parliamentary inquiry. Since 1995 War Documentation [the 
RIOD, later NIOD] was seeking a broader field to investigate in order to silence 
the ever louder call to disband them. (Wasn't just about everything there was to 
document about WW II already documented?) New fields to plow were welcome.
War Documentation is de facto a governmental service. It 
works under the auspices of the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science and 
is financed by them. Especially for this very reason it is strange that the 
Cabinet, which had proposed an independent investigation to the community, 
eventually chose this dependent organization. Indeed there was brief mention of 
other possible solutions in the orientation phase (including the name of the 
Clingendael Institute for International Relations). According to NIOD director 
Hans Blom the Cabinet made 'honest attempts' to launch an international 
investigation into Srebrenica. But for reasons known only to that Cabinet, the 
NIOD was selected.
It is very odd then that the NIOD investigation was 
officially paid for by the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science (the 
Minister of Education was the commissioner and the contact person between the 
NIOD and the government) while in reality the - unlimited - budget for the 
investigation was drawn from the Defence Ministry. Via the budget line 'Miscellaneaous 
Defence-wide expenditures' a total of two million euros was allocated in both 
2002 and 2003 for the NIOD investigation. Defence transferred that amount to 
Education, Culture and Science and they then transferred it to the NIOD.
Thus Defence was paying for a study about the functioning 
of (among others) Defence, but it probably was considered smart to camouflage 
the relationship.
It must be said that the Cabinet did its best to present 
the impression that the investigation was independent. Take the way in which the 
Cabinet reacted to the eventual publication: the members of the Cabinet were 
surprised and shocked. Well, they acted surprised and shocked; they were not. 
The NIOD had been visited in the last stages of their investigation by 'readers' 
from at least four ministries: Education, Culture and Science, State, Defence 
and the Cabinet Office (Algemene Zaken). Formally they only came to ascertain 
whether the investigators were handling sensitive archives with care, but they 
also reported back to their respective bosses. Added to that, the draft of the 
report was to have been made known to the Cabinet some weeks before its 
publication. Hans Blom did himself announce to one and all that he and some of 
his colleagues had divulged the contents of the report to Prime Minister Kok and 
the ministers of Defence and State. The huge surprise in The Hague concerning 
the conclusions of the investigating team was, in short, an act, evidently only 
meant as theatre.
If the government really intended to commission an 
independent study, why did they eventually choose the NIOD? Why wasn't a team 
chosen from among independent and even foreign historians? But the curious were 
purposefully kept away. Blom didn't even want to allow a readers' group, as was 
customary for historical studies at War Documentation. It is also apparent that 
the two independent Srebrenica experts at the time, Frank Westerman and Bart 
Rijs, authors of the book Srebrenica, het zwartste scenario [10] (Srebrenica, 
the darkest scenario), provided material to be used; nevertheless, they were 
never asked a single question by the NIOD investigators.
For other reasons, too, the choice of the NIOD was not as 
obvious as it might have seemed at the time. No one who worked there had any 
knowledge of the problems to be addressed. In short, the Cabinet chose an 
organization to do the loaded Srebrenica job in which no person had any 
applicable expertise. If Kok and his colleagues did not realize this, then they 
were quite unworldly.
As of January 1, 1999, the Ministry of Education 's direct 
control of the NIOD was changed to an indirect control. To mark that event the 
name was changed from RIOD to NIOD. After that War Documentation fell under the 
cloak of the KNAW, the Dutch Academy of Sciences. The minister responsible at 
the time, Jo Ritzen, wished to emphasize the independence of the Institute, but 
in fact it made little difference, since the KNAW was also paid for by the 
government. The suggestion arises that this cosmetic operation (which was 
done in the middle of the Srebrenica investigation) was also an attempt to pull 
the wool over the eyes of possible critics.
Altogether the only buffer between the investigators and 
the politicians was the man Hans Blom, director of the NIOD. Who is Professor 
Doctor J.C.H. Blom? A hardened, aggresive rock of immutability? A pure scholar 
who would never allow himself to be swayed by the leaders of this country? No, 
not in the least. The utterly amenable establishment-creature Blom is up to his 
eyebrows in boardroom positions; practically every organization of any 
importance in the historical field had or has him in its midst (including the 
Royal Dutch Historical Association and the biographical commission of the Prince 
Bernhard Culture Fund). He also seems to enjoy being seen in the political 
world. Those who know him describe him as someone who likes to be liked and who 
avidly avoids conflicts. Blom had only been the director of the NIOD for three 
days when he heard that the Cabinet had especially chosen him to do the 
investigation into Srebrenica. What a miraculous coincidence!
Coincidence? Perhaps. But the fact is that there were 
two people in the commission that nominated Blom for the position who had 
already been involved in a very special manner with post-Srebrenica happenings. 
They were G.L.H. Huyser and Professor Master J. de Ruiter. Govert Huyser, 
retired general and ex-member of the Ministry of Defence staff and Job de Ruiter, 
ex-minister of Defence and of Justice. 
Later on it became known that the same Huyser and De 
Ruiter were responsible for keeping unpleasant details about occurences in 
Srebrenica under their hats.
One of the most questionable elements of the Srebrenica 
affair is the so-called debriefing of Dutchbat in the autumn of 1995, organized 
by the Armed Forces' top brass. Before an operation soldiers are briefed about 
what they can expect and what is expected of them; after such an operation there 
is an evaluation to determine whether the directives have been fulfilled in the 
proper manner. It was crucial in this case, because the military personnel 
present at the fall of Srebrenica in the summer of 1995 would have the 
opportunity to tell exactly what they had seen, heard and experienced. Govert 
Huyser and Job de Ruiter were there at the debriefing. They were there as 
independent advisors who were to make sure that the information was collected 
and handled correctly.
Only last year did the NIOD report confirm what had been 
suspected all along: the military top brass had withheld from the debriefing 
report certain evidence from Dutchbatters, which it thought was harmful to the 
reputation of the Armed Forces. Huyser and De Ruiter had not resisted this. 
They obviously found the reasoning of the Army's leaders more persuasive.
When Frank de Grave became Minister of Defence in 1998, he 
was confronted with new Srebrenica facts and suspicions from the period of his 
predecessor Voorhoeve. He decided on a separate investigation. Noord-Holland 
Province Governor Jos van Kemmenade was put in charge of the investigating 
committee and he concluded that nothing had been swept under the carpet. That 
conclusion was absolutely rebutted last year when the NIOD report was published: 
the Army's top brass had twisted and omitted certain facts in the debriefing 
report. NIOD's press release says: "Minister Voorhoeve (-) counted on the 
loyalty, support and proper political sense from the Army. The top brass of the 
Royal Armed Forces in fact had other priorities such as protecting the image of 
Dutchbat and of the army, whereby the Minister received late, often insufficient 
and sometimes even no information. The debriefing report was inadequate. The 
Royal Armed Forces clearly was able to mould it."
In addition the Netwerk (Network) television program 
revealed that the Van Kemenade committee must have found out about this, but 
refrained from letting it be known. The committee stubbornly ignored a number of 
clues including eleven incriminating declarations from Dutchbatters. In his 
interview with Committee chairman Van Kemenade the chief bureaucrat of Defence 
De Winter seems to have said, "Some passages were not completely correct; 
here and there matters had been obscured. I take it that the debriefing team 
thought it better to keep it (-) quiet." And: "I have the impression that that 
was left out on purpose."
Concerning the running of the NIOD investigation there 
remains a complete and unbelievable 'omerta'. There has never been 
anything made public about it. Odd, because it was not some secret activity, but 
an historical - scientific study. Or is there something to hide?
4 - Wherein the NIOD methodology reveals inexplicable 
amateurism
The story of the newly appointed, ambitious director, his 
temporary employees and the relationships between them begins on August 28, 
1996. Blom has already started at War Documentation, but still needs to tie up a 
few loose ends at his old employer's, the University of Amsterdam. He finds a 
note in his room; during the last staff meeting the Minister of Education Jo 
Ritzen had tried to reach him by phone. Would he please return the call ASAP. 
Blom does. "Don't be startled, " Jo says to Hans (They know one another) and he 
proceeds to explain that the council of ministers is considering designating him 
to do a large and extensive investigation into the fall of Srebrenica. Just so 
that he would know about it.
Blom was startled, he later remarked (in Vrij Nederland); 
but he also couldn't be anything other than elated. Such an important task is a 
fantastic entrance. Although afterwards he never returned to the subject, he 
once openly let it be known why (in an interview in Trouw). He could see the 
future mapped out before him; under his tutelage the backwater Institute for War 
Documentation would expand into an organization where the whole of recent 
history would be studied, one comparative to the prestigious Institut für 
Zeitgeschichte in Munich.
At any rate, the manner in which media professor Henri 
Beunders spoke about Blom in a portrait brought by NRC Handelsblad on April 8, 
2002 says much about his elation in the early days of his directorship, when he 
began to realize that Srebrenica could well become his magnum opus. Beunders 
relates how Blom gathered an informal coterie of historians, who did 'nice 
things' together with their partners. "When he became director of the NIOD, he 
issued an invitation to all of us. He proudly showed us the wonderful new 
building, and said, 'I have a coffee lady now, even catering. Would you like a 
drink? A beer? Wine? Maybe a sandwich? That's all possible here.' He was as 
happy as a child."
So Blom said "Yes." to the Cabinet's assignment, but the 
NIOD was not, as stated, equiped to handle such a complex job. There were 25 
employees, of whom six had attained the status of investigator. But there was 
nobody who knew anything substantial about the current Dutch political scene, 
about Defence or about Yugoslavia. Nobody.
What happened next shows an inexplicable amateurism. 
Blom accepted an assignment which he could not fulfill with the exisiting team. 
He needed to bring in new people. He brought in only three. That was very sparse 
in view of the work to be done. Blom evidently decided to have the immense 
investigation handled by only three people; the discrepancy between the size of 
the matter to be studied and the number of team members was absurdly large.
There was also inadequate thought given to the 
investigation's directives. The official text states that there will be an 
"inventory" and "organization" of "relevant factual material" so as to "allow 
insight". Vague enough to be susceptible to various interpretations. And yet 
there had been a lengthy conference beforehand and it was Blom himself who 
eventually choose the way it was formulated. Much of what was agreed between him 
and the government is unknown to us. Only that the Cabinet had promised access 
to secret information and that the investigators could use the notes (made 
anonymous) from the ministerial councils.
The government wanted quiet in the country, so it was no 
problem at all if Blom's investigation took a long time. In answer to difficult 
questions from the press, reference could be made to the deep-digging and 
therefore time-consuming investigation that was being done. No deadline had been 
set, but expectations were around three years; about just after the 
elections for the Second Chamber of Parliament (the "Commons" or "House of 
Representatives") in 1998. With the support of the PvdA, VVD and D'66 [the 
parties making up the coalition government] a motion was put down that called 
for publication before the end of the first purple Cabinet. But even members of 
the government parties such as D'66 House member Hoekema, did not imagine that 
the investigation would take the whole of the new government's stay. The 
decision was made not to make interim reports, because that would only lead to 
bother.
The Cabinet could not have foretold that things would 
become chaotic in Blom's team of investigators. The Cabinet could also not have 
foreseen that the length of time the investigation would require was beyond 
reason. That was against the wishes of the Cabinet and explains the anger that 
Premier Kok displayed when Blom requested another postponement in the latter 
phases of the Srebrenica study.
After accepting the task Blom had taken little time for a 
serious selection procedure. Not only was the size of the team a matter for 
conjecture, its make-up was curious, too. Albert Kersten (expert in the area of 
international relations), Paul Koedijk (researcher and author of books about the 
history of the Dutch press) and Dick Schoonoord (ex-Navy man, Colonel on the 
Defence staff and author of books about Dutch battles) were added to the 
Investigation section of War Documentation on a temporary basis.
How really independent were these three fresh 
investigators? Albert Kersten, who took responsibility for that part of 
the NIOD study that concerned the relation between the Netherlands and foreign 
countries, was closely linked to the Department of State. His thesis 
concerned it and he often contributed to Department of State publications. On 
top of that Kersten is is the biographer of Joseph Luns [(in)famous Dutch 
Foreign Minister of the cold war era] and his future is entwined with that of 
the Department of State. Not only did he seem part of that establishment; he 
also liked to have it said and preened about it.
Dick Schoonoord was a Navy man in heart and soul, so 
certainly both Kersten and Schoonoord had ties to the field of investigation. 
What could Blom have been thinking? That he was engaging expertise? Certainly. 
But the down side (the taint of partiality) is something he missed.
Paul Koedijk to complete the whole, once a journalist at 
Vrij Nederland, was the only one without prior connections. Blom knew him from 
the period when Koedijk completed his studies with him. That goes for his other 
ex-student Titia Frankfort, who became assistent investigator and later in 1999 
full investigator.
5 - Wherein the chaos at the NIOD runs completely 
rampant
What was this odd team planning to do? Considering the 
limited size of the company and their nominal expertise in this field of 
research, it could not have had too many pretentions. The number of subjects 
to be handled (Dutch internal politics, Dutch international politics, 
Yugoslavia, the United Nations, military matters, intelligence services, 
communications) was huge. Because the researchers themselves realized that 
their expertise had its limits they decided to confine themselves to "the Dutch 
side" of the Srebrenica case. This has been stated in writing by Floribert 
Baudet (political history, University of Utrecht) in the previously cited 
Journal for History (Tijdschrift voor Geschiedenis, TvG) who recalls a 
"discussion with one of the investigators". The plan for the study remained as 
vague as the directive for the study. As the same Baudet describes in the TvG, a 
serious historically scientific examination ought to be built upon a clear 
questionnaire. This should lead to a transparent analysis and then result in a 
coherent account. "Should it be the case that the sources used by the NIOD were 
not available to other researchers," he writes, "then it shall not be possible 
to check the correct reproduction of certain discussions, which naturally would 
have consequences for the value of the NIOD's analysis." Srebrenica. A 'safe' 
area is shaky in that aspect: much of the collected information has been used in 
the report without providing any critical sources to evaluate.
Based on various quotes from those involved and Hans 
Blom himself one can conclude with hindsight that there was no delegation of the 
many tasks nor any hierarchy. The original group of researchers was immediately 
at odds over the methods to be applied. This disagreement became a clearcut 
struggle for power because Blom did little about it.
Kersten had previously been at the Historical Institute in 
The Hague and was of the opinion that he certainy knew how to undertake an 
historical investigation.
Koedijk, the archives rat, believed that he knew exactly 
how to do it. After all he had a lot of experience in journalism and as a 
political editor at Vrij Nederland he had been completely immersed in the Peter 
Stuyvesant-world of the intelligence services. He considered himself the natural 
leader of the investigation. Only Schoonoord had no intention of demanding to 
be the leader.
It wasn't only internal strife that caused the NIOD 
study's slow start; there were external problems plagueing the three 
investigators, too. Although the Dutch government had promised to give the NIOD 
team access to any archives that it considered necessary, this was not kept to 
in practice. The Military History Department of the Royal Armed Forces 
co-operated when put under intense pressure, but also kept some information 
concealed.
The French (crucial because of General Janvier, who at 
the time in question had been the commander of the UN forces in Bosnia) had no 
desire at all to be of assistance. The United Nations first wanted to devise new 
rules concerning the revelation of UN information and in anticipation they 
stalled. The Americans were "not at home". NATO would also not give sensitive 
information up for nothing. A variety of archives stayed behind closed doors and 
a selection of those responsible were not available [for interviews]. After a 
year and a half Blom still had no hint of success for his mission. Astoundingly 
an efficiency expert was taken on board in 1997, and that for such a tiny group 
of people.
What that expert advised is not known to us. It's 
redundant anyway, since nothing changed. In some aspects the situation even got 
worse. Paul Koedijk got the idea that his vision was the guiding light and he 
promptly took steps. That just led to even more friction.
In the Spring of 1997 the three researchers traveled with 
the then assistent-investigator and historian Titia Frankfort and an 
anthropologist who had been working in Great Britain Ger Duijzings (who would 
become a full member of the team in 2000) to "The Area" as they called 
Srebrenica and its surroundings for the first time, escorted by the American 
Army.
Meanwhile there had been elections in the Netherlands, a 
new Cabinet had been sworn in and there was also a new Defence Minister. After a 
trying formation Frank de Grave had taken a week off to spend time at the 
seaside in Bergen aan Zee with his family. His vacation came to an abrupt end. 
The press disclosed one Srebrenica exposé after the other. Among them the 
allegation that an armored vehicle used during the retreat of Dutchbat troops 
had been driven over some refugees with fatal consequences.
Until then it had been comparatively quiet in the 
Netherlands with relation to Srebrenica, but in the run-up to the elections the 
opposition began to taunt. Especially the CDA, that had been shunted off so 
deliberately during the first purple Cabinet, did its utmost to bring discredit 
to the parties in power. Embarassing disclosures about the Srebrenica question 
were ideal to this end. But the emotional wave created by this only reached its 
highest peak after the second 'Purple Cabinet' had been sworn in. This was even 
more touchy because the Defence- and State Departments both had new ministers, 
Frank de Grave and Jozias van Aertsen of the VVD, neither of whom had had 
anything to do with Srebrenica.
At this time there was a growing conspiracy theory about 
the Srebrenica cover-up. PvdA, CDA and D'66 all decided that a parliamentary 
inquiry was necessary.
With his feet in the surf and his mobile phone to his 
ear De Grave tried to quiet things down, but he sidn't manage to do so. 
Eventually, as stated, he appointed Jos van Kemenade, the Province Governor in 
North Holland, to investigate whether or not the Armed Forces were withholding 
information concerning Srebrenica. "NO," was his conclusion after six (!) weeks.
Prime Minister Kok promoted Van Kemenade to Minister of 
State just before the presentation of the NIOD report. Felicitious, since he 
came into the line of fire after the publication and it would have been much 
more difficult then. The NIOD had not been able to avoid negating Van Kemenade's 
investigation from 1998 ("No cover-up"). But he got away with the absurd 
annoucement that he had destroyed all the information used during his 
investigation. ("Van Kemenade cleaned it all up." Het Parool, April 18, 2002).
Destroyed! How could that be? The personal archive of ex-Army commander 
Hans Couzy could not be used by the NIOD because it, too, had already been 
destroyed. And wasn't there something that had gone awry with some rolls of film 
filled with evidence? Indeed... Destroyed.
After the second Kok Cabinet took over, the 
parliamentary inquiry was once again postponed. NIOD director Hans Blom 
contributed to that. In an avid and pouting opinion piece in the Volkskrant of 
August 18, 1998 he claimed that the prestige of his institution would be 
undermined internationally through all these proposed extraneous investigations 
(Ministry of Public Affairs, Defence, 2nd Chamber of Parliament) into 
Srebrenica. Kok still had confidence in him and now he managed to convince 
Defence Minister De Grave and Interior Minister Van Aertsen (neither tainted 
with a Srebrenica past) that the NIOD wasn't twiddling its thumbs.
Blom was in a jam: a parliamentary inquiry would make 
him redundant, but he couldn't make public how things really were going: the 
investigation was barely started and there was hardly a line written of the 
report.
Paul Koedijk recognized this and offered himself, an 
ex-journalist, as Blom's PR-man. That Koedijk then abandoned his real work did 
not improve his relationship with the rest of the team.
Blom gathered his wits and promised that he would speed 
up the process of investigation. To that end he was allowed to hire more 
personnel in 1999. The Serbo-Croatian teacher Nevana (Nena) Bajalica (originally 
from Serbia and already living in the Netherlands for a number of years) was 
added and Cees Wiebes and Bob de Graaff (the authors of Villa Maarheeze, a 
notorious book about the Dutch CIA, disbanded in 1992) were also pulled in. 
Titia Frankfort was promoted from assistant to senior investigator. Later on 
Rolf van Uye, ex-employee of the OCSE (Organization for Cooperation and Security 
in Europe) joined the group and in 2000 the aforementioned anthropologist Ger 
Duijzings completed the team.
This did not make the team more connected nor matters more 
transparent. More and more differences of opinion arose, with the consequence 
that each researcher retreated into his or her own field of specialization. 
There were sources that some investigators evaluated in completely different 
ways, resulting in varied interpretations. What one considered speculative was 
taken at face value by another. Or as investigator Ger Duijzings stated in the 
NRC Handelsblad on November 9, 2002, "Information from sources that I would 
question, are used in section 1 by Bob de Graaff when they suit his purpose."
6 - Wherein investigators and their sources become 
entangled
Another phenomenon popped up among some members of the NIOD 
team who gradually adopted a pro-Serbian attitude from Dutchbat. Whereas the 
military men related that one could make solid agreements with the Serbs, while 
that was hardly possible with the Muslims, the [NIOD] investigators noted that 
the Serbs arranged good hotels and that one did not have to sit on the ground 
during meetings.
Investigator Titia Frankfort heard heroic stories about 
Dutchbat doctor Gerry Kremer on one of her visits to "The Area". He had helped 
the Muslim refugees when he had been forbidden to do so. According to Kremer his 
superior officers had purposefully withheld medical aid from the local 
population. Kremer determinedly ignored an order and went out alone to treat the 
wounded. On top of that he also accused his medical colleagues (from the Navy) 
present in the enclave, because they had not offered any medical assistance to 
the Muslims. The matter of this "medical question" is not unknown, since Kremer 
went public with it both before and after the publication of what in his opinion 
is the faulty NIOD report. This to the irritation of both Navy and Army top, of 
course.
Early in July of 1995 Doctors Without Borders requested 
assistance from the Dutch military stationed in Srebrenica. This was refused 
because the Dutchbat commanders did not wish to use any of the so-called 
"brass-tacks supplies" (a minimum medical inventory that was to be kept for the 
treatment of their own troops). Kremer signed, after in his experience most 
heavy pressure from General Vader the commander of the Medical Commando of the 
Armed Forces, a rather mild statement about this matter when there was an 
internal military investigation.
When Titia Frankfort visited this Gerry Kremer together 
with Paul Koedijk during the Srebrenica investigation, she said to him that the 
"Bosnian Gates of Heaven" were opened wide for him. She had heard nothing but 
good about him from the survivors; he was the only hero in a sea of Dutchbat 
"cowards", as the Bosnian Muslims saw it. Kremer was responsive to that kind of 
compliment. It reinforced his opnion that he had acted honorably according to 
his own conscience when he publicized these happenings, even if his 
ex-colleagues now considered him a "buddy-fucker". He gave her a detailed 
history of events and felt that the NIOD was doing a good job. Finally he was 
being taken seriously.
When he contacted Frankfort later on to express his 
surprise that there had been no follow-up to the first interview, he was 
informed that Dick Schoonoord had evidently taken over the investigation into 
this subject. But nothing was heard from him either. Frankfort indicated that 
she would like to meet Kremer again. A more-than-friendly relationship flamed up 
between these two, although both of them were married. Frankfort, who had become 
very empathetic with the Srebrenica victims,was quite impressed with the 
Dutchbat surgeon. Differentiating between the 'good' and the 'bad' persons 
always had a big place in her life. She recognized a 'good' person in Kremer. 
Whether Frankfort's scientific professionalism was influenced by this is not 
exactly the crux of the matter. What is, is that some of her co-workers 
considered that it was influenced. It certainly did not contribute to the 
unity of the team.
The relationship that developped between the NIOD 
investigator and the Dutchbat doctor, created an added problem for Hans Blom. 
Various newspapers (including Trouw and the PZC, November 24, 2001) were going 
to flaunt it, which could bring the objectivity of the investigation into 
question.
Happily Blom could make use of another team member, Dick 
Schoonoord. This ex-Navy man would eventually take responsibility for a large 
portion of the NIOD report. Blom and Schoonoord saw things the same way and they 
had reservations about their colleagues Titia Frankfort, Nevana Bajalica and 
Paul Koedijk, who accepted information they gathered from survivors and 
eye-witnesses. That could lead to a version of events that would not
harmonize with the version of the Defence top brass. They were identifying 
more with the common Dutchbatters (who had experienced the drama in situ) than 
with the military commanders (who made decisions from a safe distance). In 
Blom's eyes this "emotional empathy" of theirs and their determined search for 
"the truth" made them troublesome dissidents. At the end he allowed Schoonoord 
to write the 'medical' section concerning Dutchbat in the report, and that 
caused quite some frustration among the 'dissidents'.
This decision must have affected the content of the report 
in Gerry Kremer's opinion. Schoonoord was still a Colonel on active duty and he 
had served in the Navy his whole life. Kremer was not in the Navy, but in the 
Air Force. In his investigation Schoonoord relied on information from his 
Navy friends, was Kremer's complaint. He had spoken only to the Navy medical 
specialists (the other three in the enclave). Point in case: Schoonoord phoned 
Kremer only at "one minute to midnight" immediately before the deadline for his 
part of the NIOD report. As reaction Schoonoord offers that "This is just a 
descriptive phrase.", but Kremer doesn't think he was taken seriously. When 
Schoonoord had phoned him, he had not been at home, but the next day (January 
18, 2001) he noticed that he had been called on his phone's screen. Kremer 
dialed back to this unknown telephone number and reached Schoonoord. He was 
startled that Kremer called him "out of the blue" and wanted to know "in God's 
name" how Kremer had obtained his telephone number. In answer to Kremer's 
question why he was only contacted at this stage, Schoonoord answered that he 
wanted to dot the i's and that his director had not considered it necessary to 
interview Kremer. The conversation lasted exactly 27 minutes and 31 seconds 
(according to the phone company's bill) and that was all. But in the NIOD report 
this conversaton is alluded to many times; as interview, as discussion, as 
source. It also gives a date of January 17th instead of the 18th. Perhaps this 
is a mistake, but maybe it is Schoonoord's attempt to disguise his only 
contacting an important source at the very last minute. At any rate Kremer 
accuses Schoonoord of doing his writing on the basis of talks with of a limited 
number of Navy spokespersons, and specifically relying upon a colleague-surgeon 
who in contrast to Kremer had only been in the enclave for two weeks and 
therefore had much less knowledge about what was going on.
Schoonoord had been using the archive system at Defence and 
allowed Defence itself to make copies of the pieces he used. The ministry 
therefore could know exactly which documents the NIOD had and which it did not.
When closely inspected this NIOD investigation does not 
seem to measure up qua "independence" and "objectivity". On November 1, 2002 the 
VPRO radio program Argos devoted a broadcast to the contribution of Cees Wiebes 
[in the NIOD report] on intelligence- and security services. With various 
spokespersons the program's producers were able to to make a convincing point, 
that both the American and German intelligence services knew that an attack on 
Srebrenica was imminent. Wiebes states in the NIOD report that nobody knew 
anything. According to Argos he had brushed aside all the witness statements 
that said otherwise. Last September [2003] The Bosnian Serb prosecution witness 
Momir Nikolic, a former army officer, admitted at the ICTY that the mass murder 
had been planned in detail and had not been "improvised" on the spot, as Wiebes 
claims in the NIOD report. According to Wiebes (who does not agree with the 
Argos assertions) this supports his position, because Nikolic stated that the 
plans for the massacre were made on July 12th [1995], after the fall of the 
enclave.
7 - Where the debacle within the NIOD team threatens to 
be exposed to the outside world
The criss-crossed relationships that risked the objectivity 
of the investigation were kept out of the public eye. But the chaos within the 
NIOD team was revealed a little when in 2000 the 2nd Chamber of Parliament 
itself got in harness. The Temporary Commission for Foreign Deployment, with 
chairman Bert Bakker (D'66) studied all military missions, but obviously 
concentrated on the most sensitive of them, Srebrenica. The members of the 
commission tried to work together with the NIOD investigators. They not only 
found that difficult, it shocked them terribly to see the systems that had 
used and to hear about the deep conflicts. "Total desolation" one even 
called it in HP/De Tijd of August 31, 2001. They then requested that the Cabinet 
provide a public answer to the question of why the report still was not 
finished. But Prime Minister Kok did not budge and the 2nd Chamber dropped the 
matter.
In November of 2001 the relationship between Titia 
Frankfort and Gerry Kremer, between the 'NIOD investigator' and the 'Dutchbat 
surgeon' leaked out. Several newspapers published the story. NIOD spokesman 
David Barnouw had to admit that the relationship existed, but declared that it 
had taken place "in the Summer", was "short-lived"and now was "over".
Kremer himself now knows (from one of the journalists who 
published the story but whose name he doesn't wish to disclose) that it was not 
a jealous partner who spilled the beans, but a member of NIOD's investigation 
team.
The whole NIOD study was under the auspices of the BVD 
(later AIVD, the national security service), mainly because they were working 
with classified documents and state security was involved. Each investigator had 
undergone a screening process before they could become a member of the team. In 
the rather isolated whirlpool of the investigation some researchers were gripped 
by a fear of spies and bugs. For instance Titia Frankfort had an extra dedicated 
email address for her 'sensitive' contacts.
The tension mounted because a realistic publication date 
seemed further and further away. When Wim Kok (with whom NIOD director Hans Blom 
had had a good understanding) displayed public anger at the latest delay in 
publication, panic really took hold. So much so that the board of the Royal 
Dutch Academy of Sciences, to which the NIOD belonged since its name change in 
1999, evidently demanded Blom have all the members of the team visit the company 
doctor. According to a spokesperson from the Royal Academy (KNAW) the members of 
the Srebrenica team had not had any "medical support". The social Annual Report 
of 2001 from KNAW reads under the heading NIOD that, "In the foregoing year much 
attention has been paid to the team that is conducting the Srebrenica 
investigation." Mention is also made literally of "great pressure" and of 
"direct support from the HR advisor and the company doctor." In addition to this 
the HSK Groep, an organisation that specializes in diagnosis and treatment of 
work-related psychiatric problems, interventions and training programs in 
businesses and institutions, was called in. When information about this was 
requested, an employee said apologetically: "The HSK Groep does not issue any 
statements about this matter. That is all I am allowed to say to you."
The fear was great that public failure of the Srebrenica 
investigation would not only damage the NIOD, but would affect the KNAW in its 
totality. Blom was considered at such risk that Peter Romijn (the director of 
Research at the NIOD) was added at the eleventh hour to be co-responsible for 
the Srebrenica team: to cover Blom and to keep him out of harm's way. Not that 
Romijn had any special expertise pertaining to the subject matter, but more so 
that he could help the exhausted research team achieve a publishable report.
The reason for the last postponement (September, 2001) 
of the publication date from November 2001 to April 2002 was officially that the 
NIOD would be allowed access to the Serbian archives after the fall of 
Milosevic. The real reason was that there was not yet any light at the end of 
the investigation's tunnel. There were still many interviews to be done and 
neither Paul Koedijk nor Albert Kersten had much written down. That irritated 
the others and drove Blom perpetually to despair. Eventually he reprimanded 
Koedijk. And Kersten was seconded at the last minute with the experienced 
Amsterdam historian Piet de Rooy as a kind of 'ghostwriter'.
It was war with Blom and Schoonoord on the one front and 
Koedijk, Frankfort and Bajalica on the other. There was no longer any 
conversation possible across no-man's land; they didn't even greet one another. 
However avidly Blom and Schoonoord would have liked to be rid of that trio, 
Koedijk and Frankfort had control of an important part of the report. Blom could 
not send them packing because then the devastation in the team would be evident 
to the outside world.
To request yet another postponement was just not possible. 
Blom and Kok had a gentlemen's agreement (according to Blom in an interview with 
Vrij Nederland, November 2, 2002) that the report would not be brought out in 
the middle of an electorial campaign, but well before time. In February of 2002 
close to the due date the 2nd Chamber suddenly woke up and smelled the coffee. A 
majority of the CDA, VVD and D'66 parties felt themselves tricked and wanted 
immediately, "now" and at this very moment to have the contents of the NIOD 
report made public. That definitely had something to do with the approaching 
election. It wouldn't a bad thing for these parties if the position of the PvdA 
party leader Kok should become somewhat instable. But the most important reason 
for their outcry was an issue of the Twee Vandaag TV show which revealed that 
the reason stated for the latest delay of the NIOD report - the opening of the 
archives in Belgrade - was a lie. The archives were not opened at all. Bert 
Bakker (D'66) said at the time in HP/De Tijd: "We agreed twice to a delay last 
year. It seems only proper to me, that if the rationalisation behind requesting 
a postponement dissolves, the Chamber and the Cabinet should be informed." Geert 
Wilders (VVD) said at the time: "It is very odd and strange that we should be 
hearing this via the media. Totally so, if they knew early on that the archives 
would not be opened up. Why did they keep silent about it?" And Agnes van 
Ardenne (CDA) said then: "Why does the Cabinet accept all this? Why weren't we 
informed?"
The NIOD had of necessity communicated less than the truth, 
but during his weekly press conference Prime Minister Kok reacted with a stolid, 
"The NIOD does what the NIOD wishes." and "It is not my responsibility." No, of 
course not, was the immediate angry backwash. Kok isn't responsible for anything 
anymore. He had already announced that he was going to quit and the elections 
were soon to be held.
8 - Wherein the members of the research team fare as 
badly as the Dutchbatters
During the trying close to the investigation (Blom had to 
keep to his promise, even though many sections of the report had no conceptual 
form.) the pizza delivery man beat a path to the house on the Herengracht and 
the researchers who did not live in Amsterdam, were of necessity lodging in 
hotels nearby.
Using the unbearable pressure of the deadline as an 
argument, Blom invented a creative solution; he suggested that the aftermath of 
the fall of Srebrenica, so anything that had happened after July 11, 1995, would 
not be taken into consideration. The whole storm around the roll of film, the 
cover-up at Defence, the infamous debriefing would thus be excluded from the 
report.
But most of the team considered this 'solution' worse than 
the problem. They asserted to Blom that a six-year study to produce a report 
could not ignore the aftermath, if it didn't want to be completely discounted. 
Blom gave in and paradoxically scored the most points at the presentation of the 
report with exactly the sections that he had wanted to leave out. Perhaps that 
explains why the 'dissidents' within the team kept silent about the bizarre 
manner of its creation.
When all the work was done, most of the Srebrenica team 
members were close to the last straw. A big black hole loomed. Exit-discussions 
were organized to prepare them for their return to society. Everyone was also 
firmly instructed not to speak to anyone about the internal problems and to 
immediately warn one another if an outsider should ask questions about that. 
(NRC Handelsblad, September 9, 2002).
Months after presenting his report Blom admitted (in the 
aforementioned article in Vrij Nederland) that he had underestimated the 
difficulty factor and the management of the investigation and overrated himself. 
He also recognized that there had been problems, but he did not wish to make any 
statements about personal matters. No, of course not.
The fact that in the end all the contributors' names had 
been placed on the title page of Srebrenica. A 'safe' area was called on camera 
by Blom "The Miracle of the Herengracht". For in the last phase the 
researchers would not even read one another's drafts and there was no one to 
point out the contradictions between the various chapters. Thus Titia Frankfort 
offers a sharp criticism concerning Dutchbat's preparation, where Albert Kersten 
is much more mild. "We waited for somebody to point the finger at such 
inconsistency." Frankfort and Ger Duijzings would later say (NRC Handelsblad, 
November 9, 2002).
The haste with which the report was pieced together in 
the last few months, becomes clear in the reading of it. Since the NIOD team 
realized that journalists would want to quickly present the hottest news, there 
was much care taken writing the synopsis. Still it reported wrongly that "the 
largest proportion" of the Muslim refugees fleeing Srebrenica were armed 
fighters - both a hurtful and a symptomatic mistake. The text had been checked 
officially by nine investigators, including Hans Blom.
For Joris Voorhoeve (who never has given a public 
reaction to the report) this is a pity; for the surviving relatives it is a true 
scandal: the 'book of Srebrenica' should not have been closed by the NIOD 
ritual. The unanswered questions remain. There have even been new questions 
added. After some six years of study - that cost almost five million euros - the 
NIOD could only confirm the vision that had existed since 1995. To be sure the 
investigation did extend Kok's purple reign.
Now and then there are short pieces in the newspaper about 
how the former Dutchbatters are doing. Not too well, it seems. Some have sought 
refuge in criminality, many have physical or psychological problems and a few 
attempts at suicide are known, marriages have failed, relationships have broken 
up, and unemployment - whether or not due to disability - is unusually high.
And how are the nine investigators on NIOD director Hans 
Blom's Srebrenica team faring these days?
Blom himself travels every day to his stately business 
address on Amsterdam's Herengracht, and is occasionally in the public eye due to 
new NIOD publications; he was proclaimed "historian of the year 2002" by the 
Dutch Historical Newsletter (Historisch Nieuwsblad). Through this his status as 
National Historian is definite. For three of the investigators the end of the 
NIOD study coincided with the end of their marriages. Some of the investigators 
developed problems with their health. In specific cases this meant lengthy sick 
leaves. It is no secret that the long years of work for the NIOD has had a huge 
impact on the lives of those involved. "Some of them threatened to collapse." 
was Blom's comment.
Ger Duijzing is working again at the School of Slavonic 
Studies at the University of London. Bob de Graaff is back at the University of 
Utrecht. Albert Kersten is devoting himself to his Luns biography in this slack 
period and Dick Schoonoord is a pensioned mariner. Titia Frankfort is 
investigator at the Integrity Office of the county of Amsterdam and Paul Koedijk 
(who for a short while was the dedicated commentator concerning Srebrenica on 
the Netwerk TV program) is also working, by his own description, "in the sphere 
of integrity supervision". Cees Wiebes was employed by the University of 
Amsterdam in 1983, and is still there.
Army commander Hans Couzy acquired his pension already 
in 1996. Commander Ton Karremans was promoted after the drama in Srebrenica to 
Colonel, although behind the back of the then-serving Minister of Defence Joris 
Voorhoeve. He works at the NATO headquarters Afsouth in Naples. Voorhoeve 
himself is a member of the Raad van State, (Council of State), the most 
important body to advise the government. Like Jos van Kemenade, both Hans van 
Mierlo and Wim Kok were appointed Minister of State, an honorary, lifelong title 
that is granted by the Queen in extraordinary situations. With his untarnished 
image as a sucessful statesman Kok sits on the Board of Supervisors of one 
company after the other and has been awarded many honorary doctorates.
The parliamentary inquiry into the fall of 
Srebrenica, that followed the report like the horse after the cart, started in 
June of 2002 and based itself without question on the conclusions of the NIOD 
publication according to its final report in January of 2003. These were 
obviously presumed to be above any suspicion. Nobody had an inclination anymore 
to focus a magnifying glass on "The Miracle of the Herengracht". It was time to 
call it quits about the whole matter.
For those concerned in the Netherlands the publication 
of the NIOD report did mean the end of the Srebrenica question. For those 
Bosnian survivors, anything but. It is clear that they are not convinced that 
the Dutch government could not have done anything other than what was done. If 
so, there would not be this gigantic claim for damages. And if they should know 
how this report which was created by order of that very government about the 
fall of their Srebrenica had come into being, they certainly would not gain any 
more trust in the country that is host to the Yugoslavia tribunal.
FOOTNOTES (ADDED BY DOMOVINA.NET)
[1] Radio Slobodna Evropa/Domovina Net Radio Report, April 
10th, 2002
4 mins RealAudio stream (Bosanski)
[2] Hasan Nuhanović in De Wereld volgens Dummer, VPRO TV, 
January 19, 1997
39 mins RealAudio stream (Nederlands/English/Bosanski)
39 mins RealVideo stream (Nederlands/English/Bosanski - NL 
ondertiteld)
[3] Hasan Nuhanović in 7 Dagen, VPRO TV, April 7, 2002
32 mins - RealVideo (Nederlands/English NL ondertiteld)
[4] The NIOD report has not determined the level of 
responsibility and guilt of the Duchtbat troops and officials for genocide in 
Srebrenica
Hasan Nuhanović's reaction to the NIOD report, April 21, 
2002 (English)
[5] Nederlands Instituut voor Oorlogsdocumenatie (NIOD)
Website, Nederlands, some English
[6] Srebrenica, a 'safe' area
NIOD's April 10, 2002, Srebrenica report on the Internet 
(English)
[7] Srebrenica, De genocide die niet werd voorkomen
IKV rapport (Nederlands, PDF document)
[8] J.W. Honig, N.Both Srebrenica, reconstructie van een 
oorlogsmisdaad
Original title: Srebrenica, Record of a War Crime (Nederlands, 
Bosanski)
[9] NIOD Srebrenica, a 'safe' area
Dutchbat je morao održavati mir gdje mira nije bilo (Bosanski)
Summary for the Press (English)
Geautoriseerde perssamenvatting (Nederlands)
[10] Frank Westerman, Bart Rijs: Srebrenica, het zwartste 
scenario (Nederlands)
Domovina's webpage also contains information in English and scans 
of classified documents which Rijs and Westerman made available to NIOD and the 
ICTY. [Domovina.net is no longer available and was not archived.]
Formerly published at 
http://www.domovina.net/archive/2003/20031212_hptijd.php