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Brioni Agreement

The Brioni Agreement, also known as the Brioni Declaration (Croatian: Brijunska deklaracija, Serbian: Brionska deklaracija, Serbian Cyrillic: Брионска декларација, Slovene: Brionska deklaracija), is a document signed by representatives of Slovenia, Croatia, and Yugoslavia under the political sponsorship of the European Community (EC) on the Brijuni Islands on 7 July 1991. The agreement sought to create an environment in which further negotiations on the future of Yugoslavia could take place. However, ultimately it isolated the federal prime minister Ante Marković in his efforts to preserve Yugoslavia, and effectively stopped any form of federal influence over Slovenia. This meant the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) would focus on combat in Croatia, creating a precedent of redrawing international borders and staking the EC's interest in resolving the Yugoslav crisis.

Brioni Agreement
Map of Slovenia (green), Croatia (pink) and the remainder of Yugoslavia (pale yellow) at the time of the Brioni Agreement
Drafted5 July 1991
Signed7 July 1991
LocationBrijuni, Croatia
Mediators
Signatories
Parties
Full text
hr:Brijunska deklaracija at Wikisource

The agreement put an end to hostilities between the Yugoslav and Slovene forces in the Ten-Day War. Slovenia and Croatia agreed to suspend activities stemming from their 25 June declarations of independence for a period of three months. The document also resolved border control and customs inspection issues regarding Slovenia's borders, resolved air-traffic control responsibility and mandated an exchange of prisoners of war. The Brioni Agreement also formed the basis for an observer mission to monitor implementation of the agreement in Slovenia. Eleven days after the agreement was made, the federal government pulled the JNA out of Slovenia. Conversely, the agreement made no mitigating impact on fighting in Croatia.

Background

On 23 June 1991, as Slovenia and Croatia prepared to declare their independence during the breakup of Yugoslavia, the European Community (EC) foreign ministers decided the EC member states would not extend diplomatic recognition to the two states. The EC viewed the declarations as unilateral moves and offered assistance in negotiations regarding the future of the SFR Yugoslavia instead. At the same time, the EC decided to suspend direct talks with Slovenia and Croatia. The move was welcomed by the Yugoslav federal government.[1] Slovenia and Croatia declared independence on 25 June,[2][3] and the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) units began to deploy from its bases in Slovenia the next day. On 27 June, armed conflict broke out as the JNA and the Territorial Defence Force of Slovenia (TDS) began fighting over control of Slovenia's border posts, in what became the Ten-Day War.[4]

A three-strong EC delegation made three visits to the region in late June and early July to negotiate a political agreement which would facilitate further negotiations. The delegation consisted of the foreign ministers of Luxembourg, as the incumbent holder of the EC presidency, and Italy and the Netherlands, as the previous and future holders of that office.[1] The delegation members were Jacques Poos (Luxembourg), Gianni de Michelis (Italy), and Hans van den Broek (Netherlands). Prior to the delegation's arrival in Belgrade, Poos told reporters that the EC would take charge of the crisis. There, the delegation was met by Serbian president Slobodan Milošević who dismissed the prospect of Croatia leaving the Yugoslav federation because its population contained 600,000 Serbs.[2]

On 29 June, Croatia and Slovenia agreed to suspend their declarations of independence to allow time for a negotiated settlement. The EC delegation appeared to make progress when Serbia responded to the move by ceasing their opposition to the appointment of a Croatian member of the federal presidency, Stjepan Mesić, as the body's chairman on 30 June. The appearance of a success was reinforced when the JNA ordered its troops posted in Slovenia to return to their barracks.[2] On 1 July, de Michelis was replaced by João de Deus Pinheiro, the Portuguese foreign minister, to maintain the formula of current, former and future EC presidencies comprising the EC delegation as the Netherlands took over the presidency from Luxembourg, while Portugal was scheduled to assume the presidency after the Dutch.[5]

Conference at Brijuni

A further result of the EC delegation's mission were talks attended by representatives of the EC, Croatia, Slovenia, Serbia and the Yugoslav government. The talks were held at Brijuni Islands on 7 July.[2] Besides the EC delegation, headed by van den Broek,[6] five out of eight members of the federal presidency attended the talks—Mesić, Bogić Bogićević, Janez Drnovšek, Branko Kostić and Vasil Tupurkovski. The Yugoslav federal prime minister Ante Marković was also present, as were the Yugoslav federal foreign minister Budimir Lončar, interior minister Petar Gračanin and the deputy defence minister Vice Admiral Stane Brovet [sr].[7] Croatia was represented by President Franjo Tuđman while President Milan Kučan attended on behalf of Slovenia. Serbia was represented by Borisav Jović, a former Serbian member of the federal presidency who had resigned from the position on 15 June, instead of Milošević who refused to attend.[8] Starting at 8:00 a.m., the EC delegation held separate talks with Kučan and his assistants, then with Tuđman and his assistants, and finally with Jović. In the afternoon, a plenary meeting was held with the federal, Slovene and Croatian delegations in attendance, while Jović reportedly left dissatisfied with the talks.[9]

The agreement was prepared at the EC council of ministers in The Hague on 5 July.[10] It consisted of a Joint Declaration, and two annexes detailing the creation of an environment suitable to further political negotiations and guidelines for an observer mission to Yugoslavia.[11] The agreement, which became known as the Brioni Declaration or the Brioni Agreement,[12] required the JNA and the TDS to return to their bases, and stipulated that Slovene officials were to control Slovenia's borders alone and that both Slovenia and Croatia were to suspend all activities stemming from their declarations of independence for three months.[13] The observer mission set out by the Brioni Agreement materialised as the European Community Monitor Mission (ECMM) tasked with monitoring the disengagement of the JNA and the TDS in Slovenia,[12] and ultimately the withdrawal of the JNA from Slovenia.[14]

Aftermath

Even though little was agreed upon and the agreement was later interpreted differently by its signatories, the Brioni Agreement established the EC's interest in the region and the first EC Ministerial Conference on Yugoslavia was held in The Hague on 10 July.[14] The ECMM helped calm several standoffs around military barracks in Slovenia and facilitated negotiations between Slovene authorities and the JNA regarding the withdrawal of the JNA from Slovenia.[12] In Croatia, armed combat continued and the JNA shelled the city of Osijek the same evening the agreement was signed.[14] The federal presidency ordered the complete withdrawal of the JNA from Slovenia on 18 July in response to Slovene actions in breach of the Brioni Agreement.[15] The ECMM's scope of work was expanded to include Croatia on 1 September.[16] By mid-September, the war had escalated as the Croatian National Guard and police blockaded the JNA barracks and the JNA embarked on a campaign against Croatian forces.[17]

The Brioni Agreement isolated Marković who tried to preserve the federation, but was ignored by van den Broek who appeared not to comprehend issues presented before him, and the EC delegation tacitly encouraged the dissolution of Yugoslavia.[6] The agreement diminished the authority of part of the JNA's leadership who fought for the preservation of the Yugoslav federation.[18] The agreement was also unfavourable for Croatia because it was left to defend against the JNA and Serb forces.[13] By effectively removing Slovenia from influence of the federal authorities, especially the JNA, the agreement fulfilled one of the Serbian nationalists' goals, allowing the redrawing of international borders.[18] Sabrina Ramet noted that Kučan and Milošević reached an agreement in January 1991 in which Milošević gave his assurances that Slovenia's independence bid would not be opposed by Serbia. In return, Kučan expressed his understanding for Milošević's interest to create a Greater Serbia.[6]

At the time, the EC viewed the agreement as a method of defusing the crisis and failed to attribute the lull which coincided with the Brioni Agreement to a shift in Serbian strategy instead. The EC delegation's failure to respond to Jović's departure before the plenary meeting and the EC foreign ministers' declaration of 10 July indicating the EC would withdraw from mediation if the Brioni Agreement was not implemented only encouraged Serbia which, unlike Slovenia, Croatia, or the Yugoslav federation, had nothing to lose if the EC pulled out.[19] In the end, the EC took credit for a rapid resolution of the armed conflict in Slovenia without realising that its diplomatic efforts had little to do with the situation on the ground.[6]

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Ahrens 2007, p. 42
  2. ^ a b c d O'Shea 2005, p. 15
  3. ^ "Badinter Commission (for the Former Yugoslavia)". Oxford Public International Law. Retrieved 18 September 2021.
  4. ^ CIA 2002, pp. 59–60
  5. ^ Mesić 2004, p. 129
  6. ^ a b c d Stokes 2009, p. 98
  7. ^ Mesić 2004, pp. 130–131
  8. ^ Valentić 2010, p. 144
  9. ^ Mesić 2004, p. 131
  10. ^ Mesić 2004, pp. 129–131
  11. ^ UCDP, pp. 1–4
  12. ^ a b c Ahrens 2007, p. 43
  13. ^ a b Sharp 1997, p. 10
  14. ^ a b c O'Shea 2005, p. 16
  15. ^ Woodward 1995, p. 171
  16. ^ Miškulin 2010, p. 310
  17. ^ CIA 2002, pp. 95–97
  18. ^ a b Woodward 1995, p. 169
  19. ^ Libal 1997, p. 20

References

Books
Other sources
  • (PDF). Uppsala Conflict Data Program. 8 July 1991. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 March 2012. Retrieved 6 December 2010.
  • Miškulin, Ivica (October 2010). ""Sladoled i sunce" – Promatračka misija Europske zajednice i Hrvatska, 1991.–1995" ["Ice cream and sun" – European Community Monitor Mission and Croatia, 1991–1995]. Journal of Contemporary History (in Croatian). Croatian Institute of History. 42 (2): 299–337. ISSN 0590-9597.

brioni, agreement, other, uses, disambiguation, also, known, brioni, declaration, croatian, brijunska, deklaracija, serbian, brionska, deklaracija, serbian, cyrillic, Брионска, декларација, slovene, brionska, deklaracija, document, signed, representatives, slo. For other uses see Brioni Agreement disambiguation The Brioni Agreement also known as the Brioni Declaration Croatian Brijunska deklaracija Serbian Brionska deklaracija Serbian Cyrillic Brionska deklaraciјa Slovene Brionska deklaracija is a document signed by representatives of Slovenia Croatia and Yugoslavia under the political sponsorship of the European Community EC on the Brijuni Islands on 7 July 1991 The agreement sought to create an environment in which further negotiations on the future of Yugoslavia could take place However ultimately it isolated the federal prime minister Ante Markovic in his efforts to preserve Yugoslavia and effectively stopped any form of federal influence over Slovenia This meant the Yugoslav People s Army JNA would focus on combat in Croatia creating a precedent of redrawing international borders and staking the EC s interest in resolving the Yugoslav crisis Brioni AgreementMap of Slovenia green Croatia pink and the remainder of Yugoslavia pale yellow at the time of the Brioni AgreementDrafted5 July 1991Signed7 July 1991LocationBrijuni CroatiaMediatorsHans van den Broek Joao de Deus Pinheiro Jacques PoosSignatoriesFranjo Tuđman Janez Drnovsek Milan Kucan Ante Markovic Budimir Loncar Petar Gracanin Stane Brovet sr Bogic Bogicevic Branko Kostic Stjepan Mesic Vasil TupurkovskiParties Republic of Croatia Republic of Slovenia SFR YugoslaviaFull texthr Brijunska deklaracija at WikisourceThe agreement put an end to hostilities between the Yugoslav and Slovene forces in the Ten Day War Slovenia and Croatia agreed to suspend activities stemming from their 25 June declarations of independence for a period of three months The document also resolved border control and customs inspection issues regarding Slovenia s borders resolved air traffic control responsibility and mandated an exchange of prisoners of war The Brioni Agreement also formed the basis for an observer mission to monitor implementation of the agreement in Slovenia Eleven days after the agreement was made the federal government pulled the JNA out of Slovenia Conversely the agreement made no mitigating impact on fighting in Croatia Contents 1 Background 2 Conference at Brijuni 3 Aftermath 4 Footnotes 5 ReferencesBackground EditOn 23 June 1991 as Slovenia and Croatia prepared to declare their independence during the breakup of Yugoslavia the European Community EC foreign ministers decided the EC member states would not extend diplomatic recognition to the two states The EC viewed the declarations as unilateral moves and offered assistance in negotiations regarding the future of the SFR Yugoslavia instead At the same time the EC decided to suspend direct talks with Slovenia and Croatia The move was welcomed by the Yugoslav federal government 1 Slovenia and Croatia declared independence on 25 June 2 3 and the Yugoslav People s Army JNA units began to deploy from its bases in Slovenia the next day On 27 June armed conflict broke out as the JNA and the Territorial Defence Force of Slovenia TDS began fighting over control of Slovenia s border posts in what became the Ten Day War 4 A three strong EC delegation made three visits to the region in late June and early July to negotiate a political agreement which would facilitate further negotiations The delegation consisted of the foreign ministers of Luxembourg as the incumbent holder of the EC presidency and Italy and the Netherlands as the previous and future holders of that office 1 The delegation members were Jacques Poos Luxembourg Gianni de Michelis Italy and Hans van den Broek Netherlands Prior to the delegation s arrival in Belgrade Poos told reporters that the EC would take charge of the crisis There the delegation was met by Serbian president Slobodan Milosevic who dismissed the prospect of Croatia leaving the Yugoslav federation because its population contained 600 000 Serbs 2 On 29 June Croatia and Slovenia agreed to suspend their declarations of independence to allow time for a negotiated settlement The EC delegation appeared to make progress when Serbia responded to the move by ceasing their opposition to the appointment of a Croatian member of the federal presidency Stjepan Mesic as the body s chairman on 30 June The appearance of a success was reinforced when the JNA ordered its troops posted in Slovenia to return to their barracks 2 On 1 July de Michelis was replaced by Joao de Deus Pinheiro the Portuguese foreign minister to maintain the formula of current former and future EC presidencies comprising the EC delegation as the Netherlands took over the presidency from Luxembourg while Portugal was scheduled to assume the presidency after the Dutch 5 Conference at Brijuni EditA further result of the EC delegation s mission were talks attended by representatives of the EC Croatia Slovenia Serbia and the Yugoslav government The talks were held at Brijuni Islands on 7 July 2 Besides the EC delegation headed by van den Broek 6 five out of eight members of the federal presidency attended the talks Mesic Bogic Bogicevic Janez Drnovsek Branko Kostic and Vasil Tupurkovski The Yugoslav federal prime minister Ante Markovic was also present as were the Yugoslav federal foreign minister Budimir Loncar interior minister Petar Gracanin and the deputy defence minister Vice Admiral Stane Brovet sr 7 Croatia was represented by President Franjo Tuđman while President Milan Kucan attended on behalf of Slovenia Serbia was represented by Borisav Jovic a former Serbian member of the federal presidency who had resigned from the position on 15 June instead of Milosevic who refused to attend 8 Starting at 8 00 a m the EC delegation held separate talks with Kucan and his assistants then with Tuđman and his assistants and finally with Jovic In the afternoon a plenary meeting was held with the federal Slovene and Croatian delegations in attendance while Jovic reportedly left dissatisfied with the talks 9 The agreement was prepared at the EC council of ministers in The Hague on 5 July 10 It consisted of a Joint Declaration and two annexes detailing the creation of an environment suitable to further political negotiations and guidelines for an observer mission to Yugoslavia 11 The agreement which became known as the Brioni Declaration or the Brioni Agreement 12 required the JNA and the TDS to return to their bases and stipulated that Slovene officials were to control Slovenia s borders alone and that both Slovenia and Croatia were to suspend all activities stemming from their declarations of independence for three months 13 The observer mission set out by the Brioni Agreement materialised as the European Community Monitor Mission ECMM tasked with monitoring the disengagement of the JNA and the TDS in Slovenia 12 and ultimately the withdrawal of the JNA from Slovenia 14 Aftermath EditEven though little was agreed upon and the agreement was later interpreted differently by its signatories the Brioni Agreement established the EC s interest in the region and the first EC Ministerial Conference on Yugoslavia was held in The Hague on 10 July 14 The ECMM helped calm several standoffs around military barracks in Slovenia and facilitated negotiations between Slovene authorities and the JNA regarding the withdrawal of the JNA from Slovenia 12 In Croatia armed combat continued and the JNA shelled the city of Osijek the same evening the agreement was signed 14 The federal presidency ordered the complete withdrawal of the JNA from Slovenia on 18 July in response to Slovene actions in breach of the Brioni Agreement 15 The ECMM s scope of work was expanded to include Croatia on 1 September 16 By mid September the war had escalated as the Croatian National Guard and police blockaded the JNA barracks and the JNA embarked on a campaign against Croatian forces 17 The Brioni Agreement isolated Markovic who tried to preserve the federation but was ignored by van den Broek who appeared not to comprehend issues presented before him and the EC delegation tacitly encouraged the dissolution of Yugoslavia 6 The agreement diminished the authority of part of the JNA s leadership who fought for the preservation of the Yugoslav federation 18 The agreement was also unfavourable for Croatia because it was left to defend against the JNA and Serb forces 13 By effectively removing Slovenia from influence of the federal authorities especially the JNA the agreement fulfilled one of the Serbian nationalists goals allowing the redrawing of international borders 18 Sabrina Ramet noted that Kucan and Milosevic reached an agreement in January 1991 in which Milosevic gave his assurances that Slovenia s independence bid would not be opposed by Serbia In return Kucan expressed his understanding for Milosevic s interest to create a Greater Serbia 6 At the time the EC viewed the agreement as a method of defusing the crisis and failed to attribute the lull which coincided with the Brioni Agreement to a shift in Serbian strategy instead The EC delegation s failure to respond to Jovic s departure before the plenary meeting and the EC foreign ministers declaration of 10 July indicating the EC would withdraw from mediation if the Brioni Agreement was not implemented only encouraged Serbia which unlike Slovenia Croatia or the Yugoslav federation had nothing to lose if the EC pulled out 19 In the end the EC took credit for a rapid resolution of the armed conflict in Slovenia without realising that its diplomatic efforts had little to do with the situation on the ground 6 Footnotes Edit a b Ahrens 2007 p 42 a b c d O Shea 2005 p 15 Badinter Commission for the Former Yugoslavia Oxford Public International Law Retrieved 18 September 2021 CIA 2002 pp 59 60 Mesic 2004 p 129 a b c d Stokes 2009 p 98 Mesic 2004 pp 130 131 Valentic 2010 p 144 Mesic 2004 p 131 Mesic 2004 pp 129 131 UCDP pp 1 4 a b c Ahrens 2007 p 43 a b Sharp 1997 p 10 a b c O Shea 2005 p 16 Woodward 1995 p 171 Miskulin 2010 p 310 CIA 2002 pp 95 97 a b Woodward 1995 p 169 Libal 1997 p 20References EditBooksAhrens Geert Hinrich 2007 Diplomacy on the Edge Containment of Ethnic Conflict and the Minorities Working Group of the Conferences on Yugoslavia Washington D C Woodrow Wilson Center Press ISBN 978 0 8018 8557 0 Central Intelligence Agency Office of Russian and European Analysis 2002 Balkan Battlegrounds A Military History of the Yugoslav Conflict 1990 1995 Washington D C Central Intelligence Agency ISBN 978 0 16 066472 4 OCLC 50396958 Libal Michael 1997 Limits of Persuasion Germany and the Yugoslav Crisis 1991 1992 Westport Connecticut Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 275 95798 8 Mesic Stjepan 2004 The Demise of Yugoslavia A Political Memoir Budapest Hungary Central European University Press ISBN 978 963 9241 81 7 O Shea Brendan 2005 The Modern Yugoslav Conflict 1991 1995 Perception Deception and Dishonesty London England Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 35705 0 Sharp Jane M O 1997 Honest Broker Or Perfidious Albion British Policy in Former Yugoslavia London England Institute for Public Policy Research ISBN 978 1 86030 015 8 Stokes Gale 2009 Independence and the Fate of Minorities 1991 1992 In Ingrao Charles W Emmert Thomas Allan eds Confronting the Yugoslav Controversies A Scholars Initiative West Lafayette Indiana Purdue University Press pp 83 114 ISBN 978 1 55753 533 7 Valentic Mirko 2010 Rat protiv Hrvatske 1991 1995 velikosrpski projekti od ideje do realizacije War Against Croatia 1991 1995 Greater Serbia Projects from Inception to Implementation in Croatian Slavonski Brod Croatia Croatian Institute of History Department for the History of Slavonia Srijem and Baranja ISBN 978 953 6659 51 7 Woodward Susan L 1995 Balkan Tragedy Chaos and Dissolution After the Cold War Washington D C Brookings Institution Press ISBN 978 0 8157 9513 1 Other sources Brioni Declaration July 18 1991 PDF Uppsala Conflict Data Program 8 July 1991 Archived from the original PDF on 14 March 2012 Retrieved 6 December 2010 Miskulin Ivica October 2010 Sladoled i sunce Promatracka misija Europske zajednice i Hrvatska 1991 1995 Ice cream and sun European Community Monitor Mission and Croatia 1991 1995 Journal of Contemporary History in Croatian Croatian Institute of History 42 2 299 337 ISSN 0590 9597 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brioni Agreement amp oldid 1089326403, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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