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Croatian War of Independence

The Croatian War of Independence was fought from 1991 to 1995 between Croat forces loyal to the Government of Croatia—which had declared independence from the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY)—and the Serb-controlled Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) and local Serb forces, with the JNA ending its combat operations in Croatia by 1992. In Croatia, the war is primarily referred to as the "Homeland War" (Croatian: Domovinski rat) and also as the "Greater-Serbian Aggression" (Croatian: Velikosrpska agresija).[25][26] In Serbian sources, "War in Croatia" (Serbian Cyrillic: Рат у Хрватској, romanizedRat u Hrvatskoj) and (rarely) "War in Krajina" (Serbian Cyrillic: Рат у Крајини, romanizedRat u Krajini) are used.[27]

Croatian War of Independence
Part of the Yugoslav Wars

Clockwise from top left: the central street of Dubrovnik, the Stradun, in ruins during the Siege of Dubrovnik; the damaged Vukovar water tower, a symbol of the early conflict, flying the Flag of Croatia; soldiers of the Croatian Army preparing to destroy a Serbian tank; the Vukovar Memorial Cemetery; a Serbian T-55 tank destroyed on the road to Drniš
Date31 March 1991 – 12 November 1995[A 6]
(4 years, 7 months, 1 week and 5 days)
Location
Result

Croatian victory

Territorial
changes
The Croatian government gains control over the vast majority of territory previously held by rebel Serbs, with the remainder coming under UNTAES control.[A 8]
Belligerents
1991–94:
Commanders and leaders
Units involved
Strength
  • 145,000 (1991)
  • 50,000 (1995)
Casualties and losses
  • 15,007 dead or missing
    8,685 soldiers and 6,322 civilians killed or missing[20]

  • 300,000 displaced[21]

7,134 dead or missing
4,484 soldiers and 2,650 civilians killed or missing[22]

  • 1,279 soldiers killed[23]

  • 7,204 dead or missing
    3,486 soldiers, 2,677 civilians and 864 unidentified killed or missing[20]

  • 7,204–8,106 dead or missing in total

  • 300,000 displaced[24]

A majority of Croats wanted Croatia to leave Yugoslavia and become a sovereign country, while many ethnic Serbs living in Croatia, supported by Serbia,[28][29] opposed the secession and wanted Serb-claimed lands to be in a common state with Serbia. Most Serbs sought a new Serb state within a Yugoslav federation, including areas of Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina with ethnic Serb majorities or significant minorities,[30][31] and attempted to conquer as much of Croatia as possible.[32][33][34] Croatia declared independence on 25 June 1991, but agreed to postpone it with the Brioni Agreement and cut all remaining ties with Yugoslavia on 8 October 1991.

The JNA initially tried to keep Croatia within Yugoslavia by occupying all of Croatia.[35][36] After this failed, Serb forces established the self-proclaimed proto-state Republic of Serbian Krajina (RSK) within Croatia which began with the Log Revolution. After the ceasefire of January 1992 and international recognition of the Republic of Croatia as a sovereign state,[37][38] the front lines were entrenched, the United Nations Protection Force (UNPROFOR) was deployed,[39] and combat became largely intermittent in the following three years. During that time, the RSK encompassed 13,913 square kilometers (5,372 sq mi), more than a quarter of Croatia.[40] In 1995, Croatia launched two major offensives known as Operation Flash and Operation Storm;[12][41] these offensives effectively ended the war in its favor. The remaining United Nations Transitional Authority for Eastern Slavonia, Baranja and Western Sirmium (UNTAES) zone was peacefully reintegrated into Croatia by 1998.[13][17]

The war ended with Croatian victory, as it achieved the goals it had declared at the beginning of the war: independence and preservation of its borders.[12][13] Approximately 21–25% of Croatia's economy was ruined, with an estimated US$37 billion in damaged infrastructure, lost output, and refugee-related costs.[42] Over 20,000 people were killed in the war,[43] and refugees were displaced on both sides. The Serbian and Croatian governments began to progressively cooperate with each other, but tensions remain, in part due to verdicts by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and lawsuits filed by each country against the other.[44][45]

In 2007, the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) returned a guilty verdict against Milan Martić, one of the Serb leaders in Croatia, for having colluded with Slobodan Milošević and others to create a "unified Serbian state".[46] Between 2008 and 2012, the ICTY had prosecuted Croatian generals Ante Gotovina, Mladen Markač and Ivan Čermak for alleged involvement in the crimes related to Operation Storm. Čermak was acquitted outright, and the convictions of Gotovina and Markač were later overturned by an ICTY Appeals Panel.[47][48] The International Court of Justice dismissed mutual claims of genocide by Croatia and Serbia in 2015. The Court reaffirmed that, to an extent, crimes against civilians had taken place, but it ruled that specific genocidal intent was not present.[49]

Background

Political changes in Yugoslavia

 
Serbian President Slobodan Milošević wanted to retain Serb-claimed lands in Croatia within a common state with Serbia.

In the 1970s, Yugoslavia's socialist regime became severely splintered into a liberal-decentralist nationalist faction led by Croatia and Slovenia that supported a decentralized federation to give greater autonomy to Croatia and Slovenia, versus a conservative-centralist nationalist faction led by Serbia that supported a centralized federation to secure Serbia's and the Serbs' interests across Yugoslavia—as they were the largest ethnic group in the country as a whole.[50] From 1967 to 1972 in Croatia and 1968 and 1981 protests in Kosovo, nationalist doctrines and actions caused ethnic tensions that destabilized Yugoslavia.[51] The suppression by the state of nationalists is believed to have had the effect of identifying Croat nationalism as the primary alternative to communism itself and made it a strong underground movement.[52]

A crisis emerged in Yugoslavia with the weakening of the communist states in Eastern Europe towards the end of the Cold War, as symbolized by the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. In Croatia, the regional branch of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia, the League of Communists of Croatia, had lost its ideological potency.[53][54] Slovenia and Croatia wanted to move towards decentralization.[55] SR Serbia, headed by Slobodan Milošević, adhered to centralism and single-party rule, and in turn effectively ended the autonomy of the autonomous provinces of Kosovo and Vojvodina by March 1989, taking command of their votes in the Yugoslav federal presidency.[29][54][56][57] Nationalist ideas started to gain influence within the ranks of the still-ruling League of Communists, while Milošević's speeches, notably the 1989 Gazimestan speech in which he talked of "battles and quarrels", favored continuation of a unified Yugoslav state — one in which all power would continue to be centralized in Belgrade.[29][58][59]

In the autumn of 1989, the Serbian government pressured the Croatian government to allow a series of Serb nationalist rallies in the country, and the Serbian media and various Serbian intellectuals had already begun to refer to the Croatian leadership as "Ustaše", and began to make reference to genocide and other crimes committed by the Ustaše between 1941 and 1945. The Serbian political leadership approved of the rhetoric and accused the Croatian leadership of being "blindly nationalistic" when it objected.[60]

Having completed the anti-bureaucratic revolution in Vojvodina, Kosovo, and Montenegro, Serbia secured four out of eight federal presidency votes in 1991,[58] which rendered the governing body ineffective as other republics objected and called for reform of the Federation.[61] In 1989, political parties were allowed and a number of them had been founded, including the Croatian Democratic Union (Croatian: Hrvatska demokratska zajednica) (HDZ), led by Franjo Tuđman, who later became the first president of Croatia.[62] Tuđman ran on a nationalist platform[63] with a program of "national reconciliation" between Croatian communists and former Ustašes (fascists) being a key component of his party's political program.[64] Accordingly, he also integrated former Ustaše members into the party and state's apparatus.[65]

 
Croatian President Franjo Tuđman wanted Croatia to become independent from Yugoslavia.

In January 1990, the League of Communists broke up on ethnic lines, with the Croatian and Slovene factions demanding a looser federation at the 14th Extraordinary Congress. At the congress, Serbian delegates accused the Croatian and Slovene delegates of "supporting separatism, terrorism and genocide in Kosovo".[66] The Croatian and Slovene delegations, including most of their ethnic Serb members, eventually left in protest, after Serbian delegates rejected every proposed amendment.[58][67]

January 1990 also marked the beginning of court cases being brought to Yugoslavia's Constitutional Court on the matter of secession.[68] The first was the Slovenian Constitutional Amendments case after Slovenia claimed the right to unilateral secession pursuant to the right of self-determination.[69] The Constitutional Court ruled that secession from the federation was only permitted if there was the unanimous agreement of Yugoslavia's republics and autonomous provinces.[68] The Constitutional Court noted that 1974 Constitution's Section I of the Basic Principles of the Constitution identified that self-determination including secession "belonged to the peoples of Yugoslavia and their socialist republics".[68] The matter of Kosovo secession was addressed in May 1991 with the court claiming that "only the peoples of Yugoslavia" had the right to secession, Albanians were considered a minority and not a people of Yugoslavia.[68]

The 1990 survey conducted among Yugoslav citizens showed that ethnic animosity existed on a small scale.[70] Compared to the results from 25 years before, Croatia was the republic with the highest increase in ethnic distance. Furthermore, there was significant increase of ethnic distance among Serbs and Montenegrins toward Croats and Slovenes and vice versa.[70] Of all respondents, 48% of Croats said that their affiliation with Yugoslavia is very important to them.[70]

In February 1990, Jovan Rašković founded the Serb Democratic Party (SDS) in Knin, whose program aimed to change the regional division of Croatia to be aligned with ethnic Serb interests.[71] Prominent members of the RSK government, including Milan Babić and Milan Martić, later testified that Belgrade directed a propaganda campaign portraying the Serbs in Croatia as being threatened with genocide by the Croat majority.[72] On 4 March 1990, 50,000 Serbs rallied at Petrova Gora and shouted negative remarks aimed at Tuđman,[71] chanted "This is Serbia",[71] and expressed support for Milošević.[73][74]

The first free elections in Croatia and Slovenia were scheduled for a few months later.[75] The first round of elections in Croatia was held on 22 April, and the second round on 6 May.[76] The HDZ based its campaign on greater sovereignty (eventually outright independence) for Croatia, fueling a sentiment among Croats that "only the HDZ could protect Croatia from the aspirations of Milošević towards a Greater Serbia". It topped the poll in the elections (followed by Ivica Račan's reformed communists, Social Democratic Party of Croatia) and was set to form a new Croatian Government.[76]

A tense atmosphere prevailed on May 13, 1990, when a football game was held at Zagreb in Maksimir Stadium between Zagreb's Dinamo team and Belgrade's Red Star. The game erupted into violence between the Croatian and Serbian fans and with the police.[77]

On 30 May 1990, the new Croatian Parliament held its first session. President Tuđman announced his manifesto for a new Constitution (ratified at the end of the year) and a multitude of political, economic, and social changes, notably to what extent minority rights (mainly for Serbs) would be guaranteed. Local Serb politicians opposed the new constitution. In 1991, Croats represented 78.1% and Serbs 12.2% of the total population of Croatia,[78] but the latter held a disproportionate number of official posts: 17.7% of appointed officials in Croatia, including police, were Serbs. An even greater proportion of those posts had been held by Serbs in Croatia earlier, which created a perception that the Serbs were guardians of the communist regime.[79] This caused discontent among the Croats despite the fact it never actually undermined their own dominance in SR Croatia.[53] After the HDZ came to power, many Serbs employed in the public sector, especially the police, were fired and replaced by Croats.[80] This, combined with Tuđman's remarks, i.e. "Thank God my wife is not a Jew or a Serb",[81] were distorted by Milošević's media to spark fear that any form of an independent Croatia would be a new "Ustashe state". In one instance, TV Belgrade showed Tuđman shaking hands with German Chancellor Helmut Kohl (who would be the first government leader in the world to recognise independent Croatia and Slovenia) accusing the two of plotting "a Fourth Reich".[82][83] Aside from the firing of many Serbs from public sector positions, another concern among Serbs living in Croatia was the HDZ's public display of the šahovnica (Croatian checkerboard) in the Croatian coat of arms, which was associated with the fascist Ustaše regime.[84] This was a misconception as the checkerboard had a history going back to the fifteenth century and was not identical to the one that was used in the WW2-era Independent State of Croatia.[85] However, Tuđman's xenophobic rhetoric and attitude towards Croatian Serbs as well as his support for former Ustaše leaders did little to ease Serb fears.[86][87][88]

Civil unrest and demands for autonomy

Immediately after the Slovenian parliamentary election and the Croatian parliamentary election in April and May 1990, the JNA announced that the Tito-era doctrine of "general people's defense", in which each republic maintained a Territorial defense force (Serbo-Croatian: Teritorijalna obrana) (TO), would henceforth be replaced by a centrally directed system of defense. The republics would lose their role in defense matters, and their TOs would be disarmed and subordinated to JNA headquarters in Belgrade, but the new Slovenian government acted quickly to retain control over their TO.[89] On 14 May 1990, the weapons of the TO of Croatia, in Croat-majority regions, were taken away by the JNA,[90] preventing the possibility of Croatia having its own weapons as was done in Slovenia.[91][92] Borisav Jović, Serbia's representative in the Federal Presidency and a close ally of Slobodan Milošević, claimed that this action came at the behest of Serbia.[93]

According to Jović, on 27 June 1990 he and Veljko Kadijević, the Yugoslav Defence Minister, met and agreed that they should, regarding Croatia and Slovenia, "expel them forcibly from Yugoslavia, by simply drawing borders and declaring that they have brought this upon themselves through their decisions". According to Jović, the next day he obtained the agreement of Milošević.[94] However, Kadijević, of mixed Serb-Croat heritage and a Yugoslav Partisan in World War II, was loyal to Yugoslavia and not a Greater Serbia; Kadijević believed that if Slovenia left Yugoslavia the state would collapse and thus he discussed with Jović about possibly using the JNA to impose martial law in Slovenia to prevent this potential collapse and was willing to wage war with the secessionist republics to prevent their secession.[95] Kadijević considered the political crisis and ethnic conflict to have been caused by the actions of foreign governments, particularly Germany, which he accused of seeking to break up Yugoslavia to allow Germany to exercise a sphere of influence in the Balkans.[96] Kadijević regarded the Croatian government of Tuđman to be a fascist-inspired and that Serbs had the right to be protected from Croatian "armed formations".[96]

After the election of Tuđman and the HDZ, a Serb Assembly was established in Srb, north of Knin, on 25 July 1990 as the political representation of the Serb people in Croatia. The Serb Assembly declared "sovereignty and autonomy of the Serb people in Croatia".[97]

The new Croatian government implemented policies that were seen as openly nationalistic and anti-Serbian in nature, such as the removal of the Serbian Cyrillic script from correspondence in public offices.[98][99]

Greater Serbian circles have no interest in protecting the Serbian people living in either Croatia or Bosnia or anywhere else. If that were the case, then we could look and see what it is in the Croatian constitution, see what is in the declaration on minorities, on the Serbs in Croatia and on minorities, because the Serbs are treated separately there. Let us see if the Serbs have less rights than the Croats in Croatia. That would be protecting the Serbs in Croatia. But that is not what is sought. Gentlemen, what they want is territory.

Stjepan Mesić on Belgrade's intentions in the war[100]

In August 1990, an unrecognized mono-ethnic referendum was held in regions with a substantial Serb population which would later become known as the Republic of Serbian Krajina (RSK) (bordering western Bosnia and Herzegovina) on the question of Serb "sovereignty and autonomy" in Croatia.[101] This was an attempt to counter changes made to the constitution. The Croatian government sent police forces to police stations in Serb-populated areas to seize their weapons. Among other incidents, local Serbs from the southern hinterlands of Croatia, mostly around the city of Knin, blocked roads to tourist destinations in Dalmatia. This incident is known as the "Log Revolution".[102][103] Years later, during Martić's trial, Babić claimed he was tricked by Martić into agreeing to the Log Revolution, and that it and the entire war in Croatia was Martić's responsibility, and had been orchestrated by Belgrade.[104] The statement was corroborated by Martić in an interview published in 1991.[105] Babić confirmed that by July 1991 Milošević had taken over control of the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA).[106] The Croatian government responded to the blockade of roads by sending special police teams in helicopters to the scene, but were intercepted by SFR Yugoslav Air Force fighter jets and forced to turn back to Zagreb. The Serbs felled pine trees or used bulldozers to block roads to seal off towns like Knin and Benkovac near the Adriatic coast. On 18 August 1990, the Serbian newspaper Večernje novosti claimed "almost two million Serbs were ready to go to Croatia to fight".[102]

On 21 December 1990, the SAO Krajina was proclaimed by the municipalities of the regions of Northern Dalmatia and Lika, in south-western Croatia. Article 1 of the Statute of the SAO Krajina defined the SAO Krajina as "a form of territorial autonomy within the Republic of Croatia" in which the Constitution of the Republic of Croatia, state laws, and the Statute of the SAO Krajina were applied.[97][107]

On 22 December 1990, the Parliament of Croatia ratified the new constitution,[108] which was seen by Serbs as taking away rights that had been granted by the Socialist constitution.[109] The constitution did define Croatia as "the national state of the Croatian nation and a state of members of other nations and minorities who are its citizens: Serbs ... who are guaranteed equality with citizens of Croatian nationality ..."[97]

Following Tuđman's election and the perceived threat from the new constitution,[108] Serb nationalists in the Kninska Krajina region began taking armed action against Croatian government officials. Croatian government property throughout the region was increasingly controlled by local Serb municipalities or the newly established "Serbian National Council". This would later become the government of the breakaway Republic of Serbian Krajina (RSK).[97]

After it was discovered that Martin Špegelj had pursued a campaign to acquire arms through the black market in January 1991 an ultimatum was issued requesting disarming and disbanding of Croatian military forces considered illegal by the Yugoslav authorities.[110][111] Croatian authorities refused to comply, and the Yugoslav army withdrew the ultimatum six days after it was issued.[112][113]

On 12 March 1991, the leadership of the Army met with the Presidency of the SFRY in an attempt to convince them to declare a state of emergency which would allow for the army to take control of the country. Yugoslav army chief Veljko Kadijević declared that there was a conspiracy to destroy the country, saying:

An insidious plan has been drawn up to destroy Yugoslavia. Stage one is civil war. Stage two is foreign intervention. Then puppet regimes will be set up throughout Yugoslavia.

— Veljko Kadijević, 12 March 1991.[114]

Jović claims that Kadijević and the Army in March 1991 supported a coup d'état as a way out of the crisis but then changed their minds four days later.[115] Kadijević's response to this was that "Jović is lying".[115] Kadijević claims he was invited to a meeting in March 1991 in Jović's office, two days after huge protests organized by Vuk Drašković on the streets of Belgrade, where Milošević, according to Kadijević, requested that the army take control of the country through a military coup.[115] Kadijević's apparent response was to inform Milošević that he could not make such a decision by himself, and that he'd discuss the request with army leaders and later inform Jović's office about their decision.[115] Kadijević then said that their decision was against the putsch and that he informed Jović's office in written form about it.[115] Jović claims that such document doesn't exist.[115]

Ante Marković has described that after the Presidency meeting failed to achieve the results the Army wanted that Kadijević met with him with the proposed coup d'état against the secessionist republics.[116] During the meeting Marković responded to Kadijević by saying that the plan failed to arrest Milošević.[116] Kadijević replied "He is only one fighting for Yugoslavia. Without him, we could not be proposing this." Marković rejected the plan and afterwards communication between Kadijević and Marković broke down.[116]

Military forces

Serb and Yugoslav People's Army forces

 
Map of the strategic offensive plan of the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) in 1991 as interpreted by the US Central Intelligence Agency

The JNA was initially formed during World War II to carry out guerrilla warfare against occupying Axis forces. The success of the Partisan movement led to the JNA basing much of its operational strategy on guerrilla warfare, as its plans normally entailed defending against NATO or Warsaw Pact attacks, where other types of warfare would put the JNA in a comparatively poor position. That approach led to maintenance of a Territorial Defense system.[117]

On paper, the JNA seemed a powerful force, with 2,000 tanks and 300 jet aircraft (mainly Soviet or locally produced). However, by 1991, the majority of this equipment was 30 years old, as the force consisted primarily of T-54/55 tanks and MiG-21 aircraft.[118] Still, the JNA operated around 300 M-84 tanks (a Yugoslav version of the Soviet T-72) and a sizable fleet of ground-attack aircraft, such as the Soko G-4 Super Galeb and the Soko J-22 Orao, whose armament included AGM-65 Maverick guided missiles.[119] By contrast, more modern cheap anti-tank missiles (like the AT-5) and anti-aircraft missiles (like the SA-14) were abundant and were designed to destroy much more advanced weaponry. Before the war the JNA had 169,000 regular troops, including 70,000 professional officers. The fighting in Slovenia brought about a great number of desertions, and the army responded by mobilizing Serbian reserve troops. Approximately 100,000 evaded the draft, and the new conscripts proved an ineffective fighting force. The JNA resorted to reliance on irregular militias.[120] Paramilitary units like the White Eagles, Serbian Guard, Dušan Silni, and Serb Volunteer Guard, which committed a number of massacres against Croat and other non-Serbs civilians, were increasingly used by the Yugoslav and Serb forces.[121][122] There were also foreign fighters supporting the RSK, mostly from Russia.[123] With the retreat of the JNA forces in 1992, JNA units were reorganized as the Army of Serb Krajina, which was a direct heir to the JNA organization, with little improvement.[6][124]

By 1991, the JNA officer corps was dominated by Serbs and Montenegrins; they were overrepresented in Yugoslav federal institutions, especially the army. 57.1% of JNA officers were Serbs, while Serbs formed 36.3% of the population of Yugoslavia.[79] A similar structure was observed as early as 1981.[125] Even though the two peoples combined comprised 38.8% of the population of Yugoslavia, 70% of all JNA officers and non-commissioned officers were either Serbs or Montenegrins.[126] In July 1991, the JNA was instructed to "completely eliminate Croats and Slovenes from the army", most of whom had already begun to desert en masse.[why?][127]

Croatian forces

 
The Croatian military eased their equipment shortage by seizing the JNA barracks in the Battle of the Barracks.

The Croatian military was in a much worse state than that of the Serbs. In the early stages of the war, lack of military units meant that the Croatian Police force would take the brunt of the fighting. The Croatian National Guard (Croatian: Zbor narodne garde), the new Croatian military, was formed on 11 April 1991, and gradually developed into the Croatian Army (Croatian: Hrvatska vojska) by 1993. Weaponry was in short supply, and many units were either unarmed or were equipped with obsolete World War II-era rifles. The Croatian Army had only a handful of tanks, including World War II-surplus vehicles such as the T-34, and its Air Force was in an even worse state, consisting of only a few Antonov An-2 biplane crop-dusters that had been converted to drop makeshift bombs.[128][129]

In August 1991, the Croatian Army had fewer than 20 brigades. After general mobilization was instituted in October, the size of the army grew to 60 brigades and 37 independent battalions by the end of the year.[130][131] In 1991 and 1992, Croatia was also supported by 456 foreign fighters, including British (139), French (69), and German (55).[132] The seizure of the JNA's barracks between September and December helped to alleviate the Croatians' equipment shortage.[133][134] By 1995, the balance of power had shifted significantly. Serb forces in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina were capable of fielding an estimated 130,000 troops; the Croatian Army, Croatian Defence Council (Croatian: Hrvatsko vijeće obrane) (HVO), and the Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina could field a combined force of 250,000 soldiers and 570 tanks.[135][136]

Course of the war

1991: Open hostilities begin

First armed incidents

 
A monument to Josip Jović, widely perceived in Croatia as the first Croatian victim of the war, who died during the Plitvice Lakes incident

Ethnic hatred grew as various incidents fueled the propaganda machines on both sides. During his testimony before the ICTY, one of the top Krajina leaders, Milan Martić, stated that the Serb side started using force first.[137]

The conflict escalated into armed incidents in the majority-Serb populated areas. The Serbs attacked Croatian police units in Pakrac in early March,[10][138] while one Josip Jović is widely reported as the first police officer killed by Serb forces as part of the war, during the Plitvice Lakes incident in late March 1991.[11][139]

In March and April 1991, Serbs in Croatia began to make moves to secede from that territory. It is a matter of debate to what extent this move was locally motivated and to what degree the Milošević-led Serbian government was involved. In any event, the SAO Krajina was declared, which consisted of any Croatian territory with a substantial Serb population. The Croatian government viewed this move as a rebellion.[97][140][141]

From the beginning of the Log Revolution and the end of April 1991, nearly 200 incidents involving the use of explosive devices and 89 attacks on the Croatian police were recorded.[29] The Croatian Ministry of the Interior started arming an increasing number of special police forces, and this led to the building of a real army. On 9 April 1991, Croatian President Tuđman ordered the special police forces to be renamed Zbor Narodne Garde ("National Guard"); this marks the creation of a separate military of Croatia.[142]

Significant clashes from this period included the siege of Kijevo, where over a thousand people were besieged in the inner Dalmatian village of Kijevo, and the Borovo Selo killings, where Croatian policemen engaged Serb paramilitaries in the eastern Slavonian village of Borovo and suffered twelve casualties.[143] Violence gripped eastern Slavonian villages: in Tovarnik, a Croat policeman was killed by Serb paramilitaries on 2 May, while in Sotin, a Serb civilian was killed on 5 May when he was caught in a crossfire between Serb and Croat paramilitaries.[143] On 6 May, the 1991 protest in Split against the siege of Kijevo at the Navy Command in Split resulted in the death of a Yugoslav People's Army soldier.

On 15 May, Stjepan Mesić, a Croat, was scheduled to be the chairman of the rotating presidency of Yugoslavia. Serbia, aided by Kosovo, Montenegro, and Vojvodina, whose presidency votes were at that time under Serbian control, blocked the appointment, which was otherwise seen as largely ceremonial. This maneuver technically left Yugoslavia without a head of state and without a commander-in-chief.[144][145] Two days later, a repeated attempt to vote on the issue failed. Ante Marković, prime minister of Yugoslavia at the time, proposed appointing a panel which would wield presidential powers.[146] It was not immediately clear who the panel members would be, apart from defense minister Veljko Kadijević, nor who would fill position of JNA commander-in-chief. The move was quickly rejected by Croatia as unconstitutional.[147] The crisis was resolved after a six-week stalemate, and Mesić was elected president — the first non-communist to become Yugoslav head of state in decades.[148]

Throughout this period, the federal army, the JNA, and the local Territorial Defense Forces continued to be led by federal authorities controlled by Milošević. Helsinki Watch reported that Serb Krajina authorities executed Serbs who were willing to reach an accommodation with Croat officials.[29]

Declaration of independence

On 19 May 1991, the Croatian authorities held a referendum on independence with the option of remaining in Yugoslavia as a looser union.[149] Serb local authorities issued calls for a boycott, which were largely followed by Croatian Serbs. The referendum passed with 94% in favor.[150]

The newly constituted Croatian military units held a military parade and review at Stadion Kranjčevićeva in Zagreb on 28 May 1991.[151]

The parliament of Croatia declared Croatia's independence and dissolved its association with Yugoslavia on 25 June 1991.[2][152] The Croatian parliament's decision was partially boycotted by left-wing parliament deputies.[153] The European Community and the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe urged Croatian authorities to place a three-month moratorium on the decision.[154]

The government of Yugoslavia responded to the declarations of independence of Croatia and Slovenia with Yugoslav Prime Minister Ante Marković declaring the secessions to be illegal and contrary to the Constitution of Yugoslavia, and supported the JNA taking action to secure the integral unity of Yugoslavia.[155]

In June and July 1991, the short armed conflict in Slovenia came to a speedy end, partly because of the ethnic homogeneity of the population of Slovenia.[152] It was later revealed that a military strike against Slovenia, followed by a planned withdrawal, was conceived by Slobodan Milošević and Borisav Jović, then president of the SFR Yugoslavia presidency. Jović published his diary containing the information and repeated it in his testimony at the Milošević trial at the ICTY.[127]

Croatia agreed to the Brioni Agreement that involved freezing its independence declaration for three months, which eased tensions a little.[3]

Escalation of the conflict

 
 
In the first stages of war, Croatian cities were extensively shelled by the JNA. Bombardment damage in Dubrovnik: Stradun in the walled city (left) and map of the walled city with the damage marked (right)

In July, in an attempt to salvage what remained of Yugoslavia, JNA forces were involved in operations against predominantly Croat areas. In July the Serb-led Territorial Defence Forces started their advance on Dalmatian coastal areas in Operation Coast-91.[156] By early August, large areas of Banovina were overrun by Serb forces.[157]

With the start of military operations in Croatia, Croats and a number of Serbian conscripts started to desert the JNA en masse, similar to what had happened in Slovenia.[156][158] Albanians and Macedonians started to search for a way to legally leave the JNA or serve their conscription term in Macedonia; these moves further homogenized the ethnic composition of JNA troops in or near Croatia.[159]

One month after Croatia declared its independence, the Yugoslav army and other Serb forces held something less than one-third of the Croatian territory,[157] mostly in areas with a predominantly ethnic Serb population.[160][161] The JNA military strategy partly consisted of extensive shelling, at times irrespective of the presence of civilians.[162] As the war progressed, the cities of Dubrovnik, Gospić, Šibenik, Zadar, Karlovac, Sisak, Slavonski Brod, Osijek, Vinkovci, and Vukovar all came under attack by Yugoslav forces.[163][164][165][166] The United Nations (UN) imposed a weapons embargo; this did not affect JNA-backed Serb forces significantly, as they had the JNA arsenal at their disposal, but it caused serious trouble for the newly formed Croatian army. The Croatian government started smuggling weapons over its borders.[167][168]

We will soon gain control of Petrinja, Karlovac and Zadar because it has been shown that it is in our interest and the interest of the army to have a large port.

Milan Martić, August 19, 1991, on the expansion of Republic of Serbian Krajina at Croatia's expense[105]

In August 1991, the Battle of Vukovar began.[169][170] Eastern Slavonia was gravely impacted throughout this period, starting with the Dalj massacre,[171] and fronts developed around Osijek and Vinkovci in parallel to the encirclement of Vukovar.[172][173][174][175] In September, Serbian troops completely surrounded the city of Vukovar. Croatian troops, including the 204th Vukovar Brigade, entrenched themselves within the city and held their ground against elite armored and mechanized brigades of the JNA, as well as Serb paramilitary units.[176][177] Vukovar was almost completely devastated; 15,000 houses were destroyed.[178] Some ethnic Croatian civilians had taken shelter inside the city. Other members of the civilian population fled the area en masse. Death toll estimates for Vukovar as a result of the siege range from 1,798 to 5,000.[122] A further 22,000 were exiled from Vukovar immediately after the town was captured.[178][179]

Some estimates include 220,000 Croats and 300,000 Serbs internally displaced for the duration of the war in Croatia.[24] In many areas, large numbers of civilians were forced out by the military. It was at this time that the term ethnic cleansing—the meaning of which ranged from eviction to murder—first entered the English lexicon.[180]

 
The JNA breakthrough in eastern Slavonia, September 1991–-January 1992

On October 3, the Yugoslav Navy renewed its blockade of the main ports of Croatia. This move followed months of standoff for JNA positions in Dalmatia and elsewhere now known as the Battle of the Barracks. It also coincided with the end of Operation Coast-91, in which the JNA failed to occupy the coastline in an attempt to cut off Dalmatia's access to the rest of Croatia.[181]

On October 5, President Tuđman made a speech in which he called upon the whole population to mobilize and defend against "Greater Serbian imperialism" pursued by the Serb-led JNA, Serbian paramilitary formations, and rebel Serb forces.[131] On 7 October, the Yugoslav air force attacked the main government building in Zagreb, an incident referred to as the bombing of the Banski Dvori.[182][183] The next day, as a previously agreed three-month moratorium on implementation of the declaration of independence expired, the Croatian Parliament severed all remaining ties with Yugoslavia. 8 October is now celebrated as Independence Day in Croatia.[4] The bombing of the government offices and the Siege of Dubrovnik that started in October[184] were contributing factors that led to European Union (EU) sanctions against Serbia.[185][186] On 15 October after the capture of Cavtat by the JNA, local Serbs led by Aco Apolonio proclaimed the Dubrovnik Republic.[187] The international media focused on the damage to Dubrovnik's cultural heritage; concerns about civilian casualties and pivotal battles such as the one in Vukovar were pushed out of public view. Nonetheless, artillery attacks on Dubrovnik damaged 56% of its buildings to some degree, as the historic walled city, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, sustained 650 hits by artillery rounds.[188]

Peak of the war

 
Croatian internally displaced persons near Dubrovnik in December 1991

In response to the 5th JNA Corps advance across the Sava River towards Pakrac and further north into western Slavonia,[189] the Croatian army began a successful counterattack in early November 1991, its first major offensive operation of the war. Operation Otkos 10 (31 October to 4 November) resulted in Croatia recapturing an area between the Bilogora and Papuk mountains.[190][191] The Croatian Army recaptured approximately 270 square kilometers (100 sq mi) of territory in this operation.[191]

The Vukovar massacre took place in November;[192][193] the survivors were transported to prison camps such as Ovčara and Velepromet, with the majority ending up in Sremska Mitrovica prison camp.[194] The sustained siege of Vukovar attracted heavy international media attention. Many international journalists were in or near Vukovar, as was UN peace mediator Cyrus Vance, who had been Secretary of State to former US President Carter.[195]

Also in eastern Slavonia, the Lovas massacre occurred in October[121][196] and the Erdut massacre in November 1991, before and after the fall of Vukovar.[197] At the same time, the Škabrnja massacre and Gospić massacre occurred in the Dalmatian hinterland.[198]

Croats became refugees in their own country.

Mirko Kovač on the 10th anniversary of the end of the Croatian War[199]

On 14 November, the Navy blockade of Dalmatian ports was challenged by civilian ships. The confrontation culminated in the Battle of the Dalmatian channels, when Croatian coastal and island based artillery damaged, sank, or captured a number of Yugoslav navy vessels, including Mukos PČ 176, later rechristened PB 62 Šolta.[200] After the battle, the Yugoslav naval operations were effectively limited to the southern Adriatic.[201]

Croatian forces made further advances in the second half of December, including Operation Orkan 91. In the course of Orkan '91, the Croatian army recaptured approximately 1,440 square kilometers (560 sq mi) of territory.[191] The end of the operation marked the end of a six-month-long phase of intense fighting: 10,000 people had died; hundreds of thousands had fled and tens of thousands of homes had been destroyed.[202]

 
Photos of the victims of the Lovas massacre

On December 19, as the intensity of the fighting increased, Croatia won its first diplomatic recognition by a western nation—Iceland—while the Serbian Autonomous Oblasts in Krajina and western Slavonia officially declared themselves the Republic of Serbian Krajina.[32] Four days later, Germany recognized Croatian independence.[37] On December 26, 1991, the Serb-dominated federal presidency announced plans for a smaller Yugoslavia that could include the territory captured from Croatia during the war.[33]

However, on December 21, 1991 for the first time in the war Istria was under attack.[203] The Serbian Forces attacked the airport near the city of Vrsar, situated in the south-western of the peninsula between the city of Poreč and Rovinj, with two MiG-21 and two Galeb G-2.[204] Afterwards, Yugoslav airplanes carpet bombed Vrsar's Crljenka airport, resulting in two deaths.[205] Mediated by foreign diplomats, ceasefires were frequently signed and frequently broken. Croatia lost much territory, but expanded the Croatian Army from the seven brigades it had at the time of the first ceasefire to 60 brigades and 37 independent battalions by December 31, 1991.[130]

 
A destroyed T-34-85 tank in Karlovac, 1992

The Arbitration Commission of the Peace Conference on Yugoslavia, also referred to as Badinter Arbitration Committee, was set up by the Council of Ministers of the European Economic Community (EEC) on August 27, 1991, to provide the Conference on Yugoslavia with legal advice. The five-member Commission consisted of presidents of Constitutional Courts in the EEC. Starting in late November 1991, the committee rendered ten opinions. The Commission stated, among other things, that SFR Yugoslavia was in the process of dissolution and that the internal boundaries of Yugoslav republics may not be altered unless freely agreed upon.[1]

Factors in favour of Croatia's preservation of its pre-war borders were the Yugoslav Federal Constitution Amendments of 1971, and the Yugoslav Federal Constitution of 1974. The 1971 amendments introduced a concept that sovereign rights were exercised by the federal units, and that the federation had only the authority specifically transferred to it by the constitution. The 1974 Constitution confirmed and strengthened the principles introduced in 1971.[206][207] The borders had been defined by demarcation commissions in 1947, pursuant to decisions of AVNOJ in 1943 and 1945 regarding the federal organization of Yugoslavia.[208]

1992: Ceasefire

class=notpageimage|
Occupied areas in Croatia (January 1992)

A new UN-sponsored ceasefire, the fifteenth in just six months, was agreed on January 2, 1992, and came into force the next day.[6] This so-called Sarajevo Agreement became a lasting ceasefire. Croatia was officially recognized by the European Community on January 15, 1992.[37] Even though the JNA began to withdraw from Croatia, including Krajina, the RSK clearly retained the upper hand in the occupied territories due to support from Serbia.[124] By that time, the RSK encompassed 13,913 square kilometers (5,372 sq mi) of territory.[40] The area size did not encompass another 680 square kilometers (260 sq mi) of occupied territory near Dubrovnik, as that area was not considered part of the RSK.[209]

Ending the series of unsuccessful ceasefires, the UN deployed a protection force in Serbian-held Croatia—the United Nations Protection Force (UNPROFOR)—to supervise and maintain the agreement.[210] The UNPROFOR was officially created by UN Security Council Resolution 743 on February 21, 1992.[39] The warring parties mostly moved to entrenched positions, and the JNA soon retreated from Croatia into Bosnia and Herzegovina, where a new conflict was anticipated.[6] Croatia became a member of the UN on May 22, 1992, which was conditional upon Croatia amending its constitution to protect the human rights of minority groups and dissidents.[38] Expulsions of the non-Serb civilian population remaining in the occupied territories continued despite the presence of the UNPROFOR peacekeeping troops, and in some cases, with UN troops being virtually enlisted as accomplices.[211]

The Yugoslav People's Army took thousands of prisoners during the war in Croatia, and interned them in camps in Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Montenegro. The Croatian forces also captured some Serbian prisoners, and the two sides agreed to several prisoner exchanges; most prisoners were freed by the end of 1992. Some infamous prisons included the Sremska Mitrovica camp, the Stajićevo camp, and the Begejci camp in Serbia, and the Morinj camp in Montenegro.[212] The Croatian Army also established detention camps, such as the Lora prison camp in Split.[212]

 
Croatian soldiers capture a Serb cannon and truck in the Miljevci plateau incident, June 21, 1992

Armed conflict in Croatia continued intermittently on a smaller scale. There were several smaller operations undertaken by Croatian forces to relieve the siege of Dubrovnik, and other Croatian cities (Šibenik, Zadar and Gospić) from Krajina forces. Battles included the Miljevci plateau incident (between Krka and Drniš), on June 21–22, 1992,[213] Operation Jaguar at Križ Hill near Bibinje and Zadar, on May 22, 1992, and a series of military actions in the Dubrovnik hinterland: Operation Tigar, on 1–13 July 1992,[214] in Konavle, on 20–24 September 1992, and at Vlaštica on September 22–25, 1992. Combat near Dubrovnik was followed by the withdrawal of JNA from Konavle, between September 30 and October 20, 1992. The Prevlaka peninsula guarding entrance to the Bay of Kotor was demilitarized and turned over to the UNPROFOR, while the remainder of Konavle was restored to the Croatian authorities.[215]

1993: Croatian military advances

Fighting was renewed at the beginning of 1993, as the Croatian army launched Operation Maslenica, an offensive operation in the Zadar area on January 22. The objective of the attack was to improve the strategic situation in that area, as it targeted the city airport and the Maslenica Bridge,[216] the last entirely overland link between Zagreb and the city of Zadar until the bridge area was captured in September 1991.[217] The attack proved successful as it met its declared objectives,[218] but at a high cost, as 114 Croat and 490 Serb soldiers were killed in a relatively limited theater of operations.[219]

While Operation Maslenica was in progress, Croatian forces attacked Serb positions 130 kilometers (81 mi) to the east. They advanced towards the Peruća Hydroelectric Dam and captured it by January 28, 1993, shortly after Serb militiamen chased away the UN peacekeepers protecting the dam.[220] UN forces had been present at the site since the summer of 1992. They discovered that the Serbs had planted 35 to 37 tons of explosives spread over seven different sites on the dam in a way that prevented the explosives' removal; the charges were left in place.[220][221] Retreating Serb forces detonated three of explosive charges totaling 5 tons within the 65-meter (213 ft) high dam in an attempt to cause it to fail and flood the area downstream.[221][222] The disaster was prevented by Mark Nicholas Gray, a colonel in the British Royal Marines, a lieutenant at the time, who was a UN military observer at the site. He risked being disciplined for acting beyond his authority by lowering the reservoir level, which held 0.54 cubic kilometers (0.13 cu mi) of water, before the dam was blown up. His action saved the lives of 20,000 people who would otherwise have drowned or become homeless.[223]

Operation Medak Pocket took place in a salient south of Gospić, from September 9–17. The offensive was undertaken by the Croatian army to stop Serbian artillery in the area from shelling nearby Gospić.[224] The operation met its stated objective of removing the artillery threat, as Croatian troops overran the salient, but it was marred by war crimes. The ICTY later indicted Croatian officers for war crimes. The operation was halted amid international pressure, and an agreement was reached that the Croatian troops were to withdraw to positions held prior to September 9, while UN troops were to occupy the salient alone. The events that followed remain controversial, as Canadian authorities reported that the Croatian army intermittently fought against the advancing Canadian Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry before finally retreating after sustaining 27 fatalities.[225] The Croatian ministry of defense and UN officer's testimonies given during the Ademi-Norac trial deny that the battle occurred.[226][227][228][229]

Ethnic make-up of the Republic of Serbian Krajina (1991–1993)
Ethnic group 1991[230] 1993[231]
Serbs 245,800 (52.3%) 398,900 (92%)
Croats 168,026 (35.8%) 30,300 (7%)
Others 55,895 (11.9%) 4,395 (1%)
Total 469,721 433,595

On February 18, 1993, Croatian authorities signed the Daruvar Agreement with local Serb leaders in Western Slavonia. The aim of the secret agreement was normalizing life for local populations near the frontline. However, authorities in Knin learned of this and arrested the Serb leaders responsible.[232] In June 1993, Serbs began voting in a referendum on merging Krajina territory with Republika Srpska.[202] Milan Martić, acting as the RSK interior minister, advocated a merger of the "two Serbian states as the first stage in the establishment of a state of all Serbs" in his April 3 letter to the Assembly of the Republika Srpska. On January 21, 1994, Martić stated that he would "speed up the process of unification and pass on the baton to all Serbian leader Slobodan Milošević" if elected president of the RSK".[233] These intentions were countered by the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) Resolution 871 in October 1993, when the UNSC affirmed for the first time that the United Nations Protected Areas, i.e. the RSK held areas, were an integral part of the Republic of Croatia.[234]

During 1992 and 1993, an estimated 225,000 Croats, as well as refugees from Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia, settled in Croatia. Croatian volunteers and some conscripted soldiers participated in the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina.[235] In September 1992, Croatia had accepted 335,985 refugees from Bosnia and Herzegovina, most of whom were Bosniak civilians (excluding men of drafting age).[236] The large number of refugees significantly strained the Croatian economy and infrastructure.[237] The American Ambassador to Croatia, Peter Galbraith, tried to put the number of Muslim refugees in Croatia into a proper perspective in an interview on 8 November 1993. He said the situation would be the equivalent of the United States taking in 30,000,000 refugees.[238]

1994: Erosion of support for Krajina

 
Map of the Bihać enclave

In 1992, the Croat-Bosniak conflict erupted in Bosnia and Herzegovina, just as each was fighting with the Bosnian Serbs. The war was originally fought between the Croatian Defence Council and Croatian volunteer troops on one side and the Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina (ARBiH) on the other, but by 1994, the Croatian Army had an estimated 3,000 to 5,000 troops involved in the fighting.[239] Under pressure from the United States,[240] the belligerents agreed on a truce in late February,[241] followed by a meeting of Croatian, Bosnian, and Bosnian Croat representatives with US Secretary of State Warren Christopher in Washington, D.C. on February 26, 1994. On March 4, Franjo Tuđman endorsed the agreement providing for the creation of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and an alliance between Bosnian and Croatian armies against the Serb forces.[7][242] This led to the dismantling of Herzeg-Bosnia and reduced the number of warring factions in Bosnia and Herzegovina from three to two.[243]

In late 1994, the Croatian Army intervened in Bosnia from November 1–3, in Operation Cincar near Kupres,[14] and from November 29 – December 24 in the Winter '94 operation near Dinara and Livno.[15][16] These operations were undertaken to detract from the siege of the Bihać region and to approach the RSK capital of Knin from the north, isolating it on three sides.[135]

During this time, unsuccessful negotiations mediated by the UN were under way between the Croatian and RSK governments. The matters under discussion included opening the Serb-occupied part of the Zagreb–Slavonski Brod motorway near Okučani to transit traffic, as well as the putative status of Serbian-majority areas within Croatia. The motorway initially reopened at the end of 1994, but it was soon closed again due to security issues. Repeated failures to resolve the two disputes would serve as triggers for major Croatian offensives in 1995.[244]

At the same time, the Krajina army continued the Siege of Bihać, together with the Army of Republika Srpska from Bosnia.[245] Michael Williams, an official of the UN peacekeeping force, said that when the village of Vedro Polje west of Bihać had fallen to a RSK unit in late November 1994, the siege entered the final stage. He added that heavy tank and artillery fire against the town of Velika Kladuša in the north of the Bihać enclave was coming from the RSK. Western military analysts said that among the array of Serbian surface-to-air missile systems that surrounded the Bihać pocket on Croatian territory, there was a modern SAM-2 system probably brought there from Belgrade.[246] In response to the situation, the Security Council passed Resolution 958, which allowed NATO aircraft deployed as a part of the Operation Deny Flight to operate in Croatia. On November 21, NATO attacked the Udbina airfield controlled by the RSK, temporarily disabling runways. Following the Udbina strike, NATO continued to launch strikes in the area, and on November 23, after a NATO reconnaissance plane was illuminated by the radar of a surface-to-air missile (SAM) system, NATO planes attacked a SAM site near Dvor with AGM-88 HARM anti-radiation missiles.[247]

In later campaigns, the Croatian army would pursue a variant of blitzkrieg tactics, with the Guard brigades punching through the enemy lines while the other units simply held the lines at other points and completed an encirclement of the enemy units.[130][135] In a further attempt to bolster its armed forces, Croatia hired Military Professional Resources Inc. (MPRI) in September 1994 to train some of its officers and NCOs.[248] Begun in January 1995, MPRI's assignment involved fifteen advisors who taught basic officer leadership skills and training management. MPRI activities were reviewed in advance by the US State Department to ensure they did not involve tactical training or violate the UN arms embargo still in place.[249]

1995: End of the war

Tensions were renewed at the beginning of 1995 as Croatia sought to put increasing pressure on the RSK. In a five-page letter on 12 January Franjo Tuđman formally told the UN Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali that Croatia was ending the agreement permitting the stationing of UNPROFOR in Croatia, effective 31 March. The move was purportedly motivated by actions by Serbia and the Serb-dominated Federal Republic of Yugoslavia to provide assistance to the Serb occupation of Croatia and allegedly integrate the occupied areas into Yugoslav territory. The situation was noted and addressed by the UN General Assembly:[250]

... regarding the situation in Croatia, and to respect strictly its territorial integrity, and in this regard concludes that their activities aimed at achieving the integration of the occupied territories of Croatia into the administrative, military, educational, transportation and communication systems of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro) are illegal, null and void, and must cease immediately.[251]

— The United Nations General Assembly resolution 1994/43, regarding to the occupied territories of Croatia
 

International peacemaking efforts continued, and a new peace plan called the Z-4 plan was presented to Croatian and Krajina authorities. There was no initial Croatian response, and the Serbs flatly refused the proposal.[252] As the deadline for UNPROFOR to pull out neared, a new UN peacekeeping mission was proposed with an increased mandate to patrol Croatia's internationally recognized borders. Initially the Serbs opposed the move, and tanks were moved from Serbia into eastern Croatia.[253] A settlement was finally reached, and the new UN peacekeeping mission was approved by United Nations Security Council Resolution 981 on March 31. The name of the mission was the subject of a last-minute dispute, as Croatian Foreign Minister Mate Granić insisted that the word Croatia be added to the force's name. The name United Nations Confidence Restoration Operation in Croatia (UNCRO) was approved.[254]

Violence erupted again in early May 1995. The RSK lost support from the Serbian government in Belgrade, partly as a result of international pressure. At the same time, the Croatian Operation Flash reclaimed all of the previously occupied territory in Western Slavonia.[41] In retaliation, Serb forces attacked Zagreb with rockets, killing 7 and wounding over 200 civilians.[255] The Yugoslav army responded to the offensive with a show of force, moving tanks towards the Croatian border, in an apparent effort to stave off a possible attack on the occupied area in Eastern Slavonia.[256]

During the following months, international efforts mainly concerned the largely unsuccessful United Nations Safe Areas set up in Bosnia and Herzegovina and trying to set up a more lasting ceasefire in Croatia. The two issues virtually merged by July 1995 when a number of the safe areas in eastern Bosnia and Herzegovina were overrun and one in Bihać was threatened.[257] In 1994, Croatia had already signaled that it would not allow Bihać to be captured,[135] and a new confidence in the Croatian military's ability to recapture occupied areas brought about a demand from Croatian authorities that no further ceasefires were to be negotiated; the occupied territories would be re-integrated into Croatia.[258] These developments and the Washington Agreement, a ceasefire signed in the Bosnian theater, led to another meeting of presidents of Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina on 22 July, when the Split Agreement was adopted. In it, Bosnia and Herzegovina invited Croatia to provide military and other assistance, particularly in the Bihać area. Croatia accepted, committing itself to an armed intervention.[259]

 
The document issued by the Supreme Defense Council of the RSK on 4 August 1995, ordering the evacuation of civilians from its territory

From 25 to 30 July, the Croatian Army and Croatian Defence Council (HVO) troops attacked Serb-held territory north of Mount Dinara, capturing Bosansko Grahovo and Glamoč during Operation Summer '95. That offensive paved the way for the military recapture of occupied territory around Knin, as it severed the last efficient resupply route between Banja Luka and Knin.[260] On 4 August, Croatia started Operation Storm, with the aim of recapturing almost all of the occupied territory in Croatia, except for a comparatively small strip of land, located along the Danube, at a considerable distance from the bulk of the contested land. The offensive, involving 100,000 Croatian soldiers, was the largest single land battle fought in Europe since World War II.[261] Operation Storm achieved its goals and was declared completed on 8 August.[12]

The Croatian human rights organization Hrvatski helsinški odbor, counted 677 Serb civilians killed by Croatian forces after Operation Storm, mostly old people who remained, while other Serb civilians fled.[262] An additional 837 Serb civilians are listed as missing following Operation Storm.[263] Other sources indicate a 181 more victims were killed by Croatian forces and buried in a mass grave in Mrkonjić Grad, following a continuation of the Operation Storm offensive into Bosnia.[264][265]

Many of the civilian population of the occupied areas fled during the offensive or immediately after its completion, in what was later described in various terms ranging from expulsion to planned evacuation.[12] Krajina Serb sources (Documents of HQ of Civilian Protection of RSK, Supreme Council of Defense published by Kovačević,[266] Sekulić,[267] and Vrcelj[268]) confirm that the evacuation of Serbs was organized and planned beforehand.[269][270] According to Amnesty International, "some 200,000 Croatian Serbs, including the entire Croatian Serb Army, fled to the neighbouring Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and areas of Bosnia and Herzegovina under Bosnian Serb control. In the aftermath of the operations members of the Croatian Army and police murdered, tortured, and forcibly expelled Croatian Serb civilians who had remained in the area as well as members of the withdrawing Croatian Serb armed forces".[271] The ICTY, on the other hand, concluded that only about 20,000 people were deported.[47] The BBC noted 200,000 Serb refugees at one point.[272][273] Croatian refugees exiled in 1991 were finally allowed to return to their homes. In 1996 alone, about 85,000 displaced Croats returned to the former Krajina and western Slavonia, according to the estimates of the U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants.[274]

In the months that followed, there were still some intermittent, mainly artillery, attacks from Serb-held areas in Bosnia and Herzegovina on the Dubrovnik area and elsewhere.[9] The remaining Serb-held area in Croatia, in Eastern Slavonia, was faced with the possibility of military confrontation with Croatia. Such a possibility was repeatedly stated by Tuđman after Storm.[275] The threat was underlined by the movement of troops to the region in mid-October,[276] as well as a repeat of an earlier threat to intervene militarily—specifically saying that the Croatian Army could intervene if no peace agreement was reached by the end of the month.[277]

Reintegration of Eastern Slavonia

Further combat was averted on 12 November when the Erdut Agreement was signed by the RSK acting defense minister Milan Milanović,[13][278] on instructions received from Slobodan Milošević and Federal Republic of Yugoslavia officials.[279][280] The agreement stated that the remaining occupied area was to be returned to Croatia, with a two-year transitional period.[13] The new UN transitional administration was established as the United Nations Transitional Authority for Eastern Slavonia, Baranja and Western Sirmium (UNTAES) by United Nations Security Council Resolution 1037 of 15 January 1996.[281] The agreement also guarantees the right of establishment of a Joint Council of Municipalities for the local Serbian community.

The transitional period was subsequently extended by a year. On 15 January 1998, the UNTAES mandate ended and Croatia regained full control of the area.[17] As the UNTAES replaced the UNCRO mission, the Prevlaka peninsula, previously under UNCRO control, was put under the control of United Nations Mission of Observers in Prevlaka (UNMOP). The UNMOP was established by United Nations Security Council Resolution 1038 of 15 January 1996, and terminated on 15 December 2002.[215]

Notable defections

On 25 October 1991, Yugoslav Air Force pilot Rudolf Perešin flew his MiG-21R to Austria and defected.[282][283] He later fought on behalf of Croatian forces in the war, ultimately dying after being shot down in 1995.[282]

On 4 February 1992, air force pilot Danijel Borović [sh] flew his MiG-21bis to Croatia and defected.[283] He later fought on behalf of Croatian forces in the war. The MiG-21bis itself was later shot down on 24 June 1992, killing pilot Anto Radoš [sh].

On 15 May 1992, air force pilots Ivica Ivandić [sh] and Ivan Selak [sh] flew their MiG-21bis to Croatia and defected.[284] Both later fought on behalf of Croatian forces in the war and survived. Ivandić's MiG-21bis was shot down on 14 September 1993, killing pilot Miroslav Peris [sh].

Impact and aftermath

Assessment of type and name of the war

 
Monument to the defenders of Dubrovnik, 2009

The standard term applied to the war as directly translated from Croatian is Homeland war (Croatian: Domovinski rat),[285] while the term Croatian War of Independence is also used.[286][287][288][289] Early English sources also called it the War in Croatia, the Serbo-Croatian War,[144] and the Conflict in Yugoslavia.[3][27]

Different translations of the Croatian name for the war are also sometimes used, such as Patriotic War, although such use by native speakers of English is rare.[290] The official term used in Croatian is the most widespread name used in Croatia but other terms are also used. Another is Greater-Serbian Aggression (Croatian: Velikosrpska agresija). The term was widely used by the media during the war, and is still sometimes used by the Croatian media, politicians and others.[26][291][292]

Two views exist as to whether the war was a civil or an international war. The government of Serbia often states that it was entirely a "civil war".[293][294] The prevailing view in Croatia and of most international law experts, including the ICTY, is that the war was an international conflict, between the rump Yugoslavia and Serbia against Croatia, supported by Serbs in Croatia.[295][296][297] The Croatian international legal scholar and Yale University professor, Mirjan Damaška, said that the question of aggression was not one for the ICJ to decide as at the time of the verdict, the international crime of aggression had not yet been defined.[298] Neither Croatia nor Yugoslavia ever formally declared war on each other.[299] Unlike the Serbian position that the conflict need not be declared as it was a civil war,[293] the Croatian motivation for not declaring war was that Tuđman believed that Croatia could not confront the JNA directly and did everything to avoid an all-out war.[300]

All acts and omissions charged as Grave Breaches of the Geneva Conventions of 1949 occurred during the international armed conflict and partial occupation of Croatia. ... Displaced persons were not allowed to return to their homes and those few Croats and other non-Serbs who had remained in the Serb-occupied areas were expelled in the following months. The territory of the RSK remained under Serb occupation until large portions of it were retaken by Croatian forces in two operations in 1995. The remaining area of Serb control in Eastern Slavonia was peacefully re-integrated into Croatia in 1998.[301]

— ICTY's indictment against Milošević

Casualties and refugees

 
War memorial containing 938 graves of victims of the siege of Vukovar
 
The former Stajićevo camp in Serbia, where Croatian prisoners of war and civilians were kept by Serbian authorities

Most sources place the total number of deaths from the war at around 20,000.[43][302][303] According to the head of the Croatian Commission for Missing Persons, Colonel Ivan Grujić, Croatia suffered 12,000 killed or missing, including 6,788 soldiers and 4,508 civilians.[304] Another source gives a figure of 14,000 killed on the Croatian side, of whom 43.4% were civilians.[305] Official figures from 1996 also list 35,000 wounded.[25] Ivo Goldstein mentions 13,583 killed or missing,[306] while Anglo-Croatian historian Marko Attila Hoare reports the number to be 15,970[307] (citing figures from January 2003 presented by scientific researcher Dražen Živić).[308] Close to 2,400 persons were reported missing during the war.[309] In 2018, the Croatian Memorial-Documentation Center of Homeland War published new figures, indicating 22,211 killed or missing in the war: 15,007 killed or missing on the Croatian side and 7,204 killed or missing on the Serb side. 1,077 of those killed on the territories of the Republic of Serbian Krajina were non-Serbs.[20] However, on Croatian government-controlled territory, the Center did not break-out the ethnic structure of the total number of 5,657 civilians killed, due to missing data.[310]

As of 2016, the Croatian government listed 1,993 missing persons from the war, of whom 1093 were Croats (428 soldiers and 665 civilians), while the remaining 900 were Serbs (5 soldiers and 895 civilians).[311][312] As of 2009, there were more than 52,000 persons in Croatia registered as disabled due to their participation in the war.[313] This figure includes not only those disabled physically due to wounds or injuries sustained, but also persons whose health deteriorated due to their involvement in the war, including diagnoses of chronic diseases such as cardiovascular disease, as well as posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).[314] In 2010, the number of war-related PTSD-diagnosed persons was 32,000.[315]

In total, the war caused 500,000 refugees and displaced persons.[316] Around 196,000[317] to 247,000 (in 1993)[318] Croats and other non-Serbs were displaced during the war from or around the RSK. The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) said that 221,000 were displaced in 2006, of which 218,000 had returned.[319] Up to 300,000 Croats were displaced, according to other sources.[21] The majority were displaced during the initial fighting and during the JNA offensives of 1991 and 1992.[211][320] On 16 March 1994, Croatia registered 492,636 displaced or refugees on its territory (241,014 persons from Croatia itself and 251,622 from Bosnia and Herzegovina), an estimated 10% of the country's population.[321] Some 150,000 Croats from Republika Srpska and Serbia have obtained Croatian citizenship since 1991,[322] many due to incidents like the expulsions in Hrtkovci.[323]

 
Destroyed Serbian house in Croatia. Most Serbs were displaced during Operation Storm in 1995.

The Belgrade-based non-government organization Veritas lists 7,134 killed and missing from the Republic of Serbian Krajina, including 4,484 combatants and 2,650 civilians, and 307 JNA members who were not born or lived in Croatia. Most of them were killed or went missing in 1991 (2,729) and 1995 (2,348). The most deaths occurred in Northern Dalmatia (1,605).[22] The JNA has officially acknowledged 1,279 killed in action. The actual number was probably considerably greater, since casualties were consistently underreported. In one example, official reports spoke of two slightly wounded soldiers after an engagement, however, according to the unit's intelligence officer, the actual number was 50 killed and 150 wounded.[23][324]

According to Serbian sources, some 120,000 Serbs were displaced from 1991 to 1993, and 250,000 were displaced after Operation Storm.[325] The number of displaced Serbs was 254,000 in 1993,[318] dropping to 97,000 in the early 1995[317] and then increasing again to 200,000 by the end of the year. Most international sources place the total number of Serbs displaced at around 300,000. According to Amnesty International 300,000 were displaced from 1991 to 1995, of which 117,000 were officially registered as having returned as of 2005.[271] According to the OSCE, 300,000 were displaced during the war, of which 120,000 were officially registered as having returned as of 2006. However, it is believed the number does not accurately reflect the number of returnees, because many returned to Serbia, Montenegro, or Bosnia and Herzegovina after officially registering in Croatia.[319] According to the UNHCR in 2008, 125,000 were registered as having returned to Croatia, of whom 55,000 remained permanently.[326]

While the prewar 1991 Croatian census counted 581,663 Serbs, or 12.2% of the population in Croatia,[327] the first postwar 2001 census showed only 201,631 Serbs remaining in Croatia, or just 4.5% of the population.

The Croatian Association of Prisoners in Serbian Concentration Camps and Croatian Disabled Homeland War Veterans Association were founded to help victims of prison abuse.[328][329]

A 2013 report by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in Croatia entitled 'Assessment of the Number of Sexual Violence Victims during the Homeland War on the Territory of the Republic of Croatia and Optimal Forms of Compensation and Support of Victims', determined the estimated victims (male and female) of rape and other forms of sexual assault on both sides to number between approximately 1,470 and 2,205 or 1,501 and 2,437 victims.[330] Most victims were non-Serbs assaulted by Serbs.[330] By region, the largest number of rapes and acts of sexual violence occurred in Eastern Slavonia, with an estimated 380-570 victims.[330] According to the UNDP report, between 300 and 600 men (4.4%-6.6% of those imprisoned) and between 279 and 466 women (or 30%-50% of those imprisoned) suffered from various forms of sexual abuse while being held in Serbian detention camps and prisons (including those in Serbia proper).[330] Between 412 and 611 Croat women were raped in the Serb-occupied territories, outside of detention camps, from 1991 to 1995.[330] Croat forces were also known to have committed rapes and acts of sexual violence against Serb women during Operations Flash and Storm, with an estimated 94-140 victims.[330] Sexual abuse of Serb prisoners also occurred in the Croat-run Lora and Kerestinec camps.[330]

On May 29, 2015, the Croatian parliament passed the first law in the country that recognises rape as a war crime – the Law on the Rights of Victims of Sexual Violence during the Military Aggression against the Republic of Croatia in the Homeland War.[331] The legislation, which is overseen by the Croatian War Veterans’ Ministry, provides victims with medical and legal aid as well as financial compensation from the state – up to 20,000 euros. These benefits do not depend on a court verdict.[331]

As of May 2019, Željka Žokalj from the War Veterans’ Ministry, said that around 25 million kunas (3.37 million euros) have already been awarded to victims. Since 2015, 249 compensation requests have been filed and 156 of them approved.[331]

Wartime damage and minefields

 
Bombardment damage in Osijek
 
A standard minefield marking

Official figures on wartime damage published in Croatia in 1996 specify 180,000 destroyed housing units, 25% of the Croatian economy destroyed, and US$27 billion of material damage.[25] Europe Review 2003/04 estimated the war damage at US$37 billion in damaged infrastructure, lost economic output, and refugee-related costs, while GDP dropped 21% in the period.[42] 15 percent of housing units and 2,423 cultural heritage structures, including 495 sacral structures, were destroyed or damaged.[332] The war imposed an additional economic burden of very high military expenditures. By 1994, as Croatia rapidly developed into a de facto war economy, the military consumed as much as 60 percent of total government spending.[333]

Yugoslav and Serbian expenditures during the war were even more disproportionate. The federal budget proposal for 1992 earmarked 81 percent of funds to be diverted into the Serbian war effort.[334] Since a substantial part of the federal budgets prior to 1992 was provided by Slovenia and Croatia, the most developed republics of Yugoslavia, a lack of federal income quickly led to desperate printing of money to finance government operations. That in turn produced the worst episode of hyperinflation in history: Between October 1993 and January 1995, Yugoslavia, which then consisted of Serbia and Montenegro, suffered through a hyperinflation of five quadrillion percent.[335][336]

Many Croatian cities were attacked by artillery, missiles, and aircraft bombs by RSK or JNA forces from RSK or Serb-controlled areas in Bosnia and Herzegovina, as well as Montenegro and Serbia. The most shelled cities were Vukovar, Slavonski Brod (from the mountain of Vučjak),[337] and Županja (for more than 1,000 days),[338] Vinkovci, Osijek, Nova Gradiška, Novska, Daruvar, Pakrac, Šibenik, Sisak, Dubrovnik, Zadar, Gospić, Karlovac, Biograd na moru, Slavonski Šamac, Ogulin, Duga Resa, Otočac, Ilok, Beli Manastir, Lučko, Zagreb, and others[339][340][341] Slavonski Brod was never directly attacked by tanks or infantry, but the city and its surrounding villages were hit by more than 11,600 artillery shells and 130 aircraft bombs in 1991 and 1992.[342]

Approximately 2 million mines were laid in various areas of Croatia during the war. Most of the minefields were laid with no pattern or any type of record being made of the position of the mines.[343] A decade after the war, in 2005, there were still about 250,000 mines buried along the former front lines, along some segments of the international borders, especially near Bihać, and around some former JNA facilities.[344] As of 2007, the area still containing or suspected of containing mines encompassed approximately 1,000 square kilometers (390 sq mi).[345] More than 1,900 people were killed or injured by land mines in Croatia since the beginning of the war, including more than 500 killed or injured by mines after the end of the war.[346] Between 1998 and 2005, Croatia spent €214 million on various mine action programs.[347] As of 2009, all remaining minefields are clearly marked.[348] During the 2015 European migrant crisis, there existed concerns over areas where mines could affect the flow of refugees coming from Serbia to Croatia.[349]

War crimes and the ICTY

The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) was established by UN Security Council Resolution 827, which was passed on 25 May 1993. The court has power to prosecute persons responsible for serious violations of international humanitarian law, breaches of the Geneva Conventions, violating the laws or customs of war, committing genocide, and crimes against humanity committed in the territory of the former SFR Yugoslavia since 1 January 1991.[350]

The indictees by ICTY ranged from common soldiers to Prime Ministers and Presidents. Some high-level indictees included Slobodan Milošević (President of Serbia), Milan Babić (president of the RSK), and Ante Gotovina (general of the Croatian Army).[351] Franjo Tuđman (President of Croatia) died in 1999 of cancer while the ICTY's prosecutors were still investigating him.[352] According to Marko Attila Hoare, a former employee at the ICTY, an investigative team worked on indictments of senior members of the "joint criminal enterprise", including not only Milošević, but Veljko Kadijević, Blagoje Adžić, Borisav Jović, Branko Kostić, Momir Bulatović and others. These drafts were rejected, reportedly upon the intervention of Carla del Ponte and the indictment limited to Milošević.[353]

Between 1991 and 1995, Martić held positions of minister of interior, minister of defense and president of the self-proclaimed "Serbian Autonomous Region of Krajina" (SAO Krajina), which was later renamed "Republic of Serbian Krajina" (RSK). He was found to have participated during this period in a joint criminal enterprise which included Slobodan Milošević, whose aim was to create a unified Serbian state through commission of a widespread and systematic campaign of crimes against non-Serbs inhabiting areas in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina envisaged to become parts of such a state.[46]

— International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, in its verdict against Milan Martić
 
Milan Martic during trial at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia

As of 2018, the ICTY has convicted seven officials from the Serb/Montenegrin side and nobody from the Croatian side. Milan Martić received the largest sentence: 35 years in prison.[354] Milan Babić received 13 years. He expressed remorse for his role in the war, asking his "Croat brothers to forgive him".[355] In 2007, two former Yugoslav army officers were sentenced for the Vukovar massacre at the ICTY in The Hague. Veselin Šljivančanin was sentenced to 10 years and Mile Mrkšić to 20 years in prison.[356] Prosecutors stated that following the capture of Vukovar, the JNA handed over several hundred Croats to Serbian forces. Of these, at least 264 (mostly injured soldiers, but also two women and a 16-year-old child)[357] were murdered and buried in mass graves in the neighborhood of Ovčara, on the outskirts of Vukovar.[358] The city's mayor, Slavko Dokmanović, was brought to trial at the ICTY, but committed suicide in 1998 in captivity before proceedings began.[359] In 2017, Dragan Vasiljković commander of a Croatian Serb paramilitary unit, he was convicted of war crimes sentenced by a Croatian court to 15 years in prison.

Generals Pavle Strugar and Miodrag Jokić were sentenced by the ICTY to eight and seven years, respectively, for shelling Dubrovnik.[360] A third indictee, Vladimir Kovačević, was declared mentally unfit to stand trial.[361] The Yugoslav Army's Chief of the General Staff, Momčilo Perišić, was charged with aiding and abetting war crimes but eventually acquitted on all charges.[362] Ex-RSK President Goran Hadžić died during the trial. In 2018, Vojislav Šešelj was sentenced to 10 years for crimes against humanity perpetrated through persecution and deportation of Croats from Vojvodina in 1992,[363] while he was also given an additional cumulative sentence of 4 years and 9 months for contempt of court.[364]

A number of Croat civilians in hospitals and shelters marked with a red cross were targeted by Serb forces.[365] There were numerous well-documented war crimes against civilians and prisoners of war perpetrated by Serb and Yugoslav forces in Croatia: the Dalj killings,[366] the Lovas massacre,[121][196] the Široka Kula massacre,[367] the Baćin massacre,[366] the Saborsko massacre,[368] the Škabrnja massacre,[198] the Voćin massacre,[366][369] and the Zagreb rocket attacks.

 
 
 
The ICTY (left) convicted numerous individuals for their role in the war. Milošević (middle) became the first former head of state of any country brought before an international criminal tribunal,[370] but died before a verdict was reached. Mile Mrkšić (right) received 20 years.[356]

There were a number of prison camps where Croatian POWs and civilians were detained, including the Sremska Mitrovica camp, the Stajićevo camp, and the Begejci camp in Serbia, and the Morinj camp in Montenegro.[212] The Croatian Association of Prisoners in Serbian Concentration Camps was later founded in order to help the victims of prison abuse. The Croatian Army established detention camps, like Lora prison camp in Split.[212]

Croatian war crimes included the Gospić massacre, the Sisak killings in 1991 and 1992,[371] and others,[372][373] which were likewise prosecuted by Croatian courts or the ICTY. Another infamous instance of war crimes, in what would later become known as the "Pakračka Poljana" case, committed by a reserve police unit commanded by Tomislav Merčep, involved the killing of prisoners, mostly ethnic Serbs, near Pakrac in late 1991 and early 1992.[374] The events were initially investigated by the ICTY, but the case was eventually transferred to the Croatian judiciary.[375] More than a decade later, five members of this unit, although not its commander, were indicted on criminal charges related to these events, and convicted.[376] Merčep was arrested for these crimes in December 2010.[377] In 2009, Branimir Glavaš, a Croatian incumbent MP at the time, was convicted of war crimes committed in Osijek in 1991 and sentenced to jail by a Croatian court.[378]

The ICTY indicted Croatian officers Janko Bobetko, Rahim Ademi, and Mirko Norac, for crimes committed during Operation Medak Pocket, but that case was also transferred to Croatian courts. Norac was found guilty and jailed for 7 years; Ademi was acquitted.[379] Bobetko was declared unfit to stand trial due to poor health.[380][381] The ICTY's indictment against General Ante Gotovina cited at least 150 Serb civilians killed in the aftermath of Operation Storm.[382] The Croatian Helsinki Committee registered 677 Serb civilians killed in the operation.[383] Louise Arbour, a prosecutor of the ICTY, stated that the legality and legitimacy of the Operation itself was not the issue, but that the ICTY was required to investigate whether crimes were committed during the campaign.[384] The Trial Chamber reiterated that the legality of Operation Storm is "irrelevant" for the case at hand, since the ICTY's remit is processing war crimes.[385] In 2011, Gotovina was sentenced to 24 and Markač to 18 years in prison. In 2012, their convictions were overturned and both were immediately released. Čermak was acquitted of all charges.[47] Recorded war crimes that were committed against ethnic Serbs, particularly the elderly, during or in the aftermath of Operation Storm include the Golubić killings, Grubori massacre, and Varivode massacre.

In the first-degree verdict, the trial chamber found that "certain members of the Croatian political and military leadership shared the common objective of the permanent removal of the Serb civilian population from the Krajina by force or threat of force", implicating Franjo Tuđman, Gojko Šušak, who was the Minister of Defence and a close associate of Tuđman's, and Zvonimir Červenko, the Chief of the Croatian army Main Staff.[47] Nevertheless, in the second-degree verdict, the appeals chamber dismissed the notion of such a joint criminal enterprise. The verdict meant the ICTY convicted no Croats for their role in the Croatian War of Independence.[48]

In 2013 the former chief of Serbian State Security Jovica Stanišić, and deputy Franko Simatović, were acquitted of crimes against humanity and war crimes, but after protests and an appeal by prosecutors in 2015 a new trial was ordered due to legal errors.[386] The new trial began in 2017.[386]

In a first-degree verdict, on 30 June 2021 the UN Mechanism for International Criminal Tribunals (MICT) found the pair guilty for crimes committed in Bosnia in Bosanski Šamac and sentenced them to 12 years in prison, but acquitted them of planning, ordering or aiding and abetting any crimes committed by Serb units in Croatia.[387] They were tried as part of a joint criminal enterprise involving Milošević and other Serbian political, military and police officials. The court found that "from at least August 1991, a joint criminal enterprise existed" whose aim was to "forcibly and permanently remove.. Croats, Bosnian Muslim and Bosnian Croats, from large areas of Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina."[387] Those implicated in the enterprise included senior political, military, and police leadership in Serbia, the SAO Krajina, the SAO Eastern Slavonia, Baranja and Western Syrmia, and Republika Srpska, though the court found that the prosecution failed to prove the participation of Stanišić and Simatović in the enterprise.[387][388]

Serbia's role

During the war

 
Territories controlled by Serb forces during the Yugoslav Wars. It is widely believed that Milošević tried to create Greater Serbia, which would unite all Serbs across a collapsing Yugoslavia.[29][389][390][391]

While Serbia and Croatia never declared war on each other, Serbia was directly and indirectly involved in the war through a number of activities.[299] Its foremost involvement entailed material support of the JNA. Following the independence of various republics from SFR Yugoslavia, Serbia provided the bulk of manpower and funding that was channeled to the war effort through Serbian control of the Yugoslav presidency and the federal defense ministry.[127] Serbia actively supported various paramilitary volunteer units from Serbia that were fighting in Croatia.[121][122] Even though no actual fighting occurred on Serbian or Montenegrin soil, involvement of the two was evident through the maintenance of prison camps in Serbia and Montenegro, which became places where a number of war crimes were committed.[212]

Borders are always dictated by the strong, never by the weak ... We simply consider it as a legitimate right and interest of the Serb nation to live in one state.

Slobodan Milošević, 16 March 1991, on the breakup of Yugoslavia.[392]

Milošević's trial at the ICTY revealed numerous declassified documents of Belgrade's involvement in the wars in Croatia and Bosnia.[124][161] Evidence introduced at trial showed exactly how Serbia and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia financed the war, that they provided weapons and material support to Bosnian and Croatian Serbs, and demonstrated the administrative and personnel structures set up to support the Bosnian Serb and Croatian Serb armies.[124][393] It was established that Belgrade, through the federal government, financed more than 90 percent of the Krajina budget in 1993; that the Supreme Defense Council decided to hide aid to Republika Srpska and Krajina from the public; that the National Bank of Krajina operated as a branch office of the National Bank of Yugoslavia; and that by March 1994 FR Yugoslavia, Krajina, and Republika Srpska used a single currency. Numerous documents demonstrated that branches of the Krajina Public Accountancy Service were incorporated into Serbia's accountancy system in May 1991, and that the financing of Krajina and Republika Srpska caused hyperinflation in FR Yugoslavia.[124] The trial revealed that the JNA, the Serbian Ministry of Interior, and other entities (including Serb civilian groups and police) armed Serb civilians and local territorial defense groups in the RSK before the conflict escalated.[124]

In 1993, the US State Department reported that right after the Maslenica and Medak pocket operations, authorities in Serbia dispatched substantial numbers of "volunteers" to Serb-held territories in Croatia to fight.[318] A former secretary of the Serbian paramilitary leader Željko Ražnatović testified at the Hague, confirming that Ražnatović took his orders, and his money, directly from the secret police run by Milošević.[394]

This degree of control was reflected in negotiations held at various times between Croatian authorities and the RSK, as the Serbian leadership under Milošević was regularly consulted and frequently made decisions on behalf of the RSK.[6] The Erdut Agreement that ended the war was signed by a RSK minister on instructions from Milošević.[13][279][280] The degree of control Serbia held over SFR Yugoslavia and later the RSK was evidenced through testimonies during the Milošević trial at the ICTY.[127][279][280]

Serbia's state-run media were reportedly used to incite the conflict and further inflame the situation,[395][396] and also to broadcast false information about the war and the state of the Serbian economy.[397]

Following the rise of nationalism and political tensions after Slobodan Milošević came to power, as well as the outbreaks of the Yugoslav Wars, numerous anti-war movements developed in Serbia.[398][399][400] The anti-war protests in Belgrade were held mostly because of opposition the Battle of Vukovar and Siege of Dubrovnik,[398][400] while protesters demanded the referendum on a declaration of war and disruption of military conscription.[401][402][403] It is estimated that between 50,000 and 200,000 people deserted from the Milošević-controlled Yugoslav People's Army during wars, while between 100,000 and 150,000 people emigrated from Serbia refusing to participate in the war.[401][400] According to professor Renaud De la Brosse, senior lecturer at the University of Reims and a witness called by the ICTY, it is surprising how great the resistance to Milošević's propaganda was among Serbs, given that and the lack of access to alternative news.[404] By late December 1991, just over a month after victory had been proclaimed in Vukovar, opinion polls found that 64% of Serbian people wanted to end the war immediately and only 27% were willing for it to continue.[405]

After the war

 
The Ovčara Massacre Memorial in Vukovar, where Serbian President Boris Tadić expressed his "apology and regret" for the 1991 Vukovar massacre in which 260 people were killed.[406]

After the successful implementation of the Erdut Agreement which ended armed conflict in 1995, the relations between Croatia and Serbia gradually improved and the two countries established diplomatic relations following an agreement in early August 1996.[407]

In a case before the International Court of Justice, Croatia filed a suit against the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia on 2 July 1999, citing Article IX of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.[408] With the transformation of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia into Serbia and Montenegro and the dissolution of that country in 2006, Serbia is considered its legal successor.[408] The application was filed for Croatia by a U.S. lawyer, David B. Rivkin.[409] Serbia reciprocated with the genocide lawsuit against the Republic of Croatia on 4 January 2010.[410] The Serbian application covers missing people, killed people, refugees, expelled people, and all military actions and concentration camps with a historical account of genocide committed by the Independent State of Croatia during World War II.[411]

In 2003, Stjepan Mesić became the first Croatian head of state to visit Belgrade since 1991. Both Mesić and the President of Serbia and Montenegro, Svetozar Marović, issued mutual apologies to Croat and Serb victims of the war.[412]

By 2010, Croatia and Serbia further improved their relations through an agreement to resolve remaining refugee issues,[44] and visits of Croatian President Ivo Josipović to Belgrade,[45] and of the Serbian President Boris Tadić to Zagreb and Vukovar. During their meeting in Vukovar, President Tadić gave a statement expressing his "apology and regret", while President Josipović said "that no crimes committed at the time would go unpunished." The statements were made during a joint visit to the Ovčara memorial center, site of the Vukovar massacre.[406]

Role of the international community

The war developed at a time when the attention of the United States and the world was on Iraq, and the Gulf War in 1991, along with a sharp rise in oil prices and a slowdown in the growth of the world economy.[413]

Between 19 and 23 December 1991, several other European countries, beginning with Germany and the Vatican City, followed by Sweden and Italy, announced their recognition of Croatia's (and Slovenia's) independence.[37] The European Union as a whole recognized the independence of the two republics on 15 January 1992.

Each of the major foreign governments acted somewhat differently:

  • Germany – up until 1991, Germany supported a 'status quo'.[414] According to diplomat Gerhard Almer, the Yugoslav disintegration was feared as "a bad example for the dissolution of the Soviet Union", sparking fears that violence could also be used against the nations that were about to declare independence from the Soviet Union.[415] During the war, this policy changed, when Helmut Kohl announced that Germany recognized Slovenia and Croatia as independent countries.
  • United KingdomJohn Major's government favored neutrality.
  • United States – The United States, under George H. W. Bush, tended to favour non-intervention at first,[416] just like the United Kingdom. In contrast, from 1993, the administration led by Bill Clinton tended to engage itself in order to end the conflicts in the former Yugoslavia. Cyrus Vance supported the 'integrity of Yugoslavia'.[417]
  • Russia – The Russian government under Boris Yeltsin tended to oppose recognition of Croatia although Russia recognized Croatia on 17 February 1992, while the United States did the same on 7 April 1992.[418]

Notable people

See also

Annotations

  1. ^ As determined by the Badinter Arbitration Committee, SFR Yugoslavia dissolved during the war.[1] On 25 June 1991, the Croatian parliament declared the independence of Croatia, following a referendum held in May.[2] The decision was suspended for three months;[3] the declaration became effective on 8 October 1991, and Croatia was no longer part of Yugoslavia.[4]
  2. ^ After all former Yugoslav federal republics except Serbia and Montenegro declared independence, the two declared the creation of a new country – the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia – on 27 April 1992, disbanding the JNA soon afterwards.[5] Serb-controlled units of the JNA participated in combat operations throughout 1991 and up to May 1992 in support of the Republic of Serbian Krajina.[6]
  3. ^ Bosnia and Herzegovina was particularly significant for the war in late 1994 and in 1995. Pursuant to the Washington Agreement, the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina was formed as a subunit of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina (RBiH) representing both Bosnian Croat and Bosniak (Bosnian Muslim) ethnic groups. Most significantly, the Washington Agreement specifically permitted Croatian Army to enter Bosnia and Herzegovina, thereby allowing operations Cincar and Winter '94 against the army of Republika Srpska, outflanking the RSK capital at Knin and creating a new strategic situation before the decisive battles of the war.[7]
  4. ^ Initially, SAO Krajina, SAO Western Slavonia, and SAO Eastern Slavonia, Baranja and Western Syrmia were separate entities and fought individually against the Croatian government. As of December 19, 1991, the SAOs became part of the RSK.
  5. ^ In 1992–94, Republika Srpska was intermittently involved in Croatian military operations, mostly through provision of military and other aid to the RSK, occasional air raids launched from Mahovljani airbase near Banja Luka, and most significantly through artillery attacks against a number of cities in Croatia, especially Slavonski Brod, Županja, and Dubrovnik.[8][9]
  6. ^ There was no formal declaration of war. The first armed clash of the war was the Pakrac clash on 1 March 1991,[10] followed by the Plitvice Lakes incident on 31 March 1991, when the first fatalities occurred.[11] The last major combat operation was Operation Storm, from 5–8 August 1995.[12] Formally, hostilities ceased when the Erdut Agreement was signed on 12 November 1995.[13]
  7. ^ There were also some conflicts in Bosnia and Herzegovina, particularly in late 1994 and early 1995. Among those, the most significant to the course of the war were Cincar,[14] and Operation Winter '94.[15][16]
  8. ^ Three months after the military defeat of the RSK in Operation Storm,[12] the UN-sponsored Erdut Agreement between the Croatian and RSK authorities was signed on 12 November 1995.[13] The agreement provided for a two-year transitional period, later extended by a year, during which the remaining occupied territory of Croatia was to be transferred to control of the Croatian government. The agreement was implemented by UNTAES and successfully completed by 1998.[17]

Notes

  1. ^ a b Allain Pellet (1992). (PDF). European Journal of International Law. 3 (1): 178–185. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.ejil.a035802. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 29, 2011.
  2. ^ a b Chuck Sudetic (June 26, 1991). "2 Yugoslav States Vote Independence To Press Demands". The New York Times. from the original on November 10, 2012. Retrieved 12 December 2010.
  3. ^ a b c Chuck Sudetic (June 29, 1991). "Conflict in Yugoslavia; 2 Yugoslav States Agree to Suspend Secession Process". The New York Times. Retrieved December 12, 2010.
  4. ^ a b . Official web site of the Parliament of Croatia. Sabor. October 7, 2004. Archived from the original on March 14, 2012. Retrieved July 29, 2012.
  5. ^ "Two Republics Transform Selves Into a New, Smaller Yugoslavia". The Los Angeles Times. Associated Press. April 28, 1992. Retrieved January 7, 2011.
  6. ^ a b c d e Chuck Sudetic (January 3, 1992). "Yugoslav Factions Agree to U.N. Plan to Halt Civil War". The New York Times. Retrieved December 16, 2010.
  7. ^ a b Steven Greenhouse (March 18, 1994). "Muslims and Bosnian Croats Give Birth to a New Federation". The New York Times. Retrieved December 17, 2010.
  8. ^ Peter Maass (July 16, 1992). "Serb Artillery Hits Refugees – At Least 8 Die As Shells Hit Packed Stadium". The Seattle Times. Retrieved December 23, 2010.
  9. ^ a b Raymond Bonner (August 17, 1995). "Dubrovnik Finds Hint of Deja Vu in Serbian Artillery". The New York Times. Retrieved December 18, 2010.
  10. ^ a b Stephen Engelberg (March 3, 1991). "Belgrade Sends Troops to Croatia Town". The New York Times. Retrieved December 11, 2010.
  11. ^ a b Chuck Sudetic (April 1, 1991). "Deadly Clash in a Yugoslav Republic". The New York Times. Retrieved December 11, 2010.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Dean E. Murphy (August 8, 1995). "Croats Declare Victory, End Blitz". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved December 18, 2010.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Chris Hedges (November 12, 1995). "Serbs in Croatia Resolve Key Issue by Giving up Land". The New York Times. Retrieved December 18, 2010.
  14. ^ a b Chuck Sudetic (November 4, 1994). "Bosnian Army and Croats Drive Serbs Out of a Town". The New York Times. Retrieved December 17, 2010.
  15. ^ a b Roger Cohen (January 12, 1995). "Croatia Is Set to End Mandate Of U.N. Force on Its Territory". The New York Times. Retrieved December 17, 2010.
  16. ^ a b Burg and Shoup (2000), p. 331
  17. ^ a b c Chris Hedges (January 16, 1998). "An Ethnic Morass Is Returned to Croatia". The New York Times. Retrieved December 18, 2010.
  18. ^ Tus: U listopadu '91. HV je imao 70.000 vojnika[dead link] Domovinski rat.hr
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on November 19, 2012. Retrieved July 17, 2012.
  20. ^ a b c Zebić, Enis (January 15, 2018). "Ljudski gubici u ratu u Hrvatskoj: 22.211 osoba" [Human Casualties in the Croatian War: 22,211 Persons]. Radio Free Europe (in Croatian). Retrieved December 17, 2019.
  21. ^ a b Phuong 2005, p. 157.
  22. ^ a b "Srpske žrtve rata i poraća na području Hrvatske i bivše RSK 1990. – 1998. godine". Veritas. Retrieved June 16, 2015.
  23. ^ a b Meštrović (1996), pp. 77–78
  24. ^ a b Zanotti (2011), pp. 111
  25. ^ a b c Darko Zubrinic. "Croatia within ex-Yugoslavia". Croatianhistory.net. Retrieved February 7, 2010.
  26. ^ a b Mirko Bilandžić (July 2008). "Hrvatska vojska u međunarodnim odnosima" [Croatian Army in International Relations (English summary)]. Polemos: časopis Za Interdisciplinarna Istraživanja Rata I Mira (in Croatian). Croatian Sociological Association and Jesenski & Turk Publishing House. 11 (22). ISSN 1331-5595. Retrieved December 21, 2010.
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  209. ^ "Dubrovačka biskupija" [Dubrovnik Diocese] (in Croatian). Croatian Bishops' Conference. Retrieved January 20, 2011. Biskupija danas obuhvaća 1368 km2. ... Pola biskupije bilo je okupirano. [Today, the Diocese encompasses 1,368 km2. ... A half of the Diocese was occupied.]
croatian, independence, fought, from, 1991, 1995, between, croat, forces, loyal, government, croatia, which, declared, independence, from, socialist, federal, republic, yugoslavia, sfry, serb, controlled, yugoslav, people, army, local, serb, forces, with, endi. The Croatian War of Independence was fought from 1991 to 1995 between Croat forces loyal to the Government of Croatia which had declared independence from the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia SFRY and the Serb controlled Yugoslav People s Army JNA and local Serb forces with the JNA ending its combat operations in Croatia by 1992 In Croatia the war is primarily referred to as the Homeland War Croatian Domovinski rat and also as the Greater Serbian Aggression Croatian Velikosrpska agresija 25 26 In Serbian sources War in Croatia Serbian Cyrillic Rat u Hrvatskoј romanized Rat u Hrvatskoj and rarely War in Krajina Serbian Cyrillic Rat u Kraјini romanized Rat u Krajini are used 27 Croatian War of IndependencePart of the Yugoslav WarsClockwise from top left the central street of Dubrovnik the Stradun in ruins during the Siege of Dubrovnik the damaged Vukovar water tower a symbol of the early conflict flying the Flag of Croatia soldiers of the Croatian Army preparing to destroy a Serbian tank the Vukovar Memorial Cemetery a Serbian T 55 tank destroyed on the road to DrnisDate31 March 1991 12 November 1995 A 6 4 years 7 months 1 week and 5 days Location Croatia A 7 ResultCroatian victory Yugoslav army formally withdrew from Croatia from January 1992 under the Sarajevo Agreement Croatian forces regained control over most of Republic of Serbian Krajina held territory Croatian forces advanced into Bosnia and Herzegovina to assist the united Bosnian and Croatian side which led to the eventual end of the Bosnian War in December 1995 TerritorialchangesThe Croatian government gains control over the vast majority of territory previously held by rebel Serbs with the remainder coming under UNTAES control A 8 Belligerents1991 94 Croatia A 1 1991 92 SFR Yugoslavia A 2 SAO Krajina SAO Eastern Slavonia Baranja and Western Syrmia SAO Western Slavonia1994 95 Croatia Bosnia and Herzegovina A 3 1992 95 Republic of Serbian Krajina A 4 Republika Srpska A 5 Commanders and leadersFranjo Tuđman Gojko Susak Anton Tus Janko Bobetko Zvonimir Cervenko Petar Stipetic Ante Gotovina Mladen Markac Martin SpegeljSlobodan Milosevic Veljko Kadijevic Blagoje Adzic Zivota Panic Milan Martic Milan Babic Goran Hadzic Jovica Stanisic Franko Simatovic Radovan Karadzic Ratko MladicUnits involvedCroatian Army Croatian National Guard Croatian Navy Croatian Air Force Croatian Police Croatian Defence ForcesYugoslav People s Army Yugoslav Ground Forces Yugoslav Navy Yugoslav Air ForceRepublic of Serbia Territorial Defence ForcesRepublic of Montenegro Territorial Defense Forces Army of Serbian Krajina Serbian paramilitary unitsStrength70 000 1991 18 200 000 1995 19 145 000 1991 50 000 1995 Casualties and losses15 007 dead or missing8 685 soldiers and 6 322 civilians killed or missing 20 300 000 displaced 21 7 134 dead or missing4 484 soldiers and 2 650 civilians killed or missing 22 1 279 soldiers killed 23 7 204 dead or missing3 486 soldiers 2 677 civilians and 864 unidentified killed or missing 20 7 204 8 106 dead or missing in total300 000 displaced 24 A majority of Croats wanted Croatia to leave Yugoslavia and become a sovereign country while many ethnic Serbs living in Croatia supported by Serbia 28 29 opposed the secession and wanted Serb claimed lands to be in a common state with Serbia Most Serbs sought a new Serb state within a Yugoslav federation including areas of Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina with ethnic Serb majorities or significant minorities 30 31 and attempted to conquer as much of Croatia as possible 32 33 34 Croatia declared independence on 25 June 1991 but agreed to postpone it with the Brioni Agreement and cut all remaining ties with Yugoslavia on 8 October 1991 The JNA initially tried to keep Croatia within Yugoslavia by occupying all of Croatia 35 36 After this failed Serb forces established the self proclaimed proto state Republic of Serbian Krajina RSK within Croatia which began with the Log Revolution After the ceasefire of January 1992 and international recognition of the Republic of Croatia as a sovereign state 37 38 the front lines were entrenched the United Nations Protection Force UNPROFOR was deployed 39 and combat became largely intermittent in the following three years During that time the RSK encompassed 13 913 square kilometers 5 372 sq mi more than a quarter of Croatia 40 In 1995 Croatia launched two major offensives known as Operation Flash and Operation Storm 12 41 these offensives effectively ended the war in its favor The remaining United Nations Transitional Authority for Eastern Slavonia Baranja and Western Sirmium UNTAES zone was peacefully reintegrated into Croatia by 1998 13 17 The war ended with Croatian victory as it achieved the goals it had declared at the beginning of the war independence and preservation of its borders 12 13 Approximately 21 25 of Croatia s economy was ruined with an estimated US 37 billion in damaged infrastructure lost output and refugee related costs 42 Over 20 000 people were killed in the war 43 and refugees were displaced on both sides The Serbian and Croatian governments began to progressively cooperate with each other but tensions remain in part due to verdicts by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia ICTY and lawsuits filed by each country against the other 44 45 In 2007 the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia ICTY returned a guilty verdict against Milan Martic one of the Serb leaders in Croatia for having colluded with Slobodan Milosevic and others to create a unified Serbian state 46 Between 2008 and 2012 the ICTY had prosecuted Croatian generals Ante Gotovina Mladen Markac and Ivan Cermak for alleged involvement in the crimes related to Operation Storm Cermak was acquitted outright and the convictions of Gotovina and Markac were later overturned by an ICTY Appeals Panel 47 48 The International Court of Justice dismissed mutual claims of genocide by Croatia and Serbia in 2015 The Court reaffirmed that to an extent crimes against civilians had taken place but it ruled that specific genocidal intent was not present 49 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Political changes in Yugoslavia 1 2 Civil unrest and demands for autonomy 2 Military forces 2 1 Serb and Yugoslav People s Army forces 2 2 Croatian forces 3 Course of the war 3 1 1991 Open hostilities begin 3 1 1 First armed incidents 3 1 2 Declaration of independence 3 1 3 Escalation of the conflict 3 1 4 Peak of the war 3 2 1992 Ceasefire 3 3 1993 Croatian military advances 3 4 1994 Erosion of support for Krajina 3 5 1995 End of the war 3 5 1 Reintegration of Eastern Slavonia 4 Notable defections 5 Impact and aftermath 5 1 Assessment of type and name of the war 5 2 Casualties and refugees 5 3 Wartime damage and minefields 5 4 War crimes and the ICTY 6 Serbia s role 6 1 During the war 6 2 After the war 7 Role of the international community 8 Notable people 9 See also 10 Annotations 11 Notes 12 References 12 1 Books 12 2 Other sources 13 External linksBackground EditSee also Breakup of Yugoslavia and Independence of Croatia Political changes in Yugoslavia Edit Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic wanted to retain Serb claimed lands in Croatia within a common state with Serbia In the 1970s Yugoslavia s socialist regime became severely splintered into a liberal decentralist nationalist faction led by Croatia and Slovenia that supported a decentralized federation to give greater autonomy to Croatia and Slovenia versus a conservative centralist nationalist faction led by Serbia that supported a centralized federation to secure Serbia s and the Serbs interests across Yugoslavia as they were the largest ethnic group in the country as a whole 50 From 1967 to 1972 in Croatia and 1968 and 1981 protests in Kosovo nationalist doctrines and actions caused ethnic tensions that destabilized Yugoslavia 51 The suppression by the state of nationalists is believed to have had the effect of identifying Croat nationalism as the primary alternative to communism itself and made it a strong underground movement 52 A crisis emerged in Yugoslavia with the weakening of the communist states in Eastern Europe towards the end of the Cold War as symbolized by the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 In Croatia the regional branch of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia the League of Communists of Croatia had lost its ideological potency 53 54 Slovenia and Croatia wanted to move towards decentralization 55 SR Serbia headed by Slobodan Milosevic adhered to centralism and single party rule and in turn effectively ended the autonomy of the autonomous provinces of Kosovo and Vojvodina by March 1989 taking command of their votes in the Yugoslav federal presidency 29 54 56 57 Nationalist ideas started to gain influence within the ranks of the still ruling League of Communists while Milosevic s speeches notably the 1989 Gazimestan speech in which he talked of battles and quarrels favored continuation of a unified Yugoslav state one in which all power would continue to be centralized in Belgrade 29 58 59 In the autumn of 1989 the Serbian government pressured the Croatian government to allow a series of Serb nationalist rallies in the country and the Serbian media and various Serbian intellectuals had already begun to refer to the Croatian leadership as Ustase and began to make reference to genocide and other crimes committed by the Ustase between 1941 and 1945 The Serbian political leadership approved of the rhetoric and accused the Croatian leadership of being blindly nationalistic when it objected 60 Having completed the anti bureaucratic revolution in Vojvodina Kosovo and Montenegro Serbia secured four out of eight federal presidency votes in 1991 58 which rendered the governing body ineffective as other republics objected and called for reform of the Federation 61 In 1989 political parties were allowed and a number of them had been founded including the Croatian Democratic Union Croatian Hrvatska demokratska zajednica HDZ led by Franjo Tuđman who later became the first president of Croatia 62 Tuđman ran on a nationalist platform 63 with a program of national reconciliation between Croatian communists and former Ustases fascists being a key component of his party s political program 64 Accordingly he also integrated former Ustase members into the party and state s apparatus 65 Croatian President Franjo Tuđman wanted Croatia to become independent from Yugoslavia In January 1990 the League of Communists broke up on ethnic lines with the Croatian and Slovene factions demanding a looser federation at the 14th Extraordinary Congress At the congress Serbian delegates accused the Croatian and Slovene delegates of supporting separatism terrorism and genocide in Kosovo 66 The Croatian and Slovene delegations including most of their ethnic Serb members eventually left in protest after Serbian delegates rejected every proposed amendment 58 67 January 1990 also marked the beginning of court cases being brought to Yugoslavia s Constitutional Court on the matter of secession 68 The first was the Slovenian Constitutional Amendments case after Slovenia claimed the right to unilateral secession pursuant to the right of self determination 69 The Constitutional Court ruled that secession from the federation was only permitted if there was the unanimous agreement of Yugoslavia s republics and autonomous provinces 68 The Constitutional Court noted that 1974 Constitution s Section I of the Basic Principles of the Constitution identified that self determination including secession belonged to the peoples of Yugoslavia and their socialist republics 68 The matter of Kosovo secession was addressed in May 1991 with the court claiming that only the peoples of Yugoslavia had the right to secession Albanians were considered a minority and not a people of Yugoslavia 68 The 1990 survey conducted among Yugoslav citizens showed that ethnic animosity existed on a small scale 70 Compared to the results from 25 years before Croatia was the republic with the highest increase in ethnic distance Furthermore there was significant increase of ethnic distance among Serbs and Montenegrins toward Croats and Slovenes and vice versa 70 Of all respondents 48 of Croats said that their affiliation with Yugoslavia is very important to them 70 In February 1990 Jovan Raskovic founded the Serb Democratic Party SDS in Knin whose program aimed to change the regional division of Croatia to be aligned with ethnic Serb interests 71 Prominent members of the RSK government including Milan Babic and Milan Martic later testified that Belgrade directed a propaganda campaign portraying the Serbs in Croatia as being threatened with genocide by the Croat majority 72 On 4 March 1990 50 000 Serbs rallied at Petrova Gora and shouted negative remarks aimed at Tuđman 71 chanted This is Serbia 71 and expressed support for Milosevic 73 74 The first free elections in Croatia and Slovenia were scheduled for a few months later 75 The first round of elections in Croatia was held on 22 April and the second round on 6 May 76 The HDZ based its campaign on greater sovereignty eventually outright independence for Croatia fueling a sentiment among Croats that only the HDZ could protect Croatia from the aspirations of Milosevic towards a Greater Serbia It topped the poll in the elections followed by Ivica Racan s reformed communists Social Democratic Party of Croatia and was set to form a new Croatian Government 76 A tense atmosphere prevailed on May 13 1990 when a football game was held at Zagreb in Maksimir Stadium between Zagreb s Dinamo team and Belgrade s Red Star The game erupted into violence between the Croatian and Serbian fans and with the police 77 On 30 May 1990 the new Croatian Parliament held its first session President Tuđman announced his manifesto for a new Constitution ratified at the end of the year and a multitude of political economic and social changes notably to what extent minority rights mainly for Serbs would be guaranteed Local Serb politicians opposed the new constitution In 1991 Croats represented 78 1 and Serbs 12 2 of the total population of Croatia 78 but the latter held a disproportionate number of official posts 17 7 of appointed officials in Croatia including police were Serbs An even greater proportion of those posts had been held by Serbs in Croatia earlier which created a perception that the Serbs were guardians of the communist regime 79 This caused discontent among the Croats despite the fact it never actually undermined their own dominance in SR Croatia 53 After the HDZ came to power many Serbs employed in the public sector especially the police were fired and replaced by Croats 80 This combined with Tuđman s remarks i e Thank God my wife is not a Jew or a Serb 81 were distorted by Milosevic s media to spark fear that any form of an independent Croatia would be a new Ustashe state In one instance TV Belgrade showed Tuđman shaking hands with German Chancellor Helmut Kohl who would be the first government leader in the world to recognise independent Croatia and Slovenia accusing the two of plotting a Fourth Reich 82 83 Aside from the firing of many Serbs from public sector positions another concern among Serbs living in Croatia was the HDZ s public display of the sahovnica Croatian checkerboard in the Croatian coat of arms which was associated with the fascist Ustase regime 84 This was a misconception as the checkerboard had a history going back to the fifteenth century and was not identical to the one that was used in the WW2 era Independent State of Croatia 85 However Tuđman s xenophobic rhetoric and attitude towards Croatian Serbs as well as his support for former Ustase leaders did little to ease Serb fears 86 87 88 Civil unrest and demands for autonomy Edit See also Log Revolution Immediately after the Slovenian parliamentary election and the Croatian parliamentary election in April and May 1990 the JNA announced that the Tito era doctrine of general people s defense in which each republic maintained a Territorial defense force Serbo Croatian Teritorijalna obrana TO would henceforth be replaced by a centrally directed system of defense The republics would lose their role in defense matters and their TOs would be disarmed and subordinated to JNA headquarters in Belgrade but the new Slovenian government acted quickly to retain control over their TO 89 On 14 May 1990 the weapons of the TO of Croatia in Croat majority regions were taken away by the JNA 90 preventing the possibility of Croatia having its own weapons as was done in Slovenia 91 92 Borisav Jovic Serbia s representative in the Federal Presidency and a close ally of Slobodan Milosevic claimed that this action came at the behest of Serbia 93 According to Jovic on 27 June 1990 he and Veljko Kadijevic the Yugoslav Defence Minister met and agreed that they should regarding Croatia and Slovenia expel them forcibly from Yugoslavia by simply drawing borders and declaring that they have brought this upon themselves through their decisions According to Jovic the next day he obtained the agreement of Milosevic 94 However Kadijevic of mixed Serb Croat heritage and a Yugoslav Partisan in World War II was loyal to Yugoslavia and not a Greater Serbia Kadijevic believed that if Slovenia left Yugoslavia the state would collapse and thus he discussed with Jovic about possibly using the JNA to impose martial law in Slovenia to prevent this potential collapse and was willing to wage war with the secessionist republics to prevent their secession 95 Kadijevic considered the political crisis and ethnic conflict to have been caused by the actions of foreign governments particularly Germany which he accused of seeking to break up Yugoslavia to allow Germany to exercise a sphere of influence in the Balkans 96 Kadijevic regarded the Croatian government of Tuđman to be a fascist inspired and that Serbs had the right to be protected from Croatian armed formations 96 After the election of Tuđman and the HDZ a Serb Assembly was established in Srb north of Knin on 25 July 1990 as the political representation of the Serb people in Croatia The Serb Assembly declared sovereignty and autonomy of the Serb people in Croatia 97 The new Croatian government implemented policies that were seen as openly nationalistic and anti Serbian in nature such as the removal of the Serbian Cyrillic script from correspondence in public offices 98 99 Greater Serbian circles have no interest in protecting the Serbian people living in either Croatia or Bosnia or anywhere else If that were the case then we could look and see what it is in the Croatian constitution see what is in the declaration on minorities on the Serbs in Croatia and on minorities because the Serbs are treated separately there Let us see if the Serbs have less rights than the Croats in Croatia That would be protecting the Serbs in Croatia But that is not what is sought Gentlemen what they want is territory Stjepan Mesic on Belgrade s intentions in the war 100 In August 1990 an unrecognized mono ethnic referendum was held in regions with a substantial Serb population which would later become known as the Republic of Serbian Krajina RSK bordering western Bosnia and Herzegovina on the question of Serb sovereignty and autonomy in Croatia 101 This was an attempt to counter changes made to the constitution The Croatian government sent police forces to police stations in Serb populated areas to seize their weapons Among other incidents local Serbs from the southern hinterlands of Croatia mostly around the city of Knin blocked roads to tourist destinations in Dalmatia This incident is known as the Log Revolution 102 103 Years later during Martic s trial Babic claimed he was tricked by Martic into agreeing to the Log Revolution and that it and the entire war in Croatia was Martic s responsibility and had been orchestrated by Belgrade 104 The statement was corroborated by Martic in an interview published in 1991 105 Babic confirmed that by July 1991 Milosevic had taken over control of the Yugoslav People s Army JNA 106 The Croatian government responded to the blockade of roads by sending special police teams in helicopters to the scene but were intercepted by SFR Yugoslav Air Force fighter jets and forced to turn back to Zagreb The Serbs felled pine trees or used bulldozers to block roads to seal off towns like Knin and Benkovac near the Adriatic coast On 18 August 1990 the Serbian newspaper Vecernje novosti claimed almost two million Serbs were ready to go to Croatia to fight 102 On 21 December 1990 the SAO Krajina was proclaimed by the municipalities of the regions of Northern Dalmatia and Lika in south western Croatia Article 1 of the Statute of the SAO Krajina defined the SAO Krajina as a form of territorial autonomy within the Republic of Croatia in which the Constitution of the Republic of Croatia state laws and the Statute of the SAO Krajina were applied 97 107 On 22 December 1990 the Parliament of Croatia ratified the new constitution 108 which was seen by Serbs as taking away rights that had been granted by the Socialist constitution 109 The constitution did define Croatia as the national state of the Croatian nation and a state of members of other nations and minorities who are its citizens Serbs who are guaranteed equality with citizens of Croatian nationality 97 Following Tuđman s election and the perceived threat from the new constitution 108 Serb nationalists in the Kninska Krajina region began taking armed action against Croatian government officials Croatian government property throughout the region was increasingly controlled by local Serb municipalities or the newly established Serbian National Council This would later become the government of the breakaway Republic of Serbian Krajina RSK 97 After it was discovered that Martin Spegelj had pursued a campaign to acquire arms through the black market in January 1991 an ultimatum was issued requesting disarming and disbanding of Croatian military forces considered illegal by the Yugoslav authorities 110 111 Croatian authorities refused to comply and the Yugoslav army withdrew the ultimatum six days after it was issued 112 113 On 12 March 1991 the leadership of the Army met with the Presidency of the SFRY in an attempt to convince them to declare a state of emergency which would allow for the army to take control of the country Yugoslav army chief Veljko Kadijevic declared that there was a conspiracy to destroy the country saying An insidious plan has been drawn up to destroy Yugoslavia Stage one is civil war Stage two is foreign intervention Then puppet regimes will be set up throughout Yugoslavia Veljko Kadijevic 12 March 1991 114 Jovic claims that Kadijevic and the Army in March 1991 supported a coup d etat as a way out of the crisis but then changed their minds four days later 115 Kadijevic s response to this was that Jovic is lying 115 Kadijevic claims he was invited to a meeting in March 1991 in Jovic s office two days after huge protests organized by Vuk Draskovic on the streets of Belgrade where Milosevic according to Kadijevic requested that the army take control of the country through a military coup 115 Kadijevic s apparent response was to inform Milosevic that he could not make such a decision by himself and that he d discuss the request with army leaders and later inform Jovic s office about their decision 115 Kadijevic then said that their decision was against the putsch and that he informed Jovic s office in written form about it 115 Jovic claims that such document doesn t exist 115 Ante Markovic has described that after the Presidency meeting failed to achieve the results the Army wanted that Kadijevic met with him with the proposed coup d etat against the secessionist republics 116 During the meeting Markovic responded to Kadijevic by saying that the plan failed to arrest Milosevic 116 Kadijevic replied He is only one fighting for Yugoslavia Without him we could not be proposing this Markovic rejected the plan and afterwards communication between Kadijevic and Markovic broke down 116 Military forces EditSerb and Yugoslav People s Army forces Edit See also Yugoslav People s Army and Military of Serbian Krajina Map of the strategic offensive plan of the Yugoslav People s Army JNA in 1991 as interpreted by the US Central Intelligence Agency The JNA was initially formed during World War II to carry out guerrilla warfare against occupying Axis forces The success of the Partisan movement led to the JNA basing much of its operational strategy on guerrilla warfare as its plans normally entailed defending against NATO or Warsaw Pact attacks where other types of warfare would put the JNA in a comparatively poor position That approach led to maintenance of a Territorial Defense system 117 On paper the JNA seemed a powerful force with 2 000 tanks and 300 jet aircraft mainly Soviet or locally produced However by 1991 the majority of this equipment was 30 years old as the force consisted primarily of T 54 55 tanks and MiG 21 aircraft 118 Still the JNA operated around 300 M 84 tanks a Yugoslav version of the Soviet T 72 and a sizable fleet of ground attack aircraft such as the Soko G 4 Super Galeb and the Soko J 22 Orao whose armament included AGM 65 Maverick guided missiles 119 By contrast more modern cheap anti tank missiles like the AT 5 and anti aircraft missiles like the SA 14 were abundant and were designed to destroy much more advanced weaponry Before the war the JNA had 169 000 regular troops including 70 000 professional officers The fighting in Slovenia brought about a great number of desertions and the army responded by mobilizing Serbian reserve troops Approximately 100 000 evaded the draft and the new conscripts proved an ineffective fighting force The JNA resorted to reliance on irregular militias 120 Paramilitary units like the White Eagles Serbian Guard Dusan Silni and Serb Volunteer Guard which committed a number of massacres against Croat and other non Serbs civilians were increasingly used by the Yugoslav and Serb forces 121 122 There were also foreign fighters supporting the RSK mostly from Russia 123 With the retreat of the JNA forces in 1992 JNA units were reorganized as the Army of Serb Krajina which was a direct heir to the JNA organization with little improvement 6 124 By 1991 the JNA officer corps was dominated by Serbs and Montenegrins they were overrepresented in Yugoslav federal institutions especially the army 57 1 of JNA officers were Serbs while Serbs formed 36 3 of the population of Yugoslavia 79 A similar structure was observed as early as 1981 125 Even though the two peoples combined comprised 38 8 of the population of Yugoslavia 70 of all JNA officers and non commissioned officers were either Serbs or Montenegrins 126 In July 1991 the JNA was instructed to completely eliminate Croats and Slovenes from the army most of whom had already begun to desert en masse why 127 Croatian forces Edit See also Croatian National Guard and Military of Croatia The Croatian military eased their equipment shortage by seizing the JNA barracks in the Battle of the Barracks The Croatian military was in a much worse state than that of the Serbs In the early stages of the war lack of military units meant that the Croatian Police force would take the brunt of the fighting The Croatian National Guard Croatian Zbor narodne garde the new Croatian military was formed on 11 April 1991 and gradually developed into the Croatian Army Croatian Hrvatska vojska by 1993 Weaponry was in short supply and many units were either unarmed or were equipped with obsolete World War II era rifles The Croatian Army had only a handful of tanks including World War II surplus vehicles such as the T 34 and its Air Force was in an even worse state consisting of only a few Antonov An 2 biplane crop dusters that had been converted to drop makeshift bombs 128 129 In August 1991 the Croatian Army had fewer than 20 brigades After general mobilization was instituted in October the size of the army grew to 60 brigades and 37 independent battalions by the end of the year 130 131 In 1991 and 1992 Croatia was also supported by 456 foreign fighters including British 139 French 69 and German 55 132 The seizure of the JNA s barracks between September and December helped to alleviate the Croatians equipment shortage 133 134 By 1995 the balance of power had shifted significantly Serb forces in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina were capable of fielding an estimated 130 000 troops the Croatian Army Croatian Defence Council Croatian Hrvatsko vijece obrane HVO and the Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina could field a combined force of 250 000 soldiers and 570 tanks 135 136 Course of the war EditFor a chronological guide see Timeline of the Croatian War of Independence 1991 Open hostilities begin Edit First armed incidents Edit A monument to Josip Jovic widely perceived in Croatia as the first Croatian victim of the war who died during the Plitvice Lakes incident Ethnic hatred grew as various incidents fueled the propaganda machines on both sides During his testimony before the ICTY one of the top Krajina leaders Milan Martic stated that the Serb side started using force first 137 The conflict escalated into armed incidents in the majority Serb populated areas The Serbs attacked Croatian police units in Pakrac in early March 10 138 while one Josip Jovic is widely reported as the first police officer killed by Serb forces as part of the war during the Plitvice Lakes incident in late March 1991 11 139 In March and April 1991 Serbs in Croatia began to make moves to secede from that territory It is a matter of debate to what extent this move was locally motivated and to what degree the Milosevic led Serbian government was involved In any event the SAO Krajina was declared which consisted of any Croatian territory with a substantial Serb population The Croatian government viewed this move as a rebellion 97 140 141 From the beginning of the Log Revolution and the end of April 1991 nearly 200 incidents involving the use of explosive devices and 89 attacks on the Croatian police were recorded 29 The Croatian Ministry of the Interior started arming an increasing number of special police forces and this led to the building of a real army On 9 April 1991 Croatian President Tuđman ordered the special police forces to be renamed Zbor Narodne Garde National Guard this marks the creation of a separate military of Croatia 142 Significant clashes from this period included the siege of Kijevo where over a thousand people were besieged in the inner Dalmatian village of Kijevo and the Borovo Selo killings where Croatian policemen engaged Serb paramilitaries in the eastern Slavonian village of Borovo and suffered twelve casualties 143 Violence gripped eastern Slavonian villages in Tovarnik a Croat policeman was killed by Serb paramilitaries on 2 May while in Sotin a Serb civilian was killed on 5 May when he was caught in a crossfire between Serb and Croat paramilitaries 143 On 6 May the 1991 protest in Split against the siege of Kijevo at the Navy Command in Split resulted in the death of a Yugoslav People s Army soldier On 15 May Stjepan Mesic a Croat was scheduled to be the chairman of the rotating presidency of Yugoslavia Serbia aided by Kosovo Montenegro and Vojvodina whose presidency votes were at that time under Serbian control blocked the appointment which was otherwise seen as largely ceremonial This maneuver technically left Yugoslavia without a head of state and without a commander in chief 144 145 Two days later a repeated attempt to vote on the issue failed Ante Markovic prime minister of Yugoslavia at the time proposed appointing a panel which would wield presidential powers 146 It was not immediately clear who the panel members would be apart from defense minister Veljko Kadijevic nor who would fill position of JNA commander in chief The move was quickly rejected by Croatia as unconstitutional 147 The crisis was resolved after a six week stalemate and Mesic was elected president the first non communist to become Yugoslav head of state in decades 148 Throughout this period the federal army the JNA and the local Territorial Defense Forces continued to be led by federal authorities controlled by Milosevic Helsinki Watch reported that Serb Krajina authorities executed Serbs who were willing to reach an accommodation with Croat officials 29 Declaration of independence Edit See also 1991 Croatian independence referendum and Ten Day War On 19 May 1991 the Croatian authorities held a referendum on independence with the option of remaining in Yugoslavia as a looser union 149 Serb local authorities issued calls for a boycott which were largely followed by Croatian Serbs The referendum passed with 94 in favor 150 The newly constituted Croatian military units held a military parade and review at Stadion Kranjceviceva in Zagreb on 28 May 1991 151 The parliament of Croatia declared Croatia s independence and dissolved its association with Yugoslavia on 25 June 1991 2 152 The Croatian parliament s decision was partially boycotted by left wing parliament deputies 153 The European Community and the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe urged Croatian authorities to place a three month moratorium on the decision 154 The government of Yugoslavia responded to the declarations of independence of Croatia and Slovenia with Yugoslav Prime Minister Ante Markovic declaring the secessions to be illegal and contrary to the Constitution of Yugoslavia and supported the JNA taking action to secure the integral unity of Yugoslavia 155 In June and July 1991 the short armed conflict in Slovenia came to a speedy end partly because of the ethnic homogeneity of the population of Slovenia 152 It was later revealed that a military strike against Slovenia followed by a planned withdrawal was conceived by Slobodan Milosevic and Borisav Jovic then president of the SFR Yugoslavia presidency Jovic published his diary containing the information and repeated it in his testimony at the Milosevic trial at the ICTY 127 Croatia agreed to the Brioni Agreement that involved freezing its independence declaration for three months which eased tensions a little 3 Escalation of the conflict Edit Further information Battle of Vukovar Siege of Dubrovnik Battle of Osijek Battle of the Barracks Battle of Gospic Operation Hurricane 91 and Battle of the Dalmatian channels In the first stages of war Croatian cities were extensively shelled by the JNA Bombardment damage in Dubrovnik Stradun in the walled city left and map of the walled city with the damage marked right In July in an attempt to salvage what remained of Yugoslavia JNA forces were involved in operations against predominantly Croat areas In July the Serb led Territorial Defence Forces started their advance on Dalmatian coastal areas in Operation Coast 91 156 By early August large areas of Banovina were overrun by Serb forces 157 With the start of military operations in Croatia Croats and a number of Serbian conscripts started to desert the JNA en masse similar to what had happened in Slovenia 156 158 Albanians and Macedonians started to search for a way to legally leave the JNA or serve their conscription term in Macedonia these moves further homogenized the ethnic composition of JNA troops in or near Croatia 159 One month after Croatia declared its independence the Yugoslav army and other Serb forces held something less than one third of the Croatian territory 157 mostly in areas with a predominantly ethnic Serb population 160 161 The JNA military strategy partly consisted of extensive shelling at times irrespective of the presence of civilians 162 As the war progressed the cities of Dubrovnik Gospic Sibenik Zadar Karlovac Sisak Slavonski Brod Osijek Vinkovci and Vukovar all came under attack by Yugoslav forces 163 164 165 166 The United Nations UN imposed a weapons embargo this did not affect JNA backed Serb forces significantly as they had the JNA arsenal at their disposal but it caused serious trouble for the newly formed Croatian army The Croatian government started smuggling weapons over its borders 167 168 We will soon gain control of Petrinja Karlovac and Zadar because it has been shown that it is in our interest and the interest of the army to have a large port Milan Martic August 19 1991 on the expansion of Republic of Serbian Krajina at Croatia s expense 105 In August 1991 the Battle of Vukovar began 169 170 Eastern Slavonia was gravely impacted throughout this period starting with the Dalj massacre 171 and fronts developed around Osijek and Vinkovci in parallel to the encirclement of Vukovar 172 173 174 175 In September Serbian troops completely surrounded the city of Vukovar Croatian troops including the 204th Vukovar Brigade entrenched themselves within the city and held their ground against elite armored and mechanized brigades of the JNA as well as Serb paramilitary units 176 177 Vukovar was almost completely devastated 15 000 houses were destroyed 178 Some ethnic Croatian civilians had taken shelter inside the city Other members of the civilian population fled the area en masse Death toll estimates for Vukovar as a result of the siege range from 1 798 to 5 000 122 A further 22 000 were exiled from Vukovar immediately after the town was captured 178 179 Some estimates include 220 000 Croats and 300 000 Serbs internally displaced for the duration of the war in Croatia 24 In many areas large numbers of civilians were forced out by the military It was at this time that the term ethnic cleansing the meaning of which ranged from eviction to murder first entered the English lexicon 180 The JNA breakthrough in eastern Slavonia September 1991 January 1992 On October 3 the Yugoslav Navy renewed its blockade of the main ports of Croatia This move followed months of standoff for JNA positions in Dalmatia and elsewhere now known as the Battle of the Barracks It also coincided with the end of Operation Coast 91 in which the JNA failed to occupy the coastline in an attempt to cut off Dalmatia s access to the rest of Croatia 181 On October 5 President Tuđman made a speech in which he called upon the whole population to mobilize and defend against Greater Serbian imperialism pursued by the Serb led JNA Serbian paramilitary formations and rebel Serb forces 131 On 7 October the Yugoslav air force attacked the main government building in Zagreb an incident referred to as the bombing of the Banski Dvori 182 183 The next day as a previously agreed three month moratorium on implementation of the declaration of independence expired the Croatian Parliament severed all remaining ties with Yugoslavia 8 October is now celebrated as Independence Day in Croatia 4 The bombing of the government offices and the Siege of Dubrovnik that started in October 184 were contributing factors that led to European Union EU sanctions against Serbia 185 186 On 15 October after the capture of Cavtat by the JNA local Serbs led by Aco Apolonio proclaimed the Dubrovnik Republic 187 The international media focused on the damage to Dubrovnik s cultural heritage concerns about civilian casualties and pivotal battles such as the one in Vukovar were pushed out of public view Nonetheless artillery attacks on Dubrovnik damaged 56 of its buildings to some degree as the historic walled city a UNESCO World Heritage Site sustained 650 hits by artillery rounds 188 Peak of the war Edit Croatian internally displaced persons near Dubrovnik in December 1991 In response to the 5th JNA Corps advance across the Sava River towards Pakrac and further north into western Slavonia 189 the Croatian army began a successful counterattack in early November 1991 its first major offensive operation of the war Operation Otkos 10 31 October to 4 November resulted in Croatia recapturing an area between the Bilogora and Papuk mountains 190 191 The Croatian Army recaptured approximately 270 square kilometers 100 sq mi of territory in this operation 191 The Vukovar massacre took place in November 192 193 the survivors were transported to prison camps such as Ovcara and Velepromet with the majority ending up in Sremska Mitrovica prison camp 194 The sustained siege of Vukovar attracted heavy international media attention Many international journalists were in or near Vukovar as was UN peace mediator Cyrus Vance who had been Secretary of State to former US President Carter 195 Also in eastern Slavonia the Lovas massacre occurred in October 121 196 and the Erdut massacre in November 1991 before and after the fall of Vukovar 197 At the same time the Skabrnja massacre and Gospic massacre occurred in the Dalmatian hinterland 198 Croats became refugees in their own country Mirko Kovac on the 10th anniversary of the end of the Croatian War 199 On 14 November the Navy blockade of Dalmatian ports was challenged by civilian ships The confrontation culminated in the Battle of the Dalmatian channels when Croatian coastal and island based artillery damaged sank or captured a number of Yugoslav navy vessels including Mukos PC 176 later rechristened PB 62 Solta 200 After the battle the Yugoslav naval operations were effectively limited to the southern Adriatic 201 Croatian forces made further advances in the second half of December including Operation Orkan 91 In the course of Orkan 91 the Croatian army recaptured approximately 1 440 square kilometers 560 sq mi of territory 191 The end of the operation marked the end of a six month long phase of intense fighting 10 000 people had died hundreds of thousands had fled and tens of thousands of homes had been destroyed 202 Photos of the victims of the Lovas massacre On December 19 as the intensity of the fighting increased Croatia won its first diplomatic recognition by a western nation Iceland while the Serbian Autonomous Oblasts in Krajina and western Slavonia officially declared themselves the Republic of Serbian Krajina 32 Four days later Germany recognized Croatian independence 37 On December 26 1991 the Serb dominated federal presidency announced plans for a smaller Yugoslavia that could include the territory captured from Croatia during the war 33 However on December 21 1991 for the first time in the war Istria was under attack 203 The Serbian Forces attacked the airport near the city of Vrsar situated in the south western of the peninsula between the city of Porec and Rovinj with two MiG 21 and two Galeb G 2 204 Afterwards Yugoslav airplanes carpet bombed Vrsar s Crljenka airport resulting in two deaths 205 Mediated by foreign diplomats ceasefires were frequently signed and frequently broken Croatia lost much territory but expanded the Croatian Army from the seven brigades it had at the time of the first ceasefire to 60 brigades and 37 independent battalions by December 31 1991 130 A destroyed T 34 85 tank in Karlovac 1992 The Arbitration Commission of the Peace Conference on Yugoslavia also referred to as Badinter Arbitration Committee was set up by the Council of Ministers of the European Economic Community EEC on August 27 1991 to provide the Conference on Yugoslavia with legal advice The five member Commission consisted of presidents of Constitutional Courts in the EEC Starting in late November 1991 the committee rendered ten opinions The Commission stated among other things that SFR Yugoslavia was in the process of dissolution and that the internal boundaries of Yugoslav republics may not be altered unless freely agreed upon 1 Factors in favour of Croatia s preservation of its pre war borders were the Yugoslav Federal Constitution Amendments of 1971 and the Yugoslav Federal Constitution of 1974 The 1971 amendments introduced a concept that sovereign rights were exercised by the federal units and that the federation had only the authority specifically transferred to it by the constitution The 1974 Constitution confirmed and strengthened the principles introduced in 1971 206 207 The borders had been defined by demarcation commissions in 1947 pursuant to decisions of AVNOJ in 1943 and 1945 regarding the federal organization of Yugoslavia 208 1992 Ceasefire Edit See also United Nations Protection Force and Miljevci plateau incident Zagreb Osijek B Manastir Vukovar Erdut Vinkovci Zupanja Slavonski Brod Pakrac Maslenica Karlovac Ogulin Otocac Dubrovnik Konavle Prevlaka Split Sibenik Zadar Sisak Petrinja Plitvice Gospic Knin Peruca Dam Okucani Bihac Banja Luka Croatian controlled Serb controlled Bosniak controlledclass notpageimage Occupied areas in Croatia January 1992 A new UN sponsored ceasefire the fifteenth in just six months was agreed on January 2 1992 and came into force the next day 6 This so called Sarajevo Agreement became a lasting ceasefire Croatia was officially recognized by the European Community on January 15 1992 37 Even though the JNA began to withdraw from Croatia including Krajina the RSK clearly retained the upper hand in the occupied territories due to support from Serbia 124 By that time the RSK encompassed 13 913 square kilometers 5 372 sq mi of territory 40 The area size did not encompass another 680 square kilometers 260 sq mi of occupied territory near Dubrovnik as that area was not considered part of the RSK 209 Ending the series of unsuccessful ceasefires the UN deployed a protection force in Serbian held Croatia the United Nations Protection Force UNPROFOR to supervise and maintain the agreement 210 The UNPROFOR was officially created by UN Security Council Resolution 743 on February 21 1992 39 The warring parties mostly moved to entrenched positions and the JNA soon retreated from Croatia into Bosnia and Herzegovina where a new conflict was anticipated 6 Croatia became a member of the UN on May 22 1992 which was conditional upon Croatia amending its constitution to protect the human rights of minority groups and dissidents 38 Expulsions of the non Serb civilian population remaining in the occupied territories continued despite the presence of the UNPROFOR peacekeeping troops and in some cases with UN troops being virtually enlisted as accomplices 211 The Yugoslav People s Army took thousands of prisoners during the war in Croatia and interned them in camps in Serbia Bosnia and Herzegovina and Montenegro The Croatian forces also captured some Serbian prisoners and the two sides agreed to several prisoner exchanges most prisoners were freed by the end of 1992 Some infamous prisons included the Sremska Mitrovica camp the Stajicevo camp and the Begejci camp in Serbia and the Morinj camp in Montenegro 212 The Croatian Army also established detention camps such as the Lora prison camp in Split 212 Croatian soldiers capture a Serb cannon and truck in the Miljevci plateau incident June 21 1992 Armed conflict in Croatia continued intermittently on a smaller scale There were several smaller operations undertaken by Croatian forces to relieve the siege of Dubrovnik and other Croatian cities Sibenik Zadar and Gospic from Krajina forces Battles included the Miljevci plateau incident between Krka and Drnis on June 21 22 1992 213 Operation Jaguar at Kriz Hill near Bibinje and Zadar on May 22 1992 and a series of military actions in the Dubrovnik hinterland Operation Tigar on 1 13 July 1992 214 in Konavle on 20 24 September 1992 and at Vlastica on September 22 25 1992 Combat near Dubrovnik was followed by the withdrawal of JNA from Konavle between September 30 and October 20 1992 The Prevlaka peninsula guarding entrance to the Bay of Kotor was demilitarized and turned over to the UNPROFOR while the remainder of Konavle was restored to the Croatian authorities 215 1993 Croatian military advances Edit Further information Operation Maslenica and Operation Medak Pocket Fighting was renewed at the beginning of 1993 as the Croatian army launched Operation Maslenica an offensive operation in the Zadar area on January 22 The objective of the attack was to improve the strategic situation in that area as it targeted the city airport and the Maslenica Bridge 216 the last entirely overland link between Zagreb and the city of Zadar until the bridge area was captured in September 1991 217 The attack proved successful as it met its declared objectives 218 but at a high cost as 114 Croat and 490 Serb soldiers were killed in a relatively limited theater of operations 219 Map of Operation Medak Pocket While Operation Maslenica was in progress Croatian forces attacked Serb positions 130 kilometers 81 mi to the east They advanced towards the Peruca Hydroelectric Dam and captured it by January 28 1993 shortly after Serb militiamen chased away the UN peacekeepers protecting the dam 220 UN forces had been present at the site since the summer of 1992 They discovered that the Serbs had planted 35 to 37 tons of explosives spread over seven different sites on the dam in a way that prevented the explosives removal the charges were left in place 220 221 Retreating Serb forces detonated three of explosive charges totaling 5 tons within the 65 meter 213 ft high dam in an attempt to cause it to fail and flood the area downstream 221 222 The disaster was prevented by Mark Nicholas Gray a colonel in the British Royal Marines a lieutenant at the time who was a UN military observer at the site He risked being disciplined for acting beyond his authority by lowering the reservoir level which held 0 54 cubic kilometers 0 13 cu mi of water before the dam was blown up His action saved the lives of 20 000 people who would otherwise have drowned or become homeless 223 Operation Medak Pocket took place in a salient south of Gospic from September 9 17 The offensive was undertaken by the Croatian army to stop Serbian artillery in the area from shelling nearby Gospic 224 The operation met its stated objective of removing the artillery threat as Croatian troops overran the salient but it was marred by war crimes The ICTY later indicted Croatian officers for war crimes The operation was halted amid international pressure and an agreement was reached that the Croatian troops were to withdraw to positions held prior to September 9 while UN troops were to occupy the salient alone The events that followed remain controversial as Canadian authorities reported that the Croatian army intermittently fought against the advancing Canadian Princess Patricia s Canadian Light Infantry before finally retreating after sustaining 27 fatalities 225 The Croatian ministry of defense and UN officer s testimonies given during the Ademi Norac trial deny that the battle occurred 226 227 228 229 Ethnic make up of the Republic of Serbian Krajina 1991 1993 Ethnic group 1991 230 1993 231 Serbs 245 800 52 3 398 900 92 Croats 168 026 35 8 30 300 7 Others 55 895 11 9 4 395 1 Total 469 721 433 595On February 18 1993 Croatian authorities signed the Daruvar Agreement with local Serb leaders in Western Slavonia The aim of the secret agreement was normalizing life for local populations near the frontline However authorities in Knin learned of this and arrested the Serb leaders responsible 232 In June 1993 Serbs began voting in a referendum on merging Krajina territory with Republika Srpska 202 Milan Martic acting as the RSK interior minister advocated a merger of the two Serbian states as the first stage in the establishment of a state of all Serbs in his April 3 letter to the Assembly of the Republika Srpska On January 21 1994 Martic stated that he would speed up the process of unification and pass on the baton to all Serbian leader Slobodan Milosevic if elected president of the RSK 233 These intentions were countered by the United Nations Security Council UNSC Resolution 871 in October 1993 when the UNSC affirmed for the first time that the United Nations Protected Areas i e the RSK held areas were an integral part of the Republic of Croatia 234 During 1992 and 1993 an estimated 225 000 Croats as well as refugees from Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia settled in Croatia Croatian volunteers and some conscripted soldiers participated in the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina 235 In September 1992 Croatia had accepted 335 985 refugees from Bosnia and Herzegovina most of whom were Bosniak civilians excluding men of drafting age 236 The large number of refugees significantly strained the Croatian economy and infrastructure 237 The American Ambassador to Croatia Peter Galbraith tried to put the number of Muslim refugees in Croatia into a proper perspective in an interview on 8 November 1993 He said the situation would be the equivalent of the United States taking in 30 000 000 refugees 238 1994 Erosion of support for Krajina Edit Further information Washington Agreement and Operation Winter 94 Map of the Bihac enclave In 1992 the Croat Bosniak conflict erupted in Bosnia and Herzegovina just as each was fighting with the Bosnian Serbs The war was originally fought between the Croatian Defence Council and Croatian volunteer troops on one side and the Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina ARBiH on the other but by 1994 the Croatian Army had an estimated 3 000 to 5 000 troops involved in the fighting 239 Under pressure from the United States 240 the belligerents agreed on a truce in late February 241 followed by a meeting of Croatian Bosnian and Bosnian Croat representatives with US Secretary of State Warren Christopher in Washington D C on February 26 1994 On March 4 Franjo Tuđman endorsed the agreement providing for the creation of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and an alliance between Bosnian and Croatian armies against the Serb forces 7 242 This led to the dismantling of Herzeg Bosnia and reduced the number of warring factions in Bosnia and Herzegovina from three to two 243 In late 1994 the Croatian Army intervened in Bosnia from November 1 3 in Operation Cincar near Kupres 14 and from November 29 December 24 in the Winter 94 operation near Dinara and Livno 15 16 These operations were undertaken to detract from the siege of the Bihac region and to approach the RSK capital of Knin from the north isolating it on three sides 135 During this time unsuccessful negotiations mediated by the UN were under way between the Croatian and RSK governments The matters under discussion included opening the Serb occupied part of the Zagreb Slavonski Brod motorway near Okucani to transit traffic as well as the putative status of Serbian majority areas within Croatia The motorway initially reopened at the end of 1994 but it was soon closed again due to security issues Repeated failures to resolve the two disputes would serve as triggers for major Croatian offensives in 1995 244 A Croatian improvised fighting vehicle At the same time the Krajina army continued the Siege of Bihac together with the Army of Republika Srpska from Bosnia 245 Michael Williams an official of the UN peacekeeping force said that when the village of Vedro Polje west of Bihac had fallen to a RSK unit in late November 1994 the siege entered the final stage He added that heavy tank and artillery fire against the town of Velika Kladusa in the north of the Bihac enclave was coming from the RSK Western military analysts said that among the array of Serbian surface to air missile systems that surrounded the Bihac pocket on Croatian territory there was a modern SAM 2 system probably brought there from Belgrade 246 In response to the situation the Security Council passed Resolution 958 which allowed NATO aircraft deployed as a part of the Operation Deny Flight to operate in Croatia On November 21 NATO attacked the Udbina airfield controlled by the RSK temporarily disabling runways Following the Udbina strike NATO continued to launch strikes in the area and on November 23 after a NATO reconnaissance plane was illuminated by the radar of a surface to air missile SAM system NATO planes attacked a SAM site near Dvor with AGM 88 HARM anti radiation missiles 247 In later campaigns the Croatian army would pursue a variant of blitzkrieg tactics with the Guard brigades punching through the enemy lines while the other units simply held the lines at other points and completed an encirclement of the enemy units 130 135 In a further attempt to bolster its armed forces Croatia hired Military Professional Resources Inc MPRI in September 1994 to train some of its officers and NCOs 248 Begun in January 1995 MPRI s assignment involved fifteen advisors who taught basic officer leadership skills and training management MPRI activities were reviewed in advance by the US State Department to ensure they did not involve tactical training or violate the UN arms embargo still in place 249 1995 End of the war Edit Further information Operation Flash Operation Summer 95 Operation Storm Erdut Agreement UNTAES and UNMOP Tensions were renewed at the beginning of 1995 as Croatia sought to put increasing pressure on the RSK In a five page letter on 12 January Franjo Tuđman formally told the UN Secretary General Boutros Boutros Ghali that Croatia was ending the agreement permitting the stationing of UNPROFOR in Croatia effective 31 March The move was purportedly motivated by actions by Serbia and the Serb dominated Federal Republic of Yugoslavia to provide assistance to the Serb occupation of Croatia and allegedly integrate the occupied areas into Yugoslav territory The situation was noted and addressed by the UN General Assembly 250 regarding the situation in Croatia and to respect strictly its territorial integrity and in this regard concludes that their activities aimed at achieving the integration of the occupied territories of Croatia into the administrative military educational transportation and communication systems of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Serbia and Montenegro are illegal null and void and must cease immediately 251 The United Nations General Assembly resolution 1994 43 regarding to the occupied territories of Croatia Map of Operation Storm International peacemaking efforts continued and a new peace plan called the Z 4 plan was presented to Croatian and Krajina authorities There was no initial Croatian response and the Serbs flatly refused the proposal 252 As the deadline for UNPROFOR to pull out neared a new UN peacekeeping mission was proposed with an increased mandate to patrol Croatia s internationally recognized borders Initially the Serbs opposed the move and tanks were moved from Serbia into eastern Croatia 253 A settlement was finally reached and the new UN peacekeeping mission was approved by United Nations Security Council Resolution 981 on March 31 The name of the mission was the subject of a last minute dispute as Croatian Foreign Minister Mate Granic insisted that the word Croatia be added to the force s name The name United Nations Confidence Restoration Operation in Croatia UNCRO was approved 254 Violence erupted again in early May 1995 The RSK lost support from the Serbian government in Belgrade partly as a result of international pressure At the same time the Croatian Operation Flash reclaimed all of the previously occupied territory in Western Slavonia 41 In retaliation Serb forces attacked Zagreb with rockets killing 7 and wounding over 200 civilians 255 The Yugoslav army responded to the offensive with a show of force moving tanks towards the Croatian border in an apparent effort to stave off a possible attack on the occupied area in Eastern Slavonia 256 During the following months international efforts mainly concerned the largely unsuccessful United Nations Safe Areas set up in Bosnia and Herzegovina and trying to set up a more lasting ceasefire in Croatia The two issues virtually merged by July 1995 when a number of the safe areas in eastern Bosnia and Herzegovina were overrun and one in Bihac was threatened 257 In 1994 Croatia had already signaled that it would not allow Bihac to be captured 135 and a new confidence in the Croatian military s ability to recapture occupied areas brought about a demand from Croatian authorities that no further ceasefires were to be negotiated the occupied territories would be re integrated into Croatia 258 These developments and the Washington Agreement a ceasefire signed in the Bosnian theater led to another meeting of presidents of Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina on 22 July when the Split Agreement was adopted In it Bosnia and Herzegovina invited Croatia to provide military and other assistance particularly in the Bihac area Croatia accepted committing itself to an armed intervention 259 The document issued by the Supreme Defense Council of the RSK on 4 August 1995 ordering the evacuation of civilians from its territory From 25 to 30 July the Croatian Army and Croatian Defence Council HVO troops attacked Serb held territory north of Mount Dinara capturing Bosansko Grahovo and Glamoc during Operation Summer 95 That offensive paved the way for the military recapture of occupied territory around Knin as it severed the last efficient resupply route between Banja Luka and Knin 260 On 4 August Croatia started Operation Storm with the aim of recapturing almost all of the occupied territory in Croatia except for a comparatively small strip of land located along the Danube at a considerable distance from the bulk of the contested land The offensive involving 100 000 Croatian soldiers was the largest single land battle fought in Europe since World War II 261 Operation Storm achieved its goals and was declared completed on 8 August 12 The Croatian human rights organization Hrvatski helsinski odbor counted 677 Serb civilians killed by Croatian forces after Operation Storm mostly old people who remained while other Serb civilians fled 262 An additional 837 Serb civilians are listed as missing following Operation Storm 263 Other sources indicate a 181 more victims were killed by Croatian forces and buried in a mass grave in Mrkonjic Grad following a continuation of the Operation Storm offensive into Bosnia 264 265 Many of the civilian population of the occupied areas fled during the offensive or immediately after its completion in what was later described in various terms ranging from expulsion to planned evacuation 12 Krajina Serb sources Documents of HQ of Civilian Protection of RSK Supreme Council of Defense published by Kovacevic 266 Sekulic 267 and Vrcelj 268 confirm that the evacuation of Serbs was organized and planned beforehand 269 270 According to Amnesty International some 200 000 Croatian Serbs including the entire Croatian Serb Army fled to the neighbouring Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and areas of Bosnia and Herzegovina under Bosnian Serb control In the aftermath of the operations members of the Croatian Army and police murdered tortured and forcibly expelled Croatian Serb civilians who had remained in the area as well as members of the withdrawing Croatian Serb armed forces 271 The ICTY on the other hand concluded that only about 20 000 people were deported 47 The BBC noted 200 000 Serb refugees at one point 272 273 Croatian refugees exiled in 1991 were finally allowed to return to their homes In 1996 alone about 85 000 displaced Croats returned to the former Krajina and western Slavonia according to the estimates of the U S Committee for Refugees and Immigrants 274 In the months that followed there were still some intermittent mainly artillery attacks from Serb held areas in Bosnia and Herzegovina on the Dubrovnik area and elsewhere 9 The remaining Serb held area in Croatia in Eastern Slavonia was faced with the possibility of military confrontation with Croatia Such a possibility was repeatedly stated by Tuđman after Storm 275 The threat was underlined by the movement of troops to the region in mid October 276 as well as a repeat of an earlier threat to intervene militarily specifically saying that the Croatian Army could intervene if no peace agreement was reached by the end of the month 277 Reintegration of Eastern Slavonia Edit Further combat was averted on 12 November when the Erdut Agreement was signed by the RSK acting defense minister Milan Milanovic 13 278 on instructions received from Slobodan Milosevic and Federal Republic of Yugoslavia officials 279 280 The agreement stated that the remaining occupied area was to be returned to Croatia with a two year transitional period 13 The new UN transitional administration was established as the United Nations Transitional Authority for Eastern Slavonia Baranja and Western Sirmium UNTAES by United Nations Security Council Resolution 1037 of 15 January 1996 281 The agreement also guarantees the right of establishment of a Joint Council of Municipalities for the local Serbian community The transitional period was subsequently extended by a year On 15 January 1998 the UNTAES mandate ended and Croatia regained full control of the area 17 As the UNTAES replaced the UNCRO mission the Prevlaka peninsula previously under UNCRO control was put under the control of United Nations Mission of Observers in Prevlaka UNMOP The UNMOP was established by United Nations Security Council Resolution 1038 of 15 January 1996 and terminated on 15 December 2002 215 Notable defections EditOn 25 October 1991 Yugoslav Air Force pilot Rudolf Peresin flew his MiG 21R to Austria and defected 282 283 He later fought on behalf of Croatian forces in the war ultimately dying after being shot down in 1995 282 On 4 February 1992 air force pilot Danijel Borovic sh flew his MiG 21bis to Croatia and defected 283 He later fought on behalf of Croatian forces in the war The MiG 21bis itself was later shot down on 24 June 1992 killing pilot Anto Rados sh On 15 May 1992 air force pilots Ivica Ivandic sh and Ivan Selak sh flew their MiG 21bis to Croatia and defected 284 Both later fought on behalf of Croatian forces in the war and survived Ivandic s MiG 21bis was shot down on 14 September 1993 killing pilot Miroslav Peris sh Impact and aftermath EditAssessment of type and name of the war Edit Monument to the defenders of Dubrovnik 2009 The standard term applied to the war as directly translated from Croatian is Homeland war Croatian Domovinski rat 285 while the term Croatian War of Independence is also used 286 287 288 289 Early English sources also called it the War in Croatia the Serbo Croatian War 144 and the Conflict in Yugoslavia 3 27 Different translations of the Croatian name for the war are also sometimes used such as Patriotic War although such use by native speakers of English is rare 290 The official term used in Croatian is the most widespread name used in Croatia but other terms are also used Another is Greater Serbian Aggression Croatian Velikosrpska agresija The term was widely used by the media during the war and is still sometimes used by the Croatian media politicians and others 26 291 292 Two views exist as to whether the war was a civil or an international war The government of Serbia often states that it was entirely a civil war 293 294 The prevailing view in Croatia and of most international law experts including the ICTY is that the war was an international conflict between the rump Yugoslavia and Serbia against Croatia supported by Serbs in Croatia 295 296 297 The Croatian international legal scholar and Yale University professor Mirjan Damaska said that the question of aggression was not one for the ICJ to decide as at the time of the verdict the international crime of aggression had not yet been defined 298 Neither Croatia nor Yugoslavia ever formally declared war on each other 299 Unlike the Serbian position that the conflict need not be declared as it was a civil war 293 the Croatian motivation for not declaring war was that Tuđman believed that Croatia could not confront the JNA directly and did everything to avoid an all out war 300 All acts and omissions charged as Grave Breaches of the Geneva Conventions of 1949 occurred during the international armed conflict and partial occupation of Croatia Displaced persons were not allowed to return to their homes and those few Croats and other non Serbs who had remained in the Serb occupied areas were expelled in the following months The territory of the RSK remained under Serb occupation until large portions of it were retaken by Croatian forces in two operations in 1995 The remaining area of Serb control in Eastern Slavonia was peacefully re integrated into Croatia in 1998 301 ICTY s indictment against Milosevic Casualties and refugees Edit War memorial containing 938 graves of victims of the siege of Vukovar The former Stajicevo camp in Serbia where Croatian prisoners of war and civilians were kept by Serbian authorities Most sources place the total number of deaths from the war at around 20 000 43 302 303 According to the head of the Croatian Commission for Missing Persons Colonel Ivan Grujic Croatia suffered 12 000 killed or missing including 6 788 soldiers and 4 508 civilians 304 Another source gives a figure of 14 000 killed on the Croatian side of whom 43 4 were civilians 305 Official figures from 1996 also list 35 000 wounded 25 Ivo Goldstein mentions 13 583 killed or missing 306 while Anglo Croatian historian Marko Attila Hoare reports the number to be 15 970 307 citing figures from January 2003 presented by scientific researcher Drazen Zivic 308 Close to 2 400 persons were reported missing during the war 309 In 2018 the Croatian Memorial Documentation Center of Homeland War published new figures indicating 22 211 killed or missing in the war 15 007 killed or missing on the Croatian side and 7 204 killed or missing on the Serb side 1 077 of those killed on the territories of the Republic of Serbian Krajina were non Serbs 20 However on Croatian government controlled territory the Center did not break out the ethnic structure of the total number of 5 657 civilians killed due to missing data 310 As of 2016 the Croatian government listed 1 993 missing persons from the war of whom 1093 were Croats 428 soldiers and 665 civilians while the remaining 900 were Serbs 5 soldiers and 895 civilians 311 312 As of 2009 there were more than 52 000 persons in Croatia registered as disabled due to their participation in the war 313 This figure includes not only those disabled physically due to wounds or injuries sustained but also persons whose health deteriorated due to their involvement in the war including diagnoses of chronic diseases such as cardiovascular disease as well as posttraumatic stress disorder PTSD 314 In 2010 the number of war related PTSD diagnosed persons was 32 000 315 In total the war caused 500 000 refugees and displaced persons 316 Around 196 000 317 to 247 000 in 1993 318 Croats and other non Serbs were displaced during the war from or around the RSK The Organization for Security and Co operation in Europe OSCE said that 221 000 were displaced in 2006 of which 218 000 had returned 319 Up to 300 000 Croats were displaced according to other sources 21 The majority were displaced during the initial fighting and during the JNA offensives of 1991 and 1992 211 320 On 16 March 1994 Croatia registered 492 636 displaced or refugees on its territory 241 014 persons from Croatia itself and 251 622 from Bosnia and Herzegovina an estimated 10 of the country s population 321 Some 150 000 Croats from Republika Srpska and Serbia have obtained Croatian citizenship since 1991 322 many due to incidents like the expulsions in Hrtkovci 323 Destroyed Serbian house in Croatia Most Serbs were displaced during Operation Storm in 1995 The Belgrade based non government organization Veritas lists 7 134 killed and missing from the Republic of Serbian Krajina including 4 484 combatants and 2 650 civilians and 307 JNA members who were not born or lived in Croatia Most of them were killed or went missing in 1991 2 729 and 1995 2 348 The most deaths occurred in Northern Dalmatia 1 605 22 The JNA has officially acknowledged 1 279 killed in action The actual number was probably considerably greater since casualties were consistently underreported In one example official reports spoke of two slightly wounded soldiers after an engagement however according to the unit s intelligence officer the actual number was 50 killed and 150 wounded 23 324 According to Serbian sources some 120 000 Serbs were displaced from 1991 to 1993 and 250 000 were displaced after Operation Storm 325 The number of displaced Serbs was 254 000 in 1993 318 dropping to 97 000 in the early 1995 317 and then increasing again to 200 000 by the end of the year Most international sources place the total number of Serbs displaced at around 300 000 According to Amnesty International 300 000 were displaced from 1991 to 1995 of which 117 000 were officially registered as having returned as of 2005 271 According to the OSCE 300 000 were displaced during the war of which 120 000 were officially registered as having returned as of 2006 However it is believed the number does not accurately reflect the number of returnees because many returned to Serbia Montenegro or Bosnia and Herzegovina after officially registering in Croatia 319 According to the UNHCR in 2008 125 000 were registered as having returned to Croatia of whom 55 000 remained permanently 326 While the prewar 1991 Croatian census counted 581 663 Serbs or 12 2 of the population in Croatia 327 the first postwar 2001 census showed only 201 631 Serbs remaining in Croatia or just 4 5 of the population The Croatian Association of Prisoners in Serbian Concentration Camps and Croatian Disabled Homeland War Veterans Association were founded to help victims of prison abuse 328 329 A 2013 report by the United Nations Development Programme UNDP in Croatia entitled Assessment of the Number of Sexual Violence Victims during the Homeland War on the Territory of the Republic of Croatia and Optimal Forms of Compensation and Support of Victims determined the estimated victims male and female of rape and other forms of sexual assault on both sides to number between approximately 1 470 and 2 205 or 1 501 and 2 437 victims 330 Most victims were non Serbs assaulted by Serbs 330 By region the largest number of rapes and acts of sexual violence occurred in Eastern Slavonia with an estimated 380 570 victims 330 According to the UNDP report between 300 and 600 men 4 4 6 6 of those imprisoned and between 279 and 466 women or 30 50 of those imprisoned suffered from various forms of sexual abuse while being held in Serbian detention camps and prisons including those in Serbia proper 330 Between 412 and 611 Croat women were raped in the Serb occupied territories outside of detention camps from 1991 to 1995 330 Croat forces were also known to have committed rapes and acts of sexual violence against Serb women during Operations Flash and Storm with an estimated 94 140 victims 330 Sexual abuse of Serb prisoners also occurred in the Croat run Lora and Kerestinec camps 330 On May 29 2015 the Croatian parliament passed the first law in the country that recognises rape as a war crime the Law on the Rights of Victims of Sexual Violence during the Military Aggression against the Republic of Croatia in the Homeland War 331 The legislation which is overseen by the Croatian War Veterans Ministry provides victims with medical and legal aid as well as financial compensation from the state up to 20 000 euros These benefits do not depend on a court verdict 331 As of May 2019 Zeljka Zokalj from the War Veterans Ministry said that around 25 million kunas 3 37 million euros have already been awarded to victims Since 2015 249 compensation requests have been filed and 156 of them approved 331 Wartime damage and minefields Edit Further information Minefields in Croatia Bombardment damage in Osijek A standard minefield marking Official figures on wartime damage published in Croatia in 1996 specify 180 000 destroyed housing units 25 of the Croatian economy destroyed and US 27 billion of material damage 25 Europe Review 2003 04 estimated the war damage at US 37 billion in damaged infrastructure lost economic output and refugee related costs while GDP dropped 21 in the period 42 15 percent of housing units and 2 423 cultural heritage structures including 495 sacral structures were destroyed or damaged 332 The war imposed an additional economic burden of very high military expenditures By 1994 as Croatia rapidly developed into a de facto war economy the military consumed as much as 60 percent of total government spending 333 Yugoslav and Serbian expenditures during the war were even more disproportionate The federal budget proposal for 1992 earmarked 81 percent of funds to be diverted into the Serbian war effort 334 Since a substantial part of the federal budgets prior to 1992 was provided by Slovenia and Croatia the most developed republics of Yugoslavia a lack of federal income quickly led to desperate printing of money to finance government operations That in turn produced the worst episode of hyperinflation in history Between October 1993 and January 1995 Yugoslavia which then consisted of Serbia and Montenegro suffered through a hyperinflation of five quadrillion percent 335 336 Many Croatian cities were attacked by artillery missiles and aircraft bombs by RSK or JNA forces from RSK or Serb controlled areas in Bosnia and Herzegovina as well as Montenegro and Serbia The most shelled cities were Vukovar Slavonski Brod from the mountain of Vucjak 337 and Zupanja for more than 1 000 days 338 Vinkovci Osijek Nova Gradiska Novska Daruvar Pakrac Sibenik Sisak Dubrovnik Zadar Gospic Karlovac Biograd na moru Slavonski Samac Ogulin Duga Resa Otocac Ilok Beli Manastir Lucko Zagreb and others 339 340 341 Slavonski Brod was never directly attacked by tanks or infantry but the city and its surrounding villages were hit by more than 11 600 artillery shells and 130 aircraft bombs in 1991 and 1992 342 Approximately 2 million mines were laid in various areas of Croatia during the war Most of the minefields were laid with no pattern or any type of record being made of the position of the mines 343 A decade after the war in 2005 there were still about 250 000 mines buried along the former front lines along some segments of the international borders especially near Bihac and around some former JNA facilities 344 As of 2007 the area still containing or suspected of containing mines encompassed approximately 1 000 square kilometers 390 sq mi 345 More than 1 900 people were killed or injured by land mines in Croatia since the beginning of the war including more than 500 killed or injured by mines after the end of the war 346 Between 1998 and 2005 Croatia spent 214 million on various mine action programs 347 As of 2009 all remaining minefields are clearly marked 348 During the 2015 European migrant crisis there existed concerns over areas where mines could affect the flow of refugees coming from Serbia to Croatia 349 War crimes and the ICTY Edit Further information International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia and List of indictees of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia ICTY was established by UN Security Council Resolution 827 which was passed on 25 May 1993 The court has power to prosecute persons responsible for serious violations of international humanitarian law breaches of the Geneva Conventions violating the laws or customs of war committing genocide and crimes against humanity committed in the territory of the former SFR Yugoslavia since 1 January 1991 350 The indictees by ICTY ranged from common soldiers to Prime Ministers and Presidents Some high level indictees included Slobodan Milosevic President of Serbia Milan Babic president of the RSK and Ante Gotovina general of the Croatian Army 351 Franjo Tuđman President of Croatia died in 1999 of cancer while the ICTY s prosecutors were still investigating him 352 According to Marko Attila Hoare a former employee at the ICTY an investigative team worked on indictments of senior members of the joint criminal enterprise including not only Milosevic but Veljko Kadijevic Blagoje Adzic Borisav Jovic Branko Kostic Momir Bulatovic and others These drafts were rejected reportedly upon the intervention of Carla del Ponte and the indictment limited to Milosevic 353 Between 1991 and 1995 Martic held positions of minister of interior minister of defense and president of the self proclaimed Serbian Autonomous Region of Krajina SAO Krajina which was later renamed Republic of Serbian Krajina RSK He was found to have participated during this period in a joint criminal enterprise which included Slobodan Milosevic whose aim was to create a unified Serbian state through commission of a widespread and systematic campaign of crimes against non Serbs inhabiting areas in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina envisaged to become parts of such a state 46 International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in its verdict against Milan Martic Castle Eltz after the Siege of Vukovar Milan Martic during trial at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia As of 2018 the ICTY has convicted seven officials from the Serb Montenegrin side and nobody from the Croatian side Milan Martic received the largest sentence 35 years in prison 354 Milan Babic received 13 years He expressed remorse for his role in the war asking his Croat brothers to forgive him 355 In 2007 two former Yugoslav army officers were sentenced for the Vukovar massacre at the ICTY in The Hague Veselin Sljivancanin was sentenced to 10 years and Mile Mrksic to 20 years in prison 356 Prosecutors stated that following the capture of Vukovar the JNA handed over several hundred Croats to Serbian forces Of these at least 264 mostly injured soldiers but also two women and a 16 year old child 357 were murdered and buried in mass graves in the neighborhood of Ovcara on the outskirts of Vukovar 358 The city s mayor Slavko Dokmanovic was brought to trial at the ICTY but committed suicide in 1998 in captivity before proceedings began 359 In 2017 Dragan Vasiljkovic commander of a Croatian Serb paramilitary unit he was convicted of war crimes sentenced by a Croatian court to 15 years in prison Generals Pavle Strugar and Miodrag Jokic were sentenced by the ICTY to eight and seven years respectively for shelling Dubrovnik 360 A third indictee Vladimir Kovacevic was declared mentally unfit to stand trial 361 The Yugoslav Army s Chief of the General Staff Momcilo Perisic was charged with aiding and abetting war crimes but eventually acquitted on all charges 362 Ex RSK President Goran Hadzic died during the trial In 2018 Vojislav Seselj was sentenced to 10 years for crimes against humanity perpetrated through persecution and deportation of Croats from Vojvodina in 1992 363 while he was also given an additional cumulative sentence of 4 years and 9 months for contempt of court 364 A number of Croat civilians in hospitals and shelters marked with a red cross were targeted by Serb forces 365 There were numerous well documented war crimes against civilians and prisoners of war perpetrated by Serb and Yugoslav forces in Croatia the Dalj killings 366 the Lovas massacre 121 196 the Siroka Kula massacre 367 the Bacin massacre 366 the Saborsko massacre 368 the Skabrnja massacre 198 the Vocin massacre 366 369 and the Zagreb rocket attacks The ICTY left convicted numerous individuals for their role in the war Milosevic middle became the first former head of state of any country brought before an international criminal tribunal 370 but died before a verdict was reached Mile Mrksic right received 20 years 356 There were a number of prison camps where Croatian POWs and civilians were detained including the Sremska Mitrovica camp the Stajicevo camp and the Begejci camp in Serbia and the Morinj camp in Montenegro 212 The Croatian Association of Prisoners in Serbian Concentration Camps was later founded in order to help the victims of prison abuse The Croatian Army established detention camps like Lora prison camp in Split 212 Croatian war crimes included the Gospic massacre the Sisak killings in 1991 and 1992 371 and others 372 373 which were likewise prosecuted by Croatian courts or the ICTY Another infamous instance of war crimes in what would later become known as the Pakracka Poljana case committed by a reserve police unit commanded by Tomislav Mercep involved the killing of prisoners mostly ethnic Serbs near Pakrac in late 1991 and early 1992 374 The events were initially investigated by the ICTY but the case was eventually transferred to the Croatian judiciary 375 More than a decade later five members of this unit although not its commander were indicted on criminal charges related to these events and convicted 376 Mercep was arrested for these crimes in December 2010 377 In 2009 Branimir Glavas a Croatian incumbent MP at the time was convicted of war crimes committed in Osijek in 1991 and sentenced to jail by a Croatian court 378 The ICTY indicted Croatian officers Janko Bobetko Rahim Ademi and Mirko Norac for crimes committed during Operation Medak Pocket but that case was also transferred to Croatian courts Norac was found guilty and jailed for 7 years Ademi was acquitted 379 Bobetko was declared unfit to stand trial due to poor health 380 381 The ICTY s indictment against General Ante Gotovina cited at least 150 Serb civilians killed in the aftermath of Operation Storm 382 The Croatian Helsinki Committee registered 677 Serb civilians killed in the operation 383 Louise Arbour a prosecutor of the ICTY stated that the legality and legitimacy of the Operation itself was not the issue but that the ICTY was required to investigate whether crimes were committed during the campaign 384 The Trial Chamber reiterated that the legality of Operation Storm is irrelevant for the case at hand since the ICTY s remit is processing war crimes 385 In 2011 Gotovina was sentenced to 24 and Markac to 18 years in prison In 2012 their convictions were overturned and both were immediately released Cermak was acquitted of all charges 47 Recorded war crimes that were committed against ethnic Serbs particularly the elderly during or in the aftermath of Operation Storm include the Golubic killings Grubori massacre and Varivode massacre In the first degree verdict the trial chamber found that certain members of the Croatian political and military leadership shared the common objective of the permanent removal of the Serb civilian population from the Krajina by force or threat of force implicating Franjo Tuđman Gojko Susak who was the Minister of Defence and a close associate of Tuđman s and Zvonimir Cervenko the Chief of the Croatian army Main Staff 47 Nevertheless in the second degree verdict the appeals chamber dismissed the notion of such a joint criminal enterprise The verdict meant the ICTY convicted no Croats for their role in the Croatian War of Independence 48 In 2013 the former chief of Serbian State Security Jovica Stanisic and deputy Franko Simatovic were acquitted of crimes against humanity and war crimes but after protests and an appeal by prosecutors in 2015 a new trial was ordered due to legal errors 386 The new trial began in 2017 386 In a first degree verdict on 30 June 2021 the UN Mechanism for International Criminal Tribunals MICT found the pair guilty for crimes committed in Bosnia in Bosanski Samac and sentenced them to 12 years in prison but acquitted them of planning ordering or aiding and abetting any crimes committed by Serb units in Croatia 387 They were tried as part of a joint criminal enterprise involving Milosevic and other Serbian political military and police officials The court found that from at least August 1991 a joint criminal enterprise existed whose aim was to forcibly and permanently remove Croats Bosnian Muslim and Bosnian Croats from large areas of Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina 387 Those implicated in the enterprise included senior political military and police leadership in Serbia the SAO Krajina the SAO Eastern Slavonia Baranja and Western Syrmia and Republika Srpska though the court found that the prosecution failed to prove the participation of Stanisic and Simatovic in the enterprise 387 388 Serbia s role EditDuring the war Edit See also Serbia in the Yugoslav Wars and Role of the media in the Yugoslav wars Territories controlled by Serb forces during the Yugoslav Wars It is widely believed that Milosevic tried to create Greater Serbia which would unite all Serbs across a collapsing Yugoslavia 29 389 390 391 While Serbia and Croatia never declared war on each other Serbia was directly and indirectly involved in the war through a number of activities 299 Its foremost involvement entailed material support of the JNA Following the independence of various republics from SFR Yugoslavia Serbia provided the bulk of manpower and funding that was channeled to the war effort through Serbian control of the Yugoslav presidency and the federal defense ministry 127 Serbia actively supported various paramilitary volunteer units from Serbia that were fighting in Croatia 121 122 Even though no actual fighting occurred on Serbian or Montenegrin soil involvement of the two was evident through the maintenance of prison camps in Serbia and Montenegro which became places where a number of war crimes were committed 212 Borders are always dictated by the strong never by the weak We simply consider it as a legitimate right and interest of the Serb nation to live in one state Slobodan Milosevic 16 March 1991 on the breakup of Yugoslavia 392 Milosevic s trial at the ICTY revealed numerous declassified documents of Belgrade s involvement in the wars in Croatia and Bosnia 124 161 Evidence introduced at trial showed exactly how Serbia and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia financed the war that they provided weapons and material support to Bosnian and Croatian Serbs and demonstrated the administrative and personnel structures set up to support the Bosnian Serb and Croatian Serb armies 124 393 It was established that Belgrade through the federal government financed more than 90 percent of the Krajina budget in 1993 that the Supreme Defense Council decided to hide aid to Republika Srpska and Krajina from the public that the National Bank of Krajina operated as a branch office of the National Bank of Yugoslavia and that by March 1994 FR Yugoslavia Krajina and Republika Srpska used a single currency Numerous documents demonstrated that branches of the Krajina Public Accountancy Service were incorporated into Serbia s accountancy system in May 1991 and that the financing of Krajina and Republika Srpska caused hyperinflation in FR Yugoslavia 124 The trial revealed that the JNA the Serbian Ministry of Interior and other entities including Serb civilian groups and police armed Serb civilians and local territorial defense groups in the RSK before the conflict escalated 124 In 1993 the US State Department reported that right after the Maslenica and Medak pocket operations authorities in Serbia dispatched substantial numbers of volunteers to Serb held territories in Croatia to fight 318 A former secretary of the Serbian paramilitary leader Zeljko Raznatovic testified at the Hague confirming that Raznatovic took his orders and his money directly from the secret police run by Milosevic 394 This degree of control was reflected in negotiations held at various times between Croatian authorities and the RSK as the Serbian leadership under Milosevic was regularly consulted and frequently made decisions on behalf of the RSK 6 The Erdut Agreement that ended the war was signed by a RSK minister on instructions from Milosevic 13 279 280 The degree of control Serbia held over SFR Yugoslavia and later the RSK was evidenced through testimonies during the Milosevic trial at the ICTY 127 279 280 Serbia s state run media were reportedly used to incite the conflict and further inflame the situation 395 396 and also to broadcast false information about the war and the state of the Serbian economy 397 Following the rise of nationalism and political tensions after Slobodan Milosevic came to power as well as the outbreaks of the Yugoslav Wars numerous anti war movements developed in Serbia 398 399 400 The anti war protests in Belgrade were held mostly because of opposition the Battle of Vukovar and Siege of Dubrovnik 398 400 while protesters demanded the referendum on a declaration of war and disruption of military conscription 401 402 403 It is estimated that between 50 000 and 200 000 people deserted from the Milosevic controlled Yugoslav People s Army during wars while between 100 000 and 150 000 people emigrated from Serbia refusing to participate in the war 401 400 According to professor Renaud De la Brosse senior lecturer at the University of Reims and a witness called by the ICTY it is surprising how great the resistance to Milosevic s propaganda was among Serbs given that and the lack of access to alternative news 404 By late December 1991 just over a month after victory had been proclaimed in Vukovar opinion polls found that 64 of Serbian people wanted to end the war immediately and only 27 were willing for it to continue 405 After the war Edit See also Croatia Serbia relations and Croatia Serbia genocide case The Ovcara Massacre Memorial in Vukovar where Serbian President Boris Tadic expressed his apology and regret for the 1991 Vukovar massacre in which 260 people were killed 406 After the successful implementation of the Erdut Agreement which ended armed conflict in 1995 the relations between Croatia and Serbia gradually improved and the two countries established diplomatic relations following an agreement in early August 1996 407 In a case before the International Court of Justice Croatia filed a suit against the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia on 2 July 1999 citing Article IX of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide 408 With the transformation of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia into Serbia and Montenegro and the dissolution of that country in 2006 Serbia is considered its legal successor 408 The application was filed for Croatia by a U S lawyer David B Rivkin 409 Serbia reciprocated with the genocide lawsuit against the Republic of Croatia on 4 January 2010 410 The Serbian application covers missing people killed people refugees expelled people and all military actions and concentration camps with a historical account of genocide committed by the Independent State of Croatia during World War II 411 In 2003 Stjepan Mesic became the first Croatian head of state to visit Belgrade since 1991 Both Mesic and the President of Serbia and Montenegro Svetozar Marovic issued mutual apologies to Croat and Serb victims of the war 412 By 2010 Croatia and Serbia further improved their relations through an agreement to resolve remaining refugee issues 44 and visits of Croatian President Ivo Josipovic to Belgrade 45 and of the Serbian President Boris Tadic to Zagreb and Vukovar During their meeting in Vukovar President Tadic gave a statement expressing his apology and regret while President Josipovic said that no crimes committed at the time would go unpunished The statements were made during a joint visit to the Ovcara memorial center site of the Vukovar massacre 406 Role of the international community EditThe war developed at a time when the attention of the United States and the world was on Iraq and the Gulf War in 1991 along with a sharp rise in oil prices and a slowdown in the growth of the world economy 413 Between 19 and 23 December 1991 several other European countries beginning with Germany and the Vatican City followed by Sweden and Italy announced their recognition of Croatia s and Slovenia s independence 37 The European Union as a whole recognized the independence of the two republics on 15 January 1992 Each of the major foreign governments acted somewhat differently Germany up until 1991 Germany supported a status quo 414 According to diplomat Gerhard Almer the Yugoslav disintegration was feared as a bad example for the dissolution of the Soviet Union sparking fears that violence could also be used against the nations that were about to declare independence from the Soviet Union 415 During the war this policy changed when Helmut Kohl announced that Germany recognized Slovenia and Croatia as independent countries United Kingdom John Major s government favored neutrality United States The United States under George H W Bush tended to favour non intervention at first 416 just like the United Kingdom In contrast from 1993 the administration led by Bill Clinton tended to engage itself in order to end the conflicts in the former Yugoslavia Cyrus Vance supported the integrity of Yugoslavia 417 Russia The Russian government under Boris Yeltsin tended to oppose recognition of Croatia although Russia recognized Croatia on 17 February 1992 while the United States did the same on 7 April 1992 418 Notable people EditRoza Miletic born 1934 Croatian war veteranSee also Edit Croatia portalCroatian War of Independence in film Timeline of the Croatian War of Independence Virovitica Karlovac Karlobag lineAnnotations Edit As determined by the Badinter Arbitration Committee SFR Yugoslavia dissolved during the war 1 On 25 June 1991 the Croatian parliament declared the independence of Croatia following a referendum held in May 2 The decision was suspended for three months 3 the declaration became effective on 8 October 1991 and Croatia was no longer part of Yugoslavia 4 After all former Yugoslav federal republics except Serbia and Montenegro declared independence the two declared the creation of a new country the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia on 27 April 1992 disbanding the JNA soon afterwards 5 Serb controlled units of the JNA participated in combat operations throughout 1991 and up to May 1992 in support of the Republic of Serbian Krajina 6 Bosnia and Herzegovina was particularly significant for the war in late 1994 and in 1995 Pursuant to the Washington Agreement the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina was formed as a subunit of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina RBiH representing both Bosnian Croat and Bosniak Bosnian Muslim ethnic groups Most significantly the Washington Agreement specifically permitted Croatian Army to enter Bosnia and Herzegovina thereby allowing operations Cincar and Winter 94 against the army of Republika Srpska outflanking the RSK capital at Knin and creating a new strategic situation before the decisive battles of the war 7 Initially SAO Krajina SAO Western Slavonia and SAO Eastern Slavonia Baranja and Western Syrmia were separate entities and fought individually against the Croatian government As of December 19 1991 the SAOs became part of the RSK In 1992 94 Republika Srpska was intermittently involved in Croatian military operations mostly through provision of military and other aid to the RSK occasional air raids launched from Mahovljani airbase near Banja Luka and most significantly through artillery attacks against a number of cities in Croatia especially Slavonski Brod Zupanja and Dubrovnik 8 9 There was no formal declaration of war The first armed clash of the war was the Pakrac clash on 1 March 1991 10 followed by the Plitvice Lakes incident on 31 March 1991 when the first fatalities occurred 11 The last major combat operation was Operation Storm from 5 8 August 1995 12 Formally hostilities ceased when the Erdut Agreement was signed on 12 November 1995 13 There were also some conflicts in Bosnia and Herzegovina particularly in late 1994 and early 1995 Among those the most significant to the course of the war were Cincar 14 and Operation Winter 94 15 16 Three months after the military defeat of the RSK in Operation Storm 12 the UN sponsored Erdut Agreement between the Croatian and RSK authorities was signed on 12 November 1995 13 The agreement provided for a two year transitional period later extended by a year during which the remaining occupied territory of Croatia was to be transferred to control of the Croatian government The agreement was implemented by UNTAES and successfully completed by 1998 17 Notes Edit a b Allain Pellet 1992 The Opinions of the Badinter Arbitration Committee A Second Breath for the Self Determination of Peoples PDF European Journal of International Law 3 1 178 185 doi 10 1093 oxfordjournals ejil a035802 Archived from the original PDF on May 29 2011 a b Chuck Sudetic June 26 1991 2 Yugoslav States Vote Independence To Press Demands The New York Times Archived from the original on November 10 2012 Retrieved 12 December 2010 a b c Chuck Sudetic June 29 1991 Conflict in Yugoslavia 2 Yugoslav States Agree to Suspend Secession Process The New York Times Retrieved December 12 2010 a b Ceremonial session of the Croatian Parliament on the occasion of the Day of Independence of the Republic of Croatia Official web site of the Parliament of Croatia Sabor October 7 2004 Archived from the original on March 14 2012 Retrieved July 29 2012 Two Republics Transform Selves Into a New Smaller Yugoslavia The Los Angeles Times Associated Press April 28 1992 Retrieved January 7 2011 a b c d e Chuck Sudetic January 3 1992 Yugoslav Factions Agree to U N Plan to Halt Civil War The New York Times Retrieved December 16 2010 a b Steven Greenhouse March 18 1994 Muslims and Bosnian Croats Give Birth to a New Federation The New York Times Retrieved December 17 2010 Peter Maass July 16 1992 Serb Artillery Hits Refugees At Least 8 Die As Shells Hit Packed Stadium The Seattle Times Retrieved December 23 2010 a b Raymond Bonner August 17 1995 Dubrovnik Finds Hint of Deja Vu in Serbian Artillery The New York Times Retrieved December 18 2010 a b Stephen Engelberg March 3 1991 Belgrade Sends Troops to Croatia Town The New York Times Retrieved December 11 2010 a b Chuck Sudetic April 1 1991 Deadly Clash in a Yugoslav Republic The New York Times Retrieved December 11 2010 a b c d e f Dean E Murphy August 8 1995 Croats Declare Victory End Blitz Los Angeles Times Retrieved December 18 2010 a b c d e f g Chris Hedges November 12 1995 Serbs in Croatia Resolve Key Issue by Giving up Land The New York Times Retrieved December 18 2010 a b Chuck Sudetic November 4 1994 Bosnian Army and Croats Drive Serbs Out of a Town The New York Times Retrieved December 17 2010 a b Roger Cohen January 12 1995 Croatia Is Set to End Mandate Of U N Force on Its Territory The New York Times Retrieved December 17 2010 a b Burg and Shoup 2000 p 331 a b c Chris Hedges January 16 1998 An Ethnic Morass Is Returned to Croatia The New York Times Retrieved December 18 2010 Tus U listopadu 91 HV je imao 70 000 vojnika dead link Domovinski rat hr Centar domovinskog rata 1995 Archived from the original on November 19 2012 Retrieved July 17 2012 a b c Zebic Enis January 15 2018 Ljudski gubici u ratu u Hrvatskoj 22 211 osoba Human Casualties in the Croatian War 22 211 Persons Radio Free Europe in Croatian Retrieved December 17 2019 a b Phuong 2005 p 157 a b Srpske zrtve rata i poraca na podrucju Hrvatske i bivse RSK 1990 1998 godine Veritas Retrieved June 16 2015 a b Mestrovic 1996 pp 77 78 a b Zanotti 2011 pp 111 a b c Darko Zubrinic Croatia within ex Yugoslavia Croatianhistory net Retrieved February 7 2010 a b Mirko Bilandzic July 2008 Hrvatska vojska u međunarodnim odnosima Croatian Army in International Relations English summary Polemos casopis Za Interdisciplinarna Istrazivanja Rata I Mira in Croatian Croatian Sociological Association and Jesenski amp Turk Publishing House 11 22 ISSN 1331 5595 Retrieved December 21 2010 a b Srbija Hrvatska temelj stabilnosti Serbia Croatia foundation of stability in Serbian B92 November 4 2010 Archived from the original on November 8 2010 Retrieved December 22 2010 Martic verdict pp 122 123 The Trial Chamber found that the evidence showed that the President of Serbia Slobodan Milosevic openly supported the preservation of Yugoslavia as a federation of which the SAO Krajina would form a part However the evidence established that Milosevic covertly intended to create a Serb state This state was to be created through the establishment of paramilitary forces and the provocation of incidents in order to create a situation where the JNA could intervene Initially the JNA would intervene to separate the parties but subsequently the JNA would intervene to secure the territories envisaged to be part of a future Serb state a b c d e f Final report of the United Nations Commission of Experts established pursuant to security council resolution 780 1992 Annex IV The policy of ethnic cleansing Prepared by M Cherif Bassiouni United Nations December 28 1994 Archived from the original on May 4 2012 Retrieved March 19 2011 Babic verdict p 6 In the period of the Indictment from circa 1 August 1991 to 15 February 1992 Serb forces consisting of JNA units local Serb TO units TO units from Serbia and Montenegro local MUP police units MUP police units from Serbia and paramilitary units attacked and took control of towns villages and settlements These acts were intended to permanently and forcibly remove the majority of the Croat and other non Serb populations from approximately one third of Croatia in order to transform that territory into a Serb dominated state Chuck Sudetic August 5 1991 Serbs Refuse to Negotiate in Croatia The New York Times Retrieved January 24 2011 a b Croatia Clashes Rise Mediators Pessimistic The New York Times December 19 1991 Archived from the original on November 15 2012 Retrieved July 29 2012 a b Serb Led Presidency Drafts Plan For New and Smaller Yugoslavia The New York Times December 27 1991 Retrieved December 16 2010 Brown amp Karim 1995 p 120 Kadijevic 1993 pp 134 135 Bjelajac et al 2009 p 241 a b c d Stephen Kinzer December 24 1991 Slovenia and Croatia Get Bonn s Nod The New York Times Archived from the original on June 20 2012 Retrieved July 29 2012 a b Paul L Montgomery May 23 1992 3 Ex Yugoslav Republics Are Accepted Into U N The New York Times Archived from the original on November 11 2012 Retrieved July 29 2012 a b United Nations Security Council Resolution 743 S RES 743 1992 February 21 1992 a b Republika Hrvatska i Domovinski rat 1990 1995 dokumenti Republic of Croatian and the Croatian War of Independence 1990 1995 documents in Croatian Profil Archived from the original on May 22 2011 Retrieved January 20 2011 a b Roger Cohen May 2 1995 Croatia Hits Area Rebel Serbs Hold Crossing U N Lines The New York Times Retrieved December 18 2010 a b Europe Review 2003 p 75 a b Presidents apologise over Croatian war BBC News BBC September 10 2003 Retrieved February 7 2010 a b UN agency welcomes Serbia Croatia agreement on refugee return issues United Nations November 26 2010 Retrieved December 18 2010 a b Serbia and Croatia forge ties with talks in Belgrade BBC News BBC July 18 2010 Retrieved December 18 2010 a b Milan Martic sentenced to 35 years for crimes against humanity and war crimes International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia June 12 2007 Retrieved August 24 2010 a b c d Judgement Summary for Gotovina et al PDF The Hague International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia April 15 2011 Retrieved April 15 2011 a b Hague war court acquits Croat Generals Gotovina and Markac BBC News November 16 2012 Retrieved November 16 2012 ICJ amp 3 February 2015 Worldmark Encyclopedia of the Nations Europe Gale Group 2001 Pp 73 Jovic 2009 p 19 Jovic 2009 p 21 a b Pesic 1996 p 12 a b Kosovo The New York Times July 23 2010 Retrieved December 10 2010 Henry Kamm December 8 1985 Yugoslav republic jealously guards its gains The New York Times Retrieved December 10 2010 Serbia s Vojvodina Regains Autonomy Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty December 15 2009 Retrieved December 10 2010 A Country Study Yugoslavia Former Political Innovation and the 1974 Constitution chapter 4 The Library of Congress Retrieved January 27 2011 a b c Brown amp Karim 1995 p 116 Tim Judah July 1 2001 Tyrant s defeat marks Serbs day of destiny The Guardian Retrieved December 19 2010 Glaurdic Josip 2011 The Hour of Europe Western Powers and the Breakup of Yugoslavia Yale University Press pp 52 53 ISBN 978 0 300 16645 3 Frucht 2005 p 433 Branka Magas December 13 1999 Obituary Franjo Tudjman The Independent Archived from the original on November 10 2012 Retrieved 17 October 2011 Glover Jonathan 2001 Humanity A Moral History of the Twentieth Century Yale University Press p 125 ISBN 978 0 30008 715 4 Hockenos Paul 2018 Homeland Calling Exile Patriotism and the Balkan Wars Cornell University Press p 20 ISBN 978 1 50172 565 4 Fisher 2006 p 70 Glaurdic Josip 2011 The Hour of Europe Western Powers and the Breakup of Yugoslavia Yale University Press p 71 ISBN 978 0 300 16645 3 Racan obituary The Times April 30 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original on April 14 2019 Retrieved December 11 2010 Kres 2010 p 54 Kres 2010 p 6 Bjelajac et al 2009 pp 237 240 Glaurdic Josip 2011 The Hour of Europe Western Powers and the Breakup of Yugoslavia Yale University Press p 57 ISBN 978 0 300 16645 3 Jovic Borisav 1995 Poslednji dani SFRJ Belgrade Politika pp 160 161 Adam LeBor Milosevic A Biography London UK Bloomsbury Publishing 2003 page needed a b Sabrina P Ramet Thinking about Yugoslavia Scholarly Debates about the Yugoslav Breakup and the Wars in Bosnia and Kosovo Cambridge University Press 2005 P117 a b c d e Martic verdict pp 44 49 Guskova Elena 2001 History of the Yugoslavian crisis 1990 2000 Moscow p 147 ISBN 5941910037 Yugoslavia in the 20th century Sketches of Political History 2011 pp 780 781 ISBN 9785916741216 Milosevic Transcripts International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia October 1 2002 p 10528 Retrieved March 5 2011 Chuck Sudetic August 7 1990 Serb Minority Seek Role in a Separate Croatia The New York Times Retrieved December 11 2010 a b Roads Sealed as Yugoslav Unrest Mounts The New York Times Reuters August 19 1990 Retrieved December 11 2010 Armed Serbs Guard Highways in Croatia During Referendum The New York Times August 20 1990 Retrieved December 11 2010 IWPR news report Martic Provoked Croatian Conflict iwpr net Institute for War and Peace Reporting February 17 2006 Archived from the original on September 29 2007 Retrieved February 7 2010 a b Chuck Sudetic August 19 1991 Truce in Croatia on Edge of Collapse The New York Times Retrieved December 15 2010 Milan Babic Transcript ICTY February 17 2006 pp 1504 1510 Retrieved January 10 2011 Chuck Sudetic October 2 1990 Croatia s Serbs Declare Their Autonomy The New York Times Archived from the original on November 12 2012 Retrieved 11 December 2010 a b Crisis in the Kremlin Croatia Takes Right to Secede The New York Times Associated Press December 22 1990 Retrieved December 10 2010 Pesic 1996 p 10 11 The nations rights to be constitutive were recognized not only within their respective states but also among co nationals inhabiting the territory of other Yugoslav republics In some cases these ethnic diaspora communities viewed the constitutive nature of Yugoslav nationhood as giving them the right to extend the sovereignty of their national homeland to the territories they inhabited Such was the case with Serbs in Croatia who constituted 12 of the population in 1991 Later this status would produce enormous problems giving Croatian Serbs the right to secede from Croatia and giving Croatia the right to deny them this status by designating them as a minority in its new constitution Defiant Yugoslav Republics Brace for Assault The New York Times Associated Press January 20 1991 Retrieved December 11 2010 Chuck Sudetic January 22 1991 Yugoslavia Warns Croatia to Disarm Its Forces The New York Times Retrieved December 11 2010 Chuck Sudetic January 25 1991 Defiant Croatian Republic Refuses to Disarm Paramilitary Police The New 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Lovasu u oktobru 1991 69 Croatian civilians killed in Lovas in October 1991 in Serbian B92 October 20 2010 Retrieved December 22 2010 a b c Final report of the United Nations Commission of Experts established pursuant to UN Security Council resolution 780 1992 Annex III A Special forces Under the Direction of M Cherif Bassiouni S 1994 674 Add 2 Vol IV School of Humanities Languages and Social Sciences UWE May 27 1994 Archived from the original on October 20 2010 Retrieved October 20 2010 Use of mercenaries as a means of violating human rights and impeding the exercise of the right of peoples to self determination Note by the Secretary General United Nations August 29 1995 Retrieved January 23 2011 a b c d e f Weighing the Evidence Lessons from the Slobodan Milosevic Trial Human Rights Watch December 13 2006 Retrieved November 18 2010 Mann 1996 p 363 Final report of the United Nations Commission of Experts established pursuant to security council resolution 780 1992 December 28 1994 The military structure strategy and tactics of the warring factions University of the West of England Archived from the original on February 7 2011 Retrieved January 20 2011 a b c d Izjava Na Osnovu Pravila 89 F Statement Pursuant to Rule 89 F in Serbian International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia November 16 2003 Retrieved January 18 2011 Milosevic and I resolutely requested the following from Kadijevic 1 Respond to the Slovenes vigorously using all means including the air force they must absolutely no longer be allowed to disrespect the Yugoslav People s Army Then withdraw from Slovenia We shall make a timely decision on that matter In that way army morale shall be improved Croatia shall be scared and Serbian people calmed 2 The main YPA forces shall be grouped on Karlovac Plitvice Lakes line to the West Baranja Osijek Vinkovci Sava River to the East and Neretva River in the South In that way all territories inhabited by Serbs shall be covered until the final resolution that is until the people freely decides in a referendum 3 Completely eliminate Croats and Slovenes from the army Georg Mader 2006 Croatia s embargoed air force World Air Power Journal London UK Aerospace Publishing 24 Spring 145 ISBN 1 874023 66 2 Frucht 2005 p 562 a b c Thomas 2006 pp 21 25 a b Chuck Sudetic October 6 1991 Shells Still Fall on Croatian Towns Despite Truce The New York Times Retrieved December 16 2010 Berislav Jelinic November 24 2009 Zivot nakon rata za tuđu domovinu Life after a war for a foreign homeland Nacional in Croatian NCL Media Grupa d o o Archived from the original on May 27 2012 Retrieved 23 January 2011 Alan Cowell September 24 1991 Serbs and Croats Seeing War in Different Prisms The New York Times Retrieved December 16 2010 Dusan Stojanovic March 19 2010 Ex Serb general hero or traitor Boston Globe Retrieved December 16 2010 a b c d Ramet 2006 p 452 Roger Cohen November 5 1994 Arms Trafficking to Bosnia Goes On Despite Embargo The New York Times Retrieved December 17 2010 Milan Martic Transcripts The Hague International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia February 15 2006 p 1360 Retrieved May 12 2011 Could you tell us please was one side responsible for the escalation in terms of violence and demonstrations of force A Both sides were responsible but to my knowledge the Serb side began using force first Stephen Engelberg March 4 1991 Serb Croat Showdown in One Village Square The New York Times Retrieved December 11 2010 19th anniversary of Plitvice action commemorated morh hr Ministry of Defence of the Republic of Croatia March 31 2010 Archived from the original on July 17 2011 Retrieved September 11 2010 David Binder March 18 1991 Serbian Official Declares Part of Croatia Separate The New York Times Retrieved December 11 2010 Chuck Sudetic April 2 1991 Rebel Serbs Complicate Rift on Yugoslav Unity The New York Times Retrieved December 11 2010 Commonwealth pp 272 278 a b Stephen Engelberg May 5 1991 One More Dead as Clashes Continue in Yugoslavia The New York Times Retrieved December 11 2010 a b John Pike October 20 2005 Serbo Croatian War GlobalSecurity org Retrieved February 7 2010 Celestine Bohlen May 16 1991 New Crisis Grips Yugoslavia Over Rotation of Leadership The New York Times Retrieved December 12 2010 Celestine Bohlen May 18 1991 Yugoslavia Fails to Fill Presidency The New York Times Retrieved December 12 2010 Chuck Sudetic May 19 1991 Croatia Rejects a Yugoslav Panel The New York Times Retrieved December 12 2010 Chuck Sudetic July 1 1991 Belgrade Orders Army to Return To Its Barracks The New York Times Retrieved December 12 2010 Croatia Calls for EC Style Yugoslavia Los Angeles Times July 16 1991 Retrieved December 20 2010 Chuck Sudetic May 20 1991 Croatia Votes for Sovereignty and Confederation The New York Times Retrieved December 12 2010 Chronology of the homeland war osrh hr Military of Croatia Archived from the original on October 22 2010 Retrieved December 11 2010 a b Brown amp Karim 1995 p 117 Seks Dio lijevoga bloka odbio glasovati za samostalnost Novi list in Croatian HINA June 25 2012 Archived from the original on March 24 2019 Retrieved November 29 2012 Alan Riding June 26 1991 Europeans Warn on Yugoslav Split The New York Times Retrieved December 12 2010 Lenard J Cohen Jasna Dragovic Soso State Collapse in South Eastern Europe New Perspectives on Yugoslavia s Disintegration Purdue University Press 2008 Pp 323 a b Army Leaves More Towns in Croatia Los Angeles Times September 29 1991 Retrieved December 13 2010 a b Charles T Powers August 1 1991 Serbian Forces Press Fight for Major Chunk of Croatia Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on May 16 2012 Retrieved 29 July 2012 Stephen Engelberg July 16 1991 Yugoslav Army Revamping Itself After Setbacks The New York Times Retrieved December 13 2010 Croatia and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia FRY Military Service United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Refworld Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada September 1 1993 Archived from the original on March 24 2012 Retrieved December 13 2010 Chuck Sudetic July 24 1991 Croats Turn Down a New Peace Pact The New York Times Retrieved December 13 2010 a b Stephen Engelberg July 27 1991 Serbia Sending Supplies to Compatriots in Croatia The New York Times Retrieved December 13 2010 Stephen Engelberg December 12 1991 Germany Raising Hopes of Croatia The New York Times Retrieved September 27 2010 Before the war the Yugoslav Army drew its soldiers from conscription in all of the Yugoslav republics Now it must rely on Serbian reservists and Serb irregulars who are poorly trained A recent report by the monitoring mission concluded that the army was routinely shelling civilian areas Yugoslav Army Driving on Dubrovnik 2 Other Cities Los Angeles Times Associated Press October 3 1991 Retrieved December 13 2010 Carol J Williams November 4 1991 Belgrade Gets a Final Warning From EC Los Angeles Times Retrieved December 13 2010 Charles T Powers July 28 1991 30 Killed as Croatia Battles Rage Unabated Los Angeles Times Retrieved December 13 2010 Croatia Says Missiles Aimed at Its Fighters Los Angeles Times Reuters December 29 1991 Retrieved December 13 2010 Christopher Bellamy October 10 1992 Croatia built web of contacts to evade weapons embargo The Independent Retrieved December 13 2010 Nathaniel C Nash January 11 1992 Chilean Arms Shipment to Croatia Stirs Tensions The New York Times Retrieved December 16 2010 Chuck Sudetic August 24 1991 Fighting May Unravel Yugoslav Truce The New York Times Retrieved December 15 2010 Chuck Sudetic August 26 1991 New Croatia Strife After Bonn Warning The New York Times Retrieved December 15 2010 Stephen Engelberg August 3 1991 Up to 80 Reported Dead in Croatia Strife The New York Times Retrieved January 22 2011 Chuck Sudetic August 23 1991 Croatia Angrily Sets Deadline on Truce The New York Times Retrieved January 22 2011 John Tagliabue September 2 1991 Europeans Arrive in Yugoslavia to Promote Peace Plan The New York Times Retrieved January 22 2011 John Tagliabue September 11 1991 Europeans Are Unable to Pacify a Croatian City The New York Times Retrieved January 22 2011 Alan Cowell September 22 1991 Croatians Under Fierce Assault Pleas for Real Truce Are Ignored The New York Times Retrieved January 22 2011 Gabriel Partos June 13 2003 Vukovar massacre What happened BBC News BBC Retrieved December 15 2010 Andrew W Maki July 10 2009 Witness Says Stanisic Supplied Croatia s Serbs With Weapons United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Refworld Institute for War and Peace Reporting Archived from the original on October 17 2012 Retrieved December 15 2010 a b Helen Seeney August 22 2006 Croatia Vukovar is Still Haunted by the Shadow of its Past Deutsche Welle ARD broadcaster Retrieved December 15 2010 15 000 Recall Siege of Vukovar in 1991 The New York Times November 19 2001 Retrieved December 15 2010 William Safire March 14 1993 On Language Ethnic Cleansing The New York Times Retrieved September 27 2010 Chuck Sudetic October 3 1991 Navy Blockade of Croatia Is Renewed The New York Times Retrieved December 16 2010 Yugoslav Planes Attack Croatian Presidential Palace The New York Times October 8 1991 Retrieved December 13 2010 Carol J Williams October 8 1991 Croatia Leader s Palace Attacked Los Angeles Times Retrieved January 23 2011 Bjelajac et al 2009 pp 249 250 David Binder November 9 1991 Old City Totters in Yugoslav Siege The New York Times Retrieved December 16 2010 Alan Riding November 9 1991 European Nations Declare Sanctions Against Belgrade The New York Times Retrieved December 16 2010 The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia ICTY during the trial of Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic identified the Dubrovnik Republic as being part of several regions in Croatia that Milosevic sought to be incorporated into a Serb dominated state http www icty org x cases slobodan milosevic ind en 040727 pdf pages 2 to 3 of the original fax print The ICTY has claimed that the JNA s campaign in the Dubrovnik region was aimed at securing territory for the Dubrovnik Republic http www icty org sid 7948 Chronology for Serbs in Croatia 6 December 1991 United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Refworld Minorities at Risk 2004 Archived from the original on March 24 2012 Retrieved January 5 2011 Bjelajac et al 2009 p 245 Chuck Sudetic November 4 1991 Army Rushes to Take a Croatian Town The New York Times Archived from the original on July 29 2012 Retrieved 29 July 2012 a b c Zeljko Kruselj December 24 2005 Orkan i Otkos rasprsili velikosrpske planove Orkan and Otkos disperse plans of a Greater Serbia Vjesnik in Croatian Narodne Novine d d Chuck Sudetic November 18 1991 Croats Concede Danube Town s Loss The New York Times Retrieved December 15 2010 Eugene Brcic June 29 1998 Croats bury victims of Vukovar massacre The Independent Retrieved December 15 2010 Yugoslavia further reports of torture Amnesty International March 1992 Archived from the original PDF on November 2 2010 Retrieved December 15 2010 Balkans Vukovar Massacre Trial Begins In The Hague Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty Broadcasting Board of Governors October 11 2005 Retrieved September 11 2010 a b Serbia war crimes prosecutor investigating 12 for 1991 mass murders of Croats jurist law pitt edu Jurist Legal News amp Research Services Inc May 30 2007 Archived from the original on January 13 2011 Retrieved December 19 2010 Milosevic indictment p 17 a b Croatia war crimes suspect extradited CNN International Turner Broadcasting System November 16 2001 Archived from the original on October 2 2012 Retrieved December 19 2010 Mirko Kovac October 9 2005 Nije Bilo Genocida Nad Srbima There was no Genocide Against Serbs Crnogorski Knjizevni List in Serbian Doclean Academy of Sciences and Arts Retrieved January 27 2011 Eduard Sostaric July 8 2008 Bitka za jedrenjak Jadran Battle for Jadran sailing ship Nacional in Croatian NCL Media Grupa d o o Archived from the original on July 16 2012 Retrieved January 25 2011 Wertheim 2007 pp 145 146 a b Chuck Sudetic June 20 1993 Fighting in Bosnia Eases Under Truce The New York Times Retrieved December 14 2010 permanent dead link Bombe sull Istria PDF la Repubblica December 1991 Retrieved March 6 2013 L Istria e la terza guerra balcanica Istria in the Third Balcanic War PDF Fucine Mute October 1999 Retrieved March 6 2013 Vrsarski Dragovoljci Posjetili Vrsar s worshiped deaf the website is in Croatian PDF UHDDR April 2011 Retrieved March 6 2013 Cobanov Sasa Rudolf Davorin 2009 Jugoslavija unitarna drzava ili federacija povijesne teznje srpskoga i hrvatskog naroda jedan od uzroka raspada Jugoslavije Yugoslavia a unitary state or federation of historic efforts of Serbian and Croatian nations one of the causes of breakup of Yugoslavia Zbornik Radova Pravnog Fakulteta U Splitu in Croatian University of Split Faculty of Law 46 2 ISSN 1847 0459 Retrieved December 10 2010 Roland Rich 1993 Recognition of States The Collapse of Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union European Journal of International Law 4 1 36 65 doi 10 1093 oxfordjournals ejil a035834 Egon Kraljevic November 2007 Prilog za povijest uprave Komisija za razgranicenje pri Predsjednistvu Vlade Narodne Republike Hrvatske 1945 1946 Contribution to the history of public administration commission for the boundary demarcation at the government s presidency of the People s Republic of Croatia 1945 1946 English language summary title PDF Arhivski Vjesnik in Croatian Croatian State Archives 50 50 ISSN 0570 9008 Retrieved December 10 2010 Dubrovacka biskupija Dubrovnik Diocese in Croatian Croatian Bishops Conference Retrieved January 20 2011 Biskupija danas obuhvaca 1368 km2 Pola biskupije bilo je okupirano Today the Diocese encompasses 1 368 km2 A half of the Diocese was occupied span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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