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Ten-Day War

Ten-Day War
Part of the Yugoslav Wars

Yugoslav T-55 hit by Slovenian anti-tank fire on the Italian border post, Rožna Dolina, Nova Gorica, during a Slovenian ambush.
Date27 June – 7 July 1991
(1 week and 3 days)
Location
Result

Slovenian victory[1][2]

Territorial
changes
Slovenia gains full independence from Yugoslavia
Belligerents
 Yugoslavia  Slovenia
Commanders and leaders
Ante Marković[3]
Veljko Kadijević
Blagoje Adžić
Konrad Kolšek
Aleksandar Vasiljević
Milan Aksentijević[4]
Andrija Rašeta[4]
Milan Kučan
Lojze Peterle
Janez Janša
Igor Bavčar
Units involved

Yugoslav People's Army

Territorial Defence
National Police
Strength
22,300 personnel[5] 35,200 soldiers
10,000 policemen[5]
Casualties and losses
45 killed
146 wounded
4,693 captured[5]
19 killed
182 wounded[5]
6 Slovenian[6][7] and 12 foreign civilians killed

The Ten-Day War (Slovene: desetdnevna vojna), or the Slovenian War of Independence (Slovene: slovenska osamosvojitvena vojna),[8] was a brief armed conflict that followed Slovenia's declaration of independence from Yugoslavia on 25 June 1991.[9] It was fought between the Slovenian Territorial Defence together with Slovene Police and the Yugoslav People's Army (or JNA). It lasted from 27 June 1991 until 7 July 1991, when the Brioni Accords were signed.[4]

It was the second of the Yugoslav Wars to start in 1991, following the Croatian War of Independence, and by far the shortest of the conflicts with fewest overall casualties. The war was brief because the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA, dominated by Serbo-Montenegrins, although still made up of all the nationalities of Yugoslavia) did not want to waste resources on this campaign. Slovenia was considered "ethnically homogeneous" and therefore of no interest to the Yugoslav government. The military was preoccupied with the fighting in Croatia, where the Serbo-Montenegrin majority in Yugoslavia had greater territorial interests. In the BBC documentary The Death of Yugoslavia, which used archival footage, Slobodan Milošević, President of Serbia, is recorded stating that "I was against using the Yugoslav Army in Slovenia." while Borisav Jović, President of the Presidency of Yugoslavia, stated that: "With Slovenia out of the way, we could dictate the terms to the Croats."

Background edit

Following the death of Yugoslav President Josip Broz Tito in 1980, underlying political, ethnic, religious, and economic tensions within Yugoslavia surfaced. In 1989 Slobodan Milošević, Chairman of the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Serbia since 1986, became president of Serbia, the largest and most populous of the six Yugoslav republics. As Milošević moved to consolidate power by centralizing the state, the governments of the other republics sought to loosen the central grip on power by devolving as much constitutional power as possible to each of the republics and autonomous provinces. A series of disagreements among delegates persisted until four of the six republics each made the decision to gain independence from Yugoslavia. Supported by Germany and the Vatican,[10] Slovenia was among those republics aiming for independence.

The first action in defence of Slovenian independence, that united both the opposition and democratized communist establishment in Slovenia was, however, carried out by the Slovene police forces, in an action named Action North in 1989. In April 1990, Slovenia held its first democratic multi-party elections, won by the DEMOS coalition.

Preparations for war edit

On 23 December 1990, Slovenia held a referendum, which passed with 88.5% of overall electorate supporting independence (94.8% of votes cast), with a turnout of 93.3%.[11][12] The Slovenian government was well aware that the federal government in Belgrade might seek to use military force to quash Slovenia's move towards independence. Immediately after the Slovenian elections, the Yugoslav People's Army announced a new defence doctrine that would apply across the country. The Tito-era doctrine of "General People's Defence", in which each republic maintained a Territorial Defence (TO), was to be replaced by a centrally directed system of defence. The republics would lose their role in defence matters, and their TOs would be disarmed and subordinated to the JNA's headquarters in Belgrade.

 
Slovenian Territorial Defence military drills held in March 1991

The Slovenian government resisted these moves and successfully ensured that the majority of Slovenian Territorial Defence equipment was kept out of the hands of the JNA. It also declared in a constitutional amendment passed on 28 September 1990 that its TO would be under the sole command of the Slovenian government. At the same time, the Slovenian government set up a secret alternative command structure, known as the Manoeuvre Structures of National Protection (Manevrska struktura narodne zaščite, or MSNZ). This was an existing but antiquated institution, unique to Slovenia, which was intended to enable the republic to form an ad hoc defence structure, akin to a Home Guard. It was of negligible importance prior to 1990, with antiquated weapons and few members. However, the DEMOS-led government realised that the MSNZ could be adapted to provide a parallel organisation to the TO that would be entirely in the hands of the Slovenian government.

When the JNA tried to take control of the Slovenian Territorial Defence, the TO's command structure was simply replaced by that of the parallel MSNZ. Between May and October 1990, some 21,000 Slovenian Territorial Defence and police personnel were secretly mobilised into the MSNZ command structure, of which the federal government was wholly unaware.[citation needed] The Slovenian government also undertook detailed planning of a military campaign against the JNA, which resulted in the production of an operational and tactical plan by November 1990 – over seven months before the conflict actually began.[13]

The Slovenes were aware that they would not be able to deter the JNA's forces for an extended period of time. Under Defence Minister Janez Janša, they adopted a strategy based on an asymmetric warfare approach. TO units would carry out a guerrilla campaign, using anti-tank weapons and anti-aircraft missiles to ambush the JNA's units. Tank columns could be trapped by destroying the lead and rear vehicles in favourable terrain – for instance, on a narrow mountain road where room for manoeuvre was limited – enabling the rest to be tackled more easily. In preparation for this, the Slovenian government covertly bought lightweight missile systems from foreign suppliers, notably the SA-7 Grail (Strela) anti-aircraft missile and the German-designed Armbrust anti-tank system.[citation needed] Hit-and-run and delaying tactics were to be preferred and frontal clashes were to be avoided since in such situations the JNA's superior firepower would have been very difficult to overcome.

Conflict edit

Slovenia and Croatia passed their acts of independence on 25 June 1991. This "advance" on the date of independence was a critical element of the Slovenian plan to gain an early advantage in the expected conflict. The Slovenian government fully expected the Yugoslav military to respond with force on the day of the declaration of independence or shortly afterwards. By secretly advancing the date by 24 hours, the Slovenians wrongfooted the Yugoslav government, which had set 26 June as the date for its move.[14]

Although the Yugoslav army was adamantly opposed to Slovenian independence, it was divided about what to do. The JNA Chief of Staff, Colonel-General Blagoje Adžić, advocated a large-scale military operation to remove the Slovenian government and bring "healthy forces" to power in the republic. His political superior, the Yugoslav Defence Minister General of the Army Veljko Kadijević, insisted on a more cautious approach – essentially a show of force that would convince the Slovenian government to back down on its declaration of independence. After some debate, Kadijević got his way.[15]

It is unclear how much the civilian members of the Yugoslav government were involved in the decision to resort to force in Slovenia. Ante Marković, the President of the Federal Executive Council (equivalent to Prime Minister) is reported to have said that the federal government had not been informed of the Army's actions.[16]

26 June 1991 edit

On the morning of 26 June, units of the Yugoslav People's Army's 13th Corps left their barracks in Rijeka, Croatia, to move towards Slovenia's borders with Italy. The move immediately led to a strong reaction from local Slovenians, who organized spontaneous barricades and demonstrations against the JNA's actions. There had been no fighting yet, and both sides appeared to have an unofficial policy of not being the first to open fire.

By this time, the Slovenian government had already put into action its plan to seize control of the republic's border posts and the international airport at Brnik. The personnel manning the border posts were, in most cases, already Slovenians, so the Slovenian take-over mostly simply amounted to changing of uniforms and insignia, without any fighting. This was undertaken, in the words of Janez Janša, to "establish our sovereignty in the key triangle, border-customs-air control."[17] It also had important practical effects. The border crossings were a major source of revenue. In addition, by taking control of the borders, the Slovenians were able to establish defensive positions against an expected JNA attack. This meant that the JNA would have to fire the first shot. It was fired on 27 June at 14:30 in Divača by an officer of the JNA.[18]

27 June 1991 edit

 
26 June; arrival of the JNA tank column at Vrtojba border crossing

Further JNA troop movements took place in the early hours of 27 June. A unit of the JNA's 306th Anti-Aircraft Regiment, based in Karlovac, Croatia, crossed the Slovenian border at Metlika. A few hours later, a column of tanks and armoured personnel carriers of the JNA 1st Armoured Brigade left their barracks at Vrhnika near the Slovenian capital Ljubljana, heading for the airport at Brnik. They arrived a few hours later and took control of the facilities. As the JNA was the federal army, its forces were customarily deployed in various places within the federal republics including Slovenia. To the east, JNA units left Maribor heading for the nearby border crossing at Šentilj and the border town of Dravograd further west. The Yugoslav Air Force aircraft dropped leaflets over various parts of Slovenia bearing the messages "We invite you to peace and cooperation!" and "All resistance will be crushed."[19]

In the early hours of 27 June the Slovenian leadership was told of the movements of the JNA. The military leadership of the Fifth Military District, which included Slovenia, was in telephone contact with Slovenian president Milan Kučan, telling him that the troops' mission was limited to taking over the border crossings and airport. A meeting of the Slovene presidency was hastily convened at which Kučan and the rest of the members decided on armed resistance.[20]

 
A memorial to Slovenian helicopter pilot Toni Mrlak in Ljubljana

The Slovenian government had received warnings that the JNA would use helicopters to ferry special forces troops to strategic locations. It issued a warning to the JNA's 5th Military Command District in Zagreb that if helicopters continued to be used they would be shot down. The warning was disregarded by the JNA leadership, which still believed that the Slovenians would back down rather than fight. This was, however, a disastrous miscalculation. In the afternoon of 27 June, the Slovenian TO (Slovenian Territorial Defence) shot down two JNA helicopters[21] with SA-7 missiles, one of them a Gazelle over Rožna Dolina, Ljubljana,[22] killing the occupants, one of whom, Toni Mrlak, was a Slovenian pilot, as the JNA's forces consisted of nationals from all the republics.[23] It was later discovered that the Gazelle which Mrlak had been flying was unarmed, and was carrying only bread for the Yugoslav soldiers.[24]

The Slovenian Territorial Defence also took up positions around JNA barracks in various locations, effectively besieging them, and launched a series of attacks on JNA forces across Slovenia. At Brnik, a Slovenian TO unit attacked the JNA troops holding the airport, and at Trzin a firefight developed in which four JNA soldiers and one Slovenian TO soldier (Edvard Peperko) were killed and the remainder of the JNA unit was forced to surrender. Attacks were also launched by Slovenian TO units on JNA tank columns at Pesnica, Ormož and Koseze near Ilirska Bistrica. A tank column from the JNA's 32nd Mechanised Brigade, advancing from Varaždin in Croatia, was blocked at Ormož near the Slovenian border and found itself unable to break through a Slovenian barricade.

Despite the confusion and fighting, the JNA nonetheless successfully accomplished much of its military mission. By midnight on 27 June it had captured all of the crossings along the Italian border, all but three crossings on the Austrian border and several of the new crossing points established along Slovenia's border with Croatia. However, many of its units were still stuck in vulnerable positions across Slovenia.

28 June 1991 edit

 
Yugoslav movements in Slovenia during the Ten-Day War

During the night of 27–28 June, Slovenian TO units were ordered to undertake a general offensive against the JNA. The Slovenian defence ministry ordered:

At all locations where RS (Republic of Slovenia) armed forces (Slovenian Territorial Defence) have the tactical advantage, offensive actions against enemy units and facilities will be carried out. The enemy will be summoned to surrender, the shortest deadline possible for surrender given and action taken using all available weapons. While in action, any necessary arrangements will be made to evacuate and protect the civilians.

Additional fighting took place throughout the day. The JNA tank column that had been attacked at Pesnica the previous day was blocked by impromptu barricades of Slovenian trucks at Štrihovec, a few kilometers short of the border with Austria, where it again came under attack by Slovenian TO personnel and Slovenian police. The SFR Yugoslav Air Force mounted two airstrikes in support of the JNA forces at Strihovec, killing four truck drivers. At Medvedjek in central Slovenia, another JNA tank column came under attack at a truck barricade, where air raids killed six truck drivers.[25]

Heavy fighting broke out at Nova Gorica on the border with Italy, where the Slovenian Special Forces fired two Armbrust antitank rockets and fired 700 rounds from infantry weapons. Slovene troops destroyed two JNA T-55 tanks and captured an additional three, plus a BTS-1 military engineering vehicle. Three JNA soldiers were killed and 16 wounded, among them the commander of the armored column, and 98 surrendered.[25] A number of wounded were admitted to Gorizia's hospital after crossing the Italian border.[26] Some sources claim that this was the decisive battle of the war.

The border crossing at Holmec was captured by Slovenian TO forces. Two Slovenian and three JNA soldiers were killed, and 45 JNA soldiers captured.[18] The JNA barracks at Bukovje Mansion in Bukovje near Dravograd were attacked by Slovenian TO units and a JNA weapons depot at Borovnica fell to the Slovenian TO, significantly improving the Slovenians' supply of weapons. The Yugoslav Air Force carried out attacks at a number of locations across the country, most notably at Brnik Airport, where two journalists from Austria and Germany (Nikolas Vogel and Norbert Werner) were killed and four Adria Airways airliners were seriously damaged. The Yugoslav Air Force also attacked the Slovenian TO military headquarters at Kočevska Reka and flew sorties against radio and television transmitters at Krim, Kum, Trdina Peak, and Nanos in an attempt to silence the Slovenian government broadcasts.

By the end of the day, the JNA still held many of its positions but was rapidly losing ground. JNA was beginning to experience problems with desertions – many Slovenian members of the JNA quit their units or simply changed sides - and both the troops on the ground and the leadership in Belgrade appeared to have little idea of what to do next.

29 June 1991 edit

The outbreak of the war galvanised diplomatic efforts by the European Community to find an end to the crisis. Three EC foreign ministers met with Slovenian and Yugoslav government representatives in Zagreb during the night of 28–29 June and agreed on a ceasefire plan, but this was not put into practice. In the morning, the Slovenians achieved several significant military successes. The JNA troops at Ljubljana Airport near Brnik surrendered to Slovenian TO forces, who had surrounded the facility overnight.

In the north, several JNA tanks were captured near Strihovec and later reorganised into a TO tank company. JNA special forces attempted a maritime landing at Hrvatini but were ambushed and repulsed by the Slovenians, suffering two dead and three wounded. The JNA-held border crossings at Vrtojba and Šentilj also fell to the Slovenian TO, who seized the federal troops' weapons and tanks, providing a much-needed boost to their arsenal.[27]

The JNA issued an ultimatum to Slovenia, demanding an immediate cessation of hostilities by 09:00 on 30 June. In response, the Slovenian Assembly adopted a resolution calling for a peaceful solution to the crisis that did not jeopardise Slovenian independence, and rejected the JNA ultimatum.

30 June 1991 edit

Skirmishing continued in several places during the day. Separatist forces seized the strategic Karawanks Tunnel under the Alps on the border with Austria and captured nine JNA tanks near Nova Gorica, on the border with Italy. The entire JNA garrison at Dravograd – 16 officers and 400 men, plus equipment – surrendered, and the garrisons at Tolmin and Bovec also fell to the Slovenians. The weapons captured from the garrisons were quickly re-issued to the Slovenian forces.

1 July 1991 edit

 
A column of JNA BOV armored vehicles in the Krakovo forest

More skirmishes took place, with Slovenian TO forces taking over a JNA facility at Nova Vas, south of Ljubljana. The JNA's ammunition dump at Črni Vrh caught fire and was destroyed in a massive explosion, damaging much of the town. However, the Slovenians successfully captured depots at Pečovnik, Bukovžlak, and Zaloška Gorica, taking possession of some 70 truckloads of ammunition and explosives.[28]

The JNA 306th Light Air Defence Artillery Regiment's column retreated from its exposed position at Medvedjek and headed into the Krakovo Forest (Krakovski gozd) near the Croatian border. It ran into a blockade near the town of Krško and was surrounded by Slovenian forces, but refused to surrender, probably hoping for help from a relief column.[28]

In the meantime, the JNA's leadership sought permission to change the tempo of its operations. Defence Minister Veljko Kadijević informed the Yugoslav cabinet that the JNA's first plan – a limited operation to secure Slovenia's border crossings – had failed, and that it was time to put into operation the backup plan of a full-scale invasion and imposition of military rule in Slovenia. However, the collective presidency – headed at the time by Serbia's Borisav Jović – refused to authorise such an operation. The JNA Chief of Staff, General Blagoje Adžić, was furious and publicly denounced "the federal organs [which] continually hampered us, demanding negotiations while they [the Slovenians] were attacking us with all means."[29]

2 July 1991 edit

The heaviest fighting of the war to date took place during 2 July. The Domžale radio transmitter was attacked at 10:37 UTC (11:37 local time) and heavily damaged by two JNA MiG-21 planes. During the rest of the day there were a number of major set-backs for the JNA. The JNA convoy in the Krakovo Forest came under sustained attack from TO units, forcing it to surrender. Units from the JNA's Fourth Armoured Brigade attempted to move up from Jastrebarsko in Croatia but were beaten back near the border town of Bregana. The Slovenian TO mounted successful attacks on border crossings at Šentilj, Gornja Radgona, Fernetiči and Gorjansko, overrunning them and taking a number of JNA troops prisoner. A protracted engagement between JNA and Slovenian TO forces took place during the afternoon and evening at Dravograd, and a number of JNA facilities around the country fell to Slovenian forces.

At 21:00, the Slovenian Presidency announced a unilateral ceasefire. However, this was rejected by the JNA leadership, which vowed to "take control" and crush Slovenian resistance.

3 July 1991 edit

A large JNA armoured convoy set off from Belgrade on the morning of 3 July, ostensibly to go to Slovenia. It never arrived; according to the official account, this was due to mechanical breakdowns.

Fighting continued in Slovenia, with a JNA relief force heading for the Gornja Radgona border crossing being halted near Radenci. JNA forces at the Kog border crossing were also attacked by TO units. In the evening, the JNA agreed to a ceasefire and a withdrawal to barracks. In a separate incident not far from Radenci, in the village of Hrastje–Mota, a Yugoslav Mi-8 helicopter developed mechanical problems and was forced to land. The helicopter was seized by the Slovene military, but was deemed not suitable for the newly born air force and handed back to Belgrade on 13 August.[30]

4–6 July 1991 edit

With a ceasefire now in force, the two sides disengaged. Slovenian forces took control of all of the country's border crossings, and JNA units were allowed to withdraw peacefully to barracks and to cross the border to Croatia.

7 July 1991 and afterwards edit

 
Slovene military member (front left) supervising JNA personnel before departure

The Ten-Day War was formally ended with the Brioni Accord, signed on the Croatian Brijuni Islands. Slovenian and Croatian independence were agreed to. The terms were distinctly favourable to Slovenia; it was agreed that Slovenia and Croatia would postpone their independence for three months—which in practical terms had little real impact—and the Slovenian police and armed forces (Slovenian Territorial Defence) were recognised as sovereign on their territory.

 
The last JNA troops leaving Slovenian soil by sea

It was agreed that all Yugoslav military units would leave Slovenia, with the Yugoslav government setting a deadline of the end of October to complete the process. The Slovenian government insisted that the withdrawal should proceed on its terms; the JNA was not allowed to take much of its heavy weaponry and equipment, which was later either deployed locally or sold to other Yugoslav republics. The withdrawal began about ten days later and was completed by 26 October.

Casualties edit

Due to the short duration and low intensity of the war, casualties were not high. According to Slovenian estimates, the JNA suffered 44 fatalities and 146 wounded, while the Slovenians had 19 killed and 182 wounded, 6 Slovenian civilians were killed.[31][7] Twelve foreign nationals were also killed in the conflict, principally journalists and Bulgarian truck drivers who had strayed into the line of fire. 4,692 JNA soldiers and 252 federal police officers were captured by the Slovenian side. According to post-war assessments made by the JNA, its material losses amounted to 31 tanks, 22 armoured personnel carriers, 6 helicopters, 6,787 infantry weapons, 87 artillery pieces and 124 air defence weapons damaged, destroyed or confiscated. Property damage was not heavy, due to the scattered and short-term nature of the fighting.[32]

Ljubljana Airport bombing edit

In the opening stages of the Ten-Day War, the Yugoslav authorities bombed the airport.[33] Two Austrian journalists were killed, and several commercial aircraft were damaged in the process.[33]

Holmec incident edit

The border station at Holmec was the location of an alleged war crime perpetrated by Slovenian TO forces on 28 June,[34] and filmed by the Austrian public broadcasting station ORF. Video footage shows a small group of JNA soldiers standing or walking slowly with raised hands, holding up a white sheet in an apparent attempt to surrender. Moments later, gunfire is heard and the soldiers fall or jump to the ground. Neither the origin of the gunfire nor its exact effect are clearly visible on the video segment. Slovene officials maintain that the JNA soldiers jumped for cover and were not hit, and that the matter was thoroughly investigated years ago. However, the incident sparked renewed public debate after the footage was shown on Serbian TV station B92 in 2006, with many claiming that the soldiers were shot and killed by Slovenian TO troops and that Slovenia is trying to cover up the affair.[35][36][37]

The fate of the JNA soldiers identified on the footage is disputed. One report claims that the soldiers are still alive, 15 years after the conflict.[38] Other reports identify three young soldiers as victims (Zoran Ješić, Goran Maletić and Antonio Šimunović) and claim that they were killed in the Holmec incident.[34]

Strategic aspects edit

The actions of Slovenia's forces were largely dictated by the military strategy devised some months before and were tightly integrated with an equally detailed media management plan. An international media centre was established prior to the outbreak of conflict with Jelko Kacin designated to act as information minister and Slovenia's public face to the world. The Slovenian government and media successfully presented the conflict to Western European audiences as a case of a "David versus Goliath" struggle between an emerging democracy and an authoritarian communist state, and the columns of Yugoslav tanks brought to mind the events of the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 two years earlier. This won considerable international sympathy and favourable media coverage for the cause of independent Slovenia.

The Slovenians had the advantage of superior morale, compared to their adversaries in the Yugoslav army.[citation needed] Many of the Yugoslav soldiers did not realise they were taking part in a real military operation, rather than an exercise, until they came under attack.[4] They sent only 2000 untried conscripts, which split up into smaller groups. It was a tactical error. The officer corps was dominated by Serbs and Montenegrins and in many cases ideologically committed to Yugoslav unity. The rank and file troops however were conscripts, many of whom had no strong motivation in fighting against Slovenes. Of the soldiers of the 5th Military District, which was in action in Slovenia, in 1990 30% were Albanians, 20% Croats, 15 to 20% Serbs and Montenegrins, 10% Bosniaks, and 8% Slovenes.[39]

The Slovenians were also well aware that the Serbian government of Slobodan Milošević was not particularly concerned about Slovenia's independence,[4] given the lack of any significant Serbian minority in the country. On 30 June, Defence Minister General Kadijević suggested to the Yugoslav federal presidency a massive attack on Slovenia to break down the unexpectedly heavy resistance. But the Serb representative, Borisav Jović, shocked the military establishment by declaring that Serbia did not support further military action against Slovenia.[40] Serbia was at this point more concerned with the situation in Croatia; even before the war had ended, JNA troops were already repositioning themselves for the imminent war in Croatia.[41]

According to the journalist Hermann Tertsch, who covered that war firsthand:

The weak military deployment of the federal army had only two reasons, the external cosmetic, to claim that Belgrade defended its international borders. And the collection of property from its bases in Slovenia, especially from the borders with Austria and Italy. On the 25th the independence of this ethnically homogeneous republic had been proclaimed, without a religious minority or any Serb legacy. On July 7, having collected properties and documents from the barracks, the Yugoslav army, in reality already pan-Serbian, left a Slovenia that Milosevic and his generals did not give a damn about.[42]"

Consequences of the war edit

For Slovenia, the war marked the decisive defence of its independence in regard to Yugoslavia. It was officially recognised by all European Community member states on 15 January 1992 and joined the United Nations on 22 May.

The war led to a series of major shifts on the Yugoslav side. The JNA eventually lost nearly all of its Slovenian and Croat personnel, becoming an almost entirely Serbian and Montenegrin force. Its poor performance in Slovenia and later in Croatia discredited its leadership – Kadijević resigned as defence minister in January 1992, and Adžić was forced into medical retirement shortly afterwards.

The Slovenian and Croatian governments were urged by the European Commission to freeze their declaration of independence for a period of three months, hoping to ease tension, to which Slovenia and Croatia agreed. Slovenia used the period to consolidate its institutions, deliver some of the most urgent economic reforms and prepare for international recognition of the country.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Klemenčič, Matjaž; Žagar, Mitja (2004). "Democratization in the Beginning of the 1990s". The Former Yugoslavia's Diverse Peoples: A Reference Sourcebook. ABC-CLIO. pp. 297–298. ISBN 978-1-57607-294-3.
  2. ^ Lukic, Rénéo; Lynch, Allen (1996). "The Wars of Yugoslav Succession, 1941–95". Europe from the Balkans to the Urals: The Disintegration of Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union. Oxford University Press. p. 184. ISBN 978-0-19-829200-5.
  3. ^ Lenard J. Cohen, Jasna Dragović-Soso. State Collapse in South-Eastern Europe: New Perspectives on Yugoslavia's Disintegration. Purdue University Press, 2008. Pp. 323. (It says that the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia's Prime Minister Ante Marković declared the proclamation of independence by Slovenia and Croatia to be illegal and contrary to the Constitution of the SFRY, and authorized the Yugoslav People's Army to secure the integral unity of the SFRY).
  4. ^ a b c d e "The Death of Yugoslavia, Part 3, Wars of Independence". BBC.
  5. ^ a b c d J. Švajncer, Janez (May 2001). "War for Slovenia 1991". 25 June 2001: 10 Years of Independence. Slovenska vojska.
  6. ^ "THE ROLE OF MONTENEGRO IN THE WARS OF THE 1990s: "FROM A CONSISTENT WARRIOR TO AN (UN)WILLING ALLY", Montenegro and the war in Slovenia (1991)". Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  7. ^ a b "Slovenci, ki so dali svoja življenja za samostojno Slovenijo". Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  8. ^ Clapham, David (1996). "Slovenia". Housing Privatization in Eastern Europe. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 152. ISBN 978-0-313-27214-1.
  9. ^ Fraudet, Xavier (2006). France's Security Independence: Originality and Constraints in Europe, 1981-1995. Peter Lang. p. 129. ISBN 978-3-03911-141-1.
  10. ^ Jeanne M. Haskin (2006). Bosnia and Beyond: The "quiet" Revolution that Wouldn't Go Quietly. Algora Publishing. p. 127. ISBN 978-0-87586-430-3.
  11. ^ Flores Juberías, Carlos (November 2005). "Some legal (and political) considerations about the legal framework for referendum in Montenegro, in the light of European experiences and standards". (PDF). Foundation Open Society Institute, Representative Office Montenegro. p. 74. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 April 2012.
  12. ^ "Volitve" [Elections]. Statistični letopis 2011 [Statistical Yearbook 2011]. Vol. 15. Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia. 2011. p. 108. ISSN 1318-5403.
  13. ^ Gow, James & Carmichael, Cathie. Slovenia and the Slovenes, pp. 174–178. C. Hurst, London, 1999.
  14. ^ Balkan Battlegrounds, p. 58 (Central Intelligence Agency, 2002
  15. ^ Allcock, John B. et al. Conflict in the Former Yugoslavia, p. 274. ABC-CLIO, Denver, 1998
  16. ^ Mesić, Stjepan. "The Road to War", in The War in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina, 1991–1995, ed. Branka Magaš and Ivo Žanić. Frank Cass, London, 2001
  17. ^ Quoted in Balkan Battlegrounds, ibid.
  18. ^ a b "It happened... on June 27". RTVSLO. 27 June 2005. p. 1.
  19. ^ Quoted in Balkan Battlegrounds, p. 59
  20. ^ Silber, Laura & Little, Allan. The Death of Yugoslavia. Penguin, London, 1995
  21. ^ Ramet, Sabrina (2005). The three Yugoslavias: state-building and legitimation, 1918–2005. Woodrow Wilson Center Press Series. Indiana University Press, p. 39. ISBN 0-253-34656-8
  22. ^ Ripley, Tim (2001). Conflict in the Balkans, 1991–2000. Osprey Publishing, p. 5. ISBN 1-84176-290-3
  23. ^ Spencer, Metta (2000). The lessons of Yugoslavia. Volume 3 of Research on Russia and Eastern Europe. Emerald Group Publishing, p. 17. ISBN 0-7623-0280-1
  24. ^ Potočnjak, Draga (2013). Skrito povelje. Ljubljana: Sanje. p. 117. ISBN 978-961-274-198-3.
  25. ^ a b "RID Rivista Italiana Difesa Dicembre 2011 Vent'anni fa divampava la guerra in Jugoslavia – I combattimenti al confine italo-sloveno di Rozna Dolina (Casa Rossa) e Nova Vas". 10febbraioDetroit. 7 January 2012. Retrieved 18 April 2019.
  26. ^ "Gorizia e Nova Gorica: different twins". Red Carpet Magazine. 30 April 2018. Retrieved 18 April 2019.
  27. ^ Balkan Battlegrounds: A Military History of the Yugoslav Conflict, 1990–1995. Central Intelligence Agency, Office of Russian and European Analysis. 2002. p. 63. ISBN 978-0-16-066472-4.
  28. ^ a b Balkan Battlegrounds: A Military History of the Yugoslav Conflict, 1990–1995. Central Intelligence Agency, Office of Russian and European Analysis. 2002. p. 64. ISBN 978-0-16-066472-4.
  29. ^ Quoted in Balkan Battlegrounds, p. 64
  30. ^ Insignia magazine, Volume 1, issue 2, March 1996
  31. ^ "THE ROLE OF MONTENEGRO IN THE WARS OF THE 1990s: "FROM A CONSISTENT WARRIOR TO AN (UN)WILLING ALLY", Montenegro and the war in Slovenia (1991)". Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  32. ^ Nation, R. Craig (2003). "SLOVENIA AND CROATIA, 1991-92". War in the Balkans, 1991-2002: 91–148 – via JSTOR.
  33. ^ a b Bartolj, Jaka (29 July 2015). "For more than half a century, the Ljubljana Airport has served as Slovenia's window to the world". RTV SLO.
  34. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 17 June 2013.
  35. ^ [Serb Official Accuses Slovenia Troops of War Crimes, 2006-04-08 Associated Press Report]
  36. ^ . 12 March 2007. Archived from the original on 12 March 2007.
  37. ^ "Janša Protests to Koštunica over Statements on Holmec" 2006-04-06 BETA News Agency Report)
  38. ^ "Belgrade Says Holmec Footage Victims Alive", 2006-04-26 Slovenian News Agency STA Report
  39. ^ Meier, Viktor. Yugoslavia – A History of its Demise. Routledge, London, 1999
  40. ^ Vasić, Miloš. "The Yugoslav Army and the Post-Yugoslav Armies", in Yugoslavia and After – A Study in Fragmentation, Despair and Rebirth, ed. David A. Dyker & Ivan Vejvoda. Longman, London, 1996
  41. ^ "death of yugoslavia part 3 - Bing video". www.bing.com. Retrieved 6 September 2022.
  42. ^ Sueño esloveno, húmedo y sangriento, ABC (11/12/2018). (in Spanish).

Sources edit

  • Allcock, John B. et al. Conflict in the Former Yugoslavia. ABC-CLIO, Denver, 1998
  • Gow, James & Carmichael, Cathie. Slovenia and the Slovenes. C. Hurst, London, 1999
  • Gow, James. The Serbian Project and its Adversaries. C. Hurst, London, 2003
  • The War in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina, 1991–1995, ed. Branka Magaš and Ivo Žanić. Frank Cass, London, 2001
  • Svajncer, Brigadier Janez J. , Slovenska vojska, May 2001.

1831, between, belgium, netherlands, days, campaign, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspaper. For the 1831 war between Belgium and the Netherlands see Ten Days Campaign This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Ten Day War news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2014 Learn how and when to remove this message Ten Day WarPart of the Yugoslav WarsYugoslav T 55 hit by Slovenian anti tank fire on the Italian border post Rozna Dolina Nova Gorica during a Slovenian ambush Date27 June 7 July 1991 1 week and 3 days LocationSloveniaResultSlovenian victory 1 2 Brioni Agreement Withdrawal of the JNA from Slovenia Full scale invasion by the JNA avertedTerritorialchangesSlovenia gains full independence from YugoslaviaBelligerents Yugoslavia SloveniaCommanders and leadersAnte Markovic 3 Veljko Kadijevic Blagoje Adzic Konrad Kolsek Aleksandar Vasiljevic Milan Aksentijevic 4 Andrija Raseta 4 Milan Kucan Lojze Peterle Janez Jansa Igor BavcarUnits involvedYugoslav People s Army Yugoslav Ground ForcesTerritorial Defence National PoliceStrength22 300 personnel 5 35 200 soldiers10 000 policemen 5 Casualties and losses45 killed146 wounded4 693 captured 5 19 killed182 wounded 5 6 Slovenian 6 7 and 12 foreign civilians killed The Ten Day War Slovene desetdnevna vojna or the Slovenian War of Independence Slovene slovenska osamosvojitvena vojna 8 was a brief armed conflict that followed Slovenia s declaration of independence from Yugoslavia on 25 June 1991 9 It was fought between the Slovenian Territorial Defence together with Slovene Police and the Yugoslav People s Army or JNA It lasted from 27 June 1991 until 7 July 1991 when the Brioni Accords were signed 4 It was the second of the Yugoslav Wars to start in 1991 following the Croatian War of Independence and by far the shortest of the conflicts with fewest overall casualties The war was brief because the Yugoslav People s Army JNA dominated by Serbo Montenegrins although still made up of all the nationalities of Yugoslavia did not want to waste resources on this campaign Slovenia was considered ethnically homogeneous and therefore of no interest to the Yugoslav government The military was preoccupied with the fighting in Croatia where the Serbo Montenegrin majority in Yugoslavia had greater territorial interests In the BBC documentary The Death of Yugoslavia which used archival footage Slobodan Milosevic President of Serbia is recorded stating that I was against using the Yugoslav Army in Slovenia while Borisav Jovic President of the Presidency of Yugoslavia stated that With Slovenia out of the way we could dictate the terms to the Croats Contents 1 Background 1 1 Preparations for war 2 Conflict 2 1 26 June 1991 2 2 27 June 1991 2 3 28 June 1991 2 4 29 June 1991 2 5 30 June 1991 2 6 1 July 1991 2 7 2 July 1991 2 8 3 July 1991 2 9 4 6 July 1991 2 10 7 July 1991 and afterwards 3 Casualties 4 Ljubljana Airport bombing 5 Holmec incident 6 Strategic aspects 7 Consequences of the war 8 See also 9 Notes 10 SourcesBackground editSee also Breakup of Yugoslavia Contributions to the Slovenian National Program JBTZ trial and Slovenian Territorial Defence Following the death of Yugoslav President Josip Broz Tito in 1980 underlying political ethnic religious and economic tensions within Yugoslavia surfaced In 1989 Slobodan Milosevic Chairman of the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Serbia since 1986 became president of Serbia the largest and most populous of the six Yugoslav republics As Milosevic moved to consolidate power by centralizing the state the governments of the other republics sought to loosen the central grip on power by devolving as much constitutional power as possible to each of the republics and autonomous provinces A series of disagreements among delegates persisted until four of the six republics each made the decision to gain independence from Yugoslavia Supported by Germany and the Vatican 10 Slovenia was among those republics aiming for independence The first action in defence of Slovenian independence that united both the opposition and democratized communist establishment in Slovenia was however carried out by the Slovene police forces in an action named Action North in 1989 In April 1990 Slovenia held its first democratic multi party elections won by the DEMOS coalition Preparations for war edit On 23 December 1990 Slovenia held a referendum which passed with 88 5 of overall electorate supporting independence 94 8 of votes cast with a turnout of 93 3 11 12 The Slovenian government was well aware that the federal government in Belgrade might seek to use military force to quash Slovenia s move towards independence Immediately after the Slovenian elections the Yugoslav People s Army announced a new defence doctrine that would apply across the country The Tito era doctrine of General People s Defence in which each republic maintained a Territorial Defence TO was to be replaced by a centrally directed system of defence The republics would lose their role in defence matters and their TOs would be disarmed and subordinated to the JNA s headquarters in Belgrade nbsp Slovenian Territorial Defence military drills held in March 1991 The Slovenian government resisted these moves and successfully ensured that the majority of Slovenian Territorial Defence equipment was kept out of the hands of the JNA It also declared in a constitutional amendment passed on 28 September 1990 that its TO would be under the sole command of the Slovenian government At the same time the Slovenian government set up a secret alternative command structure known as the Manoeuvre Structures of National Protection Manevrska struktura narodne zascite or MSNZ This was an existing but antiquated institution unique to Slovenia which was intended to enable the republic to form an ad hoc defence structure akin to a Home Guard It was of negligible importance prior to 1990 with antiquated weapons and few members However the DEMOS led government realised that the MSNZ could be adapted to provide a parallel organisation to the TO that would be entirely in the hands of the Slovenian government When the JNA tried to take control of the Slovenian Territorial Defence the TO s command structure was simply replaced by that of the parallel MSNZ Between May and October 1990 some 21 000 Slovenian Territorial Defence and police personnel were secretly mobilised into the MSNZ command structure of which the federal government was wholly unaware citation needed The Slovenian government also undertook detailed planning of a military campaign against the JNA which resulted in the production of an operational and tactical plan by November 1990 over seven months before the conflict actually began 13 The Slovenes were aware that they would not be able to deter the JNA s forces for an extended period of time Under Defence Minister Janez Jansa they adopted a strategy based on an asymmetric warfare approach TO units would carry out a guerrilla campaign using anti tank weapons and anti aircraft missiles to ambush the JNA s units Tank columns could be trapped by destroying the lead and rear vehicles in favourable terrain for instance on a narrow mountain road where room for manoeuvre was limited enabling the rest to be tackled more easily In preparation for this the Slovenian government covertly bought lightweight missile systems from foreign suppliers notably the SA 7 Grail Strela anti aircraft missile and the German designed Armbrust anti tank system citation needed Hit and run and delaying tactics were to be preferred and frontal clashes were to be avoided since in such situations the JNA s superior firepower would have been very difficult to overcome Conflict editSlovenia and Croatia passed their acts of independence on 25 June 1991 This advance on the date of independence was a critical element of the Slovenian plan to gain an early advantage in the expected conflict The Slovenian government fully expected the Yugoslav military to respond with force on the day of the declaration of independence or shortly afterwards By secretly advancing the date by 24 hours the Slovenians wrongfooted the Yugoslav government which had set 26 June as the date for its move 14 Although the Yugoslav army was adamantly opposed to Slovenian independence it was divided about what to do The JNA Chief of Staff Colonel General Blagoje Adzic advocated a large scale military operation to remove the Slovenian government and bring healthy forces to power in the republic His political superior the Yugoslav Defence Minister General of the Army Veljko Kadijevic insisted on a more cautious approach essentially a show of force that would convince the Slovenian government to back down on its declaration of independence After some debate Kadijevic got his way 15 It is unclear how much the civilian members of the Yugoslav government were involved in the decision to resort to force in Slovenia Ante Markovic the President of the Federal Executive Council equivalent to Prime Minister is reported to have said that the federal government had not been informed of the Army s actions 16 26 June 1991 edit On the morning of 26 June units of the Yugoslav People s Army s 13th Corps left their barracks in Rijeka Croatia to move towards Slovenia s borders with Italy The move immediately led to a strong reaction from local Slovenians who organized spontaneous barricades and demonstrations against the JNA s actions There had been no fighting yet and both sides appeared to have an unofficial policy of not being the first to open fire By this time the Slovenian government had already put into action its plan to seize control of the republic s border posts and the international airport at Brnik The personnel manning the border posts were in most cases already Slovenians so the Slovenian take over mostly simply amounted to changing of uniforms and insignia without any fighting This was undertaken in the words of Janez Jansa to establish our sovereignty in the key triangle border customs air control 17 It also had important practical effects The border crossings were a major source of revenue In addition by taking control of the borders the Slovenians were able to establish defensive positions against an expected JNA attack This meant that the JNA would have to fire the first shot It was fired on 27 June at 14 30 in Divaca by an officer of the JNA 18 27 June 1991 edit nbsp 26 June arrival of the JNA tank column at Vrtojba border crossing Further JNA troop movements took place in the early hours of 27 June A unit of the JNA s 306th Anti Aircraft Regiment based in Karlovac Croatia crossed the Slovenian border at Metlika A few hours later a column of tanks and armoured personnel carriers of the JNA 1st Armoured Brigade left their barracks at Vrhnika near the Slovenian capital Ljubljana heading for the airport at Brnik They arrived a few hours later and took control of the facilities As the JNA was the federal army its forces were customarily deployed in various places within the federal republics including Slovenia To the east JNA units left Maribor heading for the nearby border crossing at Sentilj and the border town of Dravograd further west The Yugoslav Air Force aircraft dropped leaflets over various parts of Slovenia bearing the messages We invite you to peace and cooperation and All resistance will be crushed 19 In the early hours of 27 June the Slovenian leadership was told of the movements of the JNA The military leadership of the Fifth Military District which included Slovenia was in telephone contact with Slovenian president Milan Kucan telling him that the troops mission was limited to taking over the border crossings and airport A meeting of the Slovene presidency was hastily convened at which Kucan and the rest of the members decided on armed resistance 20 nbsp A memorial to Slovenian helicopter pilot Toni Mrlak in Ljubljana The Slovenian government had received warnings that the JNA would use helicopters to ferry special forces troops to strategic locations It issued a warning to the JNA s 5th Military Command District in Zagreb that if helicopters continued to be used they would be shot down The warning was disregarded by the JNA leadership which still believed that the Slovenians would back down rather than fight This was however a disastrous miscalculation In the afternoon of 27 June the Slovenian TO Slovenian Territorial Defence shot down two JNA helicopters 21 with SA 7 missiles one of them a Gazelle over Rozna Dolina Ljubljana 22 killing the occupants one of whom Toni Mrlak was a Slovenian pilot as the JNA s forces consisted of nationals from all the republics 23 It was later discovered that the Gazelle which Mrlak had been flying was unarmed and was carrying only bread for the Yugoslav soldiers 24 The Slovenian Territorial Defence also took up positions around JNA barracks in various locations effectively besieging them and launched a series of attacks on JNA forces across Slovenia At Brnik a Slovenian TO unit attacked the JNA troops holding the airport and at Trzin a firefight developed in which four JNA soldiers and one Slovenian TO soldier Edvard Peperko were killed and the remainder of the JNA unit was forced to surrender Attacks were also launched by Slovenian TO units on JNA tank columns at Pesnica Ormoz and Koseze near Ilirska Bistrica A tank column from the JNA s 32nd Mechanised Brigade advancing from Varazdin in Croatia was blocked at Ormoz near the Slovenian border and found itself unable to break through a Slovenian barricade Despite the confusion and fighting the JNA nonetheless successfully accomplished much of its military mission By midnight on 27 June it had captured all of the crossings along the Italian border all but three crossings on the Austrian border and several of the new crossing points established along Slovenia s border with Croatia However many of its units were still stuck in vulnerable positions across Slovenia 28 June 1991 edit nbsp Yugoslav movements in Slovenia during the Ten Day War During the night of 27 28 June Slovenian TO units were ordered to undertake a general offensive against the JNA The Slovenian defence ministry ordered At all locations where RS Republic of Slovenia armed forces Slovenian Territorial Defence have the tactical advantage offensive actions against enemy units and facilities will be carried out The enemy will be summoned to surrender the shortest deadline possible for surrender given and action taken using all available weapons While in action any necessary arrangements will be made to evacuate and protect the civilians Additional fighting took place throughout the day The JNA tank column that had been attacked at Pesnica the previous day was blocked by impromptu barricades of Slovenian trucks at Strihovec a few kilometers short of the border with Austria where it again came under attack by Slovenian TO personnel and Slovenian police The SFR Yugoslav Air Force mounted two airstrikes in support of the JNA forces at Strihovec killing four truck drivers At Medvedjek in central Slovenia another JNA tank column came under attack at a truck barricade where air raids killed six truck drivers 25 Heavy fighting broke out at Nova Gorica on the border with Italy where the Slovenian Special Forces fired two Armbrust antitank rockets and fired 700 rounds from infantry weapons Slovene troops destroyed two JNA T 55 tanks and captured an additional three plus a BTS 1 military engineering vehicle Three JNA soldiers were killed and 16 wounded among them the commander of the armored column and 98 surrendered 25 A number of wounded were admitted to Gorizia s hospital after crossing the Italian border 26 Some sources claim that this was the decisive battle of the war The border crossing at Holmec was captured by Slovenian TO forces Two Slovenian and three JNA soldiers were killed and 45 JNA soldiers captured 18 The JNA barracks at Bukovje Mansion in Bukovje near Dravograd were attacked by Slovenian TO units and a JNA weapons depot at Borovnica fell to the Slovenian TO significantly improving the Slovenians supply of weapons The Yugoslav Air Force carried out attacks at a number of locations across the country most notably at Brnik Airport where two journalists from Austria and Germany Nikolas Vogel and Norbert Werner were killed and four Adria Airways airliners were seriously damaged The Yugoslav Air Force also attacked the Slovenian TO military headquarters at Kocevska Reka and flew sorties against radio and television transmitters at Krim Kum Trdina Peak and Nanos in an attempt to silence the Slovenian government broadcasts By the end of the day the JNA still held many of its positions but was rapidly losing ground JNA was beginning to experience problems with desertions many Slovenian members of the JNA quit their units or simply changed sides and both the troops on the ground and the leadership in Belgrade appeared to have little idea of what to do next 29 June 1991 edit The outbreak of the war galvanised diplomatic efforts by the European Community to find an end to the crisis Three EC foreign ministers met with Slovenian and Yugoslav government representatives in Zagreb during the night of 28 29 June and agreed on a ceasefire plan but this was not put into practice In the morning the Slovenians achieved several significant military successes The JNA troops at Ljubljana Airport near Brnik surrendered to Slovenian TO forces who had surrounded the facility overnight In the north several JNA tanks were captured near Strihovec and later reorganised into a TO tank company JNA special forces attempted a maritime landing at Hrvatini but were ambushed and repulsed by the Slovenians suffering two dead and three wounded The JNA held border crossings at Vrtojba and Sentilj also fell to the Slovenian TO who seized the federal troops weapons and tanks providing a much needed boost to their arsenal 27 The JNA issued an ultimatum to Slovenia demanding an immediate cessation of hostilities by 09 00 on 30 June In response the Slovenian Assembly adopted a resolution calling for a peaceful solution to the crisis that did not jeopardise Slovenian independence and rejected the JNA ultimatum 30 June 1991 edit Skirmishing continued in several places during the day Separatist forces seized the strategic Karawanks Tunnel under the Alps on the border with Austria and captured nine JNA tanks near Nova Gorica on the border with Italy The entire JNA garrison at Dravograd 16 officers and 400 men plus equipment surrendered and the garrisons at Tolmin and Bovec also fell to the Slovenians The weapons captured from the garrisons were quickly re issued to the Slovenian forces 1 July 1991 edit nbsp A column of JNA BOV armored vehicles in the Krakovo forest More skirmishes took place with Slovenian TO forces taking over a JNA facility at Nova Vas south of Ljubljana The JNA s ammunition dump at Crni Vrh caught fire and was destroyed in a massive explosion damaging much of the town However the Slovenians successfully captured depots at Pecovnik Bukovzlak and Zaloska Gorica taking possession of some 70 truckloads of ammunition and explosives 28 The JNA 306th Light Air Defence Artillery Regiment s column retreated from its exposed position at Medvedjek and headed into the Krakovo Forest Krakovski gozd near the Croatian border It ran into a blockade near the town of Krsko and was surrounded by Slovenian forces but refused to surrender probably hoping for help from a relief column 28 In the meantime the JNA s leadership sought permission to change the tempo of its operations Defence Minister Veljko Kadijevic informed the Yugoslav cabinet that the JNA s first plan a limited operation to secure Slovenia s border crossings had failed and that it was time to put into operation the backup plan of a full scale invasion and imposition of military rule in Slovenia However the collective presidency headed at the time by Serbia s Borisav Jovic refused to authorise such an operation The JNA Chief of Staff General Blagoje Adzic was furious and publicly denounced the federal organs which continually hampered us demanding negotiations while they the Slovenians were attacking us with all means 29 2 July 1991 edit The heaviest fighting of the war to date took place during 2 July The Domzale radio transmitter was attacked at 10 37 UTC 11 37 local time and heavily damaged by two JNA MiG 21 planes During the rest of the day there were a number of major set backs for the JNA The JNA convoy in the Krakovo Forest came under sustained attack from TO units forcing it to surrender Units from the JNA s Fourth Armoured Brigade attempted to move up from Jastrebarsko in Croatia but were beaten back near the border town of Bregana The Slovenian TO mounted successful attacks on border crossings at Sentilj Gornja Radgona Fernetici and Gorjansko overrunning them and taking a number of JNA troops prisoner A protracted engagement between JNA and Slovenian TO forces took place during the afternoon and evening at Dravograd and a number of JNA facilities around the country fell to Slovenian forces At 21 00 the Slovenian Presidency announced a unilateral ceasefire However this was rejected by the JNA leadership which vowed to take control and crush Slovenian resistance 3 July 1991 edit A large JNA armoured convoy set off from Belgrade on the morning of 3 July ostensibly to go to Slovenia It never arrived according to the official account this was due to mechanical breakdowns Fighting continued in Slovenia with a JNA relief force heading for the Gornja Radgona border crossing being halted near Radenci JNA forces at the Kog border crossing were also attacked by TO units In the evening the JNA agreed to a ceasefire and a withdrawal to barracks In a separate incident not far from Radenci in the village of Hrastje Mota a Yugoslav Mi 8 helicopter developed mechanical problems and was forced to land The helicopter was seized by the Slovene military but was deemed not suitable for the newly born air force and handed back to Belgrade on 13 August 30 4 6 July 1991 edit With a ceasefire now in force the two sides disengaged Slovenian forces took control of all of the country s border crossings and JNA units were allowed to withdraw peacefully to barracks and to cross the border to Croatia 7 July 1991 and afterwards edit nbsp Slovene military member front left supervising JNA personnel before departure The Ten Day War was formally ended with the Brioni Accord signed on the Croatian Brijuni Islands Slovenian and Croatian independence were agreed to The terms were distinctly favourable to Slovenia it was agreed that Slovenia and Croatia would postpone their independence for three months which in practical terms had little real impact and the Slovenian police and armed forces Slovenian Territorial Defence were recognised as sovereign on their territory nbsp The last JNA troops leaving Slovenian soil by seaIt was agreed that all Yugoslav military units would leave Slovenia with the Yugoslav government setting a deadline of the end of October to complete the process The Slovenian government insisted that the withdrawal should proceed on its terms the JNA was not allowed to take much of its heavy weaponry and equipment which was later either deployed locally or sold to other Yugoslav republics The withdrawal began about ten days later and was completed by 26 October Casualties editDue to the short duration and low intensity of the war casualties were not high According to Slovenian estimates the JNA suffered 44 fatalities and 146 wounded while the Slovenians had 19 killed and 182 wounded 6 Slovenian civilians were killed 31 7 Twelve foreign nationals were also killed in the conflict principally journalists and Bulgarian truck drivers who had strayed into the line of fire 4 692 JNA soldiers and 252 federal police officers were captured by the Slovenian side According to post war assessments made by the JNA its material losses amounted to 31 tanks 22 armoured personnel carriers 6 helicopters 6 787 infantry weapons 87 artillery pieces and 124 air defence weapons damaged destroyed or confiscated Property damage was not heavy due to the scattered and short term nature of the fighting 32 Ljubljana Airport bombing editIn the opening stages of the Ten Day War the Yugoslav authorities bombed the airport 33 Two Austrian journalists were killed and several commercial aircraft were damaged in the process 33 Holmec incident editMain article Battle of Holmec The border station at Holmec was the location of an alleged war crime perpetrated by Slovenian TO forces on 28 June 34 and filmed by the Austrian public broadcasting station ORF Video footage shows a small group of JNA soldiers standing or walking slowly with raised hands holding up a white sheet in an apparent attempt to surrender Moments later gunfire is heard and the soldiers fall or jump to the ground Neither the origin of the gunfire nor its exact effect are clearly visible on the video segment Slovene officials maintain that the JNA soldiers jumped for cover and were not hit and that the matter was thoroughly investigated years ago However the incident sparked renewed public debate after the footage was shown on Serbian TV station B92 in 2006 with many claiming that the soldiers were shot and killed by Slovenian TO troops and that Slovenia is trying to cover up the affair 35 36 37 The fate of the JNA soldiers identified on the footage is disputed One report claims that the soldiers are still alive 15 years after the conflict 38 Other reports identify three young soldiers as victims Zoran Jesic Goran Maletic and Antonio Simunovic and claim that they were killed in the Holmec incident 34 Strategic aspects editThe actions of Slovenia s forces were largely dictated by the military strategy devised some months before and were tightly integrated with an equally detailed media management plan An international media centre was established prior to the outbreak of conflict with Jelko Kacin designated to act as information minister and Slovenia s public face to the world The Slovenian government and media successfully presented the conflict to Western European audiences as a case of a David versus Goliath struggle between an emerging democracy and an authoritarian communist state and the columns of Yugoslav tanks brought to mind the events of the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 two years earlier This won considerable international sympathy and favourable media coverage for the cause of independent Slovenia The Slovenians had the advantage of superior morale compared to their adversaries in the Yugoslav army citation needed Many of the Yugoslav soldiers did not realise they were taking part in a real military operation rather than an exercise until they came under attack 4 They sent only 2000 untried conscripts which split up into smaller groups It was a tactical error The officer corps was dominated by Serbs and Montenegrins and in many cases ideologically committed to Yugoslav unity The rank and file troops however were conscripts many of whom had no strong motivation in fighting against Slovenes Of the soldiers of the 5th Military District which was in action in Slovenia in 1990 30 were Albanians 20 Croats 15 to 20 Serbs and Montenegrins 10 Bosniaks and 8 Slovenes 39 The Slovenians were also well aware that the Serbian government of Slobodan Milosevic was not particularly concerned about Slovenia s independence 4 given the lack of any significant Serbian minority in the country On 30 June Defence Minister General Kadijevic suggested to the Yugoslav federal presidency a massive attack on Slovenia to break down the unexpectedly heavy resistance But the Serb representative Borisav Jovic shocked the military establishment by declaring that Serbia did not support further military action against Slovenia 40 Serbia was at this point more concerned with the situation in Croatia even before the war had ended JNA troops were already repositioning themselves for the imminent war in Croatia 41 According to the journalist Hermann Tertsch who covered that war firsthand The weak military deployment of the federal army had only two reasons the external cosmetic to claim that Belgrade defended its international borders And the collection of property from its bases in Slovenia especially from the borders with Austria and Italy On the 25th the independence of this ethnically homogeneous republic had been proclaimed without a religious minority or any Serb legacy On July 7 having collected properties and documents from the barracks the Yugoslav army in reality already pan Serbian left a Slovenia that Milosevic and his generals did not give a damn about 42 Consequences of the war editFor Slovenia the war marked the decisive defence of its independence in regard to Yugoslavia It was officially recognised by all European Community member states on 15 January 1992 and joined the United Nations on 22 May The war led to a series of major shifts on the Yugoslav side The JNA eventually lost nearly all of its Slovenian and Croat personnel becoming an almost entirely Serbian and Montenegrin force Its poor performance in Slovenia and later in Croatia discredited its leadership Kadijevic resigned as defence minister in January 1992 and Adzic was forced into medical retirement shortly afterwards The Slovenian and Croatian governments were urged by the European Commission to freeze their declaration of independence for a period of three months hoping to ease tension to which Slovenia and Croatia agreed Slovenia used the period to consolidate its institutions deliver some of the most urgent economic reforms and prepare for international recognition of the country See also editStatehood Day Slovenia History of Slovenia Order of Freedom of the Republic of Slovenia Decorations given to heroes of the Ten Day War in SloveniaNotes edit Klemencic Matjaz Zagar Mitja 2004 Democratization in the Beginning of the 1990s The Former Yugoslavia s Diverse Peoples A Reference Sourcebook ABC CLIO pp 297 298 ISBN 978 1 57607 294 3 Lukic Reneo Lynch Allen 1996 The Wars of Yugoslav Succession 1941 95 Europe from the Balkans to the Urals The Disintegration of Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union Oxford University Press p 184 ISBN 978 0 19 829200 5 Lenard J Cohen Jasna Dragovic Soso State Collapse in South Eastern Europe New Perspectives on Yugoslavia s Disintegration Purdue University Press 2008 Pp 323 It says that the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia s Prime Minister Ante Markovic declared the proclamation of independence by Slovenia and Croatia to be illegal and contrary to the Constitution of the SFRY and authorized the Yugoslav People s Army to secure the integral unity of the SFRY a b c d e The Death of Yugoslavia Part 3 Wars of Independence BBC a b c d J Svajncer Janez May 2001 War for Slovenia 1991 25 June 2001 10 Years of Independence Slovenska vojska THE ROLE OF MONTENEGRO IN THE WARS OF THE 1990s FROM A CONSISTENT WARRIOR TO AN UN WILLING ALLY Montenegro and the war in Slovenia 1991 Retrieved 7 January 2024 a b Slovenci ki so dali svoja zivljenja za samostojno Slovenijo Retrieved 7 January 2024 Clapham David 1996 Slovenia Housing Privatization in Eastern Europe Greenwood Publishing Group p 152 ISBN 978 0 313 27214 1 Fraudet Xavier 2006 France s Security Independence Originality and Constraints in Europe 1981 1995 Peter Lang p 129 ISBN 978 3 03911 141 1 Jeanne M Haskin 2006 Bosnia and Beyond The quiet Revolution that Wouldn t Go Quietly Algora Publishing p 127 ISBN 978 0 87586 430 3 Flores Juberias Carlos November 2005 Some legal and political considerations about the legal framework for referendum in Montenegro in the light of European experiences and standards Legal Aspects for Referendum in Montenegro in the Context of International Law and Practice PDF Foundation Open Society Institute Representative Office Montenegro p 74 Archived from the original PDF on 26 April 2012 Volitve Elections Statisticni letopis 2011 Statistical Yearbook 2011 Vol 15 Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia 2011 p 108 ISSN 1318 5403 Gow James amp Carmichael Cathie Slovenia and the Slovenes pp 174 178 C Hurst London 1999 Balkan Battlegrounds p 58 Central Intelligence Agency 2002 Allcock John B et al Conflict in the Former Yugoslavia p 274 ABC CLIO Denver 1998 Mesic Stjepan The Road to War in The War in Croatia and Bosnia Herzegovina 1991 1995 ed Branka Magas and Ivo Zanic Frank Cass London 2001 Quoted in Balkan Battlegrounds ibid a b It happened on June 27 RTVSLO 27 June 2005 p 1 Quoted in Balkan Battlegrounds p 59 Silber Laura amp Little Allan The Death of Yugoslavia Penguin London 1995 Ramet Sabrina 2005 The three Yugoslavias state building and legitimation 1918 2005 Woodrow Wilson Center Press Series Indiana University Press p 39 ISBN 0 253 34656 8 Ripley Tim 2001 Conflict in the Balkans 1991 2000 Osprey Publishing p 5 ISBN 1 84176 290 3 Spencer Metta 2000 The lessons of Yugoslavia Volume 3 of Research on Russia and Eastern Europe Emerald Group Publishing p 17 ISBN 0 7623 0280 1 Potocnjak Draga 2013 Skrito povelje Ljubljana Sanje p 117 ISBN 978 961 274 198 3 a b RID Rivista Italiana Difesa Dicembre 2011 Vent anni fa divampava la guerra in Jugoslavia I combattimenti al confine italo sloveno di Rozna Dolina Casa Rossa e Nova Vas 10febbraioDetroit 7 January 2012 Retrieved 18 April 2019 Gorizia e Nova Gorica different twins Red Carpet Magazine 30 April 2018 Retrieved 18 April 2019 Balkan Battlegrounds A Military History of the Yugoslav Conflict 1990 1995 Central Intelligence Agency Office of Russian and European Analysis 2002 p 63 ISBN 978 0 16 066472 4 a b Balkan Battlegrounds A Military History of the Yugoslav Conflict 1990 1995 Central Intelligence Agency Office of Russian and European Analysis 2002 p 64 ISBN 978 0 16 066472 4 Quoted in Balkan Battlegrounds p 64 Insignia magazine Volume 1 issue 2 March 1996 THE ROLE OF MONTENEGRO IN THE WARS OF THE 1990s FROM A CONSISTENT WARRIOR TO AN UN WILLING ALLY Montenegro and the war in Slovenia 1991 Retrieved 7 January 2024 Nation R Craig 2003 SLOVENIA AND CROATIA 1991 92 War in the Balkans 1991 2002 91 148 via JSTOR a b Bartolj Jaka 29 July 2015 For more than half a century the Ljubljana Airport has served as Slovenia s window to the world RTV SLO a b Croat victim in Slovenian war crime 2006 04 10 Archived from the original on 17 June 2013 Serb Official Accuses Slovenia Troops of War Crimes 2006 04 08 Associated Press Report The Centre for SouthEast European Studies 12 March 2007 Archived from the original on 12 March 2007 Jansa Protests to Kostunica over Statements on Holmec 2006 04 06 BETA News Agency Report Belgrade Says Holmec Footage Victims Alive 2006 04 26 Slovenian News Agency STA Report Meier Viktor Yugoslavia A History of its Demise Routledge London 1999 Vasic Milos The Yugoslav Army and the Post Yugoslav Armies in Yugoslavia and After A Study in Fragmentation Despair and Rebirth ed David A Dyker amp Ivan Vejvoda Longman London 1996 death of yugoslavia part 3 Bing video www bing com Retrieved 6 September 2022 Sueno esloveno humedo y sangriento ABC 11 12 2018 in Spanish Sources edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ten Day War Allcock John B et al Conflict in the Former Yugoslavia ABC CLIO Denver 1998 Gow James amp Carmichael Cathie Slovenia and the Slovenes C Hurst London 1999 Gow James The Serbian Project and its Adversaries C Hurst London 2003 The War in Croatia and Bosnia Herzegovina 1991 1995 ed Branka Magas and Ivo Zanic Frank Cass London 2001 Svajncer Brigadier Janez J War for Slovenia 1991 Slovenska vojska May 2001 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ten Day War amp oldid 1220552238, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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