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1991 Yugoslav campaign in Croatia

1991 Yugoslav campaign in Croatia
Part of the Croatian War of Independence

(clockwise from top left)
Date20 September 1991 – 3 January 1992
Location
Result Stalemate
Belligerents
Yugoslavia
SAO Krajina
SAO Eastern Slavonia, Baranja and Western Syrmia
SAO Western Slavonia
 Croatia
Commanders and leaders
Veljko Kadijević
Blagoje Adžić
Slobodan Milošević
Franjo Tuđman
Gojko Šušak
Martin Špegelj
Anton Tus
Units involved
Yugoslav Ground Forces
Yugoslav Air Force
Yugoslav Navy
Republic of Serbia Territorial Defense
Republic of Montenegro Territorial Defense
Serbian Guard
Serb Volunteer Guard
White Eagles
Croatian National Guard (until November 1991)
Croatian Army (from November 1991)
Croatian Police
Croatian Navy
Croatian Defence Forces
Strength
September 1991
145,000 troops
1,100 tanks
700 APCs
1,980 artillery pieces
September 1991
58,000 troops
January 1992
155,772 troops
216 tanks
127 APCs
1,108 artillery pieces
Casualties and losses
1,279 killed 3,761 killed
Civilian casualties: See the Aftermath section

The 1991 Yugoslav campaign in Croatia was a series of engagements between the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA), the Yugoslav Navy and the Yugoslav Air Force, and the Croatian National Guard (ZNG) then the Croatian Army (HV) during the Croatian War of Independence. The JNA was originally deployed in order to preserve Yugoslavia, and the initial plan of the campaign entailed the military occupation of Croatia and the removal of the Croatian leadership elected in 1990. The JNA intervention was the culmination of its involvement in the confiscation of weapons from Croatia's Territorial Defence, and in the Croatian Serb revolt that had begun in August 1990. From that time, the JNA had been frequently deployed to form a buffer zone between the insurgents and the ZNG or the Croatian police. In effect, these JNA buffer zones often secured the territorial gains of the insurgents and led to an increasingly hostile relationship between the JNA and Croatia. The JNA campaign plan was amended shortly before the campaign to include the relief of JNA barracks besieged by the ZNG. The besieging and subsequent capture of several JNA facilities allowed Croatia to arm its previously poorly equipped military and to equip new recruits.

The campaign effectively started on 20 September 1991, even though relatively minor offensive actions had already been undertaken. By the end of the month, it suffered from serious delays and manpower shortages caused by low call-up turnout in Serbia. In early October, the original campaign objectives were reduced as Serbian president Slobodan Milošević and his allies gained greater control of the JNA. Subsequently, the campaign objectives were redefined to deny the Croatian Government access to parts of Croatia that contained substantial Serb populations and to protect Croatian Serbs. The campaign culminated in late November and early December with the Battle of Vukovar and the Siege of Dubrovnik. A limited Croatian counterattack and the development of the HV led to a stalemate on the battlefield.

The strategic situation permitted the development of the Vance plan—a ceasefire supervised by United Nations peacekeepers designed to create conditions for the political settlement of the conflict in Croatia. The Sarajevo Agreement, regarding the implementation of the ceasefire, was signed on 2 January 1992, bringing the campaign to an end. Nonetheless, the JNA took several more months to withdraw from Croatia as it was replaced by the UN peacekeepers. In 1991 alone, the conflict caused more than 7,000 deaths and the internal displacement of 400,000–600,000 people. More than 1,700 persons remain missing as a result of the campaign.

Background edit

In 1990, following the electoral defeat of the government of the Socialist Republic of Croatia, ethnic tensions increased. The Yugoslav People's Army (Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija – JNA) confiscated the weapons of Croatia's Territorial Defence (Teritorijalna obrana – TO) to minimize potential resistance.[1] On 17 August, the tensions escalated into an open revolt by Croatian Serbs,[2] centred on the predominantly Serb-populated areas of the Dalmatian hinterland around Knin,[3] parts of the Lika, Kordun, Banovina regions and eastern Croatia.[4] In January 1991, Serbia, supported by Montenegro and Serbia's provinces of Vojvodina and Kosovo, made two unsuccessful attempts to obtain approval from the Yugoslav Presidency to deploy the JNA to disarm Croatian security forces.[5] After a bloodless skirmish between Serb insurgents and Croatian special police in March,[6] the JNA, supported by Serbia and its allies, asked the federal Presidency to grant it wartime powers and declare a state of emergency. The request was denied on 15 March,[7] and by the summer of 1991, the JNA came under the control of the Serbian President Slobodan Milošević as the Yugoslav federation started to fall apart.[8]

Milošević became de facto commander of the JNA once he secured control over the rump federal presidency and through his influence over the federal defence minister General Veljko Kadijević and JNA chief of staff Blagoje Adžić.[9] Milošević, preferring a campaign aimed at expanding Serbia rather than preserving Yugoslavia, publicly threatened to replace the JNA with a Serbian army and declared that he no longer recognized the authority of the federal presidency. This threat caused the JNA to gradually abandon plans to preserve Yugoslavia in favour of the expansion of Serbia.[7] By the end of the month, the conflict had escalated and the first fatalities occurred.[10] The JNA then stepped in to support the insurgents and prevent Croatian police from intervening.[7] In early April, leaders of the Serb revolt in Croatia declared their intention to integrate the area under their control with Serbia. The Government of Croatia considered this an act of secession.[11]

At the beginning of 1991, Croatia had no regular army. In an effort to bolster its defence, it doubled police numbers to about 20,000. The most effective part of the force was the 3,000-strong special police deployed in 12 battalions which adopted principles of military organization. In addition, there were 9,000–10,000 regionally-organized reserve police; these were set up in 16 battalions and 10 independent companies, but the units lacked weapons.[12] In May, in response to the deteriorating situation, the Croatian government established the Croatian National Guard (Zbor narodne garde – ZNG) by amalgamating the special police battalions into four guards brigades.[13] The guards brigades initially comprised about 8,000 troops, and were subordinated to the Ministry of Defence headed by retired JNA General Martin Špegelj. The regional police, by then expanded to 40,000, was also attached to the ZNG and re-organized into 19 brigades and 14 independent battalions. The guards brigades were the only ZNG units that were fully equipped with small arms, while heavier weapons and an effective command and control structure were lacking throughout the ZNG. At the time, Croatian weapon stocks consisted of 30,000 small arms purchased abroad in addition to 15,000 previously owned by the police. A new 10,000-strong special police was established to replace the personnel transferred to the ZNG guards brigades.[12]

The Croatian view of the JNA role in the Serb revolt gradually evolved between January and September 1991. The initial plan of Croatian President Franjo Tuđman was to win support for Croatia from the European Community (EC) and the United States, and he dismissed advice to seize JNA barracks and storage facilities in the country. Tuđman's stance was motivated by his belief that Croatia could not win a war against the JNA. The ZNG was limited to a defensive role even though the actions of the JNA appeared to be coordinated with Croatian Serb forces.[14] This impression was reinforced by buffer zones the JNA established after armed conflicts between the Croatian Serb militia and the ZNG—the JNA intervened after the ZNG lost ground, leaving the Croatian Serbs in control of the territory. Furthermore, the JNA provided some weapons to the Croatian Serbs, although the bulk of the weaponry was provided from Serbia's TO and Ministry of Internal Affairs stocks. After the start of the JNA intervention in Slovenia in late June, conscripts began deserting from the JNA and very few were drafted to replace them, except in Serbia.[15]

Prelude edit

 
Map showing the JNA plan for its 1991 campaign in Croatia

The JNA intervened directly against Croatia in early July in Baranja, north of the city of Osijek. On 1 August, they drove Croatian forces out of Erdut, Aljmaš and Dalj, and out of Baranja around 22 August.[16] During the summer of 1991, the Croatian Serb military consolidated in the territory under its control. In Banovina, Glina was captured from the ZNG on 26 July. That same day, two Croatian police stations near Hrvatska Kostajnica were captured, isolating the town.[17] The attacks, codenamed Operation Stinger, were carried out by the 7th Banija Division, spearheaded by the Knin special police led by Dragan Vasiljković.[18] In the aftermath of capture of the Kozibrod police station, Serb forces committed the first mass killing,[19] involving the deaths of ten captured policemen and seventeen civilians.[20]

The ZNG successfully defended Hrvatska Kostajnica until mid-September. In August, Croatian Serbs acting under the operational control of the JNA[17] clashed with the ZNG around Osijek, Vukovar and Vinkovci in eastern Slavonia. Fighting in eastern Slavonia led to ZNG blockades of JNA barracks in those cities and limited fighting against the garrisons there. In western Slavonia, the Croatian Serb militia attempted to advance into Daruvar but were held back by the ZNG in the area around Okučani and south of Pakrac before the JNA formed a buffer zone there. Following this fighting, Croatia was denied use of major transport routes between Zagreb and Slavonia. In northern Dalmatia, the JNA initiated several clashes with the ZNG and coordinated its advances with Croatian Serb forces. These attacks culminated in the capture of Kijevo on 26 August and the Maslenica Bridge on 11 September. The capture of the bridge severed the last remaining road link between Dalmatia and the rest of Croatia.[21] In the summer of 1991, the performance of the ZNG was poor because it lacked manpower and weapons, and exerted inadequate command and control. The professional ZNG troops were better trained than their opponents, with the exception of the Knin special police set up by the Serbian State Security Service.[22]

On 1 September 1991, Tuđman accepted an EC-proposed ceasefire and peace conference, despite his ultimatum demanding that the JNA return to its barracks by 31 August. After the Yugoslav Presidency also accepted it, the conference began on 7 September. Four days later, the Croatian member and chair of the federal presidency, Stjepan Mesić, ordered the JNA to return to its barracks within 48 hours.[22] The move was motivated by Tuđman's impression that the conference would have continued endlessly while the ZNG lost ground. The order was disputed by other members of the presidency, but it gave Croatia justification to openly confront the JNA.[23] On 14 September, the ZNG and the Croatian police blockaded and cut utilities to all JNA facilities it had access to, beginning the Battle of the Barracks.[24] The ZNG blockaded 33 large JNA garrisons in Croatia,[25] and numerous smaller facilities including border posts and weapons and ammunition storage depots. The ZNG quickly captured isolated facilities and depots, as well as several major JNA posts, and seized large quantities of weapons—including the capture of entire stocks of the JNA 32nd (Varaždin) Corps and nearly all the weapons confiscated from Croatia's TO.[24] The JNA lost control of eight brigades—including one armoured and two mechanized brigades, and three artillery regiments—while additional forces in the JNA Fifth Military District and its Military-Maritime District remained besieged.[26] The significance of the Battle of the Barracks was reinforced by the introduction of a United Nations (UN) arms embargo on 25 September.[27] In September, Anton Tus was appointed the Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Republic of Croatia.[26]

Order of battle edit

 
Map showing the fighting in eastern Slavonia, September 1991 – January 1992

In early September 1991, the ZNG had 8,000 full-time and 40,000 reserve troops. The four guards brigades of full-time troops were the only units of the ZNG that were fully equipped with small arms, but even they lacked heavy weapons. A 10,000-strong special police force was established to replace the personnel transferred from the original special police units to the guards brigades. In September, the Croatian small arms stockpile consisted of 30,000 purchased abroad in addition to 15,000 previously owned by the police.[12] The Battle of the Barracks resulted in a large increase to ZNG weapon holdings—allowing full arming of its existing units, raising of an additional 40–42 brigades and fielding a total of 200,000 troops and 40,000 police by the end of the year.[26] The ZNG captured 250 tanks, 400–500 heavy artillery pieces, 180,000 small arms and 2,000,000 long tons (2,200,000 short tons) of ammunition. In addition, 3,000 officers, mostly Croatian by nationality, changed allegiance and left the JNA to join the ZNG.[28] In 1991, the ZNG was supported by the Croatian Defence Forces (Croatian: Hrvatske obrambene snage, HOS)—a militia raised by the Croatian Party of Rights. The party stated it had as many as 3,000 troops, but the police estimated it at 250 armed militiamen.[29]

The JNA planned a two-stage mobilisation of troops. The first wave of call-ups was performed in July, and was meant to intimidate Croatia without an actual offensive being launched and allow timely deployment of crucial units.[30] After the first stage of the mobilisation failed to deter Croatian forces, the second stage commenced on 15 September; it was met with a large-scale refusal of mobilised personnel to report to their designated units, desertions and an overall lack of enthusiasm for the campaign. This resulted in low troop availability, forcing the JNA to deploy fewer infantry units and to abandon some operations.[31] Response to the mobilisation was particularly poor in Central Serbia, where only 26% of those called-up reported for service. Nonetheless, in September 1991, the JNA discharged conscripts that had completed their terms of service, and reached 73% of planned troop levels.[32] The mobilisation problems demoralised JNA troops and commanders. A request made by JNA general command to Milošević for general mobilisation to strengthen troop levels was denied because he did not believe the campaign was needed nor feasible.[31] Despite the mobilisation problems, the JNA and the TO forces deployed in support of the campaign consisted of approximately 145,000 troops, 1,100 tanks, 700 other armoured vehicles and 1,980 artillery pieces, supported by the Yugoslav Air Force and the Navy.[33]

Timeline edit

 
Map showing the fighting in western Slavonia, September 1991 – January 1992
 
Map showing the fighting in the Banovina, Kordun and Lika regions, October 1991 – January 1992
 
Map showing the fighting in the Dubrovnik area, October 1991 – January 1992

The JNA developed a plan to defeat Croatia militarily, overthrow its government and create conditions necessary for the continued existence of Yugoslavia. The plan was amended in September 1991 to accommodate the besieging of JNA garrisons by the ZNG, incorporating the lifting of the blockade into the campaign objectives. The plan entailed five corps-level campaigns designed to impose an air and naval blockade of Croatia, capture territory populated by Serbs and relieve barracks under ZNG siege. The axes of attack were specified as GradiškaVirovitica, BihaćKarlovac–Zagreb, Knin–Zadar and MostarSplit. Armoured and mechanized forces were tasked with the capture of eastern Slavonia and advances west towards Zagreb and Varaždin.[30] This was identified as the main effort of the campaign.[31] Finally, a land blockade of Dubrovnik was planned, coupled with an advance west towards the Neretva River to support the drive to Split.[30] The plan may have proposed withdrawal of the JNA to Serb-populated areas of Croatia or from the whole of Croatia after the objectives were completed, but sources conflict on that issue.[34]

September offensive edit

In eastern Slavonia, the JNA responded to the ZNG siege of its garrison in Vukovar, and on 14 September 1991 it deployed troops to relieve the barracks.[35] Independent of that effort, the main thrust of the campaign against Croatia was initially planned to start on 21 September. The southern operational group of the thrust, spearheaded by the 1st Guards Mechanised Division, was expected to lift the ZNG siege of the JNA barracks in Vinkovci, and reach Našice and Slavonski Brod in two to three days. Over the next four to five days, the group was expected to reach the line Okučani–Suhopolje by advancing via the ĐakovoPožega road and the Zagreb–Belgrade motorway, avoiding major population centres. The northern operational group, subordinated to the 12th (Novi Sad) Corps, was to advance from Osijek to Našice and then further west towards Bjelovar.[36] The two operational groups were assigned approximately 57,000 troops and 5,000 supporting personnel.[37] The 17th (Tuzla) Corps was probably tasked with crossing the Sava River—marking the border of Croatia—at Slavonski Brod and Slavonski Šamac to join the westward drive along the motorway, but the crossing never occurred.[35]

The campaign was brought forward by one day to 20 September. The change of schedule caused the JNA 1st Guards Mechanised Division to commit to battle as it arrived in eastern Slavonia with no reconnaissance or preparation. The resulting traffic jam on the ŠidTovarnikStari Jankovci road prevented bridging units from reaching the Bosut River. That in turn prevented the 1st Guards Division from crossing the river and confined it to the area between the Bosut and the Danube, east of Vinkovci. Besides the bridging units, the division did not receive the 80th Motorised Brigade—which appears to have disintegrated before reaching the Croatian frontier—and the 2nd Guards Mechanised Brigade—a victim of friendly fire bombardment in the area between Tovarnik and Ilača adjacent to the border. Several units of the Novi Sad Corps also disintegrated when morale declined after a number of friendly fire incidents.[38]

The Banja Luka Corps was tasked with the main axis of advance from Okučani to Daruvar and Virovitica in western Slavonia, and a secondary drive from Okučani towards Kutina.[39] This task was consistent with the line expected to be reached by the main thrust of the JNA advancing from the east in about a week.[36] The Corps had already deployed a battlegroup of the 265th Mechanised Brigade near Okučani to support the advance that started on 21 September, and reached the Papuk Mountains. The Corps received two motorised brigades and one artillery brigade as reinforcements during the advance, but the problems with morale and desertions experienced in eastern Slavonia were also present in the Banja Luka Corps. In one such instance, the 130th Mechanised Brigade, sent as a reinforcement, had been reduced to a 280-strong battalion by 29 September.[40] The JNA was stopped by the ZNG between Novska, Nova Gradiška and Pakrac, even though some Croatian Serb militia units took positions on the Bilogora and Papuk north of Pakrac near Virovitica, and Slatina, with no JNA support.[41]

The JNA Knin Corps, which had already fully mobilised and deployed, started the campaign in northern Dalmatia and southern Lika on 16 September 1991.[35] It captured Drniš on 18 September, but sustained defeats at Pakovo Selo two days later and near Šibenik on 22 September as it attempted to capture the city. After this defeat, the Corps ceased its attacks, except for those around Gospić in Lika, for the rest of the month. Five days after the JNA and the Serbian Guard paramilitaries lost their positions in the city on 22 September, the Knin Corps captured Lovinac.[42] JNA troops assembling near the southern tip of Croatia in the Dubrovnik hinterland consisted of elements of the Užice and Titograd Corps. They had not advanced onto Croatian soil by the end of September because of mobilisation problems in Bosnia and Herzegovina.[35][43] In Banovina, the JNA captured Petrinja on 21 September, but failed to make further progress.[40] Because of the failure of JNA mobilisation, the planned campaign in Kordun was limited to the consolidation of positions held around Karlovac.[35][44] On 15 September, the Yugoslav Navy blockaded the Croatian Adriatic ports of Pula, Rijeka, Zadar, Split and Dubrovnik for a week.[45][46]

Reduced objectives edit

On 30 September, the general staff of the JNA reduced the objectives of the campaign because it had not followed the initial plan and had become bogged down.[43][47] The reduced objectives called for offensive and defensive actions, the inflicting of decisive defeats on Croatian forces in Dalmatia and eastern Slavonia, and strikes against vital infrastructure in Croatia, to obtain an agreement on the evacuation of besieged JNA facilities. While some units on the ground started to implement the new orders the same day, they did not take effect completely before 4 October.[43] On 3 October, Serbian and Montenegrin representatives in the Yugoslav Presidency declared that they alone had become the acting federal presidency and assumed control of the JNA.[48] Two days later, the JNA requested that the presidency authorize a general mobilization of forces needed for the campaign, but this was refused by Milošević.[49] By 9 October, the JNA effort was considered a failure. Its commanders formally accepted the role forced on the JNA by Milošević and limited its strategic objectives in Croatia to the protection of Serb-populated areas.[31][50]

The JNA effort to relieve its Vukovar barracks turned into a protracted siege, delaying 36,000 troops and a significant proportion of armoured units slated for the thrust towards Zagreb and Varaždin. Vukovar was captured in mid-November but the victory proved pyrrhic because it completely disrupted the overall campaign. During the Battle of Vukovar, the JNA formally approved the use of paramilitary volunteers to fill its ranks.[47] These included the White Eagles and the Serb Volunteer Guard (SVG), which were trained by the Serbian Ministry of Interior.[51] On 12 October, the federal presidency authorized the JNA to enlist the volunteers as an estimated 150,000 people had emigrated from Yugoslavia, while others had taken refuge with friends or relatives to avoid the JNA draft.[52] After capturing Vukovar, the JNA 12th Corps and the SVG advanced south-west across the Bosut on 15–16 November,[16] and west between Vinkovci and Osijek, on 20 November, but the Croatian forces—renamed the Croatian Army (Hrvatska vojska – HV) that month—contained their advances.[13][53] According to General Života Panić, commander of the JNA 1st Military District at the time, the immediate objectives of the advances were Osijek and Županja.[54]

In Banovina, the JNA reached the Kupa River and captured its entire southern bank, except for ZNG bridgeheads in the areas of Nebojan, Sunja and Sisak, on 30 September. No further advances were achieved there.[55] The JNA attempted an additional push towards the Nebojan bridgehead via Novi Farkašić on 17–18 October, and another towards Sunja on 2 November, but both attempts failed.[56] On 4 October, the JNA initiated an attack in Kordun, in the area of Karlovac, pushing the ZNG back in the area of Slunj two days later. On 8 October, it reached the banks of the Kupa and Korana Rivers and the intensity of fighting died down.[55] The greatest flare-up of hostilities in the area occurred on 4–5 November when a JNA garrison based in a suburb of Karlovac broke through the ZNG siege in the Battle of Logorište and reached JNA-held territory to the east of the city. Further south, the JNA captured Slunj on 17 November and Cetingrad on 29 November, eliminating a ZNG pocket in Kordun.[57] JNA activity in Lika was limited to shelling and air raids on Gospić and Otočac, peaking on 4 October.[55]

On 1 October, the JNA Banja Luka Corps initiated probing attacks in western Slavonia, presaging a major effort employing the bulk of the corps three days later. The advance established defensive positions just outside Novska and Nova Gradiška, and captured Jasenovac on 8 October. Lipik and a part of Pakrac were captured four days later.[58] By that time, the JNA campaign in western Slavonia had lost its momentum.[59]

In northern Dalmatia, the JNA Knin Corps attacked Zadar on 4 October, reaching its outskirts and lifting the ZNG siege of the Šepurine Barracks the next day. The advance was blocked by the ZNG and a truce was agreed on 7 October. Two days later, it was followed by an agreement to evacuate JNA facilities in Zadar, including equipment stored there.[55] Further south, the JNA Titograd Corps and its Military-Maritime District forces advanced from eastern Herzegovina and the Bay of Kotor, and pushed east and west of Dubrovnik on 1 October, placing besieging the city by the end of the month.[60] The JNA was supported by Montenegro's TO in the area.[61] Even though the Croatian troops defending the city were few,[62] the city held out, sustaining increasingly intensive artillery, naval and air bombardment until a ceasefire was agreed in the area on 7 December. As the siege shaped international opinion on the Croatian War of Independence, it became a major contributor to a shift towards the international diplomatic and economic isolation of Serbia and rump Yugoslavia,[63] and resulted in the creation of a perception of Serbia and rump Yugoslavia as an aggressor state.[64]

The JNA attacks on Dubrovnik and Zadar were supported by the Yugoslav Navy, which blockaded the coast on two more occasions.[57] On 3 October, all shipping off Croatia, except for ferry lines to Pag and islands in the Kvarner Gulf, was halted. The blockade, except for that of Dubrovnik, was lifted on 11 October. The final blockade, restricting access to Rijeka, Zadar, Šibenik and Split in addition to Dubrovnik, started on 8 November.[65] On 15 November, the Yugoslav Navy sustained losses when it unsuccessfully attacked Split and the island of Brač.[57] The Yugoslav blockade in the northern Adriatic ended on 22 November, but in the southern Adriatic—except off Dubrovnik—it was lifted on 3 December.[65]

Croatian counter-offensive edit

 
Map showing the situation in northern Dalmatia, January 1992

On 8 October, Croatia declared independence from Yugoslavia.[66] Even though the declaration had been preceded the day before by a Yugoslav Air Force attack on the presidential office in Zagreb,[67] the Croatian authorities considered that the war situation was no longer critical. This assessment was followed by an order to prepare plans for a counter-offensive on 12 October, and three more orders to commence offensive operations, which were issued by 20 November.[68] The plans involved containing the JNA south of Osijek, advancing to the Bosut River south of Vinkovci, recapturing Jasenovac and the Okučani–Lipik road to secure the Papuk and Psunj mountains, advancing towards Petrinja, Glina, Slunj, Korenica and Gračac, recapturing the Maslenica Bridge and the Obrovac–Gračac road, and stopping the JNA advance north-west of Dubrovnik.[69]

The most significant results were produced in western Slavonia, where Croatian forces began pushing the JNA away from Grubišno Polje towards Lipik on 31 October, and away from Nova Gradiška towards Okučani on 12 November.[70] In mid-November, another push along the Novska–Okučani axis recaptured several villages by 9 December, while Lipik was recaptured by the Croatian forces—now renamed the HV—on 7 December. The mountains of Papuk and Bilogora, north of Pakrac where the Croatian Serb militia was not supported by the JNA, were brought under Croatian control in the same period.[59] A HV offensive to recapture the Okučani area, codenamed Operation Orkan 91, commenced in the final days of December. The area was attacked from the directions of Pakrac, Novska and Nova Gradiška. The effort made no progress except west of Nova Gradiška—but even there it was very limited.[16] Under international pressure, Tuđman called off the offensive on 26 December.[71]

The second significant HV offensive was Operation Whirlwind, launched across the Kupa River on 11 December. The HV was tasked with advancing towards Glina but the operation failed after a shallow bridgehead was established within two days.[59] In Lika, battles were fought for individual villages but little progress was made by either side.[72] The JNA captured four villages south of Osijek between 21 November and 16 December but the front lines generally became static.[16][72]

Aftermath edit

class=notpageimage|
Map showing JNA-held areas of Croatia in January 1992 (red)

The JNA campaign in Croatia ended in a stalemate, leading both sides to accept an internationally supervised ceasefire.[73] By late November, the JNA was no longer in a position to make substantial advances, while Milošević refused to pursue objectives that he no longer considered achievable.[31] Between September and December 1991, the HV captured many weapons and significantly increased its capabilities. In mid-January 1992, it commanded 155,772 troops and had 216 tanks, 127 other armoured vehicles and 1,108 artillery pieces at its disposal.[74] Even though JNA positions in western Slavonia were on the brink of military collapse,[71] the HV struggled elsewhere and its munitions stockpiles were depleted, while the UN arms embargo prevented its quick resupply.[75] By the end of 1991, the conflict had killed 6,000 Croatians. Another 23,000 were wounded and 400,000 became internally displaced persons (IDPs).[76] Some sources report that there were as many as 600,000 IDPs.[19][77] The 6,000 killed include 3,761 soldiers.[78] JNA losses were officially reported at 1,279 killed in action, but the figure may have been considerably higher because casualties were consistently under-reported during the war.[79] The HV counter-offensive in western Slavonia created 20,000 Serb refugees. They fled from the area when the JNA ordered the Croatian Serb forces to withdraw,[80] and were subsequently settled in JNA-held Baranja.[81]

In 1991 and early 1992, approximately 18,000 Croatian citizens were missing or held by the JNA or its allies. Approximately 8,000 of these were imprisoned in internment camps in Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, or in Croatian territory controlled by the JNA. The camps were set up in Begejci, Stajićevo, Sremska Mitrovica, Niš, Aleksinac, Manjača, Banja Luka, Knin, Bučje, Beli Manastir, Negoslavci, Vukovar and Morinj. Approximately 300 prisoners died while detained in the camps. Most of the prisoners had been released by August 1992.[82] As of May 2013 1,703 were people still missing as a result of the 1991 campaign.[83] Both sides committed numerous atrocities during the conflict. The most significant one committed by Croatian forces was the Gospić massacre. The atrocities committed by Serb forces were far greater in scale. The most significant ones were those committed in Kijevo, the killing of more than 200 prisoners of war in the aftermath of the Battle of Vukovar, and the bombardment of Dubrovnik.[48] Those war crimes were subsequently prosecuted by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, which was set up in 1993 under the terms of UN Security Council Resolution 827.[84]

The atrocities prompted Germany to grant Croatia diplomatic recognition in mid-November. It overcame opposition to the move from the United Kingdom, France and the United States by late December, and formally recognized Croatia on 23 December 1991. The German decision was followed by recognition from other EC member states on 15 January 1992. The Croatian Serbs in turn declared the establishment of the Republic of Serbian Krajina (RSK) on 21 December 1991 in JNA-held areas comprising approximately 30% of Croatian territory.[48][85] The RSK was entirely dependent on Serbia economically and financially.[86]

The battlefield stalemate allowed the implementation of the Vance plan—an outcome of the diplomatic mission to Yugoslavia by the Special Envoy of the Secretary-General of the United Nations Cyrus Vance, aided by United States diplomat Herbert Okun,[87] and Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations for Special Political Affairs Marrack Goulding.[88] It was aimed at producing a negotiated end to hostilities in Croatia. The plan proposed a ceasefire, the protection of civilians in specific areas designated as UN Protected Areas and deployment of UN peacekeepers in Croatia. The plan was endorsed by Milošević, Kadijević, and Tuđman,[87] and the three signed the Geneva Accord to that effect in Geneva, Switzerland, on 23 November 1991.[88] The accord provided for the end of the Croatian blockade of JNA barracks, the withdrawal of JNA personnel and equipment from Croatia, the implementation of a ceasefire and the facilitation of delivery of humanitarian aid.[89] The parties to the accord also agreed to the deployment of a UN peacekeeping mission in Croatia. The mission was subsequently authorised through United Nations Security Council Resolution 721 of 27 November,[88] following a formal request for the deployment of UN peacekeepers submitted by the Yugoslav government the previous day.[90] The Implementation Agreement, ensuring the ceasefire required for the deployment of peacekeepers, was signed by Croatian Defence Minister Gojko Šušak and deputy commander of JNA 5th Military District General Andrija Rašeta in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, on 2 January. The ceasefire generally held after it took effect on 3 January at 6 pm,[91][92] except in the Dubrovnik area,[93] where the JNA remained in positions around the town and in Konavle until July 1992.[94] The naval blockade of Dubrovnik was lifted on 26 May 1992.[95] As a consequence of organizational problems and breaches of the ceasefire agreement, the deployment of UN peacekeepers did not start until 8 March.[96] The historian Marko Attila Hoare believes that the Vance plan saved the Croatian Serb rebels from defeat.[97]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Hoare 2010, p. 117
  2. ^ Hoare 2010, p. 118
  3. ^ The New York Times & 19 August 1990
  4. ^ ICTY & 12 June 2007
  5. ^ Hoare 2010, pp. 118–119
  6. ^ Ramet 2006, pp. 384–385
  7. ^ a b c Hoare 2010, p. 119
  8. ^ Sell 2002, p. 373
  9. ^ Armatta 2010, p. 160
  10. ^ The New York Times & 3 March 1991
  11. ^ The New York Times & 2 April 1991
  12. ^ a b c CIA 2002, p. 86
  13. ^ a b EECIS 1999, pp. 272–278
  14. ^ CIA 2002, p. 91
  15. ^ CIA 2002, p. 92
  16. ^ a b c d Marijan 2012a, p. 110-111
  17. ^ a b Armatta 2010, p. 165
  18. ^ CIA 2002, vol. 2, p. 83
  19. ^ a b Calic 2012, p. 121
  20. ^ Goldstein 1999, p. 229
  21. ^ CIA 2002, p. 93
  22. ^ a b CIA 2002, p. 94
  23. ^ CIA 2002, pp. 94–95
  24. ^ a b CIA 2002, p. 95
  25. ^ Ramet 2006, p. 401
  26. ^ a b c CIA 2002, p. 96
  27. ^ The Independent & 10 October 1992
  28. ^ Oberschall 2007, p. 107
  29. ^ Marijan 2008, p. 50
  30. ^ a b c CIA 2002, p. 97
  31. ^ a b c d e CIA 2002, p. 98
  32. ^ Marijan 2012b, p. 264
  33. ^ Marijan 2012a, p. 120
  34. ^ CIA 2002, note 45/II
  35. ^ a b c d e CIA 2002, p. 99
  36. ^ a b Marijan 2012b, p. 261
  37. ^ Marijan 2012b, pp. 261–262
  38. ^ Marijan 2012b, p. 265
  39. ^ Marijan 2012b, p. 262
  40. ^ a b Marijan 2012b, p. 266
  41. ^ CIA 2002, p. 102
  42. ^ Marijan 2012b, p. 267
  43. ^ a b c Marijan 2012b, p. 268
  44. ^ CIA 2002, p. 103
  45. ^ Gow 2003, p. 156
  46. ^ Jelavić 2010, p. 177
  47. ^ a b CIA 2002, pp. 99–100
  48. ^ a b c Hoare 2010, p. 122
  49. ^ Marijan 2012b, p. 271
  50. ^ Burg & Shoup 2000, p. 83
  51. ^ Macdonald 2002, p. 104
  52. ^ Sikavica 2000, p. 143
  53. ^ CIA 2002, pp. 101–102
  54. ^ CIA 2002b, p. 208
  55. ^ a b c d Marijan 2012b, p. 270
  56. ^ Marijan 2012a, pp. 109–110
  57. ^ a b c Marijan 2012a, p. 109
  58. ^ Marijan 2012b, pp. 269–270
  59. ^ a b c Marijan 2012a, p. 110
  60. ^ CIA 2002, pp. 103–104
  61. ^ Pavlović 2005, Note 40
  62. ^ The New York Times & 9 November 1991
  63. ^ CIA 2002, p. 104
  64. ^ CIA 2002, p. 110
  65. ^ a b Jelavić 2010, pp. 177–178
  66. ^ Narodne novine & 8 October 1991
  67. ^ The New York Times & 8 October 1991
  68. ^ Marijan 2012a, p. 107
  69. ^ Marijan 2012a, pp. 107–108
  70. ^ Marijan 2012a, pp. 110–111
  71. ^ a b Hoare 2010, p. 123
  72. ^ a b Marijan 2012a, p. 113
  73. ^ CIA 2002, p. 108
  74. ^ Marijan 2012a, p. 119
  75. ^ Marijan 2012a, p. 122
  76. ^ Schuman 2004, p. 45
  77. ^ Leutloff-Grandits 2006, p. 8
  78. ^ Marijan 2008, p. 61
  79. ^ Cigar 1996, pp. 77–78
  80. ^ HRW & 13 February 1992, note 28
  81. ^ HRW & 21 January 1992, p. 297
  82. ^ Živić 2005, pp. 137–138
  83. ^ MVA
  84. ^ Schabas 2006, pp. 3–4
  85. ^ Ramet 1998, p. 179
  86. ^ Armatta 2010, p. 163
  87. ^ a b Armatta 2010, pp. 194–196
  88. ^ a b c Trbovich 2008, p. 299
  89. ^ Armatta 2010, p. 196
  90. ^ UN & 27 November 1991
  91. ^ CIA 2002, p. 106
  92. ^ Marijan 2012a, p. 103
  93. ^ CIA 2002, p. 158
  94. ^ CIA 2002, pp. 157–158
  95. ^ Jelavić 2010, p. 178
  96. ^ Trbovich 2008, p. 300
  97. ^ Hoare 2010, pp. 122–123

References edit

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  • Schabas, William A. (2006). The UN International Criminal Tribunals: The Former Yugoslavia, Rwanda and Sierra Leone. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-84657-8. Retrieved 12 January 2013.
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  • Sikavica, Stipe (2000). "The Army's Collapse". In Udovicki, Jasminka; Ridgeway, James (eds.). Burn This House: The Making and Unmaking of Yugoslavia. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press. pp. 131–153. ISBN 978-0-8223-2590-1.
  • Trbovich, Ana S. (2008). A Legal Geography of Yugoslavia's Disintegration. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-533343-5.
Scientific journal articles
  • Jelavić, Ante (October 2010). "Međunarodni oružani sukobi na moru" [International armed conflicts at sea]. Naše more, Journal of marine science and technology (in Croatian). University of Dubrovnik. 57 (3–4): 170–178. ISSN 0469-6255.
  • Marijan, Davor (June 2008). "Sudionici i osnovne značajke rata u Hrvatskoj 1990–1991" [Participants and the basic characteristics of the war in Croatia 1990–1991]. Journal of Contemporary History (in Croatian). Croatian Institute of History. 40 (1): 47–63. ISSN 0590-9597.
  • Marijan, Davor (May 2012). "The Sarajevo Ceasefire – Realism or strategic error by the Croatian leadership?". Review of Croatian History. Croatian Institute of History. 7 (1): 103–123. ISSN 1845-4380 – via Hrčak.
  • Marijan, Davor (November 2012). "Zamisao i propast napadne operacije Jugoslavenske narodne armije na Hrvatsku u rujnu 1991. godine" [The Conception and Failure of the Offensive Operation of the Yugoslav National Army in September 1991]. Journal of Contemporary History (in Croatian). Croatian Institute of History. 44 (2): 251–275. ISSN 0590-9597.
  • Pavlović, Srđa (2005). "Reckoning: The 1991 Siege of Dubrovnik and the Consequences of the "War for Peace"". Spaces of Identity. York University, The Canadian Center for German and European Studies. 5 (1). ISSN 1496-6778. Retrieved 5 March 2013.
  • Živić, Dražen (June 2005). "Demografski gubitci Hrvatske vojske tijekom domovinskog rata" [Demographic losses of the Croatian Army during the Croatian War of Independence]. Diacovensia (in Croatian). Catholic Faculty of Theology, J. J. Strossmayer University of Osijek. 13 (1): 117–141. ISSN 1330-2655.
News reports
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  • Binder, David (9 November 1991). "Old City Totters in Yugoslav Siege". The New York Times. from the original on 29 July 2012. Retrieved 6 March 2013.
  • Engelberg, Stephen (3 March 1991). "Belgrade Sends Troops to Croatia Town". The New York Times. from the original on 2 October 2013.
  • Sudetic, Chuck (2 April 1991). "Rebel Serbs Complicate Rift on Yugoslav Unity". The New York Times. from the original on 2 October 2013.
  • "Roads Sealed as Yugoslav Unrest Mounts". The New York Times. Reuters. 19 August 1990. from the original on 21 September 2013.
  • "Yugoslav Planes Attack Croatian Presidential Palace". The New York Times. 8 October 1991. from the original on 17 October 2013.
Other sources
  • "Appendix D: Helsinki Watch Letter to Slobodan Milošević, President of the Republic of Serbia and Blagoje Adžić, Acting Minister of Defense, January 21, 1992". War Crimes in Bosnia-Hercegovina (PDF). New York: Human Rights Watch. 21 January 1992. pp. 274–309. ISBN 1-56432-083-9.
  • "Appendix E: Helsinki Watch Letter to Franjo Tudjman, President of the Republic of Croatia, February 13, 1992". War Crimes in Bosnia-Hercegovina (PDF). New York: Human Rights Watch. 13 February 1992. pp. 310–357. ISBN 1-56432-083-9.
  • [Decision]. Narodne novine (in Croatian). Narodne novine (53). 8 October 1991. ISSN 1333-9273. Archived from the original on 23 September 2009.
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  • "Resolution 721 (1991)". United Nations Security Council. 27 November 1991.
  • "The Prosecutor vs. Milan Martic – Judgement" (PDF). International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. 12 June 2007.

45°17′N 18°59′E / 45.29°N 18.98°E / 45.29; 18.98

1991, yugoslav, campaign, croatia, part, croatian, independence, clockwise, from, left, bombardment, damage, stradun, dubrovnik, serb, volunteer, guard, patrol, near, erdut, damaged, buildings, during, battle, vukovar, officer, inspecting, documents, during, s. 1991 Yugoslav campaign in CroatiaPart of the Croatian War of Independence clockwise from top left bombardment damage on Stradun Dubrovnik a Serb Volunteer Guard patrol near Erdut damaged buildings during the Battle of Vukovar JNA officer inspecting documents during the Siege of Dubrovnik a destroyed T 34 tank near KarlovacDate20 September 1991 3 January 1992LocationCroatiaResultStalemateBelligerentsYugoslavia SAO Krajina SAO Eastern Slavonia Baranja and Western Syrmia SAO Western Slavonia CroatiaCommanders and leadersVeljko Kadijevic Blagoje Adzic Slobodan MilosevicFranjo Tuđman Gojko Susak Martin Spegelj Anton TusUnits involvedYugoslav Ground Forces Yugoslav Air Force Yugoslav Navy Republic of Serbia Territorial Defense Republic of Montenegro Territorial Defense Serbian Guard Serb Volunteer Guard White EaglesCroatian National Guard until November 1991 Croatian Army from November 1991 Croatian Police Croatian Navy Croatian Defence ForcesStrengthSeptember 1991145 000 troops1 100 tanks700 APCs1 980 artillery piecesSeptember 199158 000 troopsJanuary 1992155 772 troops216 tanks127 APCs1 108 artillery piecesCasualties and losses1 279 killed3 761 killedCivilian casualties See the Aftermath section The 1991 Yugoslav campaign in Croatia was a series of engagements between the Yugoslav People s Army JNA the Yugoslav Navy and the Yugoslav Air Force and the Croatian National Guard ZNG then the Croatian Army HV during the Croatian War of Independence The JNA was originally deployed in order to preserve Yugoslavia and the initial plan of the campaign entailed the military occupation of Croatia and the removal of the Croatian leadership elected in 1990 The JNA intervention was the culmination of its involvement in the confiscation of weapons from Croatia s Territorial Defence and in the Croatian Serb revolt that had begun in August 1990 From that time the JNA had been frequently deployed to form a buffer zone between the insurgents and the ZNG or the Croatian police In effect these JNA buffer zones often secured the territorial gains of the insurgents and led to an increasingly hostile relationship between the JNA and Croatia The JNA campaign plan was amended shortly before the campaign to include the relief of JNA barracks besieged by the ZNG The besieging and subsequent capture of several JNA facilities allowed Croatia to arm its previously poorly equipped military and to equip new recruits The campaign effectively started on 20 September 1991 even though relatively minor offensive actions had already been undertaken By the end of the month it suffered from serious delays and manpower shortages caused by low call up turnout in Serbia In early October the original campaign objectives were reduced as Serbian president Slobodan Milosevic and his allies gained greater control of the JNA Subsequently the campaign objectives were redefined to deny the Croatian Government access to parts of Croatia that contained substantial Serb populations and to protect Croatian Serbs The campaign culminated in late November and early December with the Battle of Vukovar and the Siege of Dubrovnik A limited Croatian counterattack and the development of the HV led to a stalemate on the battlefield The strategic situation permitted the development of the Vance plan a ceasefire supervised by United Nations peacekeepers designed to create conditions for the political settlement of the conflict in Croatia The Sarajevo Agreement regarding the implementation of the ceasefire was signed on 2 January 1992 bringing the campaign to an end Nonetheless the JNA took several more months to withdraw from Croatia as it was replaced by the UN peacekeepers In 1991 alone the conflict caused more than 7 000 deaths and the internal displacement of 400 000 600 000 people More than 1 700 persons remain missing as a result of the campaign Contents 1 Background 2 Prelude 3 Order of battle 4 Timeline 4 1 September offensive 4 2 Reduced objectives 4 3 Croatian counter offensive 5 Aftermath 6 Footnotes 7 ReferencesBackground editMain article Croatian War of Independence In 1990 following the electoral defeat of the government of the Socialist Republic of Croatia ethnic tensions increased The Yugoslav People s Army Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija JNA confiscated the weapons of Croatia s Territorial Defence Teritorijalna obrana TO to minimize potential resistance 1 On 17 August the tensions escalated into an open revolt by Croatian Serbs 2 centred on the predominantly Serb populated areas of the Dalmatian hinterland around Knin 3 parts of the Lika Kordun Banovina regions and eastern Croatia 4 In January 1991 Serbia supported by Montenegro and Serbia s provinces of Vojvodina and Kosovo made two unsuccessful attempts to obtain approval from the Yugoslav Presidency to deploy the JNA to disarm Croatian security forces 5 After a bloodless skirmish between Serb insurgents and Croatian special police in March 6 the JNA supported by Serbia and its allies asked the federal Presidency to grant it wartime powers and declare a state of emergency The request was denied on 15 March 7 and by the summer of 1991 the JNA came under the control of the Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic as the Yugoslav federation started to fall apart 8 Milosevic became de facto commander of the JNA once he secured control over the rump federal presidency and through his influence over the federal defence minister General Veljko Kadijevic and JNA chief of staff Blagoje Adzic 9 Milosevic preferring a campaign aimed at expanding Serbia rather than preserving Yugoslavia publicly threatened to replace the JNA with a Serbian army and declared that he no longer recognized the authority of the federal presidency This threat caused the JNA to gradually abandon plans to preserve Yugoslavia in favour of the expansion of Serbia 7 By the end of the month the conflict had escalated and the first fatalities occurred 10 The JNA then stepped in to support the insurgents and prevent Croatian police from intervening 7 In early April leaders of the Serb revolt in Croatia declared their intention to integrate the area under their control with Serbia The Government of Croatia considered this an act of secession 11 At the beginning of 1991 Croatia had no regular army In an effort to bolster its defence it doubled police numbers to about 20 000 The most effective part of the force was the 3 000 strong special police deployed in 12 battalions which adopted principles of military organization In addition there were 9 000 10 000 regionally organized reserve police these were set up in 16 battalions and 10 independent companies but the units lacked weapons 12 In May in response to the deteriorating situation the Croatian government established the Croatian National Guard Zbor narodne garde ZNG by amalgamating the special police battalions into four guards brigades 13 The guards brigades initially comprised about 8 000 troops and were subordinated to the Ministry of Defence headed by retired JNA General Martin Spegelj The regional police by then expanded to 40 000 was also attached to the ZNG and re organized into 19 brigades and 14 independent battalions The guards brigades were the only ZNG units that were fully equipped with small arms while heavier weapons and an effective command and control structure were lacking throughout the ZNG At the time Croatian weapon stocks consisted of 30 000 small arms purchased abroad in addition to 15 000 previously owned by the police A new 10 000 strong special police was established to replace the personnel transferred to the ZNG guards brigades 12 The Croatian view of the JNA role in the Serb revolt gradually evolved between January and September 1991 The initial plan of Croatian President Franjo Tuđman was to win support for Croatia from the European Community EC and the United States and he dismissed advice to seize JNA barracks and storage facilities in the country Tuđman s stance was motivated by his belief that Croatia could not win a war against the JNA The ZNG was limited to a defensive role even though the actions of the JNA appeared to be coordinated with Croatian Serb forces 14 This impression was reinforced by buffer zones the JNA established after armed conflicts between the Croatian Serb militia and the ZNG the JNA intervened after the ZNG lost ground leaving the Croatian Serbs in control of the territory Furthermore the JNA provided some weapons to the Croatian Serbs although the bulk of the weaponry was provided from Serbia s TO and Ministry of Internal Affairs stocks After the start of the JNA intervention in Slovenia in late June conscripts began deserting from the JNA and very few were drafted to replace them except in Serbia 15 Prelude edit nbsp Map showing the JNA plan for its 1991 campaign in CroatiaThe JNA intervened directly against Croatia in early July in Baranja north of the city of Osijek On 1 August they drove Croatian forces out of Erdut Aljmas and Dalj and out of Baranja around 22 August 16 During the summer of 1991 the Croatian Serb military consolidated in the territory under its control In Banovina Glina was captured from the ZNG on 26 July That same day two Croatian police stations near Hrvatska Kostajnica were captured isolating the town 17 The attacks codenamed Operation Stinger were carried out by the 7th Banija Division spearheaded by the Knin special police led by Dragan Vasiljkovic 18 In the aftermath of capture of the Kozibrod police station Serb forces committed the first mass killing 19 involving the deaths of ten captured policemen and seventeen civilians 20 The ZNG successfully defended Hrvatska Kostajnica until mid September In August Croatian Serbs acting under the operational control of the JNA 17 clashed with the ZNG around Osijek Vukovar and Vinkovci in eastern Slavonia Fighting in eastern Slavonia led to ZNG blockades of JNA barracks in those cities and limited fighting against the garrisons there In western Slavonia the Croatian Serb militia attempted to advance into Daruvar but were held back by the ZNG in the area around Okucani and south of Pakrac before the JNA formed a buffer zone there Following this fighting Croatia was denied use of major transport routes between Zagreb and Slavonia In northern Dalmatia the JNA initiated several clashes with the ZNG and coordinated its advances with Croatian Serb forces These attacks culminated in the capture of Kijevo on 26 August and the Maslenica Bridge on 11 September The capture of the bridge severed the last remaining road link between Dalmatia and the rest of Croatia 21 In the summer of 1991 the performance of the ZNG was poor because it lacked manpower and weapons and exerted inadequate command and control The professional ZNG troops were better trained than their opponents with the exception of the Knin special police set up by the Serbian State Security Service 22 On 1 September 1991 Tuđman accepted an EC proposed ceasefire and peace conference despite his ultimatum demanding that the JNA return to its barracks by 31 August After the Yugoslav Presidency also accepted it the conference began on 7 September Four days later the Croatian member and chair of the federal presidency Stjepan Mesic ordered the JNA to return to its barracks within 48 hours 22 The move was motivated by Tuđman s impression that the conference would have continued endlessly while the ZNG lost ground The order was disputed by other members of the presidency but it gave Croatia justification to openly confront the JNA 23 On 14 September the ZNG and the Croatian police blockaded and cut utilities to all JNA facilities it had access to beginning the Battle of the Barracks 24 The ZNG blockaded 33 large JNA garrisons in Croatia 25 and numerous smaller facilities including border posts and weapons and ammunition storage depots The ZNG quickly captured isolated facilities and depots as well as several major JNA posts and seized large quantities of weapons including the capture of entire stocks of the JNA 32nd Varazdin Corps and nearly all the weapons confiscated from Croatia s TO 24 The JNA lost control of eight brigades including one armoured and two mechanized brigades and three artillery regiments while additional forces in the JNA Fifth Military District and its Military Maritime District remained besieged 26 The significance of the Battle of the Barracks was reinforced by the introduction of a United Nations UN arms embargo on 25 September 27 In September Anton Tus was appointed the Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Republic of Croatia 26 Order of battle edit nbsp Map showing the fighting in eastern Slavonia September 1991 January 1992In early September 1991 the ZNG had 8 000 full time and 40 000 reserve troops The four guards brigades of full time troops were the only units of the ZNG that were fully equipped with small arms but even they lacked heavy weapons A 10 000 strong special police force was established to replace the personnel transferred from the original special police units to the guards brigades In September the Croatian small arms stockpile consisted of 30 000 purchased abroad in addition to 15 000 previously owned by the police 12 The Battle of the Barracks resulted in a large increase to ZNG weapon holdings allowing full arming of its existing units raising of an additional 40 42 brigades and fielding a total of 200 000 troops and 40 000 police by the end of the year 26 The ZNG captured 250 tanks 400 500 heavy artillery pieces 180 000 small arms and 2 000 000 long tons 2 200 000 short tons of ammunition In addition 3 000 officers mostly Croatian by nationality changed allegiance and left the JNA to join the ZNG 28 In 1991 the ZNG was supported by the Croatian Defence Forces Croatian Hrvatske obrambene snage HOS a militia raised by the Croatian Party of Rights The party stated it had as many as 3 000 troops but the police estimated it at 250 armed militiamen 29 The JNA planned a two stage mobilisation of troops The first wave of call ups was performed in July and was meant to intimidate Croatia without an actual offensive being launched and allow timely deployment of crucial units 30 After the first stage of the mobilisation failed to deter Croatian forces the second stage commenced on 15 September it was met with a large scale refusal of mobilised personnel to report to their designated units desertions and an overall lack of enthusiasm for the campaign This resulted in low troop availability forcing the JNA to deploy fewer infantry units and to abandon some operations 31 Response to the mobilisation was particularly poor in Central Serbia where only 26 of those called up reported for service Nonetheless in September 1991 the JNA discharged conscripts that had completed their terms of service and reached 73 of planned troop levels 32 The mobilisation problems demoralised JNA troops and commanders A request made by JNA general command to Milosevic for general mobilisation to strengthen troop levels was denied because he did not believe the campaign was needed nor feasible 31 Despite the mobilisation problems the JNA and the TO forces deployed in support of the campaign consisted of approximately 145 000 troops 1 100 tanks 700 other armoured vehicles and 1 980 artillery pieces supported by the Yugoslav Air Force and the Navy 33 Timeline edit nbsp Map showing the fighting in western Slavonia September 1991 January 1992 nbsp Map showing the fighting in the Banovina Kordun and Lika regions October 1991 January 1992 nbsp Map showing the fighting in the Dubrovnik area October 1991 January 1992The JNA developed a plan to defeat Croatia militarily overthrow its government and create conditions necessary for the continued existence of Yugoslavia The plan was amended in September 1991 to accommodate the besieging of JNA garrisons by the ZNG incorporating the lifting of the blockade into the campaign objectives The plan entailed five corps level campaigns designed to impose an air and naval blockade of Croatia capture territory populated by Serbs and relieve barracks under ZNG siege The axes of attack were specified as Gradiska Virovitica Bihac Karlovac Zagreb Knin Zadar and Mostar Split Armoured and mechanized forces were tasked with the capture of eastern Slavonia and advances west towards Zagreb and Varazdin 30 This was identified as the main effort of the campaign 31 Finally a land blockade of Dubrovnik was planned coupled with an advance west towards the Neretva River to support the drive to Split 30 The plan may have proposed withdrawal of the JNA to Serb populated areas of Croatia or from the whole of Croatia after the objectives were completed but sources conflict on that issue 34 September offensive edit In eastern Slavonia the JNA responded to the ZNG siege of its garrison in Vukovar and on 14 September 1991 it deployed troops to relieve the barracks 35 Independent of that effort the main thrust of the campaign against Croatia was initially planned to start on 21 September The southern operational group of the thrust spearheaded by the 1st Guards Mechanised Division was expected to lift the ZNG siege of the JNA barracks in Vinkovci and reach Nasice and Slavonski Brod in two to three days Over the next four to five days the group was expected to reach the line Okucani Suhopolje by advancing via the Đakovo Pozega road and the Zagreb Belgrade motorway avoiding major population centres The northern operational group subordinated to the 12th Novi Sad Corps was to advance from Osijek to Nasice and then further west towards Bjelovar 36 The two operational groups were assigned approximately 57 000 troops and 5 000 supporting personnel 37 The 17th Tuzla Corps was probably tasked with crossing the Sava River marking the border of Croatia at Slavonski Brod and Slavonski Samac to join the westward drive along the motorway but the crossing never occurred 35 The campaign was brought forward by one day to 20 September The change of schedule caused the JNA 1st Guards Mechanised Division to commit to battle as it arrived in eastern Slavonia with no reconnaissance or preparation The resulting traffic jam on the Sid Tovarnik Stari Jankovci road prevented bridging units from reaching the Bosut River That in turn prevented the 1st Guards Division from crossing the river and confined it to the area between the Bosut and the Danube east of Vinkovci Besides the bridging units the division did not receive the 80th Motorised Brigade which appears to have disintegrated before reaching the Croatian frontier and the 2nd Guards Mechanised Brigade a victim of friendly fire bombardment in the area between Tovarnik and Ilaca adjacent to the border Several units of the Novi Sad Corps also disintegrated when morale declined after a number of friendly fire incidents 38 The Banja Luka Corps was tasked with the main axis of advance from Okucani to Daruvar and Virovitica in western Slavonia and a secondary drive from Okucani towards Kutina 39 This task was consistent with the line expected to be reached by the main thrust of the JNA advancing from the east in about a week 36 The Corps had already deployed a battlegroup of the 265th Mechanised Brigade near Okucani to support the advance that started on 21 September and reached the Papuk Mountains The Corps received two motorised brigades and one artillery brigade as reinforcements during the advance but the problems with morale and desertions experienced in eastern Slavonia were also present in the Banja Luka Corps In one such instance the 130th Mechanised Brigade sent as a reinforcement had been reduced to a 280 strong battalion by 29 September 40 The JNA was stopped by the ZNG between Novska Nova Gradiska and Pakrac even though some Croatian Serb militia units took positions on the Bilogora and Papuk north of Pakrac near Virovitica and Slatina with no JNA support 41 The JNA Knin Corps which had already fully mobilised and deployed started the campaign in northern Dalmatia and southern Lika on 16 September 1991 35 It captured Drnis on 18 September but sustained defeats at Pakovo Selo two days later and near Sibenik on 22 September as it attempted to capture the city After this defeat the Corps ceased its attacks except for those around Gospic in Lika for the rest of the month Five days after the JNA and the Serbian Guard paramilitaries lost their positions in the city on 22 September the Knin Corps captured Lovinac 42 JNA troops assembling near the southern tip of Croatia in the Dubrovnik hinterland consisted of elements of the Uzice and Titograd Corps They had not advanced onto Croatian soil by the end of September because of mobilisation problems in Bosnia and Herzegovina 35 43 In Banovina the JNA captured Petrinja on 21 September but failed to make further progress 40 Because of the failure of JNA mobilisation the planned campaign in Kordun was limited to the consolidation of positions held around Karlovac 35 44 On 15 September the Yugoslav Navy blockaded the Croatian Adriatic ports of Pula Rijeka Zadar Split and Dubrovnik for a week 45 46 Reduced objectives edit Further information Battle of Vukovar and Siege of Dubrovnik On 30 September the general staff of the JNA reduced the objectives of the campaign because it had not followed the initial plan and had become bogged down 43 47 The reduced objectives called for offensive and defensive actions the inflicting of decisive defeats on Croatian forces in Dalmatia and eastern Slavonia and strikes against vital infrastructure in Croatia to obtain an agreement on the evacuation of besieged JNA facilities While some units on the ground started to implement the new orders the same day they did not take effect completely before 4 October 43 On 3 October Serbian and Montenegrin representatives in the Yugoslav Presidency declared that they alone had become the acting federal presidency and assumed control of the JNA 48 Two days later the JNA requested that the presidency authorize a general mobilization of forces needed for the campaign but this was refused by Milosevic 49 By 9 October the JNA effort was considered a failure Its commanders formally accepted the role forced on the JNA by Milosevic and limited its strategic objectives in Croatia to the protection of Serb populated areas 31 50 The JNA effort to relieve its Vukovar barracks turned into a protracted siege delaying 36 000 troops and a significant proportion of armoured units slated for the thrust towards Zagreb and Varazdin Vukovar was captured in mid November but the victory proved pyrrhic because it completely disrupted the overall campaign During the Battle of Vukovar the JNA formally approved the use of paramilitary volunteers to fill its ranks 47 These included the White Eagles and the Serb Volunteer Guard SVG which were trained by the Serbian Ministry of Interior 51 On 12 October the federal presidency authorized the JNA to enlist the volunteers as an estimated 150 000 people had emigrated from Yugoslavia while others had taken refuge with friends or relatives to avoid the JNA draft 52 After capturing Vukovar the JNA 12th Corps and the SVG advanced south west across the Bosut on 15 16 November 16 and west between Vinkovci and Osijek on 20 November but the Croatian forces renamed the Croatian Army Hrvatska vojska HV that month contained their advances 13 53 According to General Zivota Panic commander of the JNA 1st Military District at the time the immediate objectives of the advances were Osijek and Zupanja 54 In Banovina the JNA reached the Kupa River and captured its entire southern bank except for ZNG bridgeheads in the areas of Nebojan Sunja and Sisak on 30 September No further advances were achieved there 55 The JNA attempted an additional push towards the Nebojan bridgehead via Novi Farkasic on 17 18 October and another towards Sunja on 2 November but both attempts failed 56 On 4 October the JNA initiated an attack in Kordun in the area of Karlovac pushing the ZNG back in the area of Slunj two days later On 8 October it reached the banks of the Kupa and Korana Rivers and the intensity of fighting died down 55 The greatest flare up of hostilities in the area occurred on 4 5 November when a JNA garrison based in a suburb of Karlovac broke through the ZNG siege in the Battle of Logoriste and reached JNA held territory to the east of the city Further south the JNA captured Slunj on 17 November and Cetingrad on 29 November eliminating a ZNG pocket in Kordun 57 JNA activity in Lika was limited to shelling and air raids on Gospic and Otocac peaking on 4 October 55 On 1 October the JNA Banja Luka Corps initiated probing attacks in western Slavonia presaging a major effort employing the bulk of the corps three days later The advance established defensive positions just outside Novska and Nova Gradiska and captured Jasenovac on 8 October Lipik and a part of Pakrac were captured four days later 58 By that time the JNA campaign in western Slavonia had lost its momentum 59 In northern Dalmatia the JNA Knin Corps attacked Zadar on 4 October reaching its outskirts and lifting the ZNG siege of the Sepurine Barracks the next day The advance was blocked by the ZNG and a truce was agreed on 7 October Two days later it was followed by an agreement to evacuate JNA facilities in Zadar including equipment stored there 55 Further south the JNA Titograd Corps and its Military Maritime District forces advanced from eastern Herzegovina and the Bay of Kotor and pushed east and west of Dubrovnik on 1 October placing besieging the city by the end of the month 60 The JNA was supported by Montenegro s TO in the area 61 Even though the Croatian troops defending the city were few 62 the city held out sustaining increasingly intensive artillery naval and air bombardment until a ceasefire was agreed in the area on 7 December As the siege shaped international opinion on the Croatian War of Independence it became a major contributor to a shift towards the international diplomatic and economic isolation of Serbia and rump Yugoslavia 63 and resulted in the creation of a perception of Serbia and rump Yugoslavia as an aggressor state 64 The JNA attacks on Dubrovnik and Zadar were supported by the Yugoslav Navy which blockaded the coast on two more occasions 57 On 3 October all shipping off Croatia except for ferry lines to Pag and islands in the Kvarner Gulf was halted The blockade except for that of Dubrovnik was lifted on 11 October The final blockade restricting access to Rijeka Zadar Sibenik and Split in addition to Dubrovnik started on 8 November 65 On 15 November the Yugoslav Navy sustained losses when it unsuccessfully attacked Split and the island of Brac 57 The Yugoslav blockade in the northern Adriatic ended on 22 November but in the southern Adriatic except off Dubrovnik it was lifted on 3 December 65 Croatian counter offensive edit nbsp Map showing the situation in northern Dalmatia January 1992Further information Operation Orkan 91 and Operation Whirlwind On 8 October Croatia declared independence from Yugoslavia 66 Even though the declaration had been preceded the day before by a Yugoslav Air Force attack on the presidential office in Zagreb 67 the Croatian authorities considered that the war situation was no longer critical This assessment was followed by an order to prepare plans for a counter offensive on 12 October and three more orders to commence offensive operations which were issued by 20 November 68 The plans involved containing the JNA south of Osijek advancing to the Bosut River south of Vinkovci recapturing Jasenovac and the Okucani Lipik road to secure the Papuk and Psunj mountains advancing towards Petrinja Glina Slunj Korenica and Gracac recapturing the Maslenica Bridge and the Obrovac Gracac road and stopping the JNA advance north west of Dubrovnik 69 The most significant results were produced in western Slavonia where Croatian forces began pushing the JNA away from Grubisno Polje towards Lipik on 31 October and away from Nova Gradiska towards Okucani on 12 November 70 In mid November another push along the Novska Okucani axis recaptured several villages by 9 December while Lipik was recaptured by the Croatian forces now renamed the HV on 7 December The mountains of Papuk and Bilogora north of Pakrac where the Croatian Serb militia was not supported by the JNA were brought under Croatian control in the same period 59 A HV offensive to recapture the Okucani area codenamed Operation Orkan 91 commenced in the final days of December The area was attacked from the directions of Pakrac Novska and Nova Gradiska The effort made no progress except west of Nova Gradiska but even there it was very limited 16 Under international pressure Tuđman called off the offensive on 26 December 71 The second significant HV offensive was Operation Whirlwind launched across the Kupa River on 11 December The HV was tasked with advancing towards Glina but the operation failed after a shallow bridgehead was established within two days 59 In Lika battles were fought for individual villages but little progress was made by either side 72 The JNA captured four villages south of Osijek between 21 November and 16 December but the front lines generally became static 16 72 Aftermath editFurther information Vance plan nbsp nbsp nbsp Zagreb nbsp Osijek nbsp B Manastir nbsp Vukovar nbsp Erdut nbsp Vinkovci nbsp Zupanja nbsp Slavonski Brod nbsp Pakrac nbsp Maslenica nbsp Karlovac nbsp Ogulin nbsp Otocac nbsp Dubrovnik nbsp Konavle nbsp Prevlaka nbsp Split nbsp Sibenik nbsp Zadar nbsp Sisak nbsp Petrinja nbsp Plitvice nbsp Gospic nbsp Knin nbsp Peruca Dam nbsp Okucani nbsp Croatian controlled nbsp Serb controlledclass notpageimage Map showing JNA held areas of Croatia in January 1992 red The JNA campaign in Croatia ended in a stalemate leading both sides to accept an internationally supervised ceasefire 73 By late November the JNA was no longer in a position to make substantial advances while Milosevic refused to pursue objectives that he no longer considered achievable 31 Between September and December 1991 the HV captured many weapons and significantly increased its capabilities In mid January 1992 it commanded 155 772 troops and had 216 tanks 127 other armoured vehicles and 1 108 artillery pieces at its disposal 74 Even though JNA positions in western Slavonia were on the brink of military collapse 71 the HV struggled elsewhere and its munitions stockpiles were depleted while the UN arms embargo prevented its quick resupply 75 By the end of 1991 the conflict had killed 6 000 Croatians Another 23 000 were wounded and 400 000 became internally displaced persons IDPs 76 Some sources report that there were as many as 600 000 IDPs 19 77 The 6 000 killed include 3 761 soldiers 78 JNA losses were officially reported at 1 279 killed in action but the figure may have been considerably higher because casualties were consistently under reported during the war 79 The HV counter offensive in western Slavonia created 20 000 Serb refugees They fled from the area when the JNA ordered the Croatian Serb forces to withdraw 80 and were subsequently settled in JNA held Baranja 81 In 1991 and early 1992 approximately 18 000 Croatian citizens were missing or held by the JNA or its allies Approximately 8 000 of these were imprisoned in internment camps in Serbia Montenegro Bosnia and Herzegovina or in Croatian territory controlled by the JNA The camps were set up in Begejci Stajicevo Sremska Mitrovica Nis Aleksinac Manjaca Banja Luka Knin Bucje Beli Manastir Negoslavci Vukovar and Morinj Approximately 300 prisoners died while detained in the camps Most of the prisoners had been released by August 1992 82 As of May 2013 update 1 703 were people still missing as a result of the 1991 campaign 83 Both sides committed numerous atrocities during the conflict The most significant one committed by Croatian forces was the Gospic massacre The atrocities committed by Serb forces were far greater in scale The most significant ones were those committed in Kijevo the killing of more than 200 prisoners of war in the aftermath of the Battle of Vukovar and the bombardment of Dubrovnik 48 Those war crimes were subsequently prosecuted by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia which was set up in 1993 under the terms of UN Security Council Resolution 827 84 The atrocities prompted Germany to grant Croatia diplomatic recognition in mid November It overcame opposition to the move from the United Kingdom France and the United States by late December and formally recognized Croatia on 23 December 1991 The German decision was followed by recognition from other EC member states on 15 January 1992 The Croatian Serbs in turn declared the establishment of the Republic of Serbian Krajina RSK on 21 December 1991 in JNA held areas comprising approximately 30 of Croatian territory 48 85 The RSK was entirely dependent on Serbia economically and financially 86 The battlefield stalemate allowed the implementation of the Vance plan an outcome of the diplomatic mission to Yugoslavia by the Special Envoy of the Secretary General of the United Nations Cyrus Vance aided by United States diplomat Herbert Okun 87 and Under Secretary General of the United Nations for Special Political Affairs Marrack Goulding 88 It was aimed at producing a negotiated end to hostilities in Croatia The plan proposed a ceasefire the protection of civilians in specific areas designated as UN Protected Areas and deployment of UN peacekeepers in Croatia The plan was endorsed by Milosevic Kadijevic and Tuđman 87 and the three signed the Geneva Accord to that effect in Geneva Switzerland on 23 November 1991 88 The accord provided for the end of the Croatian blockade of JNA barracks the withdrawal of JNA personnel and equipment from Croatia the implementation of a ceasefire and the facilitation of delivery of humanitarian aid 89 The parties to the accord also agreed to the deployment of a UN peacekeeping mission in Croatia The mission was subsequently authorised through United Nations Security Council Resolution 721 of 27 November 88 following a formal request for the deployment of UN peacekeepers submitted by the Yugoslav government the previous day 90 The Implementation Agreement ensuring the ceasefire required for the deployment of peacekeepers was signed by Croatian Defence Minister Gojko Susak and deputy commander of JNA 5th Military District General Andrija Raseta in Sarajevo Bosnia and Herzegovina on 2 January The ceasefire generally held after it took effect on 3 January at 6 pm 91 92 except in the Dubrovnik area 93 where the JNA remained in positions around the town and in Konavle until July 1992 94 The naval blockade of Dubrovnik was lifted on 26 May 1992 95 As a consequence of organizational problems and breaches of the ceasefire agreement the deployment of UN peacekeepers did not start until 8 March 96 The historian Marko Attila Hoare believes that the Vance plan saved the Croatian Serb rebels from defeat 97 Footnotes edit Hoare 2010 p 117 Hoare 2010 p 118 The New York Times amp 19 August 1990 ICTY amp 12 June 2007 Hoare 2010 pp 118 119 Ramet 2006 pp 384 385 a b c Hoare 2010 p 119 Sell 2002 p 373 Armatta 2010 p 160 The New York Times amp 3 March 1991 The New York Times amp 2 April 1991 a b c CIA 2002 p 86 a b EECIS 1999 pp 272 278 CIA 2002 p 91 CIA 2002 p 92 a b c d Marijan 2012a p 110 111 a b Armatta 2010 p 165 CIA 2002 vol 2 p 83 a b Calic 2012 p 121 Goldstein 1999 p 229 CIA 2002 p 93 a b CIA 2002 p 94 CIA 2002 pp 94 95 a b CIA 2002 p 95 Ramet 2006 p 401 a b c CIA 2002 p 96 The Independent amp 10 October 1992 Oberschall 2007 p 107 Marijan 2008 p 50 a b c CIA 2002 p 97 a b c d e CIA 2002 p 98 Marijan 2012b p 264 Marijan 2012a p 120 CIA 2002 note 45 II a b c d e CIA 2002 p 99 a b Marijan 2012b p 261 Marijan 2012b pp 261 262 Marijan 2012b p 265 Marijan 2012b p 262 a b Marijan 2012b p 266 CIA 2002 p 102 Marijan 2012b p 267 a b c Marijan 2012b p 268 CIA 2002 p 103 Gow 2003 p 156 Jelavic 2010 p 177 a b CIA 2002 pp 99 100 a b c Hoare 2010 p 122 Marijan 2012b p 271 Burg amp Shoup 2000 p 83 Macdonald 2002 p 104 Sikavica 2000 p 143 CIA 2002 pp 101 102 CIA 2002b p 208 a b c d Marijan 2012b p 270 Marijan 2012a pp 109 110 a b c Marijan 2012a p 109 Marijan 2012b pp 269 270 a b c Marijan 2012a p 110 CIA 2002 pp 103 104 Pavlovic 2005 Note 40 The New York Times amp 9 November 1991 CIA 2002 p 104 CIA 2002 p 110 a b Jelavic 2010 pp 177 178 Narodne novine amp 8 October 1991 The New York Times amp 8 October 1991 Marijan 2012a p 107 Marijan 2012a pp 107 108 Marijan 2012a pp 110 111 a b Hoare 2010 p 123 a b Marijan 2012a p 113 CIA 2002 p 108 Marijan 2012a p 119 Marijan 2012a p 122 Schuman 2004 p 45 Leutloff Grandits 2006 p 8 Marijan 2008 p 61 Cigar 1996 pp 77 78 HRW amp 13 February 1992 note 28 HRW amp 21 January 1992 p 297 Zivic 2005 pp 137 138 MVA Schabas 2006 pp 3 4 Ramet 1998 p 179 Armatta 2010 p 163 a b Armatta 2010 pp 194 196 a b c Trbovich 2008 p 299 Armatta 2010 p 196 UN amp 27 November 1991 CIA 2002 p 106 Marijan 2012a p 103 CIA 2002 p 158 CIA 2002 pp 157 158 Jelavic 2010 p 178 Trbovich 2008 p 300 Hoare 2010 pp 122 123References editBooksArmatta Judith 2010 Twilight of Impunity The War Crimes Trial of Slobodan Milosevic Durham North Carolina Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 4746 0 Calic Marie Janine 2012 Ethnic Cleansing and War Crimes 1991 1995 In Ingrao Charles W Emmert Thomas Allan eds Confronting the Yugoslav Controversies A Scholars Initiative West Lafayette Indiana Purdue University Press pp 115 153 ISBN 978 1 55753 617 4 Central Intelligence Agency Office of Russian and European Analysis 2002 Balkan Battlegrounds A Military History of the Yugoslav Conflict 1990 1995 Washington D C Central Intelligence Agency ISBN 978 0 16 066472 4 OCLC 50396958 Central Intelligence Agency Office of Russian and European Analysis 2002 Balkan battlegrounds a military history of the Yugoslav conflict 1990 1995 Volume 2 Washington D C Central Intelligence Agency ISBN 978 0 16 066472 4 Burg Steven L Shoup Paul S 2000 The War in Bosnia Herzegovina Ethnic Conflict and International Intervention Armonk New York M E Sharpe ISBN 978 0 7656 3189 3 Cigar Norman 1996 The Serbo Croatian War 1991 In Mestrovic Stjepan Gabriel ed Genocide after Emotion The Post Emotional Balkan War London England Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 12293 1 Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States London England Routledge 1999 ISBN 978 1 85743 058 5 Goldstein Ivo 1999 Croatia A History Montreal Quebec McGill Queen s Press ISBN 978 0 7735 2017 2 Gow James 2003 The Serbian Project and Its Adversaries A Strategy of War Crimes London England C Hurst amp Co Publishers ISBN 978 1 85065 646 3 Hoare Marko Attila 2010 The War of Yugoslav Succession In Ramet Sabrina P ed Central and Southeast European Politics Since 1989 Cambridge England Cambridge University Press pp 111 136 ISBN 978 1 139 48750 4 Leutloff Grandits Carolin 2006 Claiming Ownership in Postwar Croatia The Dynamics of Property Relations and Ethnic Conflict in the Knin Region Munster Germany LIT Verlag ISBN 978 3 8258 8049 1 Macdonald David Bruce 2002 Balkan Holocausts Serbian and Croatian Victim Centered Propaganda and the War in Yugoslavia Manchester England Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 6467 8 Oberschall Anthony 2007 Conflict and Peace Building in Divided Societies Responses to Ethnic Violence London England Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 203 94485 1 Ramet Sabrina P 1998 Yugoslavia In Ramet Sabrina P ed Eastern Europe Politics Culture and Society Since 1939 Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press pp 159 189 ISBN 978 0 253 21256 6 Ramet Sabrina P 2006 The Three Yugoslavias State Building And Legitimation 1918 2006 Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 34656 8 Schabas William A 2006 The UN International Criminal Tribunals The Former Yugoslavia Rwanda and Sierra Leone Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 84657 8 Retrieved 12 January 2013 Schuman Michael A 2004 Nations in Transition Croatia New York Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 0 8160 5053 6 Sell Louis 2002 Slobodan Milosevic and the Destruction of Yugoslavia Durham North Carolina Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 3223 7 Sikavica Stipe 2000 The Army s Collapse In Udovicki Jasminka Ridgeway James eds Burn This House The Making and Unmaking of Yugoslavia Durham North Carolina Duke University Press pp 131 153 ISBN 978 0 8223 2590 1 Trbovich Ana S 2008 A Legal Geography of Yugoslavia s Disintegration Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 533343 5 Scientific journal articlesJelavic Ante October 2010 Međunarodni oruzani sukobi na moru International armed conflicts at sea Nase more Journal of marine science and technology in Croatian University of Dubrovnik 57 3 4 170 178 ISSN 0469 6255 Marijan Davor June 2008 Sudionici i osnovne znacajke rata u Hrvatskoj 1990 1991 Participants and the basic characteristics of the war in Croatia 1990 1991 Journal of Contemporary History in Croatian Croatian Institute of History 40 1 47 63 ISSN 0590 9597 Marijan Davor May 2012 The Sarajevo Ceasefire Realism or strategic error by the Croatian leadership Review of Croatian History Croatian Institute of History 7 1 103 123 ISSN 1845 4380 via Hrcak Marijan Davor November 2012 Zamisao i propast napadne operacije Jugoslavenske narodne armije na Hrvatsku u rujnu 1991 godine The Conception and Failure of the Offensive Operation of the Yugoslav National Army in September 1991 Journal of Contemporary History in Croatian Croatian Institute of History 44 2 251 275 ISSN 0590 9597 Pavlovic Srđa 2005 Reckoning The 1991 Siege of Dubrovnik and the Consequences of the War for Peace Spaces of Identity York University The Canadian Center for German and European Studies 5 1 ISSN 1496 6778 Retrieved 5 March 2013 Zivic Drazen June 2005 Demografski gubitci Hrvatske vojske tijekom domovinskog rata Demographic losses of the Croatian Army during the Croatian War of Independence Diacovensia in Croatian Catholic Faculty of Theology J J Strossmayer University of Osijek 13 1 117 141 ISSN 1330 2655 News reportsBellamy Christopher 10 October 1992 Croatia built web of contacts to evade weapons embargo The Independent Archived from the original on 10 November 2012 Binder David 9 November 1991 Old City Totters in Yugoslav Siege The New York Times Archived from the original on 29 July 2012 Retrieved 6 March 2013 Engelberg Stephen 3 March 1991 Belgrade Sends Troops to Croatia Town The New York Times Archived from the original on 2 October 2013 Sudetic Chuck 2 April 1991 Rebel Serbs Complicate Rift on Yugoslav Unity The New York Times Archived from the original on 2 October 2013 Roads Sealed as Yugoslav Unrest Mounts The New York Times Reuters 19 August 1990 Archived from the original on 21 September 2013 Yugoslav Planes Attack Croatian Presidential Palace The New York Times 8 October 1991 Archived from the original on 17 October 2013 Other sources Appendix D Helsinki Watch Letter to Slobodan Milosevic President of the Republic of Serbia and Blagoje Adzic Acting Minister of Defense January 21 1992 War Crimes in Bosnia Hercegovina PDF New York Human Rights Watch 21 January 1992 pp 274 309 ISBN 1 56432 083 9 Appendix E Helsinki Watch Letter to Franjo Tudjman President of the Republic of Croatia February 13 1992 War Crimes in Bosnia Hercegovina PDF New York Human Rights Watch 13 February 1992 pp 310 357 ISBN 1 56432 083 9 Odluka Decision Narodne novine in Croatian Narodne novine 53 8 October 1991 ISSN 1333 9273 Archived from the original on 23 September 2009 Opce informacije o nestalima General information on missing persons in Croatian Ministry of Veterans Affairs Croatia Archived from the original on 27 September 2013 Retrieved 6 May 2013 Resolution 721 1991 United Nations Security Council 27 November 1991 The Prosecutor vs Milan Martic Judgement PDF International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia 12 June 2007 45 17 N 18 59 E 45 29 N 18 98 E 45 29 18 98 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1991 Yugoslav campaign in Croatia amp oldid 1179971141, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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