- Page 1: SONJA BISERKO Yugoslavia’s Implos
- Page 4 and 5: Yugoslavia’s Implosion by Sonja B
- Page 9 and 10: FOREWORD Foreword I This is a coura
- Page 11 and 12: concerning the Second World War to
- Page 13 and 14: finance the war and to enrich those
- Page 15 and 16: Introduction THE SUBJECT OF THIS BO
- Page 17 and 18: into the dramatic events that shook
- Page 19 and 20: have not abandoned their territoria
- Page 21 and 22: Yugoslavia as they saw it (i.e., as
- Page 23 and 24: deprived autonomous provinces of th
- Page 25 and 26: Despite failing to secure victory i
- Page 27 and 28: CHAPTER 4 brings the discussion of
- Page 29 and 30: all so-called Serbian lands. While
- Page 31: ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Acknowledgements I
- Page 34 and 35: 34 ChApter 1 The Nineteenth Century
- Page 36 and 37: 36 ChApter 1 Serbian politicians we
- Page 38 and 39: 38 ChApter 1 that Serbs and Croats
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- Page 48 and 49: 48 ChApter 1 Serbia itself, both wi
- Page 50 and 51: 50 ChApter 1 contended the liberals
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56 ChApter 1 In the first postwar y
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58 ChApter 1 Communists of Serbia b
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60 ChApter 1 cared about their life
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62 ChApter 1 While serving as a mem
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64 ChApter 1 although the Serbs won
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66 ChApter 1 publication of the san
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68 ChApter 1 “not of republicans,
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70 ChApter 1 watched by the police.
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72 ChApter 1 The activities of the
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74 ChApter 1 movement was for the m
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76 ChApter 1 themselves “Yugoslav
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78 ChApter 1 [i.e., Bosnian Mulsims
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80 ChApter 1 the Serbian nationalis
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82 ChApter 1 went in the wrong dire
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84 ChApter 1 to be fought “agains
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86 ChApter 1 who converted to Islam
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88 ChApter 1 prominent members of M
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90 ChApter 1 well-organized party s
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92 ChApter 1 Yugoslav Communists, t
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94 ChApter 1 increased in the last
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96 ChApter 1 struggle for the equal
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98 ChApter 1 secession and thereby
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100 ChApter 1 truth and on the test
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102 ChApter 1 times to protect thei
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104 ChApter 1 installation of polic
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106 ChApter 1 all-Yugoslav solidari
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108 ChApter 1 rallies made possible
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110 ChApter 1 National Renewal (sno
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112 ChApter 1 their “activities,
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114 ChApter 1 transfers and exchang
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116 ChApter 1 Karadžić, a key imp
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118 ChApter 1 later renamed Republi
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120 ChApter 1 the rs. He said that
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122 ChApter 1 into the heart of Eur
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CHAPTER 2 the Army’s role in poli
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the relative majority (in 1981 the
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Security Service (Uprava Državne B
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until after Tito’s death, at whic
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in accordance with cpsu general-sec
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the armed forces were concentrated
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The ypa’s political engagement be
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The Army leadership’s argument in
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Forces in Serbia and Montenegro wer
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implies, then it must be accountabl
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his attention to the Serbian police
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state.” Already suspicious of cer
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Because of increasing criticism, es
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After the Presidency turned the pro
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accept Yugoslavia only as a unitary
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forces from outside (chiefly, from
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significant results but not its ult
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as regressive and pro-Ustasha. 238
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on statehood. The hegemonic central
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Macedonia, Serb Montenegro, Serb Bo
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started in Bosnia—to unleash his
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The ypa intervened in Slovenia afte
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egards to Bosnia as early as the pr
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in charge of labrador clandestinely
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The strength of Croat resistance fo
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with “policy and practice in the
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of Serbian newspapers and magazines
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under the same command in Belgrade.
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completely and which played a leadi
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will not accept any dictate and in
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The policy of ethnic cleansing had
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Sarajevo and the entire Muslim popu
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Serbs with a de facto division of B
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Albanian civilian population, and d
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CHAPTER 3 the Kosovo Issue NATION B
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“genocide” for the first time,
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kept inquiring ‘Surely not all?
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Local Serb inhabitants are perpetra
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of encouraging Albanians to emigrat
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THE STATUS OF ALBANIANS IN THE SECO
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The Brioni Plenum was the first sho
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possibility of creating an internat
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THE ALBANIAN QUESTION EXACERBATES T
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whomever they can, married women an
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had been used to serve the ruling i
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On June 28, the 600th anniversary o
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Autonomous Province of Kosovo, the
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Greek protests that the new state
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glorious victories of the Serbian a
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The collapse of the Albanian state
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judged to be disloyal to the Albani
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protection district”—an Albania
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several visits to Washington and Eu
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The international community vacilla
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deployment of a nato Extraction For
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manipulating the un Security Counci
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Unity said it would reactivate itse
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Čović predicted that if Miloševi
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e a sustained attack and it’s not
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defeatism and false information, be
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The destruction of the property rec
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epressing its people in Europe at t
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implementation of these provisions
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Kosovo, the regime strove to hamper
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intervention. It took almost a year
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1990, he had insisted in meetings w
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discrimination, which was then step
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into the hands of ethnic radicals.
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Un secretary-general Kofi Anan stat
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Kosovar Serbs faced the biggest pro
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SERBIA’S LAST ATTEMPTS AT PARTITI
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Kosovo’s non-Albanian populations
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its head today and that is why it w
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February 2007 address at the Munich
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that should be rapidly readmitted i
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276 ChApter 4 Milošević fell from
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278 ChApter 4 The trials of Radovan
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280 ChApter 4 Phase 3: Executing th
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282 ChApter 4 socialist legacy. Ser
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284 ChApter 4 has been estimated at
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286 ChApter 4 return of refugees an
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288 ChApter 4 segments of society.
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290 ChApter 4 international communi
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292 ChApter 4 of Milošević, his c
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294 ChApter 4 including the Democra
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296 ChApter 4 Koštunica never cond
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298 ChApter 4 light soon after Octo
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300 ChApter 4 Serbia is the only co
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302 ChApter 4 to Karadžić’s int
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304 ChApter 4 killed by the same ha
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306 ChApter 4 collective memory of
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308 ChApter 4 THE NEW CONSTITUTION
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310 ChApter 4 society with still in
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312 ChApter 4 the fledgling civil s
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CHAPTER 5 Lessons for peacemakers W
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too credulously Milošević’s ass
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and eu governments. 534 Nor did Wes
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warfare. The most the Europeans did
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ut also because of different approa
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war. Not until 1999, as nato brough
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and the eu because those organizati
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Banja Luka in December 2009, organi
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Cvetković’s government , it seem
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334 BIBLIogrAphY Ćosić, Dobrica,
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336 BIBLIogrAphY Obradović-Popovi
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338 nAme Index Brandt, Willy 96, 97
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340 nAme Index Jevtić, Miroljub 84
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342 nAme Index Nikezić, Marko 59,
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344 nAme Index Terzić, Slavenko 12