The Death of Yugoslavia"The Death of Yugoslavia is the first account to go behind the public face of battle and into the closed worlds of the key players in the war. Laura Silber, Balkans correspondent for the Financial Times, and Allan Little, award-winning BBC journalist, plot the road to war and the war itself. They pinpoint the key events that occurred in the capitals of Belgrade and Zagreb, and in villages ravaged by 'ethnic cleansing', and draw on eye-witness testimony, scrupulous research and hundreds of interviews to give unprecedented access to the facts behind the media stories. Challenging the received wisdom that the war occurred as a spontaneous and inevitable eruption of ethnic hatreds, the authors expose, step-by-step, a plan to divide the country by force of arms." "Could anything have been done to prevent this terrible tragedy? What will be its lasting effects? The authors consider these questions and assess the present situation and its implications for future international relations."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved |
From inside the book
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Page 210
It seemed to me that the right way to do it was to allow those who . wanted to be
independent to be independent , and to associate themselves with a central
organization as far as they wanted to . Those who didn ' t want to be independent
...
It seemed to me that the right way to do it was to allow those who . wanted to be
independent to be independent , and to associate themselves with a central
organization as far as they wanted to . Those who didn ' t want to be independent
...
Page 220
Paragraph One of his draft General Settlement offered the prospect of
independence , and recognition , to any republic that wanted it , but only after a
comprehensive settlement had been reached ; only after the seceding republics
had agreed ...
Paragraph One of his draft General Settlement offered the prospect of
independence , and recognition , to any republic that wanted it , but only after a
comprehensive settlement had been reached ; only after the seceding republics
had agreed ...
Page 338
The Bosnian Government wanted its country to cover all of the republic – short of
that , it wanted land stretching to every frontier . Eastern Bosnia – almost
completely controlled by the Serbs – although it was mostly Muslim before the
war ...
The Bosnian Government wanted its country to cover all of the republic – short of
that , it wanted land stretching to every frontier . Eastern Bosnia – almost
completely controlled by the Serbs – although it was mostly Muslim before the
war ...
What people are saying - Write a review
LibraryThing Review
User Review - rocketjk - LibraryThingThis history by two BBC correspondents does a very good job of presenting the chronology and events of this massive deadly tragedy. The book deftly separates the many different threads of nationalism ... Read full review
LibraryThing Review
User Review - cwhouston - LibraryThingVery enjoyable single volume history of the break up of Yugoslavia. The book is well written and the chapters are logically structured and not too long. The coverage is comprehensive and, in my view, written with very little political or ethnic bias. Read full review
Common terms and phrases
agreed agreement Alija Izetbegović allowed already areas armed Army asked attack authorities became began Belgrade believed Bosnian Serbs called camps central clear Commander Communist constitution Croatia Croats defence demanded early ethnic Federal fighting finally forces Foreign former Government ground hand head held homes independence Izetbegović Jović Karadžić killed knew Knin Kosovo Krajina Kučan later leaders leadership leave live majority March meeting military Milošević Minister months move Muslims nationalist never night officers Parliament Party peace Plan police political population position President protect remained representative republic Sarajevo Serbian session side Slovene Slovenia taken talks television territory throughout tion told took town troops Tudjman turned United village vote wanted warned weapons Western Yugoslav Yugoslavia Zagreb