The Death of YugoslaviaPenguin, 1996 - 400 pages This is a survey of the pressures and events that contributed to the break-up of former Yugoslavia - considered from a historical rather than a political or sociological point of view. The book accompanies a six-part series on BBC2, screened in 1995. This edition has one extra chapter that takes the narrative up to the Dayton Accord. |
From inside the book
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Page 160
... ceasefire , arrived after midnight to find a room full of between twenty and thirty Croats , Slovenes and EC officials . There was no structured discus- sion , no ordered negotiation . The troika had asked Kučan and Janša to revoke the ...
... ceasefire , arrived after midnight to find a room full of between twenty and thirty Croats , Slovenes and EC officials . There was no structured discus- sion , no ordered negotiation . The troika had asked Kučan and Janša to revoke the ...
Page 333
... ceasefire . Akashi refused on the grounds that there was evidence that the Serbs had begun to implement condition two , the pull - back of heavy weapons ( even though the deadline by which this should have been complet- ed had already ...
... ceasefire . Akashi refused on the grounds that there was evidence that the Serbs had begun to implement condition two , the pull - back of heavy weapons ( even though the deadline by which this should have been complet- ed had already ...
Page 369
... ceasefire . Holbrooke chose his moment carefully - the swearing - in - ceremony of a new American ambassador to Bosnia . Afterwards , Holbrooke asked if he and General Don Kerrick , an intelligence officer on the NSC staff , could see ...
... ceasefire . Holbrooke chose his moment carefully - the swearing - in - ceremony of a new American ambassador to Bosnia . Afterwards , Holbrooke asked if he and General Don Kerrick , an intelligence officer on the NSC staff , could see ...
Contents
LAYING THE CHARGE | 31 |
No One Should Dare to Beat You 377 | 37 |
No Way Back | 48 |
Copyright | |
22 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
accept agreed agreement Alija Izetbegović allowed already areas armed Army asked attack authority became began Belgrade believed Bosnian Serbs called central clear Commander Communist constitution continued Croatia Croats defense demanded elections ethnic Federal fight finally fire forces Foreign former ground hand head independence Izetbegović Jović Karadžić killed knew Knin Kosovo Krajina Kučan land later leaders leadership leave live majority March meeting military Milošević Minister months move Muslims nationalist never night officers Parliament Party peace Plan police political position President remained representative republic Sarajevo secure seemed Serbian session side Slovene Slovenia Srebrenica taken talks television territory tion told took town tried troops trying Tudjman turned United village vote wanted warned weapons western Yugoslav Yugoslavia Zagreb