For most of the 20th century, there existed
a country in Southeastern Europe called Yugoslavia.
Today, however, what used to be Yugoslavia
is now 6 fully independent countries… plus
one self-declared independent country, but
more on that later.
So why exactly did Yugoslavia split up? Well…
before looking at why it split up, let’s
first look at how it came to be. For this,
we need to go back to 1918 and the end of
the World War 1.
Yugoslavia was created from the Kingdom of
Serbia, the Kingdom of Montenegro, and what
used to be territories of the Austria-Hungarian
Empire.
The country was originally called the Kingdom
of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, but later changed
its name to the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
This lasted until about 1941, when Yugoslavia
was occupied by Axis the powers of Nazi Germany
and Fascist Italy during World War II. The
Axis powers installed their own puppet governments
which effectively ended the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
In 1945, after the Allied victory in World
War II, Yugoslavia was re-established, this
time as Socialist state, a federation of six
republics: Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Serbia, Montenegro, and Macedonia.
After initially siding with Joseph Stalin
and the Soviet Union, Yugoslavia remained
neutral throughout the Cold War, and even
went on to become one of the founding members
of the Non-Aligned Movement.
Throughout Yugoslavia’s existence, there
had always been ethnic tensions among the
various ethnic groups. This would ultimately
lead to the country’s collapse, but under
the rule of their first president, Josip Broz
Tito, these tensions were largely kept under
control, as he promoted “Brotherhood and
Unity” between the six republics, and always
tried to suppress nationalism, sometimes by
force.
The death of Tito in 1980 is often viewed
as the beginning of the end of Yugoslavia.
During the 1980s Yugoslavia’s economy took
a turn for the worse, ethnic tensions began
to rise, and nationalism began to grow among
some of the individual republics. This, coupled
with the fall of Communism around the world..
all contributed to what would become the Yugoslav
Wars and the breakup of Yugoslavia.
The ruling political party in the country
was the League of Communists. There were 8
members… the six republics, as well as the
two autonomous provinces of Serbia: Vojvodina
and Kosovo. In 1986, Slobodan Milošević
became leader of the Serbian branch. Milošević
and his supporters were uncomfortable with
the autonomous provinces of Serbia, as Belgrade
had very little control over the politics
in these parts of the country.
Supporters of Milošević, through large protests,
known as the “Rallies of Truth”, managed
to overthrow the political leaders in Kosovo,
Vojvodina, and Montenegro, which were replaced
by allies of Milošević.
Serbia had effectively created a voting bloc,
having 4 of the 8 votes. The other Yugoslav
republics, especially Slovenia, openly criticised
these actions.
In 1989, the autonomy of the province of Kosovo
was abolished. Kosovo was about 80% ethnic
Albanian, with ethnic Serbs being in the minority.
Unsurprisingly, the Albanian majority were
extremely unhappy with this motion.. and this
led to the Kosovo miners' strike, in which
more than 1300 Albanian miners went on a hunger
strike.
During what would become the last meeting
of the League of Communists, there was a heated
debate between the Slovenian and Serbian leaders
about the structure of Yugoslavia. Slovenia
called for more autonomy for the individual
republics, while Serbia wanted more unity
and centralization.
The Slovenian delegates left the congress
meeting in protest, and were soon followed
by the Croatians and Macedonians.
After the the League of Communists of Yugoslavia
was dissolved, multi-party elections were
held in all 6 of the republics for the first
time.
The Croatian people voted into power the newly
established Croatian Democratic Union party
and their leader Franjo Tuđman.The new Croatian
flag was raised as the country moved towards
its declaration of independence which later
followed.
Croatia’s population was mostly ethnic Croats,
but the country also had a large minority
of Serbs, and large regions of Croatia had
Serbian majorities, especially along the border
with Bosnia.
For many Croatian Serbs, the newly elected
government was something that caused serious
concern. Many Serbs remembered the last time
Croatia was an independent country - the Independent
State of Croatia, during World War 2, governed
by the ultranationalist, fascist group, Ustaše,
allied with Nazi Germany. The extremist group
of Croats took part in the Holocaust, carrying
out a genocide campaign against ethnic Serbs.
So in 1990, many Serbs had all-too vivid memories
of the atrocities committed to their people
just half a century before, and many worried
about the newly elected government in Croatia.
In a Serb-majority town of Knin, the local
Serbs started a rebellion, blocking off key
roads throughout Croatia. Croatian Special
Force helicopters were sent to resolve the
rebellion by force. However, while en route,
Yugoslav Army fighter jets flew alongside
them, ordering them to turn around or be shot
down. They returned back to base.
This was when the gravity of the situation
became apparent. This wasn’t just some local
Serbian rebellion, they were being assisted
by the Yugoslav National Army. In the following
weeks and months, the army also provided the
rebels with weapons.
Many more of the Serb dominated areas in Croatia
started rebellions, taking control of Serb-majority
towns, seeking to join Serbia.
3 separate rebel groups proclaimed themselves
independent from Croatia. These 3 groups would
later join together and seek unification with
Serbia.
On June 25th, 1991, Slovenia and Croatia both
officially declared their independence. Of
course by this point, the Yugoslav Wars had
already begun, but were thus far mostly confined
to Croatia, between the Croats and Serbs.
However, with Slovenia declaring their independence,
this brought them into the war as well. The
Yugoslav Army travelled to Slovenia, with
the goal of asking them to… politely reconsider
their independence.
Two days after their declaration of independence,
began what became known as the Ten-Day War,
between Slovenia and the Yugoslav Army. Relative
to the other wars within Yugoslavia, there
were very few casualties.
After these ten days of war, under the sponsorship
of the Europe Community, an agreement was
signed between Slovenia, Croatia and Yugoslavia.
The document sought to open up negotiations
between the parties to resolve things peacefully.
Yugoslavia withdrew their army, but the agreement
did very little to actually stop the fighting.
Yugoslavia were preparing a massive attack
on Slovenia, with tanks, air force and artillery.
Their military power was far superior and
they could easily take control of Slovenia.
However, Serbia’s authorisation was required,
but Serbia refused. The Serbian representatives
within Yugoslavia didn’t care if Slovenia
left.
Slovenia was a country of almost entirely
ethnic Slovenes. Because there were very few
Serbs within Slovenia, Serbia didn’t care
if they left.
Croatia, on the other hand, was a different
story. Therefore Serbia were unwilling to
let them leave so easily. The Croatian President
publicly stated that he would “defend every
inch of Croatia”
Serbian nationalists in Croatia had already
taken control of a dozen towns and villages,
but things took a turn for the worse in the
Croatian border town of Vukovar, where the
conflict escalated between Croatia and the
rebel Serbs. The Yugoslav Army sent a huge
force to the Croatia-Serbia border, claiming
to be a neutral peacekeeping unit.
Together, the Yugoslav Army and the Croatian
Serbs pushed forward taking control of more
and more villages. Some of which had been
entirely populated by Croats. They were no
longer just taking control of Serb dominated
parts of Croatia.
Due to the escalating violence in Croatia,
the presidents of all six of the republics
were called to The Hague, by the European
Community, to discuss possible peace plans.
Croatian president, Franjo Tuđman, claimed
that Croatia had every right to succeed from
Yugoslavia. Serbian president, Slobodan Milošević,
responded by saying that if Croatia had the
right to succeed, then Serbs in Croatia had
the right to join Serbia.
Europe Community peace negotiator, Lord Carrington,
presented Milošević with a question: would
you be willing to accept the independence
of Croatia, subject to the human rights of
Serbs outside of Serbia. To Lord Carrington’s
surprise, he said yes.
In the meantime, the Yugoslav Army were planning
a massive attack on the Croatian capital,
Zagreb. But such an attack carried huge risks,
of sanctions or even outside intervention.
Carrington was eager to get this verbal agreement
in writing. However, when it came time to
sign the document, there was one key difference.
The agreement would not simply accept Croatia’s
independence, but would make all six republics
independent nations. Milošević refused to
sign, as he didn’t want to dissolve Yugoslavia.
The Carrington Plan, was not just for Serbia
and Milošević, but all of the republics,
who voted on the plan. The plan needed 5 votes
to pass. Serbia voted no, but all 5 other
republics voted yes. This was surprising given
that Montenegro was strongly allied with Serbia.
As it later turned out, Italy had offered
Montenegro a large aid program if they accepted
the Carrington Plan.
The plan was set to go ahead, but Serbia later
blackmailed the Montenegrin president to send
a letter to Lord Carrington and change his
vote, or be outed to the public as a traitor
to Yugoslavia. The letter was sent, and the
plan broke down.
Around this time, Macedonia held a referendum
on independence, which was 95% in favour.
Macedonia was the the only republic which
broke away from Yugoslavia completely peacefully.
Meanwhile in Croatia, the Croatian stronghold
in Vukovar was under siege. The small Croatian
defense force managed to hold the town for
87 days, before it finally fell to the much
larger Yugoslav Army. The Serbs held around
⅓ of Croatian land.
In January of 1992, a ceasefire agreement
was signed between the Croats and the Serbs.
But the war in Yugoslavia was not just between
Croatia and Serbia. In fact, by far the bloodiest
war in Yugoslavia was the Bosnian War.
Bosnia and Herzegovina was the most multicultural
of the republics, and had three main ethnic
groups. The largest were the Bosniaks, often
referred to as “Bosnian Muslims”, but
there was also a very large minority of Serbs,
and a smaller minority of Croats.
The Bosnian Serb party leader issued a firm
warning to the Bosnian government not to pursue
independence, but in February 1992, Bosnia
and Herzegovina held a referendum. Most Bosniaks
and Croats voted in favour, while the majority
of Serbs boycotted the vote.
The very next day, a Serb civilian in Bosnia
was killed by a Bosniak, and Serbs retaliated
by setting up roadblocks in nation’s capital,
Sarajevo, and large parts of the city quickly
came under the military occupation of the
Bosnian Serbs. Demands were made that Bosnia
and Herzegovina stop seeking international
recognition.
Serbs in Bosnia had declared their own independent
republic: the "Republika Srpska". All Bosnian
Serbs in the Yugoslav Army were transferred
to the Bosnian Serb Army.
On the 27th of April, 1992, the Socialist
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia officially
came to end as a new constitution was adopted
with the proclamation the Federal Republic
of Yugoslavia, consisting of just two of the
six republics - Serbia and Montenegro. The
United Nations denied their request to automatically
continue membership as Yugoslavia.
Bosnian Serbs began to take control of all
Serb-majority areas of Bosnia, as well as
Muslim towns near the Serbian border. As well
as this, they also began sporadic mortar attacks
on Sarajevo. The Bosnian capital would be
under siege for nearly four years.
In the beginning of the Bosnian War, Bosniaks
and Croats were allied with each other, as
they were fighting against a common enemy.
However, Bosnian Croats had similar ideas
to the Bosnian Serbs, to take control of the
Croat-majority parts of Bosnia and join Croatia.
Like the Serbs however, the Croat forces also
didn’t just take control of Croat towns.
Bosnian Croats proclaimed The Croatian Republic
of Herzeg-Bosnia, a separate state from Bosnia
and Herzegovina.
In May of 1993, a United Nations Commander
was sent to the town of Srebrenica, which
had become a refuge for Bosnian Muslims who
fled their home.
He was welcoming with open arms, but when
it came time for him to leave, a crowd of
people wouldn’t let him. They wanted him
to guarantee their safety and demanded help
from the West. The Bosnian Serbs already had
the town surrounded.
The Commander went against UN policy and announced
the town was under UN protection. Later, a
unanimous UN resolution was adopted which
declared Srebrenica and other Muslim populated
regions as a “Safe Area”.
The international community devised a plan,
the Vance-Owen plan, which would divide the
country into ten ethnic provinces: 3 Bosniak,
3 Serb, 3 Croat, as well as the neutral capital,
Sarajevo.
The Bosnian president, the Croatian president,
and the Bosnian Croats, had all agreed to
the plan. The Serbian president urged the
Bosnian Serbs to agree to the plan, but through
their military conquests, they had taken control
of about ⅔ of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Accepting
the Vance-Owen Plan would mean giving up about
25% of their currently held territory, so
the plan ultimately broke down.
The Bosniaks and the Croats signed a peace
treaty in Washington, as the Americans demanding
that Croatia stop their war against Bosnian
Muslims or face sanctions. They agreed to
this as they wanted help from the West to
re-take their own land in Croatia.
In February of 1994, a mortar attack on Sarajevo’s
marketplace caused the death of 68 civilians.
In response to this, NATO issued the Bosnian
Serbs with an ultimatum: withdraw your heavy
weapons from the hills or Sarajevo within
10 days. The Bosnian Serbs rejected the ultimatum.
The Bosnian Serbs wanted to show their military
superiority over the Bosniaks, and show that
they could not be bullied by the West. They
launched a mortar attack at a hospital in
the town of Goražde, a UN safe area, NATO
responded with an airstrike of Bosnian Serb
command post, and they retaliated by surrounding
and taking hostage 150 UN personnel.
One of the other UN safe areas, Srebrenica,
while under UN military protection, was forcibly
taken in what became known as the Srebrenica
Massacre where thousands of civilians were
killed. With the violence at an all-time high
in Bosnia, another mortar attack on Sarajevo
and another 37 civilians killed, was the final
straw, and a full-scale NATO bombing campaign
began against the Bosnian Serbs.
President Milošević of Serbia, demanded
that the Bosnian Serbs allow him to negotiate
a peace treaty on their behalf, cutting all
ties and support from Belgrade.
Meanwhile, back in Croatia, the Croatian government
had been preparing for several years to retake
their land. In May and August of 1995, Croatia
launched two large-scale military assaults
on the Serb-controlled parts of Croatia. By
this point, the Croats had a far stronger
military. The vast majority of Serbs fled
the country, even communities that had lived
in Croatia for centuries. Many Serb villages
were burnt to the ground, to ensure the Serbs
never returned.
With the Bosnian Serbs weakened, Croats and
Bosniaks worked together in Bosnia taking
as much land as they could. Serbs fled to
Serbia and Montenegro. The Americans urged
them to stop, as they wanted a peace treaty
to be signed.
Peace talks took place in Dayton, Ohio, USA.
The plan was to keep Bosnia and Herzegovina
as one country, but divided into two distinct
legal entities: the Bosniak-Croat Federation
and the Republika Srpska.
After 17 days of negotiating and several redrawn
maps, the peace treaty was finally signed
between all parties.
This peace treaty which put a stop to the
wars in Yugoslavia, was not quite the end
of the violence. In the late 90’s, war broke
out between the Albanian majority in Kosovo,
against Serbia, as they seeked their independence.
Backed by NATO, the Kosovo Liberation Army
took effective control of Kosovo. The war
ended in 1999 and in 2008, the Republic of
Kosovo declared itself an independent nation,
but the situation still remains unresolved
to this day.
In the year 2000, after the overthrow of Slobodan
Milošević, Serbia and Montenegro gave up
on its desire to continue as the sole legal
successor of Yugoslavia, they joined the UN
as new member, and in 2003 changed their official
name to the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro.
This only last three more years though, because
in 2006, Montenegro passed a narrowly won
independence referendum.
Yugoslavia was a country that was built on
Brotherhood and Unity, but fell apart from
internal struggle and civil war. The country
may not exist anymore but its legacy lives
on. Unfortunately, the most prominent memories
from Yugoslavia’s history are the extremely
unpleasant ones … but today all of the former
Yugoslav republics are peaceful and prosperous
nations.
However, with the still unresolved situation
in Kosovo, another war in Balkans is always
a possibility. Let’s hope that doesn’t
happen, and that the situation can be resolved
peacefully.
I’m happy to announce this video has been
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this video, which helps support the channel.
The fall of Communism is one of the factors
that led to the breakup of Yugoslavia, and
for that reason I’m going to recommend “Revolution
1989” about the fall of the Soviet Union.
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and thank you for watching.
