During a brief military ceremony in Sarajevo,
Bosnia-Herzegovina, French General Bernard Janvier, head of the United
Nations peacekeeping force, formally transfers military authority in
Bosnia to U.S. Admiral Leighton Smith, commander of North Atlantic
Treaty Organization (NATO) forces in Southern Europe.
The solemn
ceremony cleared the path for the deployment of 60,000 NATO troops to
enforce the Dayton Peace Accords, signed in Paris by the leaders of the
former Yugoslavia on December 14. The U.S.-backed peace plan was
proposed during talks in Dayton,
Ohio,
earlier in the year and was reluctantly accepted by the last of the
belligerent parties in November, ending four years of bloody conflict in
the former Yugoslavia, which cost more than 200,000 lives.
The
United Nations peacekeeping mission to Bosnia began in early 1992,
shortly after the war erupted over efforts by the Bosnian Serbs to
achieve independence from Bosnia-Herzegovina and unite with Serbia.
Although the U.N. force was crucial in distributing humanitarian aid to
the impoverished population of Bosnia, it was unable to stop the
fighting. Approximately 25,000 U.N. peacekeepers served in Bosnia over
three and a half years, and during that time 110 of those were killed,
831 wounded, and hundreds taken hostage.
The NATO force, with its
strong U.S. support and focused aim of enforcing the Dayton agreement,
was more successful in bringing stability to the war-torn region.


Bosnian War (1992–1995)
On 18 November 1990, the first multiparty parliamentary elections
were held. A second round followed on 25 November, resulting in a
national assembly where communist power was replaced by a
coalition of three ethnically based parties.
[59] Croatia and
Slovenia's
subsequent declarations of independence and the warfare that ensued
placed Bosnia and Herzegovina and its three constituent peoples in an
awkward position. A significant split soon developed on the issue of
whether to stay with the
Yugoslav federation (overwhelmingly favored among Serbs) or seek independence (overwhelmingly favored among Bosniaks and Croats).
The
Serb members of parliament, consisting mainly of the
Serb Democratic Party members, abandoned the central parliament in Sarajevo, and formed the
Assembly of the Serb People of Bosnia and Herzegovina
on 24 October 1991, which marked the end of the tri-ethnic coalition
that governed after the elections in 1990. This Assembly established the
Serbian Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina on 9 January 1992, which became
Republika Srpska in August 1992.
On 18 November 1991, the party branch in Bosnia and Herzegovina of the ruling party in the Republic of Croatia, the
Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ), proclaimed the existence of the
Croatian Community of Herzeg-Bosnia, as a separate "political, cultural, economic, and territorial whole", on the territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina, with
Croat Defence Council (HVO) as its military part.
[60]
The Bosnian government did not recognize it. The
Constitutional Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina declared Herzeg-Bosnia illegal, first on 14 September 1992 and again on 20 January 1994.
[61][62]
A declaration of the sovereignty of Bosnia and Herzegovina on 15
October 1991 was followed by a referendum for independence from
Yugoslavia
on 29 February and 1 March 1992 which was boycotted by the great
majority of the Serbs. The turnout in the independence referendum was
63.4 percent and 99.7 percent of voters voted for independence.
[63]
Bosnia and Herzegovina declared independence on 3 March 1992 and
received international recognition the following month on April 6, 1992.
[64]
The
Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina was subsequently admitted as a member State of the United Nations on 22 May 1992.
[65]
In the meantime, following a period of escalating tensions, the opening
shots in the incipient Bosnian conflict were fired when Serb
paramilitary forces attacked Bosnian Croat villages around Capljina on 7
March 1992 and Bosanski Brod and the Bosniak-majority town, Gorazde, on
15 March. These minor attacks were followed by much more serious Serb
artillery attacks on Neum on 19 March and on Bosanski Brod on 24 March.
It is disputed between Bosniaks, Croats and Serbs who the first
casualties of the war are. Bosniaks consider the killing of Suada
Dilberović, a Bosniak civilian woman shot dead by a sniper in April
1992, as marking the start of warfare between the three major
communities.
[59][66]
Serbs consider an attack by Bosniaks on a Serb wedding procession and
the killing of Nikola Gardović, the groom's father, on 1 March 1992 in
Sarajevo's old town
Baščaršija, to be the catalyst for the war.
[67]
Discussions between
Franjo Tuđman and
Slobodan Milošević at the March 1991
Karađorđevo meeting are believed to have involved a plan to
divide Bosnia and Herzegovina between Serbia and Croatia.
[68]
Following the declaration of independence of the Republic of Bosnia and
Herzegovina, the Serbs attacked different parts of the country. The
state administration of Bosnia and Herzegovina effectively ceased to
function having lost control over the entire territory. The Serbs wanted
control of large parts of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Milošević was
widely accused of being the mastermind of a plan to build a "
Greater Serbia", the
RAM Plan.
At the same time, the policies of the Republic of Croatia and its
leader Franjo Tuđman towards Bosnia and Herzegovina were never totally
transparent and always included Franjo Tuđman's ultimate aim of
expanding Croatia's borders. Bosnian Muslims were an easy target,
because the Bosnian government forces were poorly equipped and
unprepared for the war.
[69]
International recognition of Bosnia and Herzegovina increased diplomatic pressure for the
Yugoslav People's Army
(JNA) to withdraw from the republic's territory which they officially
did. However, in fact, the Bosnian Serb members of JNA simply changed
insignia, formed the
Army of Republika Srpska, and continued fighting. Armed and equipped from JNA stockpiles in Bosnia, supported by volunteers and various
paramilitary forces from Serbia, and receiving extensive humanitarian, logistical and financial support from the
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, Republika Srpska's offensives in 1992 managed to place much of the country under its control.
[19]
Initially, the Serb forces attacked the non-Serb civilian population
in Eastern Bosnia. Once towns and villages were securely in their hands,
the Serb forces—military, police, the paramilitaries and, sometimes,
even Serb villagers—applied the same pattern: Bosniak houses and
apartments were systematically ransacked or burnt down, Bosniak
civilians were rounded up or captured, and sometimes beaten or killed in
the process. 2.2 million refugees were displaced by the end of the war
(of all three nationalities).
[70]
Able-bodied men were separated from their families and interned in
camps under a brutal regimen of abuse, murder, and sporadic group
executions, whereas women and children were kept in unsanitary detention
centers, deprived of food and water. Rape by Serb soldiers or policemen
was commonplace at the detention centers, and victims included women
and minors as young as 12 years old.
[71]
Though on a significantly smaller scale, war crimes would later also
be committed by Bosniaks and Croats as their military campaigns gained
momentum, including the establishment of prison camps in which torture,
murder and rape took place.
[72][73][74][75]
In June 1992, the focus switched to
Novi Travnik and
Gornji Vakuf
where the Croat Defence Council (HVO) efforts to gain control were
resisted. On 18 June 1992 the Bosnian Territorial Defence in Novi
Travnik received an
ultimatum
from the HVO which included demands to abolish existing Bosnia and
Herzegovina institutions, establish the authority of the Croatian
Community of Herzeg-Bosnia and pledge allegiance to it, subordinate the
Territorial Defense to the HVO and expel Muslim refugees, all within 24
hours. The attack was launched on 19 June. The elementary school and the
Post Office were attacked and damaged.
[76]
Gornji Vakuf was initially attacked by Croats on 20 June 1992, but the attack failed. The
Graz agreement
caused deep division inside the Croat community and strengthened the
separation group, which led to the conflict with Bosniaks. One of the
primary pro-union Croat leaders,
Blaž Kraljević (leader of the
Croatian Defence Forces
(HOS) armed group) was killed by HVO soldiers in August 1992, which
severely weakened the moderate group who hoped to keep the Bosnian Croat
alliance alive.
[77]
The situation became more serious in October 1992 when Croat forces attacked the Bosniak population in
Prozor. According to
Jadranko Prlić indictment, HVO forces cleansed most of the Muslims from the town of Prozor and several surrounding villages.
[60]
By 1993 when an armed conflict erupted between the predominantly
Bosniak government in Sarajevo and the Croatian Republic of
Herzeg-Bosnia, about 70% of the country was controlled by Republika
Srpska.
Ethnic cleansing and
civil rights
violations against non-Serbs were rampant in these areas. DNA teams
have been used to collect evidence of the atrocities committed by
Serbian forces during these campaigns.
[78] The single most prominent example was the
Srebrenica massacre, ruled a
genocide by the
International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. An estimated 8,372 Bosnians were killed by the Serbian
political authorities.
[79]
The
Inter Services Intelligence
(ISI) ran active military intelligence program during the Bosnian War
which started in 1992 lasting until 1995. Executed and supervised by
General
Javed Nasir,
the program distributed and coordinated the systematic supply of arms
to various groups of Bosnian fighters in their fight against the Serbian
war missions.
[80]
In March 1994, the signing of the Washington Accords between the
leaders of the republican government and Herzeg-Bosnia led to the
creation of a joint Bosniak-Croat
Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, which absorbed the territory of the Croatian Republic of Herzeg-Bosnia and that held by the
Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The Federation soon liberated the small
Autonomous Province of Western Bosnia.
Following the
Srebrenica genocide, a
NATO bombing campaign
began in August 1995 against the Army of Republika Srpska. Meanwhile, a
ground offensive by the allied forces of Croatia and Bosnia, based on
the
Split Agreement
signed by Tudjman and Izetbegović, pushed the Serbs away from
territories held in western Bosnia which paved the way to negotiations.
In December 1995, the signing of the
Dayton Agreement in
Dayton, Ohio, by the presidents of Bosnia and Herzegovina (
Alija Izetbegović), Croatia (
Franjo Tuđman) and Serbia (
Slobodan Milošević) brought a halt to the fighting, roughly establishing the basic structure of the present-day state. A
NATO-led peacekeeping force was immediately dispatched to Bosnia to enforce the agreement.
The number of identified victims is currently at 97,207 (civilian and
military casualties). These include 64,341 Bosniaks, 24,726 Serbs, and
7,602 Croats.
[81] Recent research estimates the total number to be no more than 110,000 killed (civilians and military),
[82][83][84] and 1.8 million displaced. Those declared missing are being investigated by
International Commission on Missing Persons.
According to numerous
International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) judgements, the conflict involved Bosnia and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (subsequently
Serbia and Montenegro)
[85] as well as
Croatia.
[86]
At the
International Court of Justice (ICJ), the Bosnian government charged Serbia of complicity in
genocide
in Bosnia during the war. The ICJ ruling of 26 February 2007
effectively determined the war's nature to be international, though
exonerating Serbia of direct responsibility for the genocide committed
by Serb forces of
Republika Srpska.
The ICJ concluded, however, that Serbia failed to prevent genocide
committed by Serb forces and failed to punish those who carried out the
genocide – in particular General
Ratko Mladić – and bring them to justice.
[87] Mladić was arrested in a village in northern Serbia on 26 May 2011 and, among other genocide and
war crime charges, accused of directly orchestrating and overseeing the slaughter of 8,000 Bosniak men and boys.
[88]
The judges ruled that the criteria for genocide with the specific intent (
dolus specialis) to destroy Bosnian Muslims were met
only in Srebrenica or Eastern Bosnia in 1995.
[89] The court concluded that the crimes committed during the 1992–1995 war may, according to
international law, amount to
crimes against humanity, but that these acts did not in themselves constitute genocide.
[90] The Court further decided that Serbia was the only respondent party in the case after
Montenegro's
declaration of independence in June 2006, but that "any responsibility for
past events involved, at the relevant time, the composite State of Serbia and Montenegro".
[91]
High-ranking Croat and Bosniak officials have been convicted or
indicted for war crimes as well on charges related to the murder, rape,
torture, and imprisonment of civilians.
[92]
Serbs have accused Sarajevo authorities of practicing selective justice
by actively prosecuting Serbs while ignoring or downplaying Bosniak war
crimes.
[93]
Taken from: http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/nato-assumes-peacekeeping-duties-in-bosnia & https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bosnia_and_Herzegovina [20.12.2014]