Bosnian War

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Event.png Bosnian War (War) Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Date6 April 1992 - 4 December 1995
LocationYugoslavia
Interest ofRobert Badinter, Stefan Karganovic, Noel Malcolm, Ruder Finn

The Bosnian War was an international armed conflict that took place in Bosnia and Herzegovina between 1992 and 1995, after it declared independence. The war is commonly seen as having started on 6 April 1992, following a number of earlier violent incidents. The war ended on 14 December 1995. The main belligerents were the forces of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina and those of Herzeg-Bosnia and Republika Srpska, proto-states led and supplied by Croatia and Serbia, respectively.[1]

NATO countries played a large part, both in the war itself and behind the scenes. Eventually they inverted with a bombing campaign, presented as a humanitarian intervention.

DynCorp

Full article: DynCorp

The CIA front company DynCorp engaged in sex with minors and sold them to one other as slaves. One of Jeffrey Epstein’s suspected trafficking aircraft shared the same tail number as a State department Bronco used under contract by DynCorp.

Markala false flag

Full article: Markale

The 1994 Markale market shelling was a false flag operation to create a pretext for NATO intervention.

Rape war propaganda

A part of the war propaganda was lurid allegations of Serb rape camps.

Concentration camps

A still image from video footage showing an emaciated Fikret Alic among other apparently well nourished prisoners at a transit stop in Bosnia and OUTSIDE a small barbed wire enclosure in the summer of 1992. Photograph: Reuters

Srebrenica

Full article: Srebrenica

The 1995 "Srebrenica massacre" refers to the July 1995 killing of a number of Muslim men and boys in and around Srebrenica in Bosnia. The western Official Narrative puts the number killed at 8,000 and spends a large effort to stamp it as a genocide. Phillip Corwin, the highest ranking UN official in Sarajevo at the time, estimated the actual number at probably around 800.

International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia

Full article: International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia

The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY)[1] was a body established to prosecute the war crimes that had been committed during the Yugoslav Wars and to try their perpetrators. Formally a body of the United Nations, it was heavily dominated by NATO war participants.


 

Related Quotation

PageQuote
Daily Mirror“During the Bosnian War, the Daily Mirror reported that a Bosnian woman died "after being forced to give birth to a dog." Variations on this bizarre and biologically incredible story were carried also in Germany's Bild am Sonntag and Italy's La Repubblica, with lurid accounts of how fiendish Serbian gynecologists implanted canine fetuses in the woman's womb. The dog story was also embraced by an obscure West German parliamentary deputy, Stefan Schwarz, who gained instant fame by telling gruesome tales in the Bundestag about Serbian burnings, castrations, the roasting of children in ovens, and the use of poison gas.”

 

Related Documents

TitleTypePublication dateAuthor(s)Description
Document:International Injustice: the Conviction of Radovan Karadzicarticle30 March 2016Diana JohnstoneCommentary on the guilty verdict on Radovan Karadzic by the International Criminal Court on 24 March 2016
Document:The Balkan Warsbook review21 February 2003Edward Herman
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References