The Breakup of Yugoslavia — a federation torn apart by war in 1991–92
Summary
Between 1991 and 1992 the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia — a federation of six republics in the western Balkans, founded by Josip Broz Tito after the Second World War — broke apart into a series of wars driven by competing nationalisms. Slovenia and Croatia declared independence on 25 June 1991; Macedonia and then Bosnia and Herzegovina followed; and the federation that had bound South Slavic peoples into a single state for nearly half a century dissolved. The wars that accompanied the breakup killed an estimated 130,000 to 140,000 people, displaced millions, and produced the worst atrocities in Europe since 1945, including the siege of Sarajevo and the genocide at Srebrenica.
Yugoslavia did not collapse from invasion or economic ruin alone, but from the deliberate political mobilization of ethnic nationalism in a federation whose unity had depended on a balance that its leaders chose to break. Tito, who had held the country together through personal authority and a carefully engineered system of inter-republican balance, died in 1980. The decade that followed brought economic crisis, the erosion of the federal institutions that had managed ethnic difference, and the rise of nationalist politicians — most consequentially Slobodan Milošević in Serbia — who built power by stoking grievance and fear among their own ethnic groups at the expense of the others.
The mechanism of the dissolution was the conversion of a multi-ethnic federation into a contest over which peoples would control which territory. As republics moved toward independence, the question of the borders — and of the large ethnic minorities stranded on the wrong side of them, especially Serbs in Croatia and Bosnia — turned political rupture into armed conflict. The wars were not spontaneous eruptions of ancient hatred but were organized: armies were mobilized, paramilitaries armed, populations expelled, and the term "ethnic cleansing" entered the world's vocabulary to describe the systematic removal of communities from contested land.
The human cost fell hardest on civilians. The capital of Bosnia, Sarajevo, endured the longest siege of a city in modern warfare — nearly four years, from April 1992 to February 1996 — under bombardment and sniper fire that killed thousands of its inhabitants. In July 1995, Bosnian Serb forces overran the UN-declared "safe area" of Srebrenica and murdered more than 8,000 Bosniak men and boys in the only act on European soil since the Second World War to be judged a genocide by international courts. What dissolved in 1991–92 was a country; what it left behind was a register of atrocity that the successor states and the wider world are still reckoning with.
Timeline
The country Tito built and bound
The Yugoslavia that dissolved in 1991–92 was the second state of that name and the creation of Josip Broz Tito, the Partisan leader who emerged from the Second World War as the ruler of a federation of South Slavic peoples. Founded in 1945, the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia comprised six republics — Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Montenegro, and Macedonia — and within Serbia two autonomous provinces, Kosovo and Vojvodina. It was a deliberately multi-ethnic construction, home to Slovenes, Croats, Serbs, Bosniaks, Macedonians, Montenegrins, Albanians, and others, with no single group commanding a majority of the whole. Its motto, "brotherhood and unity," expressed both an aspiration and a fragility.
The federation held together on a balance that was as much personal as institutional. Tito governed through the authority he had won in the war, suppressing nationalist expression as a threat to the state and engineering a system in which the republics and provinces checked one another. The 1974 constitution decentralized power further, granting the republics extensive autonomy and the provinces near-republican status, in an attempt to manage ethnic difference by dispersing it. Yugoslavia stood apart from the Soviet bloc, charted its own non-aligned course abroad, and for decades offered its citizens a relatively open and prosperous version of socialism. To outside observers it seemed a durable success.
Beneath the balance, however, the federation depended on conditions that would not last: Tito's authority, economic growth, and the willingness of republican leaders to restrain nationalism rather than exploit it. When Tito died on 4 May 1980, his role passed to a rotating collective presidency that lacked his standing and could not resolve the tensions he had contained. Through the 1980s the economy slid into crisis — heavy foreign debt, inflation, and stark disparities between the wealthier north and the poorer south — and the disputes between republics over resources and power sharpened. The keystone had been removed, and the structure began to work loose.
Nationalism mobilized and a federation unmade
What turned strain into rupture was the deliberate mobilization of ethnic nationalism. The pivotal figure was Slobodan Milošević, who rose to power in Serbia in the late 1980s by abandoning the federation's taboo on nationalist politics and casting himself as the defender of Serbs. He stripped Kosovo and Vojvodina of their autonomy, bringing their votes under Serbian control and overturning the balance the 1974 constitution had built. His program — the consolidation of Serbs within a single political space, by force if the federation broke — frightened the other republics and convinced their leaders that remaining in a Yugoslavia dominated by Belgrade was untenable. Nationalism was not unique to Serbia; movements in Croatia and Slovenia gathered their own momentum, and the federal center proved unable to mediate among them.
The breakup began in the northwest. After referendums returned overwhelming majorities for independence, Slovenia and Croatia both declared sovereignty on 25 June 1991. In Slovenia, ethnically homogeneous and on the federation's edge, the Yugoslav army's intervention lasted only ten days before it withdrew, and Slovenia separated with comparatively little bloodshed. Croatia was different. Its large Serb minority, encouraged by Belgrade, rejected Croatian independence and, with the support of the Yugoslav army, took up arms; the Croatian War of Independence brought the siege and destruction of Vukovar and the shelling of the historic city of Dubrovnik. The question that would define every subsequent war had appeared: what was to become of a national minority left inside a seceding republic, and who would draw the borders.
Bosnia and Herzegovina posed that question in its most dangerous form. The most ethnically intermixed of the republics, with no group close to a majority — Bosniaks, Serbs, and Croats living side by side — Bosnia could not separate cleanly along ethnic lines. When it declared independence after a referendum boycotted by most Bosnian Serbs, and was recognized internationally in April 1992, Bosnian Serb forces backed by Belgrade moved to seize and hold territory for a Serb entity, Republika Srpska. The war that followed was the deadliest of all the Yugoslav conflicts, and it was fought, from the outset, by expelling populations to create ethnically homogeneous territory — the practice that came to be called ethnic cleansing.
The siege, the safe area, and the reckoning
The war in Bosnia bore down on civilians with a deliberateness that defined its horror. Sarajevo, the Bosnian capital — a city long held up as a model of multi-ethnic coexistence — was encircled by Bosnian Serb forces beginning on 5 April 1992 and held under siege until 29 February 1996, nearly four years and the longest siege of a capital city in the history of modern warfare. From the surrounding hills, artillery and snipers fired into the streets, marketplaces, and water queues of a trapped population; by the count of one Sarajevo research center, the siege left close to 14,000 people dead, thousands of them civilians, and reduced much of the city to ruins. The suffering was inflicted on ordinary inhabitants whose only offense was to live in a city others were determined to divide.
The gravest single crime came at Srebrenica. The town, an enclave of Bosniaks in eastern Bosnia, had been declared a United Nations "safe area" and was nominally under the protection of a small Dutch peacekeeping contingent. In July 1995 Bosnian Serb forces under General Ratko Mladić overran it, separated the men and boys from the women, and over several days murdered more than 8,000 Bosniak males, burying them in mass graves that were later disturbed to hide the evidence. International courts — the tribunal at The Hague and the International Court of Justice — judged the massacre an act of genocide, the only episode on European soil since the Second World War to be so recognized. The victims were unarmed captives, killed because of who they were; the gravity of that crime is the central fact of the war's memory.
The wars were brought to a halt by outside intervention. NATO airstrikes against Bosnian Serb forces in 1995, following the fall of Srebrenica and a marketplace massacre in Sarajevo, helped force a settlement, and in December 1995 the US-brokered Dayton Agreement ended the Bosnian War, partitioning the country into a Bosniak-Croat federation and a Serb republic under a single fragile state. By then the original Yugoslavia was gone. Serbia and Montenegro had constituted a rump Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 1992; the wars over Kosovo would come later in the decade; and the federation Tito built had dissolved into independent states, leaving a toll of well over a hundred thousand dead and millions driven from their homes.
The Five Factors
Aftermath
The breakup of Yugoslavia produced seven successor states. Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Macedonia emerged in the early 1990s; the rump Federal Republic of Yugoslavia of Serbia and Montenegro abandoned the Yugoslav name in 2003 and split into separate states in 2006; and Kosovo, the scene of a further war and a NATO intervention in 1999, declared independence in 2008. The wars of the 1990s killed an estimated 130,000 to 140,000 people and displaced millions, redrawing the map of the western Balkans along the ethnic lines the fighting had imposed.
The crimes of the wars were brought, in part, before the law. The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, established at The Hague in 1993, indicted and tried scores of political and military figures. Slobodan Milošević was extradited to the tribunal and tried on charges including genocide, but died in his cell in 2006 before a verdict; Ratko Mladić and the Bosnian Serb political leader Radovan Karadžić were convicted of genocide and other crimes and sentenced to long terms. The judgments established a record of responsibility, though for many survivors justice came late and incomplete.
The dissolution is remembered above all through its victims — the besieged of Sarajevo, the murdered of Srebrenica, the millions expelled from their homes — and as a warning of how quickly a multi-ethnic society can be turned against itself by leaders who choose division. Bosnia remains a divided state under the fragile architecture of Dayton; relations among the successor states are still marked by the war's legacy; and the meaning of what happened is still contested across the region. What is not in dispute is that a federation of nearly half a century was dismantled in a few years, at a human cost that Europe had hoped never to see again.
Lessons
- Do not let a state's unity rest on one person or one balance of personalities; institutions that cannot survive the founder's death are not institutions but a borrowed stability.
- Treat the deliberate mobilization of ethnic nationalism as the warning sign it is — the breakup of a shared society is usually engineered by elites, not erupted from below.
- Recognize that in a multi-ethnic polity the borders of internal units become weapons the moment secession turns them into frontiers, because intermixed peoples cannot be cleanly divided.
- Match intervention to capacity: declaring safe areas or recognizing states without the will and force to back them can deepen a war and betray the people it was meant to shield.
- Measure such a collapse by its victims and name the atrocity precisely — siege, ethnic cleansing, genocide — because the gravest cost is borne by civilians, and the record owes them accuracy.
References
- Breakup of Yugoslavia WIKIPEDIA
- Yugoslavia | History, Map, Flag, Breakup, & Facts ENCYCLOPÆDIA BRITANNICA
- The Conflicts INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL TRIBUNAL FOR THE FORMER YUGOSLAVIA
- Siege of Sarajevo WIKIPEDIA
- The Breakup of Yugoslavia, 1990–1992 US DEPARTMENT OF STATE, OFFICE OF THE HISTORIAN