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Operation Storm: Ending Humanitarian Disaster and Genocide in Southeastern Europe
Author(s) -
Dorothy S. McClellan,
Nikola Knez
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international journal of social sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2720-8036
DOI - 10.52950/ss.2021.10.1.003
Subject(s) - battle , victory , genocide , politics , democracy , independence (probability theory) , law , war of independence , political science , spanish civil war , decisive victory , sociology , history , ancient history , statistics , mathematics , military service
Operation Storm was the single-most decisive battle of the Croatian War for Independence (1991-1995). Launched by the Republic of Croatia in August 1995, it was the largest European land battle since the Second World War. Outnumbered, outgunned, but not outmaneuvered, this tiny new democracy prevailed in a David versus Goliath encounter, a moral as well as military victory. Storm ended a massive humanitarian disaster and genocide. It led to the liberation of one third of Croatian territory, and made possible the Dayton Agreement that brought peace to the region. Based on interviews conducted with the American Ambassador to Croatia during the war years, military and political principals in the battle, noted scholars, security and intelligence agency officials, humanitarian leaders and journalists, this social scientific qualitative study examines the political and historical origins of the war and its aftermath. The article documents the events leading up to the war and surrounding this extraordinary military operation, providing strategic and political insights into the need for cooperation between democratic allies.

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