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14 commenti

  1. SpaceEngineering on

    If you thoroughly want to ruin your week I highly recommend this. Lesson learned regarding Ukraine is very clear: if we offer any security guarantees, the rules of engagement have to be very clear and well communicated, the threat must be credible, and the European backing sincere and strong. Otherwise we will do more harm than good.

  2. Sylocule on

    I had a Canadian friend who was with the UN forces when they finally entered to enforce peace. He never recovered

  3. just_a_red on

    Know many Dutch friends who don’t want to speak about srebrenice. For people of certain age. Its a shame they would rather bury

  4. Significant_Agency71 on

    I’ve listened to a podcast on the topic and it traumatised me. These people should never be forgotten.

  5. kraeutrpolizei on

    I couldn’t finish Bloodlands by Timothy Snyder because it was just so horrific

  6. No_Maize1588 on

    First read what lead to srebrenica and how muslim terrorist used srebrenica (which was no war zone at that time) as their base to go around small serbian vilages and slauther people. It is a shame what happened in srebrenica, but it was also shame what happened before that

  7. StrangerExistingFact on

    **Nineteen Minutes of Horror: Insights from the Scorpions Execution Video** by Iva Vukušić,
    (Utrecht University, part of Genocide Studies and Prevention: An International Journal)

    #Google that

  8. Consistent_Catch9917 on

    I had a coworker who was active in the rememberence community. She was one of the survivors, a little girl back when it happened. Lost several of her relatives.

  9. miraiwanai on

    The genocide of those Bosniak Muslims is often downplayed, and shockingly, many people don’t even know it happened. The Yugoslav conflicts and the wars in the Caucasus with Russia were some of the cruelest events to unfold in Europe after World War II, leaving scars that still linger today.
     

  10. rlaw1234qq on

    I had a colleague who volunteered to take part in the operation to identify the people who had been massacred. He basically x-rayed exhumed corpses for weeks on end. He was a very different person when he returned.

  11. The BBC Documentary “The Death of Yugoslavia” is also a very, very good one. Highly recommended.

  12. NotOK1955 on

    I gotta read this.

    December 1995, U.S. troops were sent to Bosnia to help protect Bosnians following the discovery of the Srebrencia massacre. National Guard units from my state also sent in troops and I (working at a local TV station) convinced my news director to send me and a fellow journalist to cover that angle.

    We left the states in January 1996 and stayed in Tuzla, Bosnia for a few days. One of the trips was to see where the mass graves were, but at that time, when we arrived, we were told the bodies had been exhumed.

    We still got a solid report about our Guard units as well as a report on a Tuzla bombing from summer 1995, by the Serbs that killed some 160 innocent men, women and children in the town square…which we linked to a similar tragedy in our state that same year (the Oklahoma City bombing).

    Note:

    July 2025: Even 30 years later, victims’ remains are still being identified and buried, highlighting the ongoing process of uncovering and honoring the dead.

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