Ma da u pravu si.Mi smo napravili genocid u bijeljini,zvorniku,rogatici,visegradu,srebrenici,prijedoru,trebinju,nevesinju,gacku,foci,han pijesku i da ne nabrajam vise.Cim su se hrvati malo naoruzali protjerali su vas i sravnali vas sa zemljom vojno.Lako vam je bilo koristiti oruzje JNA koje je pripadalo svim narodima SFRJ.Bosnjaci su imali svo vrijemme rata embargo na uvoz oruzja,Ne znam ni ja kako smo se branili.ALi opet smo pred sam Dejeton dosli isppred Banja luke pa je WARREN CHRISTOFER naredio da se sve obustavi.A tudjman prestao da daje artiljersiku podrsku jer je vec imao oslobodjenu Hrvatsku i nisu mu bile potrebne dalje zrtve.Ono sto ste vi radili na prostorima bivse SFRJ se ne pamti ni za vrijeme 2 svjetskog rata.Pa i u drugom svjetskom ratu bi se cula sirena kada kada bi avioni nadletili neki prostor i kada bi trebalo
da bude bombardovanje.U drugom svjetskom ratu su ginuli vise vojnici a manje civili.Ako cemo gledati broj ubjenih civila u proteklome ratu tu ste u ogromnoj prednosti.Tu ste se pokazali kao jaki.Akada se govori o poginulim vojnicima mislim da ste tu na gubitku velikom.To sve govori.Jedan engleski oficir poslije drugog svjetskog rata navodi da nikada u istoriji covjecanstva nije zabiljezeno da se neka vojska borila tako prljavo i kukavicki kako sto su to bili cetnici.A jos gori su bili u ratu u BIH.
Eve sa sluzbenog sajta pa si prevedite sta Englezi pisu:
Any doubts as to whether genocide was perpetrated in Former Yugoslavia have
now been laid to rest. Charges have been brought in The Hague against
senior figures such as Slobodan Milosevic, Radovan Karadzic and Ratko
Mladic. Even so the Western powers have made no serious attempt to arrest
the Bosnian Serb leaders responsible, who from the start were acting under
Milosevic's directions. The distribution of "wanted" notices in English for
the three central figures by th US authorities at the beginning of March
2000 has done nothing to change this.
A brief general review of the systematic genocide perpetrated in Bosnia,
aspects of which are documented by this report, may be helpful. Between
1992 and 1995 various European institutions and spokespersons for European
governments sought to deny the fact of genocide by referring to "the crimes
of all three belligerent parties" and using the term "civil war". This
allowed all reference to the onslaught unleashed by Belgrade to be avoided.
Meanwhile reliable inquiries have been published which have found that the
Milosevic government did in fact conduct an organised war of aggression
against the Republic of Bosnia-Herzegovina between 1992 and 1995. The
Serbian troops operating in Bosnia were under the command of the Army
General Staff. Between April 1993 and March 1994 Croatian troops also took
part in the destruction of Bosnia-Herzegovina.
In the spring, summer and autumn of 1992 the Yugoslav People's Army
conducted a military campaign directed against mostly unarmed towns and
villages in Eastern, Northern and Western Bosnia. The campaign was
co-ordinated with paramilitary units from Serbia. Local Serb nationalists
were armed and deployed against the non-Serb population as well. The
compliance of the local and regional media was secured beforehand and local
government was purged of non-Serb employees. Defenceless villages and urban
areas were often bombarded by artillery. Muslims, Croats and other
non-Serbs were separated out according to different criteria. Male
civilians between 16 and 60 years of age were taken to internment and
concentration camps; some wer being killed on the spot and others en route
to the camps. Tens of thousands were killed, members of the elite in
particular. Another aspect of the strategy of "ethnic cleansing" was the
systematic use of rape, against Bosniak women in particular. According to
the estimates of the UN Commission of Experts under the leadership of
Prof.Cherif Bassiouni, there were at least 20,000 women victims. Rape camps
existed in different parts of the area under Serbian occupation, some in
operation for periods lasting several months.
The remaining children, women and elderly people were taken to Croatia
or Central Bosnia in railway goods wagons or convoys of buses and lorries.
Time and again during these enforced population movements or as
concentration camp survivors were being transported to other parts of Bosnia
individual massacres were committed. Before being forced to leave the
victims were compelled to sign over their property to the Serbian
authorities. The inhabitants of besieged towns from Bihac to Gora`de who
fought successfully against expulsion, some for as long as four years, were
subjected to bombardment by tanks and artillery for years on end, even
though their towns had been designated safe havens under UN protection. The
death roll of victims of the four-year-long bombardment of Sarajevo contains
approximately 11,000 names.
Throughout Serb-occupied areas the physical evidence of the culture of
the Muslims in particular, and Catholics as well, was destroyed. 1183
mosques alone were razed to the ground. The Serbian genocide in Bosnia
reached its finale in July 1995 with the mass execution by firing squads of
Serbian special forces under the command of General Ratko Mladic of
approximately 8,000 men and youths from the town of Srebenica. The fall of
the town and the selection and killing of over 10,000 of the town's
inhabitants were the consequence of monstrous inaction on the part of Dutch
UN troops and Western governments' collusion with Milosevic.
The United Nations Special Rapporteur Tadeusz Mazowiecki started from
the basic assumption that Serbian troops had committed 80% of all war crimes
in Bosnia-Herzegovina. In a secret report obtained and published by the New
York Times the CIA maintained that the Serbian side had committed 90% of the
killings. There are no reliable statistics for the number of civilian
victims but the international media have generally tended to quote a figure
of 200,000.
That Croatia, after Slovenia the second victim of the Serbian
aggression, should have transformed itself into the aggressor against Bosnia
is something many of Croatia's friends have never been willing to
acknowledge. Serbian troops invaded large areas of Croatia, occupying one
third of the country, and north of Lipik , at the Maslenica Bridge and at
Karlovac threatened to divide up the unoccupied remnant of the country into
four parts. Considerably more than 10,000 Croats and members of other
smaller Croatian nationalities were killed. The beautiful Baroque town of
Vukovar was completely destroyed. Murdered residents were buried in mass
graves encircling the town. For months on end Dubrovnik was besieged and
shelled. Hundreds of villages were destroyed and throughout the occupied
areas Catholic churches were set on fire and cemeteries desecrated.