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Yugoslav Front
Part of World War II

Partisan fighter Stjepan "Stevo" Filipović, shouts "Death to fascism, freedom to the people!" (the Partisan slogan) as he is hanged by the occupation forces
Date1941 – 1945
Location
Result Decisive Partisan victory
Belligerents

Allies

Democratic Federal Yugoslavia Partisans
 Soviet Union
(limited involvement, 1944-45)
Bulgaria Bulgaria
(limited involvement, 1944-45)

Axis

 Germany
 Italy (1941-43)
Albania Albania (1941-44)
 Hungary (1941-44)
 Bulgaria (1941-44)
 Independent State of Croatiaa
Nedić regimea (1941-44)
Kingdom of Montenegroa (1941-44)

Chetniks

Chetniks or Yugoslav Army in the Fatherland, b
1941-43 Allies
1943 lost Allied support
1943-45 collaboration with Axis against Partisans, though involved in rescue of Allied airmen


Commanders and leaders
Democratic Federal Yugoslavia Josip Broz Tito
Democratic Federal Yugoslavia Milovan Đilas
Democratic Federal Yugoslavia Aleksandar Ranković
Democratic Federal Yugoslavia Kosta Nađ
Democratic Federal Yugoslavia Peko Dapčević
Democratic Federal Yugoslavia Koča Popović
Democratic Federal Yugoslavia Petar Drapšin
Democratic Federal Yugoslavia Svetozar Vukmanović Tempo
Democratic Federal Yugoslavia Arso Jovanović
Democratic Federal Yugoslavia Sava Kovačević 
Democratic Federal Yugoslavia Ivan Gošnjak
Nazi Germany Maximilian von Weichs
Nazi Germany Alexander Löhr
Nazi Germany Edmund Glaise von Horstenau
Kingdom of Italy Mario Roatta
Independent State of Croatia Ante Pavelić
Independent State of Croatia Dido Kvaternik
Milan Nedić
Kosta Pećanac
Sekule Drljević
Leon Rupnik
Draža Mihailović
Ilija Trifunović-Birčanin
Dobroslav Jevđević
Strength
Democratic Federal Yugoslavia 800,000 (1945)[1] Kingdom of Italy 321,000[2]
Independent State of Croatia 262,000[3]
Casualties and losses
Democratic Federal Yugoslavia 350,000 killed; 400,000+ wounded[4] Nazi Germany 24,267 killed; 12,060 missing[5]
Total Yugoslav casualties: ~1,200,000

a Axis puppet state established on occupied Yugoslav territory

b Axis 1942 on,[6][7][8][9] lost Allied support in 1943. Founded as a resistance movement.

Contents

Military and political career[edit]

In preparation for a quastorship, Vespasian needed to undertake two periods of service, one military and the other public, in the minor magistracies. Vespasian served in the military in Thrace for about 3 years. On his return to Rome in about 30, he obtained a post in the vigintivirate, the minor magistracies, most probably in one of the posts in charge of street cleaning. This was during the period of the ascendancy of Tiberius' minister Sejanus but there is no record of any significant involvement in events by Vespasian. After completion of a term in the Vigintivirate, Vespasian was entitled to stand for a quastorship; a senatorial office. However, lack of political or family influence meant that as quaestor, Vespasian served in one of the less sought after provincial posts in Crete, rather than as assistant to important men in Rome.

The next important step on the cursus honorum was a praetorship, carrying the Imperium, but non-Patricians and the less well-connected needed to undertake at least one intermediary post as an aedile or tribune. Vespasian failed at his first attempt at an aedileship but was successful in his second attempt, becoming an aedile in 38. Despite his lack of significant family connections or success in office he achieved praetorship in either 39 or 40, at the youngest age permitted (30), during a period of political upheaval in the organisation of elections. One explanation for his success may have been his longstanding relationship with freedwoman Antonia Caenis, confidential secretary to the Emperor's grandmother and part of the circle of courtiers and servants round the Emperor.

Upon the accession of Claudius as emperor in 41, Vespasian was appointed legate of Legio II Augusta, stationed in Germania, thanks to the influence of the Imperial freedman Narcissus.

Invasion of Britannia[edit]

In 43, Vespasian and the II Augusta participated in the Roman invasion of Britain, and he distinguished himself under the overall command of Aulus Plautius. After participating in crucial early battles on the rivers Medway and Thames, he was sent to reduce the south west, penetrating through the modern counties of Hampshire, Wiltshire, Dorset, Somerset, Devon and Cornwall with the probable objectives of securing the south coast ports and harbours along with the tin mines of Cornwall and the silver and lead mines of Somerset.

Vespasian marched from Noviomagus Reginorum (Chichester) to subdue the hostile Durotriges and Dumnonii tribes [10], captured twenty oppida (towns, or more probably hill forts, including Hod Hill and Maiden Castle in Dorset). He also invaded Vectis (the Isle of Wight), finally setting up a fortress and legionary headquarters at Isca Dumnoniorum (Exeter). These successes earned him triumphal regalia (ornamenta triumphalia) on his return to Rome.
















File:Fowler-Caen.jpg


To a Man of Many Parts
A reminder of your earlier work for Christmas Fainites barleyscribs 20:35, 1 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]

File:Kandaurov Anton - Witch.jpg


Merry Chistmas
An unlicensed psychologist preparing to bring about the downfall of Western Civilisation Fainites barleyscribs 12:19, 27 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]


sources[edit]

Dizdar is quoted in "Balkan Holocausts" by McDonald

Google Translation of review of Kljakic book on Slovene Chetniks[edit]

Chetniks "publicist Slobodan Kljakic and retired Major General Mario F. Kranjca, published "Filip Visnjic", represented in the Hall "Drive" of the Belgrade Youth Center. The atmosphere in the hall was reminiscent of those from some previous time, and the best audience reaction showed that topics such as the Chetnik movement in Slovenia is still causing controversy.

Kljakic read a letter from the absent co Kranjca who could not arrive because there is no travel documents, which says that this svedočanastvo, based on the confidential report of Duke and commander of the Chetnik movement in Slovenia Karl Novak and other documents from the archives of emigration, attracted great attention in Slovenia .

The book was published in Slovenia last year under the title "Red Guards" and have already sold two items.

Kranjac hopes the book will have the same readership in Serbia because it is aimed at the general public to learn more about one chapter a joint Serbian-Slovenian history.

Speaking about the book from the perspective of the historian, Dr. Mile Bjelajac from the Institute of Contemporary History referred to the previous book Maria F. Kranjca "Slovenian military intelligence" and "Balkan military training ground" as a "prelude" to an act which clearly shows that the Ravna Gora movement of the Royal Army in the country had its Slovenian subsidiary which operated in the tradition of the Yugoslav idea

He believes that the documents included in the integrated book very dragocna historical material which has so far been known only to a narrow circle of experts, although he does not agree with all the conclusions offered by the authors.

Bjelajac is important for the book shows that the basis of the Ravna Gora movement was not great-jingoism, as communist propaganda claimed, but proceeded from the idea of Yugoslavia, and that crimes against other nations were not done by order of the supreme command, but these were acts of revenge of local commanders.

Veselin Đuretić on the promotion of books analyzing the situation in Serbia and Slovenia to demonstrate that the Chetnik movement evolved in different directions in these two areas.

Beta


Another review;

Before you have heretofore unknown and the Slovenian history extremely valuable confidential report četniškega Duke Charles Novak, the general staff colonel and commander of the Slovenian četnikov. (Editors M.F.K. and S.K.)

The original title of the document is Ravnogorsko movement in Slovenia 1941-1945, but is a term unknown to younger readers. So we opted for a more known name - BLUE GARDA, as Slovenian Chetniks were also frequently named as plavogardisti, and their troops floating Guard. (Editors M. F. K., and S. K.)

The label "floating Guard" is the result of the party terminology collaborationists in Slovenia 1914-1945 by the Comintern personnel brought from the Soviet Union. The term "floating Guard" were among the Liberation War and later discussed the Chetniks, mihailovićevci and ravnogorci. (Edited by M. F. K.)

"In Slovenia, the Mihailović during this period sent his officer, Major Doe, who is in close cooperation with the occupier and kvizlinško White Guard organized the Chetniks under the name" floating Guard. " (The indictment against General Irritating Mihailović, commander of the Yugoslav army in the country, 1946)

Chetnik ravnogorsko movement began as oficirsko movement. In Serbia, this was the beginning of even a "national movement" certainly was not in the next period of the war, when he left numerous traces of fratricidal war and collaboration with the Germans. (Edited by S. K.)

Slovenian commitment has adopted the following commitment: the only legitimate armed force in Yugoslavia, the Yugoslav royal army under the command of General Irritating Mihailović. Neither party can have their special military formations ... Slovenian commitment by all means, moral and material support to the Royal Yugoslav Army. My basic idea was: an active struggle against occupation to the extent practicable and defense against partisans. (Major Karl Novak, in the report)

The first detachment National Resistance, better known as a false "Styrian Battalion", was founded in 17th 5. 1942 in Bizovik and comprise of 17 members. Before leaving them, Major Smith said: "dodge the attack on the Partisans attacked but if you accept the fight. Do not attack the occupying unnecessary to save the people of the victim. With you as a nation and God, "The first combat action, the detachment conducted 25th May 1942 Kompolje around when he refused to attack the Dolenjska partisan detachments. This date should also be considered as the beginning of the Civil War in the Province. Of course they are not attacked by the occupier. Soon renamed the Legion of death and the decision of Slovenian commitments became involved with the Italians in the fight against partisans. (Edited by M. F. K.)

"The Italian General Gambari in August 1943 I was told that the Italians tolerate blue Guard that is under their control to be served. Continental Guard is only a small detachment of General Mihailović četniški. Guard Commander Major blue Novak subsequently collaborated with the Germans, and his successor Colonel Prezlja few times I met with General Rösenerju. "(Divisional General Leon Rupnik - The Lion, the chief inspector Slovenian Home Guard, a statement in court, 1946)

I believe that Slovenia ideological collaboration from both sides did not start with the April 1941 war, but has a prehistory that we can find in the archives of the Communist International, the British SOE, the Vatican and other factors. Was dominated by the struggle between communism and protikomunizmom. (Edited by M. F. K.)

Germans in the autumn of 1944 closed a number of British agents in Slovenia and Italy. Allied colleagues in Italy, among them painter Zoran Music, Hrvoje Maister, son of General Maister, ing. Ivo Gregorc, MD. Ivo Bole and others who have been discharged to the Dachau and Buchenwald, you still have to earn rehabilitation and recognition, as we did with tigrovci and "English" paratroopers. (Edited by M. F. K.)

Historians are obliged to finally write a true history of the operation JVvD and partisans. It is necessary to introduce regular JVvD as Allied troops, partisans as a paramilitary Comintern. (Captain Šušterič Uros, a member of the Bureau Ravnogorskega movement Cica charm and coordinator for Slovenia)

Kolaboranti occupier can not be the liberators of the Slovenian nation! (Edited by M. F. K.)

Schore[edit]

Secondary source re Schore/neurological base for AT etc

  • Tenet 11: Separation, loss, and other undesirable social experiences, such as a succession of caregivers in early life, may produce pathological outcomes, for example delinquency or emotional disturbance.

Historical criticism. Rejection of this tenet began before attachment theory’s final formulation by Bowlby, and occurred in response to his 1951 report about the consequences of maternal deprivation. Wootton (1962) commented with concern on the fact that “[i]nstitutionalized children are not a random sample of the population of their age” (p. 259). In addition, she pointed out that some individuals have poor early attachment experiences but no serious later pathology, and others develop delinquent or disturbed behavior despite what appears to be good experiences with caregivers in early life.

Recent criticism. Current thinking about attachment theory appears to stress this tenet, with particular interest in pathological outcomes from poor early experiences. Several categories of non-secure attachment have been created, and extensive work has investigated their predictive value for later pathology (see Fonagy et al., 2002 ). This type of work has generally concluded that less-than-ideal early attachment status is correlated with later emotional problems. However, the extent to which the relationship is causal is obviously unclear, as the social setting that helped produce a poor attachment status may continue to work to encourage delinquency or mental illness.

Related evidence. Current work on issues like resilience (Kaufman, 2008) and temperament (Laible, Panfile, & Makariev, 2008) shows the potential impact of individual differences on attachment-related outcomes; the work of Rutter (2002), noted earlier, has stressed the interaction of multiple risk factors in the creation of pathology. The study of pathological outcomes has a particular importance for the testing of attachment theory. In most aspects of attachment research, ethical and practical considerations make it impossible to test the effects of independent variables by the use of randomized controlled trials. Thus comparisons between groups who have had different early experiences are always affected by possible confounded variables, and the causes of outcomes are not clear. However, interventions can and should be tested with randomized designs, and the results of such studies may provide confirmation or disconfirmation of aspects of attachment theory.

An alternative view of Tenet 11. A revised view of this tenet has been presented in the form of a “modern attachment theory” (A.N. Schore, 2000; J.R. Schore & A.N. Schore, 2008). A.N. Schore referred to this proposed update as “regulation theory.” He has focused on the development of “a pragmatic framework for models of both psychopathogenesis and the change process in psychotherapy” (J.R. Schore & A.N. Schore, 2008, p. 10). The proposed framework suggests that “attachment communications are critical to the development of structural right brain neurobiological systems involved in processing of emotion, modulation of stress, self-regulation, and therefore the functional origins of the bodily-based implicit self” (p. 10).

Schore’s regulation theory has two major components: (a) the tenet that attachment and its regulatory functions are based on, and also shape, important aspects of the right hemisphere of the brain; and (b) the tenet that early caregiver–child interactions such as mutual gaze episodes create the experience of shared affect and thus dyadic regulation of emotion. Schore has proposed that the regulatory processes of affect synchrony that create states of positive arousal and … modulate states of negative arousal are the fundamental building blocks of attachment and its associated emotions, and resilience in the face of stress and novelty is an ultimate indicator of attachment security. (J.R. Schore & A.N. Schore, 2008, p. 11)

Neuroscientific claims. The “Decade of the Brain” has brought into high fashion the use of neurological explanations for psychological phenomena. The fact that these are sometimes inadequately supported by evidence has been reflected in such statements as the Santiago Declaration (Santiago Declaration, 2007), which includes the opinions of noted early interventionists and argues that our present knowledge of neurological development is not adequate support for claims of causal connections between brain mechanisms and emotional or cognitive events. Certainly, evidence from direct measurement of developmental change in young human brains is sparse, even in the era of imaging techniques. As Zeanah and Smyke (2008) have specifically pointed out, “Little … is understood about the neural substrate underlying attachment processes” (p. 230).

Earlier in this paper, I argued against generalization of data about attachment from one species to another. What about information from pathology? Can this be generalized to support a view of normal early development? In this case, a positive answer would depend on the extent to which early development and later pathological events actually resemble each other. This resemblance determines whether the analogy is a true or a false one. With respect to these issues, A.N. Schore’s speculation about right-brain functioning is on shaky evidentiary ground. Passing over the well-known fact of the holistic functioning of an intact brain, we can note that a careful parsing of Schore’s sources (J.R. Schore & A.N. Schore, 2008) suggests a lack of due attention to some important points. In addition to a number of references to Schore’s own publications as evidence for specialized attachment-related right-hemisphere functioning, Schore and Schore cited about 10 sources as indicating empirical evidence for the postulated connection. Of these, two (Ovtscharoff & Braun, 2001; Sullivan & Gratton, 2002) involved work on rodents, which was presented as supportive evidence without any textual reference to the use of data from non-humans. One paper (Prodan, Orbelo, Testa, & Ross, 2001) described hemispheric differences in processing upper and lower parts of a facial display, and concluded that lower facial displays are preferentially processed by the left hemisphere and upper facial displays by the right hemisphere; Schore and Schore mentioned only the right-hemisphere data. A fourth paper (Le Grand, Mondloch, Maurer, & Brent, 2003) discussed facial processing deficits in persons for whom a cataract in early infancy had prevented stimulation of the right visual cortex; Schore and Schore cited this paper as evidence for the right-brain hypothesis without noting that the teratogenic or genetic event that triggered the cataract might also have caused atypical brain development, thus confounding environmental and biological factors.

Much of the evidence Schore has presented in support of his view of the role of the right brain in attachment can thus be regarded as only weakly relevant. However, such a conclusion does not amount to rejection of the entire “modern attachment theory,” as the remainder of the theory can operate independently of a specific brain mechanism.

Regulation theory. Schore’s “modern attachment theory” focuses on important events of the first months of life, especially experiences based on the caregiver’s abilities to regulate the infant’s state of arousal. Feeding, comforting, and engagement or disengagement from play are all potential means of regulation, but they function appropriately only if the caregiver correctly reads the infant’s cues, or repairs communicative errors effectively. Schore (J.R. Schore & A.N. Schore, 2008) proposed that the dyadic communication and regulation shown by infant and mother are paralleled by those of the patient–therapist dyad, and that the attitudes developed during early dyadic experiences are part of the self and re-emerge in therapy. In Schore’s view, “the attachment between therapist and client is established over time, allowing for the expression of experiences that resonate with the original infant–mother intersubjective history of the first two years” (J.R. Schore & A.N. Schore, 2008, p. 16). Schore’s discussion of dyadic and self-regulation as the essential aspect of attachment is well grounded in research on early infant–mother interactions among humans and thus fills a gap in Bowlby’s attachment theory, which does little to describe the events that precede the emergence of clear-cut attachment behavior relatively late in the first year. Schore’s theory can be used to explain safe haven and secure base behaviors as efforts to maintain emotional regulation in the face of experienced threats or of a conflict between exploratory and security motivation. However, Schore’s regulation theory does little to explain important points of development that are both easily observable and discussed by Bowlby. For example, how does regulation theory deal with the rather abrupt re-organization of responses to strangers normally seen toward the end of the first year? Schore has referred to the development of relational systems as experience-dependent (J.R. Schore & A.N. Schore, 2008), but abrupt re-organizations would be more probable in experience-expectant plasticity (Greenough, Black, & Wallace, 1987); indeed, Cicchetti (1991) referred to the idea that “certain types of ‘experience expectant’ inputs by caregivers are critical … for the full maturation of neuroregulatory systems” (p. 273). How does regulation theory deal with developmental changes that form an important part of attachment theory, such as preschoolers’ negotiation of separation and older children’s goal-corrected partnerships with others? These steps between early infancy and adult attachment status appear to be neglected by regulation theory.


Chunk from old talkpage purporting to be Karchmar. Don't know if accurate or not[edit]

Karchmar, Lucien, Draža Mihailović and the Rise of the Četnik Movement, 1941-1942, Garland Publishing, New York, 1987 [1973].(Pages 395-398)

Perhinek did not depart Ravna Gora immediately, and a few days later, with the outbreak of the civil war in Serbia, he was cut off from Montenegro by a belt of hostile Partisan territory. He finally got away at the beginning of December, avoiding the advancing Germans, and on December 18 reached Mount Golija near the borders of the Sandjak.

Meanwhile, Djurišić became impatient at the lack of news from Serbia. The situation in Montenegro had deteriorated, and contact with Mihailović was now far more urgent: his official status, daily proclaimed on the London radio, made him the natural leader of all nationalists, enabling him to issue the directives which would unite them and tell them what to do. In early December, Djurišić gathered a large escort and made his way to the Sandjak, reaching Golija on December 20. Around this journey, the Montenegrins later built a legend which today has become enshrined in Četnik hagiography, and, for different reasons, in Partisan historiography. On his return, Djurišić claimed to have visited Mihailović at his headquarters. This version later acquired virtually the strength of dogma: Djurišić receiving from Mihailović’s own hands anointment as the Četnik prophet of Montenegro. But in reality Djurišić never reached Mihailović. The country north of Golija was saturated with German troops, Ravna Gora had been overrun by the enemy, and it was uncertain whether Mihailović was still alive. However, Djurišić was now intercepted by Perhinek, who handed over the brief authorizations, and also the news of the real situation in Serbia; the insurrection defeated, the Četniks scattered, and Mihailović a fugitive in the hills, and possibly dead. It was not quite the cheering tidings which Djurišić had hoped to bring back to the Vasojevići.

The reconstruction of Djurišić’s next move is partially conjectural, but all indications point to its validity. It would appear that Djurišić, a resourceful and enterprising man, now sat down and wrote himself a lengthy directive, the famous, or infamous, Order #370, to which he boldly signed Mihailović’s name. This forgery, whose putative authorship is generally accepted by Četnik authors just as firmly as Djurišić’s story of having received it from Mihailović’s own hand, was later to become one of the prime pieces of Partisan propaganda against Mihailović. But in the meantime, Djurišić, who seems to have already decided that he was the man to smash the Communists and save Montenegro, had a detailed and well-defined political platform on which to unite the nationalists. The document, besides repeating the appointments of Djurišić and Lašić to the posts foreseen by the original authorizations, proclaimed loyalty to the dynasty, a struggle against the Partisans, and war to the hilt against the Moslems, who were to be eliminated altogether from Jugoslavia; other than that, its expressed ideas came basically from Great Serbian ideology. To complete the job, Djurišić wrote two more authorizations: one to allow Lašić and himself to order the mobilization of all officers and other ex-Jugoslav military personnel under pain of death for failure to obey, and the other to permit the requisition of supplies under receipt. Endnotes (Pages 427-430)

Testing, testing, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, .........[edit]

Serbia under German occupation was the territory covering most of present-day Central Serbia, the northern part of Kosovo (around Kosovska Mitrovica), and the Banat region,[11] in which Nazi Germany installed a puppet state during the occupation of Yugoslavia in World War II. The entity lasted from 1941 to 1944. The Serbian civil administration during that period included two puppet governments: the short lived Commissary Government (Serbian: Комесарска влада, Komesarska vlada) of Milan Aćimović and the Government of National Salvation (Влада Националног Спаса, Vlada Nacionalnog Spasa) of Milan Nedić, from August 1941 to 1944. Because the latter lasted for most of the period of occupation, the puppet state became known as Nedić's Serbia,[7] and its second government as the Nedić regime.[12] The entity

The Serbian civil administration claimed that Nedić's Serbia was an independent state though it was de facto subordinated to a German military administration known as the Military Administration in Serbia (German: Militärverwaltung in Serbien; Serbian: Vojna uprava u Srbiji or Војна управа у Србији), established in 1941, after several months of occupation.[13][6][14] Serbian collaborationist forces supported by the Serbian government were the ZBOR party, the Serbian Volunteer Corps led by Dimitrije Ljotić and the rogue Chetnik faction of Kosta Pećanac.

It is estimated that approximately 80,000 people were killed from 1941 to 1944 in concentration camps in Nedić's Serbia.[15] Serbia was proclaimed one of the Judenfrei (free of Jews) countries in Europe.[16][17][18][19][20]

Involved[edit]

Details of activity on Balkans pages since January 2011 in chronological order. The purpose of this was a brief outline of my activities on Balkans pages since January 2011, also showing where possible how I arrived at a particular article. In view of DIREKTORs allegations I have also indicated where he is not a participant. He is one of the participating editors unless the entry says otherwise. Other frequent participants were FkpCascais (until recently), PANONIAN, PRODUCER and WustenFuchs. Once I had edited an article or talkpage it remained on my watchlist. Once it was on my watchlist I checked out any posts. Some of the disputes repeatedly returned, such as the Yugoslav Front naming/infobox disputes, the Serbia under German occupation naming disputes. Some issues like the issue of collaboration by Chetniks/Mihailovic spread from one page to another, including editors talkpages, and never really die down. Some pages I was asked to intervene on. Some disputes I found myself by looking around or by noticing a reference to it on a talkpage, as the same groups of editors tended to pursue the same or similar arguments from article to article and on each others talkpages. Once I realised Infoboxes were flashpoints for nationalist warring I checked them all out. Quite often, if I stopped an edit war or helped resolve an issue on one page the same group would go and edit war and argue on another page.

Talk:Yugoslav Front

  • Subjects: belligerents in infobox (Chetniks etc, Axis or Allies?), name of article, lead issues, including language (Serbia/Croatian/Serbo-Croat)
  • Arrival: from an ANI complaint by an editor(DIREKTOR) here. Second ANI complaint shortly afterwards here. DIREKTOR asked me to protect the page on 10th January and again here. DIREKTOR then invited me to read up on the Chetniks and help out as an independent here. Asked my views again in April. FkpCascais subsequently asked me to intervene.
  • Specific admin actions: blocked User talk:Слободни умјетник twice for edit-warring. Reverted two of FkpCascais’s edits pending resolution of issue on talk, to stop ongoing revert warring (FkpCascais reported me to ANI as an abusive admin for blocking Слободни умјетник [Слободни умјетник here]). Protected page a week later to stop more edit warring.
  • Non-specific actions: getting people to discuss and not edit war, refining issues for discussion, suggesting solutions to long-running issues (eg 3 columns in the infobox), translations of title etc.


Talk:Croat-Bosniak war#Belligerents - Croatian Defence Forces?

  • Arrival: PRODUCER asked me on my talkpage to help because an IP was refusing to accept the validity of a source.
  • Subjects: whether the HOS took part in this conflict
  • Specific admin actions: none
  • Non-specific actions: mediating discussion on sources and providing detailed information from another mainstream source on the issue.
  • NB: No involvement by DIREKTOR.


Talk:Josip Broz Tito

  • Arrival: Potential revert war involving two IP’s, Nuujinn, PRODUCER and DIREKTOR
  • Subject: dispute on Tito over insertion of content.
  • Specific admin actions: protected page for 24 hours.
  • Non-specific actions: pushing for sources from User: Свифт and suggesting a mainstream source on the issue. DIREKTOR asked for details and we had a discussion.


Flag of Serbia + Kingdom of Serbia

  • Arrival: longish edit war on Flag.
  • Subject: which is the real flag?
  • Specific admin actions: protected Flag of Serbia. Subsequently saw and took part in ANI report re Kingdom of Serbia (flags) and blocked an IP who was probably the same one.
  • Non-specific actions: here the editor dealing with all the IP revert warring stuff on flags thanked me.
  • NB: no involvement by DIREKTOR


Chetniks

  • Arrival: asked by DIREKTOR to intervene here. More conversation re the subject here. Commented here onwards. Huge ongoing argument about sources. Carried on here. Invited to take part again in April by DIREKTOR.
  • Subject: mainly sourcing issues – reliability, revisionism, misrepresentation
  • Specific admin actions: Protected page twice – once recently, due to edit warring. Variously warned and blocked User talk:John Gradwell.
  • Non-specific actions: trying to get editors who had added new material and links to justify/evidence their sources. Also said I was willing to help work through all the sources used on the page to establish their compliance with policies. Reverted an editor who deliberately misquoted a source etc. Posted a source on the reliability of a source. Recently on the talkpage, “exploded” passages removed as cited to a particular disputed source to show editors what was cited to what and enable sensible discussion.


Serbia under German occupation

  • Arrival: huge ongoing naming dispute, February. Posted a source on 14th Feb, then was asked to intervene again a week later by PANONIAN. Recently asked to intervene on maps by DIREKTOR.
  • Subject: recurring article name dispute. Came back again July 2011
  • Specific admin actions: protected page from edit-warring in July.
  • Non-specific actions: Mainly discussions on alternative proposals, trying to refine ambit of dispute, reproving editors who insulted each other, sourcing, sourcing policies, provision of sources, mediating discussions on various names etc.


Ustase

  • Arrival: raised on my talkpage by FkpCascais.
  • Subject: dispute re identityof country in which ustasha regime was created.
  • Specific admin actions: none
  • Non-specific actions: opinion on what sources said, plus behaviour.


Aloysius Stepinac

  • Arrival:slow but ongoing revert wars
  • Subject: POV/sourcing type dispute
  • Specific admin actions: none
  • Non specific-actions: suggesting a mainstream source on post-war political issues. Offering to help disputing editors go through the disputed sources one at a time. Removing IP trolling.


Ante Pavelić

  • Arrival: copy-editing to help out GA nom. Then edit war started - so protected page.
  • Subject: infobox
  • Specific admin actions: page protection for 3 days.
  • Non-specific actions: later - advising newbie on sources etc


Croats

  • Arrival: edit war. Asked to intervene recently by Timbouctou.
  • Subject: infobox (pictures of notable Croats)
  • Specific admin actions: page protection, blocked Direktor and Timbouctou for 8 reverts each under ARBMAC
  • Non-specific actions: mediating discussions on infobox at "Infobox part II" and "Infobox take III" until consensus reached. Subsequently reverted to a pre-edit-war position on a different dispute until consensus reached. Asking for sources.
  • NB: DIREKTOR not involved in dispute when I arrived but subsequently suggested a compromise. Became involved in subsequent ongoing dispute. He then made an ANI complaint about Timbouctou. This was at about the same time (early April) that I had decided to topic ban DIREKTOR for WP:OWN and WP:DISRUPT. Not involved in most recent dispute.


Fausto Veranzio

  • Arrival: cleaning up results of naming dispute
  • Subject: spelling of name - Italian or Croatian
  • Specific admin actions: none
  • Non-specific actions: removing duplicated sentence from article left by edit war + talkpage comments.

NB: no involvement by DIREKTOR though he came and commented on my talkpage afterwards.


Serbs of Croatia

  • Arrival: notified on talkpage by Timbouctou.
  • Subject: infobox contents (people) which turned into usual dispute re Chetniks/collaboration etc., plus recurring theme of whether to put alleged genocidal fascists into infoboxes.
  • Specific admin actions:
  • Non-specific actions: replacing pre-edit war version of pictures until consensus reached. Mediating dispute at Infobox images, Infobox part II and Infobox III.


Momčilo Đujić

  • Arrival: edit war. Asked to keep an eye on it by PRODUCER.
  • Subject: category + chetnik collaboration issues
  • Specific admin actions: none
  • Non-specific actions: intervention on talkpage to stop edit war
  • NB: DIREKTOR not involved at that point. Arrived later.


Foibe killings

  • Arrival: alerted by DIREKTOR to sock
  • Subject: how many killed and who by
  • Specific admin actions: blocked Ragusino sock.
  • Non-specific actions: reverting sock edit. Correcting info from a source.


National Memorial Day of the Exiles and Foibe

  • Arrival: same subject as above
  • Subject: as above
  • Specific admin actions: Ragusino sock blocked by LessHeardVanU
  • Non-specific actions: cleaning up


Operation Storm ‎

  • Arrival: alerted by Timbouctou to possible problems following Hague judgment
  • Subject: judgment on Bosnian war case
  • Specific admin actions: warned IP
  • Non-specific actions: reverting inappropriate edits, stopping edit war, cleaning up re what sources say.
  • NB: no involvement by DIREKTOR


Petar II Petrović-Njegoš

  • Arrival: ethnicity/nationality dispute
  • Subject: FAQs box
  • Specific admin actions: none
  • Non-specific actions: suggested compromise solution.
  • NB: no involvement by DIREKTOR


Ante Gotovina ‎

  • Arrival: alerted by Timbouctou to possible problems following Hague judgment
  • Subject: Hague judgment
  • Specific admin actions:
  • Non-specific actions: reverted various IP inappropriate edits. Discussed quality os sources on talkpage.
  • NB: no involvement by DIREKTOR


Yugoslavs

  • Arrival: undiscussed removal of person from infobox
  • Subject: ethnic/national issues
  • Specific admin actions: see below re Hammer of Hapsburg
  • Non-specific actions: reverted removal
  • NB: no involvement by DIREKTOR


Croatia

  • Arrival:checking Hammer of Hapsburg
  • Subject: nationalist language issues
  • Specific admin actions: warned Hammer
  • Non-specific actions: revert
  • NB: no involvement by DIREKTOR


Serbs of Bosnia and Herzegovina

  • Arrival: infobox disputes. Asked to take a look by PRODUCER re Emir Kusturica
  • Subject: putting alleged genocidal fascists in infoboxes. ethnicity -v- nationality of Ivo Andric
  • Specific admin actions: none
  • Non-specific actions: attempting to mediate a discussion on the talkpage


Syrmian Front

  • Arrival: unsourced material
  • Subject: ethnic issues
  • Specific admin actions: none
  • Non-specific actions: reverted unsourced materal and requested sources
  • NB: no involvement by DIREKTOR. He arrived on my talkpage to discuss it afterwards.


Josif Runjanin

  • Arrival: move war
  • Subject: Serbian or Croatian spelling of name
  • Specific admin actions: move protected
  • Non-specific actions: tried to mediate a discussion on talkpage
  • NB: no involvement by DIREKTOR


Emir Kusturica

  • Arrival: asked to take a look by PRODUCER
  • Subject: ethnicity -v- nationality
  • Specific admin actions: none
  • Non-specific actions: restarted and tried to mediate a discussion on talkpage
  • NB: no involvement by DIREKTOR


Serbophobia ‎

  • Arrival: offensive nationalist edits.
  • Subject:
  • Specific admin actions: reverted and warned IP
  • Non-specific actions:
  • NB: no involvement by DIREKTOR


Bosnian war

  • Arrival: offensive nationaist edits
  • Subject:
  • Specific admin actions: warned IP
  • Non-specific actions: reverted edits
  • NB: no involvment by DIREKTOR

Ivo Andrić

  • Arrival: ethnicity/nationality dispute already arisen re infoboxes - edit war.
  • Subject: whether Serb, Croat or Bosnian - or all 3. (Or Yugoslavian)
  • Specific admin actions:protected page
  • Non-specific actions: Started and attempted to mediate talkpage discussion.
  • NB: no involvement by DIREKTOR


Draža Mihailović

  • Arrival: after mediation moved back to mainspace although I was given a link to it by Nujinn right back not long after I first started on the Balkan articles. This article has been under mediation since before I arrived on the Balkans pages and virtually no editing took place on it for that reason. (I reverted the odd bit of inappropriate editing). I offered to release DIREKTOR from his 1 month topic ban to continue to take part in the mediation. When the article and talk was moved to mainspace I took part with the intention of assisting in the mediation of the discussion. DIREKTOR invited me to look at it here on 31st May on my talkpage.
  • Subject: redrafted article - partly done in mediation - work continuing in mainspace.
  • Specific admin actions: none.
  • Non-specific actions: reminding/challenging editors (mostly but not always DIREKTOR) about rules of discussion and provision of sources. Sources, sourcing policy, provision and validation of sources.
  1. ^ Perica, Vjekoslav (2004). Balkan Idols: Religion and Nationalism in Yugoslav States. Oxford University Press. p. 96. ISBN 0195174291.
  2. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 255.
  3. ^ Vucinich, Wayne S. (1974). "Yugoslav Resistance in the Second World War: The Continued Debate". Reviews in European History. 1 (2): 274. In September 1943, the total strength of the armed forces of the Independent State of Croatia (regular army and Ustashe militia) was about 262,000 officers and men. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  4. ^ Tomasevich 1969, p. 120.
  5. ^ Feldgrau.com
  6. ^ a b Tomasevich, Jozo; War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941-1945: The Chetniks, Volume 1; Stanford University Press, 1975 ISBN 978-0-8047-0857-9 [1] Cite error: The named reference "autogenerated2" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  7. ^ a b Cohen, Philip J., Riesman, David; Serbia's secret war: propaganda and the deceit of history; Texas A&M University Press, 1996 ISBN 0-89096-760-1 [2] Cite error: The named reference "autogenerated3" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  8. ^ Ramet, Sabrina P.; The three Yugoslavias: state-building and legitimation, 1918-2005; Indiana University Press, 2006 ISBN 0-253-34656-8 [3]
  9. ^ Tomasevich, Jozo; War and revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941-1945: occupation and collaboration, Volume 2; Stanford University Press, 2001 ISBN 0-80473-615-4 [4]
  10. ^ A History of Britain, Richard Dargie (2007), p. 20
  11. ^ Wolff, Robert Lee, (1956). Balkans in Our Time Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA: Harvard University Press. P. 204.
  12. ^ Google Books search on "Nedić regime"
  13. ^ Wolff, Robert Lee, (1956). Balkans in Our Time Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA: Harvard University Press. p. 203-4.
  14. ^ http://beamte.freepage.de/cgi-bin/feets/freepage_ext/339483x434877d/rewrite/michaelaust/Texte/Zeitungsausschnitte/Serbien.htm
  15. ^ Cite error: The named reference Nedic was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  16. ^ Tasovac, Ivo (1999). American foreign policy and Yugoslavia, 1939-1941. Texas A&M University Press. p. 161. ISBN 0890968977, 9780890968970. Retrieved 28 February 2011. {{cite book}}: Check |isbn= value: invalid character (help)
  17. ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=Fz1PW_wnHYMC&pg=PA83&dq=belgrade+judenfrei+first&client=firefox-a
  18. ^ Final Solution (New York, 1985), p. 77; Walter Manoschek, "Serbien ist judenfrei".
  19. ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=U765FGDfbPoC&pg=PA93&dq=serbia+judenfrei&client=firefox-a#PPA93,M1
  20. ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=tnoARDLDYNAC&pg=PA86&dq=serbia+judenfrei&client=firefox-a