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Janko Bobetko
Born (1919-01-10)10 January 1919
Died 29 April 2003(2003-04-29) (aged 84)
Place of birth Crnac (part of Sisak), Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
Place of death Zagreb, Croatia
Allegiance Croatian Army
Rank Lieutenant General (YPA)
General of the Army (HV)
Commands held Chief of General Staff HV
Commander of Southern Front HV
Chief of Staff of 5th Army District YPA
Political Commissar of 32nd Division
Political Commissar of Brigade
Battles/wars World War II
Croatian War of Independence
Deblockade of Dubrovnik (Op. Tigar)
Operation Maslenica
Operation Jackal (June Dawns)
Operation Medak Pocket
Operation Flash

Janko Bobetko (10 January 1919 – 29 April 2003) was a Croatian Army general and Chief of the General Staff during the Croatian War of Independence from 1992 until his retirement in 1995. Bobetko had been charged with war crimes by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia but died before he could be tried.[1] He was one of the founding members of 1st Sisak Partisan Detachment, armed anti-fascist military unit in Yugoslavia.

In May 2013, the ICTY, in a first-instance verdict against Jadranko Prlić, found that Bobetko took part in the joint criminal enterprise against the non-Croat population of Bosnia and Herzegovina.[2]

Biography[]

Bobetko was born in the village of Crnac, Sisak in the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes.[3] He studied at the veterinary faculty in the University of Zagreb, but Croatian pro-Nazi authorities expelled him from university at the start of World War II for his anti-fascist views.

Yugoslav army career[]

During the war, the Ustaše killed his father and three brothers,[1][4] and he joined an antifascist unit, the 1st Sisak Partisan Detachment in the Brezovica forest near Sisak. Bobetko fought for the Yugoslav Partisans from 1941 to 1945. He was heavily wounded at Dravograd in Slovenia, but survived to become a Yugoslav People's Army (YPA) officer. In the post-war period, he graduated from the Military Academy of the Yugoslav People's Army and rose to the rank of lieutenant-general. During the 1970s Croatian Spring, he supported a greater autonomy for Croatia in Yugoslavia, and was demoted and expelled from the YPA after Josip Broz Tito's crackdown on Croatian leadership.[5]

Service in independent Croatia[]

After the 1990 Croatian parliamentary elections, Bobetko refused to accept the position of defense minister. His involvement in the Croatian War of Independence began in Banovina and continued on the Southern Front, where he took command on 10 April 1992.

On 20 November 1992, Bobetko was named the Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Republic of Croatia.[6]

In 1993, during Operation Medak pocket against Serb Krajina strongholds that controlled the town of Gospić, the Croatian soldiers were accused of committing crimes against humanity and violating the laws or customs of war.

Bobetko had the status of a fully disabled person, caused both by his leg injury he sustained during World War II, and later by an onset of cardiac decompensation in 1994. Because of this he was hospitalized in 1995 during Operation Flash. The extent of his disability was at one point disputed by the Ministry of Defense, but it was later fully reinstated by a court order.[7]

On 15 July 1995 President Franjo Tuđman formally replaced Bobetko as the Chief of General Staff with Zvonimir Červenko. Later that year, he was elected in the Croatian parliamentary election, 1995 on the electoral list of the Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ).[8]

In 1996, Bobetko wrote a book titled All My Battles, containing many military maps and commands, on which he said, "My face is clean, and that permits me to leave a written mark on anything I did in more than fifty years of my military and political life."

In 2000, Bobetko was the most prominent signatory to the Twelve Generals' Letter.

In September 2002, the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia indicted Bobetko as the supreme commanding officer.[9] Bobetko refused to accept the indictment and refused to surrender to the court, indignantly claiming that such an indictment questions the legitimacy of the whole military operation. The crisis stretched out as popular opinion agreed with Bobetko, and the Croatian Government wouldn't assert an unambiguous position over his extradition. At that time, Bobetko was already gravely ill.

In 2002, the United Kingdom had halted its ratification process for the Stabilisation and Association Agreement of Croatia with the European Union because of the Croatian government's handling of the Bobetko case.

Janko Bobetko died in 2003, aged 84, before any final decision was reached regarding his extradition. The treaty ratification problem was subsequently rectified in 2004.

Honors[]

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Janko Bobetko, 84, Is Dead; Fought to Free Croatians". The New York Times (30 April 2003). Accessed 6 August 2008.
  2. Six Senior Herceg-Bosna Officials Convicted
  3. "Janko Bobetko (Croatian military)". Britannica Online Encyclopedia (2009). Accessed 6 September 2009.
  4. "General Janko Bobetko". The Daily Telegraph (30 April 2003). Accessed 6 September 2009.
  5. "European Union". Encyclopædia Britannica. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/196399/European-Union. Retrieved 1 July 2009. "international organisation comprising 27 European countries and governing common economic, social, and security policies...." 
  6. http://www.vojska.net/eng/biography/b/bobetko/janko/
  7. Robert Bajruši (8 May 2002). "25 hrvatskih generala su prevaranti; Svjesno su prevarili državu kako bi dobili invalidski status i povlastice" (in Croatian). 25 Croatian generals are cheaters; They knowingly deceived the state to receive disability status and benefits. Archived from the original on 1 July 2012. http://www.webcitation.org/68pV4O1wo. Retrieved 1 July 2012. 
  8. http://hidran.hidra.hr/stranke/501int6-zast1995.htm
  9. "Case Information Sheet - "MEDAK POCKET" (IT-02-62) - Janko Bobetko". ICTY. http://www.icty.org/x/cases/bobetko/cis/en/cis_bobetko_en.pdf. Retrieved 19 December 2010. 
  10. http://www.nn.hr/clanci/sluzbeno/1995/0920.htm

External links[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at Janko Bobetko and the edit history here.
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