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Commander, Army of Republika Srpska
"We give this town to the Serbian people as a gift. The time has come to take revenge on the Turks."
Ratko Mladić was the most feared military commander of the Yugoslav Wars — a brutal and effective general who directed the siege of Sarajevo for nearly four years and personally oversaw the Srebrenica genocide. Born in a Bosnian village where his father was killed by Croatian Ustasha fascists during World War II, Mladić joined the Yugoslav People's Army and rose through its ranks with a reputation for aggressiveness and tactical skill. When Bosnia declared independence in 1992 he defected with a large portion of the JNA's officer corps and weapons to form the Army of Republika Srpska, which he commanded until the end of the Bosnian War. His forces implemented a systematic policy of siege warfare, ethnic cleansing, and mass killing that transformed Bosnia's ethnic map. At Srebrenica in July 1995, he appeared on camera distributing candy to children before ordering the execution of 8,372 men and boys.
Did you know?
Mladić's daughter Ana, a medical student whom he adored, died by suicide with his service pistol in 1994, reportedly after learning of the atrocities committed under her father's command. Mladić never recovered from her death, and some observers believe it contributed to an emotional instability visible in his later public appearances.
April 5, 1992 – February 29, 1996 · 13,952 total casualties
The siege of Sarajevo exposed the limits of UN peacekeeping in a context of active ethnic warfare and galvanized the Western public through the first televised urban siege in modern history. The city's multiethnic character — Bosniak, Serb, and Croat residents sheltered together under fire — became a defiant symbol against ethnic nationalism. The siege's end came only through direct NATO military pressure, establishing the precedent that military force could and should be used to protect civilians.
July 11 – 22, 1995 · 8,372 total casualties
Srebrenica is the defining moral catastrophe of the Yugoslav Wars and of post-Cold War European history. The massacre legally established the term 'genocide' for a European atrocity for the first time since the Nuremberg trials, confirmed by both the ICTY and the International Court of Justice. The failure of the UN 'safe areas' policy destroyed the credibility of traditional peacekeeping and was the direct catalyst for Operation Deliberate Force — the NATO bombing campaign that finally brought the Bosnian Serbs to the negotiating table.
August 30 – September 20, 1995 · 21 total casualties
Operation Deliberate Force proved that limited, targeted military force could change the strategic calculus of a conflict resistant to diplomacy and sanctions. It was NATO's baptism of fire and a direct precursor to the Kosovo intervention four years later. The operation's success within three weeks — combined with Operation Storm — created the conditions for the Dayton Peace Accords, which ended the Bosnian War.
August 4 – 7, 1995 · 2,650 total casualties
Operation Storm ended the Republic of Serbian Krajina and permanently changed the demographic map of Croatia. It demonstrated that the military balance in former Yugoslavia had shifted decisively against the Bosnian and Croatian Serb forces and created direct pressure for the Dayton negotiations. The operation's success was enabled by covert US military assistance and training, making it a pivotal moment in NATO's indirect involvement in the Yugoslav Wars before Kosovo.
November 21, 1995 · 0 total casualties
The Dayton Accords ended three and a half years of war in Bosnia but created a state structure that has frustrated political development ever since — two near-separate entities with parallel governments, armies, and education systems that institutionalized ethnic division. The agreement recognized the territorial gains of ethnic cleansing while stopping the killing, a compromise that diplomats called unavoidable and critics called deeply unjust. Dayton remains the constitutional framework of Bosnia-Herzegovina, frequently described as 'the peace that never became reconciliation.'
March 12, 1943
🌅 Birth
Born in Božanovići, Bosnia
1965
📚 Education
Graduated from Yugoslav Military Academy, Belgrade
1991
📍 Posting
Commands JNA forces in Kosovo; oversees suppression of KLA precursor movements
May 1992
⚔️ Battle
Takes command of Army of Republika Srpska; orders siege of Sarajevo
July 11, 1995
⚔️ Battle
Enters Srebrenica on camera; orders systematic execution of 8,372 Bosniak men and boys
May 26, 2011
🕊️ Postwar
Arrested near Lazarevo, Serbia after 16 years as a fugitive
November 22, 2017
🕊️ Postwar
Convicted of genocide and crimes against humanity; sentenced to life imprisonment