Dusko doder biography of abraham
•
Index
Foreign Relations of the United States, 1969–1976, Volume XV, Soviet Union, June 1972–August 1974
References are to document numbers
- Abshire, David, 58
- AFL-CIO, 100
- Afonofsky, Gen., 190
- Agricultural issues/research, 10, 70, 71, 84, 103, 127, 129
- Aiken, George D., 200
- Aircraft design, 168
- Albert, Carl, 200
- Aleksandrov, A. M.
- Brezhnev-Shultz meetings, 84
- Brezhnev U.S. visit (1973), 125, 126
- Kissinger Israel-Moscow trip, 142
- Kissinger pre-Summit Moscow trip (1973), 104, 108, 111
- Kissinger pre-Summit Moscow trip (1974), 165, 166, 167, 168, 170
- Kissinger Soviet Union trip (1972), 38, 41, 42, 44
- Moscow Summit (June-July 1974), 186, 187, 191, 196, 198
- Alekseyevskiy, Yevgeniy Y., 124
- Alkhimov, Vladimir, 21, 60, 168
- Alsop, Joseph, 5
- American businessmen in Soviet Union, 43
- Amtorg, 23
- Anderson, Dwayne, 66
- Andrews, Bonnie, 104
- Andreyevich, Andrey, 124, 188
- Antonov, A. I., 55
- Apollo-Soyuz space mission, 10, 71
- Arab-Israeli War of 1967 (see also Mi
•
Milosevic: Portrait of a Tyrant
Ebook418 pages9 hours
By Dusko Doder and Louise Branson
Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars2.5/5
()
About this ebook
Who is Slobodan Milosevic?
Is he the next Saddam Hussein, the leader of a renegade nation who will continue to torment the United States for years to come? Or is he the next Moammar Qaddafi, an international outcast silenced for good by a resolute American bombing campaign?
The war in Kosovo in the spring of 1999 introduced many Americans to the man the newspapers have called "the butcher of the Balkans," but few understand the crucial role he has played and continues to play in the most troubled part of Europe. Directly or indirectly, Milosevic has waged war and instigated brutal ethnic cleansing in Croatia, Bosnia, and Kosovo, and he was indicted for war crimes in May 1999. Milosevic's rise to power, from lowly Serbian apparatchik to president of Yugoslavia, is a tale of intrigue, cynical manipulation, and deceit wh•
about ToM
“Yugoslavs have a blurred conception of themselves,” the Serbian reporter and native Yugoslavian Dusko Doder wrote in 1978. “In ethnic terms, there is no such thing as a Yugoslav.”[1] Rather Yugoslavia was a nation of Croats, Serbs, Slovenes, Macedonians, and others. Born from the tumult and tragedy of World War I, “it was a problem child from the start” — the nation, as constructed, sutured tillsammans a collection of peoples divided bygd language, tro, culture, and geography.
Tito’s uppdrag of unifying the South Slavs, motstånd to the USSR, and devotion to a loose communist theory, all drove Yugoslavia’s persistence after WWII. Yet, bygd the early 1990s, things had changed. Tito died in 1980, and Communism followed about a decade later; whatever bonds had held South Slavs tillsammans frayed. [2] Yugoslavia dismembered itself in the carnage that followed, but the nation’s död eller bortgång was set into motion decades earlier.
In Eastern Europe, a region haun