Before World War II, Serbs were in conflict with Croats and Albanians. As an "international branch of * * * *", South * * * resolutely opposed nationalism, especially Serbian nationalism. Its leader Tito, as an Austro-Hungarian Croat, once joined the Austro-Hungarian army to fight against Serbia during World War I.. In World War II, an extremely bitter ethnic vendetta took place in Yugoslavia. At that time, the Croatian nationalist organization "U Stasa" was pro-German, the Kosovo Albanian nationalist organization "Prizren League II" was pro-Italian, and the representative of Serbian nationalism was "Cetnik" (Serbian "Volunteer Army"), which supported the Serbian royal family of the former Yugoslav kingdom in exile in Britain and belonged to the anti-fascist allied camp, but it was with Croats, Albanians and South Africa. While most of the fighters in the South * * * were Serbs (the most traditionally anti-German ethnic group in the South at that time), most of their top leaders were non-Serb internationalist * * * producers, including Tito, Kadeer (Slovenian), Dreilas (Montenegrin), Rankovic (Serbian) and Bakaric (Croatian), among whom only Rankovic was a Serb. During the war, although the Yugoslav armed forces were hostile to all the above-mentioned nationalist organizations, the Croat Albanian organizations that were pro-German and Italian were naturally resolved with the collapse of Germany and Italy, but the conflict with Cetnik lasted the longest and bled the most because of the struggle for "orthodoxy" in the anti-fascist camp, and finally ended in the execution of mikhailovich, the leader of Cetnik, by the Yugoslav regime in 1946. As you can imagine, the post-war regime in South Yugoslavia under this background is fundamentally different from the Yugoslav kingdom ruled by the traditional Serbian royal family.
After the war, the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia did not retain non-* * anti-fascist parties and implemented a multi-party cooperation United front like other Eastern European countries, but immediately implemented a one-party system in South * * *, mainly because of the complete elimination of Serbian nationalist organizations-at that time, the main organizations of other ethnic groups had disappeared because of their pro-German intentions. Later, Tito fell out with Stalin, and the contradiction between South Soviet Union and the West was always greater than that between the South and the West. "Intelligence agents" became the primary "spies" at that time, and the traditionally pro-Russian Orthodox Serbs were therefore more suspicious. Therefore, in Tito's era, Yugoslavia attacked not only Serbian nationalism, but also the nationalism of other ethnic groups, but generally speaking, it focused on the former. After the war, among the five leaders in South Yugoslavia, it was precisely two from Serbia and Montenegro who later fell. Among them, Montenegrin Dreilas is because of "liberalization", while Serbian Rankovic is because of Serbian nationalism. Especially since 1966, the "Statism-Greater Serbian Doctrine" of Rankovic Group was severely attacked, and its influence continued until the 197s, and 4, Serb cadres were purged.
institutionally, Tito's era also made arrangements that were conducive to curbing Serb power (or "suppressing Serbia" in the words of Serbian nationalists). For example, for the first time in history, "Muslims who speak Serbian" were recognized as another ethnic group (Muslims, or Bosnians), and the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina was established accordingly. For the first time, the former "Serbian-speaking Macedonian dialect" was recognized as another language (Macedonian), on which the Macedonian nation was confirmed and the Republic of Macedonia was established. In this way, Serbia * * * and the Republic of China in the Federation have shrunk, not only smaller than Serbia in the "Kingdom of Yugoslavia", but also smaller than the Kingdom of Serbia before the First World War. At the same time, it also established two "autonomous provinces" in Serbia, which other countries did not have, and granted them the status of "federal subject" almost equal to Serbia-except for these two provinces, the "Serbian headquarters" had already returned to the territory of Serbia when it was independent, which was determined by the Berlin Conference in 1878. In addition to drawing a new ethnic group from the Serbs and narrowing its territory, Tito also set up a "Yugoslav ethnic group" to encourage people to give up their original ethnic identity and convert to this new group. By 1981, 1.21 million people had reported this "new nation" in the population survey, accounting for 5.4% of the total population of South China. In Tito's time, it was obviously to separate the "Yugoslav" identity from the Serbian identity. After all these measures, the identity of Serbs has been weakening. During the war against the former Yugoslav kingdom, Serbs (both Macedonians and Bosnians were Serbs at that time) had an absolute advantage, but by 1961, only 42.1% of the population in South Africa considered themselves Serbs, and by 1981, it had dropped to 36.3%.
These practices in Tito's era played a role in suppressing the serious Serb power in the former Yugoslavia and maintaining national equality and federal stability, but they accumulated great dissatisfaction among some Serbs with strong national sentiment. After Tito's death in 198, Serbian nationalism rebounded. In May 1981, when the Serbian government purged the party and government leadership in Kosovo, it began to oppose "federalism", attacking Albanians for being self-righteous and federal members for not treating Serbia seriously. Obviously, some Serbs have long resented non-Serbs for using the federal flag as a tiger skin to "crush" Serbs. Milosevic is the representative of these people.
Milosevic's parents, who were born in 1941, were victims of Tito's era. His father, Svitocha Milosevic, was an Orthodox clergyman. Soon after Yugoslavia came to power in Belgrade in 1945, he left his family in the suburbs of the capital and lived alone in Montenegro, where he committed suicide in 1962. Mi's mother, a primary school teacher and a member of the * * * Party, also committed suicide in 1974. There is no information to explain why she committed suicide, but that year was the tide of cleaning Serbian cadres in Yugoslavia. Some Serbs said that Tito's policy ruined their family. Milosevic himself did not say so, but he repeatedly mentioned that family misfortune had a great influence on his life path. “
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