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Operation Flash

Operation Flash
Part of the Croatian War of Independence
Map 52 - Croatia - Western Slavonia, May 1995.jpg
Map of Operation Flash
Date 1–3 May 1995
Location Croatia
Result Strategic Croatian victory
Territorial
changes
Croatia regained 558 km2 (215 sq mi) of territory.
Belligerents
 Croatia  Republic of Serbian Krajina
Commanders and leaders
Croatia Janko Bobetko
Croatia Zvonimir Červenko
Croatia Luka Džanko
Croatia Petar Stipetić
Republic of Serbian Krajina Milan Čeleketić
Republic of Serbian Krajina Lazo Babić
Strength
7,200 soldiers c. 3,500 soldiers
Casualties and losses
42 killed, 162 wounded 188–283 killed
(military and civilians)
1,200 wounded
2,100 POW (military)
11,500–15,000 Croatian Serb refugees
3 UN peacekeepers wounded

Operation Flash (Serbo-Croatian: Operacija Bljesak/Операција Бљесак) was a brief Croatian Army (HV) offensive conducted against forces of the self-declared Republic of Serbian Krajina (RSK) from 1–3 May 1995. The offensive occurred in the later stages of the Croatian War of Independence and was the first major confrontation after ceasefire and economic cooperation agreements were signed between Croatia and the RSK in 1994. The last organised RSK resistance formally ceased on 3 May, with the majority of troops surrendering the next day near Pakrac, although mop-up operations continued for another two weeks.

Operation Flash was a strategic victory for Croatia resulting in the capture of a 558-square-kilometre (215 sq mi) salient held by RSK forces centred in and around the town of Okučani. The town, which sat astride the Zagreb–Belgrade motorway and railroad, had presented Croatia with significant transport problems between the nation's capital Zagreb and the eastern region of Slavonia as well as between non-contiguous territories held by the RSK. The area was a part of United Nations Confidence Restoration Operation (UNCRO) Sector West under the United Nations Security Council peacekeeping mandate in Croatia. The attacking force consisted of 7,200 HV troops, supported by the Croatian special police, arrayed against approximately 3,500 RSK soldiers. In response to the operation, the RSK military bombarded Zagreb and other civilian centres, causing seven fatalities and injuries to 205.

Forty-two HV soldiers and Croatian policemen were killed in the attack and 162 wounded. RSK casualties are disputed—Croatian authorities cited the deaths of 188 Serb soldiers and civilians with an estimated 1,000–1,200 wounded. Serbian sources, on the other hand, claimed that 283 Serb civilians were killed, contrary to the 83 reported by the Croatian Helsinki Committee. It is estimated that out of 14,000 Serbs living in the region, two-thirds fled immediately with more following in subsequent weeks. By the end of June, it is estimated that only 1,500 Serbs remained. Subsequently, the personal representative of the Secretary-General of the United Nations Yasushi Akashi criticised Croatia for "mass violations" of human rights, but his statements were refuted by the Human Rights Watch and to some extent by the United Nations Commission on Human Rights rapporteur Tadeusz Mazowiecki.


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