Gorazde 1995

By September 1995, the front lines had moved dangerously close to the city center. Observers reported that the VRS was within striking distance of severing the town in two. Had they succeeded, a humanitarian disaster on the scale of Srebrenica was a distinct possibility. The Bosnian Serbs had demonstrated in Srebrenica that they had the intent and the organization to carry out mass killings and mass expuls

In the pantheon of tragic sieges that characterized the Bosnian War (1992–1995), the town of Goražde occupies a unique and harrowing space. While Sarajevo became the global symbol of urban resilience under fire, and Srebrenica became the synonym for ultimate horror, Goražde was the "forgotten town"—a lone outpost of survival in the Drina Valley, holding out against overwhelming odds. By 1995, the town had endured three years of near-total encirclement, starvation, and relentless artillery fire. gorazde 1995

For the Bosniak defenders (the Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina, or ARBiH), Srebrenica was a lesson in the futility of demilitarization. They realized that the UN could not—or would not—protect them. Consequently, the Bosnian government forces in Goražde refused to fully demilitarize, creating tension with the UN peacekeepers (UNPROFOR) but ensuring they retained the capacity to fight if the Serbs advanced. By September 1995, the front lines had moved

The fall of Srebrenica sent shockwaves through the remaining enclaves. In Goražde, the psychological impact was devastating. The population knew they were next on the list. The Bosnian Serb logic was clear: Srebrenica had fallen with impunity; Žepa followed shortly after. Goražde was the last prize in the east. The Bosnian Serbs had demonstrated in Srebrenica that

Following the Srebrenica massacre and the "Markale massacre" in Sarajevo (a mortar attack on a market that killed 43 people), NATO finally abandoned its policy of restraint. In late August 1995, NATO launched a comprehensive air campaign against Bosnian Serb positions, known as Operation Deliberate Force .

Simultaneously, the Bosnian Serb Army launched a massive ground offensive aimed at finally extinguishing the Goražde pocket. In late August and early September, VRS units intensified their shelling and infantry assaults on the defensive lines surrounding the town. The objective was to link up Serb-held territory on both sides of the enclave, squeezing the life out of the "Safe Area."