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A number of analysts have viewed the Yugoslav war of succession of the 1990s as the prototype of a generation of "new wars" distinct from earlier forms of conflict. However, this article argues that this war did not significantly differ from earlier wars in the South Slav area, in terms of its protagonists, objectives, economic structures and the human impact of the conflict. Methods of warfare resemble those employed during the Balkan wars in 1912/13 and during the Second World War. Therefore, it was not the Yugoslav war as such, but the high degree of attention that international media devoted to reporting about this first military conflict on European soil after 1945 that produced new ways of perceiving and interpreting the conflict.
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