Slovenia Croatia Bosnia Montenegro Serbia Macedonia
There was a lot of fighting that happened to the nations of the former Yugoslavia in the early 1990's. All these countries were fighting for their own boundaries during this time.
No , not yet
Yugoslavia & Albania, neither were Warsaw Pact signatories.
Yugoslavia was a country in Southeast Europe that existed from 1918 until the early 1990s, when it began to break apart into several independent nations due to ethnic tensions and political conflicts. Today, the former territory of Yugoslavia comprises several countries: Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, North Macedonia, and Serbia. Each of these nations has its own distinct identity and government, having emerged from the dissolution of Yugoslavia.
Yugoslavia does not exist. Croatia was part of that country.
Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia were formerly part of Yugoslavia (full name Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia) until declaring independence in 1992.
There was a lot of fighting that happened to the nations of the former Yugoslavia in the early 1990's. All these countries were fighting for their own boundaries during this time.
The two embassy bombings occurred in the neighboring African countries of Kenya and Tanzania.
Yugoslavia and Albania
Full name of Macedonia is Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, so Macedonia was a part of Yugoslavia. Slovenia was also a part of Yugoslavia. Slovakia however was not a part of Yugoslavia, but it was a part of Czechoslovakia, both of them were communist countries after WW2.
The Soviet Satellite Nations were: East Germany, Czech, Poland, Soviet Union, Hungary, Romania, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria and Albania. The Soviet Satellite Nations were: East Germany, Czech, Poland, Soviet Union, Hungary, Romania, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria and Albania.
Poland, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia.