These countries were formed after the dissolution of the Socialist Federalist Republic of Yugoslavia: Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM), and 'Yugoslavia' (Serbia & Montenegro). (After the...) Dissolution of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia: Serbia and Montenegro.
Axis (Nazi Indenpendent State of Croatia), and later Allied (when partisans conquered the country and formed Yugoslavia together with other Balkan countries)
CIS
england and france with russia quietly in agreement
NATO was not formed until after WW2.
Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Finland, or Yugoslavia
New states The present-day countries created from the former parts of Yugoslavia are:Bosnia and HerzegovinaCroatiaKosovo (status as an independent country is in dispute)Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM)MontenegroSerbiaSlovenia
No. Yugoslavia began to break up in the 1990s. Some new countries that formed as a result of that breakup joined the EU in 2004 and later than that. Some of the countries that were part of Yugoslavia are not members of the EU, but may join in the future.
Croatia Bosnia and Herzegovina Kosovo Macedonia Montenegro Serbia Slovenia
Axis (Nazi Indenpendent State of Croatia), and later Allied (when partisans conquered the country and formed Yugoslavia together with other Balkan countries)
They once made up the Republic of Yugoslavia, but now they are independent countries.
Yugoslavia
CIS
The Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was composed of two republics: Serbia and Montenegro. Established in 1992, it was formed after the breakup of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. This union lasted until 2003, when it was restructured into the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro, which ultimately dissolved in 2006.
Yes. After the years of the death of Tito, it began to collapse and formed into Serbia and Montenegro. By 2006, it had formed into two different countries: Serbia, and Montenegro.
In 1991-92, The former Yugoslavia broke up. Croatia was one of the countries that was then formed. In 2003, the remaining Yugoslavia changed its name to Serbia and Montenegro.
Austria-Hungary split into quite a number of countries. The countries of Austria, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia are the three countries who are wholly formed from former Austro-Hungarian territory. The remaining parts of the Austro-Hungarian Empire went to Italy, Yugoslavia, Romania, and Poland.This map shows how the Austro-Hungarian Empire was divided.
england and france with russia quietly in agreement