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My War Gone By, I Miss It So
Anthony Loyd

Paperback edition
Penguin Books, 1999
ISBN: 0-14-029854-1

321 indexable pages
548 headings, subheadings
1518 locators, 28 cross references

For more about this book, see  Penguin Putnam 
Picture of Anthony Loyd
Anthony Loyd


My War Gone By, I Miss It So is not for the squeamish. It is an unsparing depiction of the recent warfare in Bosnia and Hercegovina and in Chechnya, and of Loyd's addictions to warfare and heroin and his troubled relationship with his family. It deserves to be widely read.

Many people in the book are identified only by their nickname or their given name. Hence, in the index, most entries for people identify the person's role. Also, entries for towns identify the country or province in which they are located.


A

Abdic, Fikret, 214–216, 218, 219, 223

Abdic, Hamdu, 8, 217, 221, 295–296, 305, 314, 315

Aernout (journalist), 299–300, 302, 303, 304, 307, 311

Ahmici, massacre at, 42, 76, 83, 141, 169

Alagic, Mehmet, 107, 315

Alex (friend), 120–121, 266

Alex (journalist), 86, 118

Arkan (Serbian paramilitary warlord), 314

atrocities, categories of, 141–142

Azera (friend), 286


B

Baisangur (Chechen warrior), 242

Beba (BiH liaison officer), 113, 114, 115

BiH armija (Bosnia and Hercegovina government army)

5th Corps, 216–217, 218, 222, 226–227, 230, 232, 299

7th Corps, 315

7th Muslim Brigade, 159

17th Krajina Brigade, 105–108, 300

501 Brigade, 217

502 Brigade, 8, 217, 295–297, 303, 310–311, 314–316

Abdic, Hamdu, 8, 217, 221, 295–296, 305, 314, 315

Alagic, Mehmet, 107, 315

battles (see Muslim-Croat conflict in Bosnia; Muslim-Serb conflict in Bosnia)

Beba (liaison officer), 113, 114, 115

Cuskic, Fikret, 107, 300

Delic, General Rasim, 315

Dudakovic, General Artif, 216–218, 220–221, 299, 301, 312–313, 314

Ganic, Nehru, 155, 286–287

high command, 216, 296, 315

Juta (502 Brigade), 297–298

Maja (502 Brigade), 306

Muslim-Croat peace accord, response to, 197

prisoners, treatment of, 105

Senad (502 Brigade), 316

successes, 197, 236, 279, 301

victim status, preservation of, 206, 279

weapons systems, mules as, 168

Bihac (Bosnia), 214, 216, 218, 219, 295, 299, 317

Bijeljina (Bosnia), 12, 312

black marketeering, 97, 113, 140

Blash (TV crewman), 116, 118

body exchanges, 93, 113

Boris (journalist), 143, 279, 280

Bosnia and Hercegovina

army (see BiH armija) [on this page]

autonomous state within, 214–216, 218, 219, 223

black marketeering, 97, 113, 140

Bosnia and Hercegovina (continued)

conflicts in (see Bosnia and Hercegovina, conflicts in) [on this page]

Croats in (see Croats, Bosnian) [on this page]

federation of Muslims and Croats, 197

foreign aid, 92–93, 97–101

foreigners, 116–117

looting, 6, 99, 101, 155, 159–160

map of, in frontmatter

multi-ethnicity, ideal of, 19, 40–41, 72–73, 159, 180, 216–217, 278

Muslims in (see Muslims, Bosnian)

petty crime, 166

resignation in, 28

Serbs in (see Serbs, Bosnian)

war in (see Bosnia and Hercegovina, conflicts in) [on this page]

Bosnia and Hercegovina, conflicts in

Ahmici, massacre at, 42, 76, 83, 141, 169

arms embargo, 222, 236

body exchanges, 93, 113

Bosnian Croat army (see HVO)

British foreign policy, 182

casualty figures, 30

Croatian paramilitary forces see HOS)

Croatian regular army (see HV)

Dayton Peace Agreement (1995), 296, 313–315

ethnic cleansing, 135, 137–138, 140, 157

government army (see BiH armija) [on this page]

mass graves, 1

media coverage, effects of, 308

multiple conflicts, 179

murderous opportunists, 170

Muslim-Croat conflict (see Muslim-Croat conflict in Bosnia)

Muslim-Serb conflict (see Muslim-Serb conflict in Bosnia)

NATO involvement, 2–4, 5, 127, 299

origin, 40, 115, 130–131

people trafficking, 181

prisoners of war, 105, 164–165, 171–172, 196, 308, 310, 315

propaganda, 71, 99–100, 110–111, 223–224

Serbian forces (see Serbs, Bosnian)

Srebrenica, massacre at, 1–2, 293–294

starvation, 167

Stupni Do, massacre at, 146, 149–156

Tuzla, massacre at, 279–283

UN involvement (see United Nations, in Bosnia and Hercegovina)

Bosnia and Hercegovina, conflicts in (continued)

unequal contest, 33

Uzdol, massacre at, 141

villages, as targets, 76

vocabulary for combatants, 112

Bosnian, defined, in front matter

Bosnian Croat army. See HOS

Bozic, Kresimir, 150, 154, 155

Budapest, 14

Bugojno (Bosnia), 141

bulletproof vests, as barrier to friendship, 22


C

cameras, as barrier to friendship, 36

Canadian UN troops, 287–288

Caplina (Bosnia), 45

Carton De Wiart, Adrian, 60–61, 126

Cathy (drug dealer), 265, 266, 276

Celo (criminal), 24

Cermerska Planina (Bosnia), 284

Cerska (Bosnia), 2, 4

Cetniks, 112

Chechnya

1944 exodus, 243

Chechen fighters, 246–247, 255–257, 259–260

Grozny, battle of, 239–241, 243, 244–252, 253, 254–256, 258, 261

intensity of conflict, 235–236, 244

Maskhadov, General Aslan, 241–242, 255–256, 261

mass murder, 243

origin of conflict, 236

Russian troops, 245–246

Western powers and, 257

Chenga (journalist), 304, 309

Chernoreche (Chechnya), 239, 256, 258

Christophe (UNHCR worker), 228, 229

Cisak (Croatia), 19

Citluk (Bosnia), 48, 53, 56

concentration camps, 106

Convoy of Joy, 97–101

Corinne (journalist), 95, 142, 153, 162, 176, 178

Corolicci (Bosnia), 220

courage, 90, 91, 233

cowardice, 90–91

Croatian paramilitary forces. See HOS

Croatian regular army. See HV

Croats, Bosnian

atrocity as a tactic, 141–142

defined, in frontmatter

federation of Muslims and Croats, 197

food supplies, 203

massacre of, at Uzdol, 141

nationalism, 39, 85, 86, 194

Serbs, cooperation with, 45, 140

See also Muslim-Croat conflict in Bosnia

Cuskic, Fikret, 107, 300


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