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Anatomy Of Deceit- An American Physician's First-Hand Encounter With The Realities Of The War In Croatia

Anatomy Of Deceit- An American Physician's First-Hand Encounter With The Realities Of The War In Croatia

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Screams of War
Review: As an American born child growing up in a Croatian household, I always felt my parent's passion for Croatia. I had a deep longing to understand my parents and what they suffered as Croatians in Yugoslavia.

Throughout school and college I referred to myself as an American-Croatian. Many wouldn't know where or what that was, and some would question, "Don't you mean you're from Yugoslavia?" It was at that point my Croatian passion, knowledge and experience would be shared and told to all around me.

Jerry Blaskovich's, Anatomy of Deceit, is about his personal experience, passion and knowledge on Croatian history, the vicious war and what the distorted "Yugoslavian" government represented to Croatians in the United States and in Croatia.

Anatomy of Deceit takes the reader into the complicated realities of Croatian history and suffering. It disects the truth behind the distorted creation of Yugo and the Anti-Croatian propaganda machine. The reader is then launched into the atrocities of war. The destruction, killings, mass graves, and rapes by the Serbs come alive in these pages. The reader feels, sees, and smells the war through the eyes of a phyisican trying to makes sense, and escape the sreams of war. You hear these screams and feel the deep pain that lingers long after the book is finished.

As far as the proof reading errors, the publisher is responsibile and not the author, for editing of final proof. The content and message of Anatomy of Deceit goes beyond human spelling and grammar errors, it grips and ripes at the heart.

Croatians will never forget what they had to go through to be able to scream their name and not fear for their lives.

Zivoli Hravti!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Nonsense
Review: Don't bother. The book is terrible. The writer can't write. The editor didn't edit. Dates are wrong, facts are wrong. Spellings are wrong. There are so many books out there about the Balkans... do yourself a favor, read any other one.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An outstanding account of history's least understood war
Review: Dr. Jerry Blaskovich was a southern California physician who had studied at the University of Zagreb in the 1960s. He considered himself to be apolitical and most of his information about events in the former Yugoslavia came from the media. Like most Americans, he believed that the news media were generally fair and accurate in reporting the news from around the world. He was thus unprepared for the magnitude and savagery of the Yugoslav People's Army attack on unarmed Croatia in 1991. In forty-four hours he was transformed from a comfortable southern California dermatologist to a front-line combat pathologist and criminal medical examiner. Blaskovich went to Croatia in December 1991 looking for evidence of poison gas attacks. He found none. What he did find, widespread massacres, mutilation, and murder, bothered him more. Some parts of this book will no doubt bother many readers, less for the gruesome subject matter than the coldly clinical descriptions that only a trained medical professional can give. Blaskovich's details come not from research or rumor, but from experience. Many of the conclusions about genocide and mass murder that were reached in 1992 by Blaskovich are only now being confirmed by the United Nations and other authorities. Unlike so many books that have been written over the past six years about the wars in the former Yugoslavia, Anatomy of Deceit is not the work of an armchair "expert" or that of a journalist-turned-historian who paid a brief visit to the region. Anatomy of Deceit is the product of a lifetime of education, a knowledge of the language and cultures of Croatia and Bosnia, and the product of one who has been on the front lines, in refugee camps, in the hospitals, and in the morgues and makeshift furial grounds. His story is at once informative, sickening, and riveting. It is a true personal chronicle of one man's transformation and the world's transformation into the grim realities of the "New World Order."

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: The truth (I can't go lower than one star)?
Review: For almost a century, since its artificial creation after World War One, Yugoslavia served as a pseudo culmination of Serbia's perpetual, albeit hallucinogenic, dream of a Greater Serbia. A post-WWI Serb dominated monarchist Yugoslavia followed by a post-WWII Serb dominated communist Yugoslavia solidified an iron grip by distorting, repressing and attempting to change Croatia's history, language, culture and identity. The world was fed a steady diet of Serbian disinformation---lies, distortions, half-truths and innuendoes---about Croatia that was manufactured to guarantee the continuance of Serb domination. Yugoslavia was Greater Serbia and Serbia today is FRY.

In the early 1990's when Slovenia and Croatia became the first two republics to exercise their right to self-determination under the Constitution of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and declare their independence, Serbia, led by Slobodan Milosevic, was horrified that their ersatz Greater Serbia was disintegrating and they would lose their unjust dominance. Therefore, Serbia, which controlled the Yugoslav People's Army, unleashed that army and Serb paramilitary groups, and invaded Croatia committing heinous destruction, killings, injuries, and humanitarian nightmares.

Anatomy of Deceit bears witness to the destruction, massacres, murders and other dreadful atrocities perpetrated by the Serbs against Croatia and Croatians. Jerry Blaskovich's book sheds light on the disinformation campaign launched by Serbia and its supporters to defend the indefensible and justify the unjustifiable during its horrendous invasion and occupation of Croatia in pursuit of maintaining an illusory Greater Serbia. Anatomy of Deceit confirms, page after page, what former British Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher, stated about Serbia's invasion of Croatia:"....as we recall the terrible events of 1991, and particularly the fate of Vukovar and its inhabitants. Had the international community moved resolutely to prevent that aggression, thousands of Croats would not have lost their lives, their limbs, their dear ones or their homes. And had the Serbian aggression not been allowed to succeed against Vukovar and elsewhere, the authors of that aggression in Belgrade would not have been encouraged to move against Bosnia, and so that terrible, continuing tragedy would have been averted...." This American physician wrote a must read book.

As far as those reviews by anonymous readers carping about proofreading errors, it shouldn't deter the potential reader. That was the publisher's responsibility, not the author's, and while the editors dropped the ball, it doesn't affect the personal narrative and professional manner the author uses to document his experiences nor does it subtract from the message. Dr. Blaskovich is to be commended for his attempt to counter this piece of ongoing Serbian disinformation.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Genuine and Compelling
Review: In "Anatomy of Deceit" Jerry Blaskovich offers a genuine and engaging account of how he experienced the war in Croatia. Blaskovich is particularly concerned to witness how he encountered several dramatic events. Accordingly, his narrative is personal and direct. This makes "Anatomy of Deceit" highly readable and absorbing. Furthermore, because of his attention to detail and his commitment to facts, Blaskovich's work also constitutes an important historical document. His knowledge of forensic matters as well as of particular events (the massacre of Vocin) is rare. Finally, Blaskovich's pragmatic criticism of the international community as well as the Croatian response to the war is refreshing and helpful. I believe that his critique of the political omissions that were made can serve as a lesson for many fledgling nations as well as those concerned with conflict management. In this sense, "Anatomy of Deceit" is valuable not only as an excellent introduction to the events of 1991 but also as a source of insights for the modern policymaker.

As a Croatian, I am aware that my reaction to the book will be biased. In my assessment of its qualities, however, I have attempted to bring out its strengths as a text. Also, it seems to me undeniable that Blaskovich is very knowledgeable and that he is a strong writer. These are criteria by which a work like his should be judged. I have found them little addressed in some other reviews on this webpage. That is why I feel compelled to strongly recommend "Anatomy of Deceit" to the interested reader.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Genuine and Compelling
Review: In "Anatomy of Deceit" Jerry Blaskovich offers a genuine and engaging account of how he experienced the war in Croatia. Blaskovich is particularly concerned to witness how he encountered several dramatic events. Accordingly, his narrative is personal and direct. This makes "Anatomy of Deceit" highly readable and absorbing. Furthermore, because of his attention to detail and his commitment to facts, Blaskovich's work also constitutes an important historical document. His knowledge of forensic matters as well as of particular events (the massacre of Vocin) is rare. Finally, Blaskovich's pragmatic criticism of the international community as well as the Croatian response to the war is refreshing and helpful. I believe that his critique of the political omissions that were made can serve as a lesson for many fledgling nations as well as those concerned with conflict management. In this sense, "Anatomy of Deceit" is valuable not only as an excellent introduction to the events of 1991 but also as a source of insights for the modern policymaker.

As a Croatian, I am aware that my reaction to the book will be biased. In my assessment of its qualities, however, I have attempted to bring out its strengths as a text. Also, it seems to me undeniable that Blaskovich is very knowledgeable and that he is a strong writer. These are criteria by which a work like his should be judged. I have found them little addressed in some other reviews on this webpage. That is why I feel compelled to strongly recommend "Anatomy of Deceit" to the interested reader.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Nothing But The Truth
Review: It is clear that Jerry writes the truth. He clearly captures and articulates the horror caused by the SERBS in Croatia. Serbophiles of course will have great disdain for such honesty. So if you are a Serbophile this probably is not the book for you, however if you want to gain a strong understanding of what took place in Croatia this book is for you, if you prefer a film please watch Harrison's Flowers (French Directed) it too will provide you with a disheartening sense of what the SERBS did in Croatia, Bosnia-Hercegovina, as well as Kosovo, finally the world knows what they are capable of, although they did hide it well under the auspices of COMMUNISM.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Nothing But The Truth
Review: It is clear that Jerry writes the truth. He clearly captures and articulates the horror caused by the SERBS in Croatia. Serbophiles of course will have great disdain for such honesty. So if you are a Serbophile this probably is not the book for you, however if you want to gain a strong understanding of what took place in Croatia this book is for you, if you prefer a film please watch Harrison's Flowers (French Directed) it too will provide you with a disheartening sense of what the SERBS did in Croatia, Bosnia-Hercegovina, as well as Kosovo, finally the world knows what they are capable of, although they did hide it well under the auspices of COMMUNISM.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A vigorous, truthful account.
Review: Jerry Blaskovich's superb book is based on his own experience of the Serbian invasion, occupation, and ethnic cleansing of no less than one third of Croatia. Much of the horrors he relates are genuinely disturbing. Apart from his own experiences, he takes time to debunk all sorts of nonsense put out by the Serbs.

It should be remembered that the Serbs had control of the propaganda machinery in Yugoslavia; Croatia therefore had none. As a consequence, many naïve journalists and politicians went to Yugoslav sources for information, completely unaware of the fact that such sources were in fact Serbian ones. Hence the bizarre myths such as "Serbs fought the Nazis", "all sides guilty", "Serbs persecuted in Croatia" etc. These were deployed against the Croats to prevent western intervention, so that genocide and ethnic cleansing could proceed apace to create an obscene Nazi style "Greater Serbia" state. Blaskovich gives full details of all the various propaganda scams.

The fact that the Yugoslav Army was Serbian controlled and that Croatia (weaponless) did not invade Serbia gives the game away as to who the aggressor was in the war; Blaskovich also elaborates on the Serb dominated nature of the old Yugoslavia.

Despite the horrors he describes, this is ultimately a positive work. There is much energy in this book, enthusiasm for Croatia and a forceful rebuttal of propaganda. As such, it most readable.

This is a truthful book. To verify its accuracy, I strongly recommend Marcus Tanner's " Croatia : A Nation Forged in War" As Mr Tanner is British, his impartiality is not in doubt.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Scary Stuff
Review: This book is scary. The writer has this headful of conspiracy mishmash. He talks about secret State Department cabals and media conspiracies and British/American conspiracies and Serb conspiracies. Everyone, it seems, is out to get the Croats. As I paged along and snickered at the dozens of misspellings, malapropisms, and out-and-out wrong facts, I laughed a lot, thinking that the book was some sort of big joke. Thinking that the writer was having ironic fun at the reader's expense. But by the end, I came to realize that the writer is just another nutbar with an ethnic axe to grind. He's really quite crazy. The book is fun because it's so badly written and researched, but after a hundred pages or so I began to feel awfully sorry for the poor writer and the hell of his insanity. He must lead a terribly unhappy life.


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