The 1990s was the era of extreme ethnic conflict in the former Yugoslavia. In 1992, Bosnia and Herzegovina adopted an independent referendum but had no similar enthusiasm among the people of the Republic. The most opposed to this independent group is the minority of Serbia who is called "large Serbia" by such leaders as Slobodan Milosevic and psychiatrist Jovan Laskovic. The Serbs were told that they needed to dominate the surrounding Croats and Muslims based on their psychological advantage.
Today: In the last years of the 1990s, the collapse of Yugoslavia led to confusion of war and ethnic cleansing in Bosnia, Serbia, Croatia and Kosovo. The United States is participating in the UN peacekeeping operations and continues to place troops in problem areas for decades. The collection of what they had, "How to tell the real war stories" appeared when it was warmly admired by critics and readers. Many of the stories in the collection include a story "How to tell the actual war". I previously published a prize in a journal such as Esquire, Plowshares, Atlantic Monthly. Critics at the New York Times Book Review say that this book is a necessity for those interested in the Vietnam War.
After two wars in Iraq, conflicts in Afghanistan, and various military operations in Bosnia, Kosovo, Libya and Syria, the Falkland Islands war has disappeared into history. This is a strange and unbelievable confrontation called "two bald" by Argentine's great writer Jorge Luis Borges. These are events constituting the minefield background, but that is not a right and mistake game to explore conflicts and other conflicts. Its role is to investigate what happens when human experiences of war, especially people who experienced war, return to "normal" living.