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  1. Date31 March 1991 – 12 November 1995 · (4 years, 7 months, 1 week and 5 days)
    LocationCroatia, with some spillover into Bosnia and Herzegovina
    ResultCroatian victory · Yugoslav army formally withdrew from Croatia from January 1992 under the Sarajevo Agreement · Croatian forces regained control over most of Republic of Serbian Krajina-held territory · Croatian forces advanced into Bosnia and Herzegovina to assist the united Bosnian and Croatian side, which led to the eventual end of the Bosnian War in December 1995.
    Territorial changesThe Croatian government gains control over the vast majority of territory previously held by rebel Serbs, with the remainder coming under UNTAES control.
  1. Zastava M59/66 - Wikipedia

  2. SKS - Wikipedia

  3. The SKS Is the Cockroach of Weapons | by Robert Beckhusen | War …

  4. Croatian War of Independence - Wikiwand

  5. SKS Rifle: 7 Things You Should Know - Operation Military Kids

  6. People also ask
    For this reason, the SKS carbine became a favorite among insurgent forces allied with the Eastern Bloc. The assault rifle was favored among troops for being lightweight and practical in guerrilla warfare. Notwithstanding, the SKS rifle did feature several limitation that eventually designated it obsolete by the Soviet Armed Forces in the 1950s.
    Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, SKS carbines proliferated in various civil wars and regional conflicts throughout the former Soviet republics, including the War in Abkhazia, War of Dagestan, and the war in Donbas.
    en.wikipedia.org
    A few hundred SKS's were given to Poland by the Soviet Union around 1954. While never adopted for use by combat units, the SKS is still in use in ceremonial units of the Polish Army, Air Force, Navy where they replaced SVT rifles. Honor guards of the Polish Police and Border Guard also use SKS carbines.
    en.wikipedia.org
    Members of the Eastern Block (such as the People’s Republic of China) utilized the SKS carbine heavily during the Cold War. In fact, production of SKS rifles continued for years in China after manufacturing ceased in the Soviet Union. Furthermore, the SKS carbine was a standard service rifle for Egypt and Yugoslavia.
  7. The Humble yet Increasingly Collectible SKS Rifle: A History

  8. Partisan Rifles - SKS M59/66, Croatia

  9. Three Decades On, War’s Legacy Still Overshadows Croatia

  10. Operation Storm — The Battle for Croatia, 1995 – Association for ...