Operation Medak Pocket

Operation Medak Pocket
Part of the Croatian War of Independence

Croatian advance during Operation Medak Pocket
Date9–17 September 1993
Location
South of Gospić, Croatia
Result

Ceasefire

  • Croatian forces capture Divoselo and Čitluk (in total 48 km2)
  • Croatian withdrawal
  • UN secures Medak Pocket
Belligerents
 Croatia

UNPROFOR

Serbian Krajina
Commanders and leaders
Janko Bobetko
Davor Domazet-Lošo
Mirko Norac
Rahim Ademi
James Calvin
Jean Cot
Mile Novaković
Strength
2,500+ soldiers 875 members of 2nd Battalion PPCLI Battle Group 800 soldiers
70 tanks
Casualties and losses
10 killed
84 wounded
(fighting Serbs)
27 killed or wounded
(fighting UNPROFOR)
4 wounded
(Canada)
7 wounded
3 APCs lost
(France)
52 killed
36 civilians killed
(ICTY prosecution estimate)
Dozens of Croat civilians killed and wounded after RSK retaliatory shelling of Gospić, Karlovac and the outskirts of Zagreb

Operation Medak Pocket (Serbo-Croatian: Operacija Medački džep, Операција Медачки џеп), officially called by Croatians Operation Pocket-93 (Operacija Džep-93) was a military operation undertaken by the Croatian Army between 9 – 17 September 1993, in which a salient reaching the south suburbs of Gospić, in the south-central Lika region of Croatia then under the control of the self-proclaimed Republic of Serbian Krajina, was attacked by Croatian forces. The pocket was named after the village of Medak.

The Croatian offensive temporarily succeeded in expelling rebel Serb forces from the pocket after several days of fighting. However, the operation ended in controversy due to a confrontation between the Croatian Army and United Nations peacekeepers as well as accusations of serious Croatian war crimes against local Serb civilians. Although the outcome of the battle against the Serbs was a tactical victory for the Croatians, it became a serious political liability for the Croatian government and international political pressure forced a withdrawal to the previous ceasefire lines. The area was eventually secured by UN troops.

According to UN and Canadian sources, UNPROFOR personnel and Croatian troops exchanged heavy fire, eventually resulting in the Canadian troops driving off a Croatian assault. In Canada, the battle was considered to be one of the most severe battles fought by the Canadian Forces since the Korean War.