The Ministry of Defense of Yugoslavia refers to the defense ministry which was responsible for defense of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia from 1918 to 1945 and the communist SFR Yugoslavia from 1945 to 1992. It may also refer to the defense ministry of FR Yugoslavia between 1992 and 2003 (officially named Serbia and Montenegro 2003–2006).
Contents |
# | Name | Born–Died | Rank | Start | End | Note |
1 | Mihailo Rašić | 1858–1932 | Divisional General | 1 December 1918 | 30 March 1919 | |
2 | Stevan S. Hadžić | 1868–1931 | Divisional General | 30 March 1919 | 19 February 1920 | 1st Term |
3 | Branko Jovanović | 1868–1921 | Divisional General | 19 February 1920 | 26 March 1921 | Died in office |
Milorad Drašković | 1873–1921 | No military rank | 26 March 1921 | 24 May 1921 | Acting Minister of Defense | |
4 | Stevan S. Hadžić | 1868–1931 | Divisional General | 24 May 1921 | 20 July 1921 | 2nd Term |
5 | Milivoje Zečević | 1872–1946 | General | 20 July 1921 | 3 January 1922 | |
6 | Miloš Vasić | 1859–1935 | General | 5 January 1922 | 4 November 1922 | |
7 | Petar Pešić | 1871–1944 | Divisional General | 4 November 1922 | 27 July 1924 | 1st Term. Promoted to General of the Army in 1923 |
8 | Stevan S. Hadžić | 1868–1931 | General of the Army | 27 July 1924 | 6 November 1924 | 3rd Term |
9 | Dušan Trifunović | 1880–1942 | Divisional General | 6 November 1924 | 24 December 1926 | |
10 | Stevan S. Hadžić | 1868–1931 | General of the Army | 24 December 1926 | 23 April 1931 | 4th Term. Died in office |
11 | Dragomir Stojanović | 1878–1943 | General of the Army | 23 April 1931 | 18 April 1934 | |
12 | Milan Milanović | General | 18 April 1934 | 22 October 1934 | ||
13 | Petar Živković | 1879–1947 | General of the Army | 22 October 1934 | 7 March 1936 | |
14 | Ljubomir Marić | 1878–1960 | General of the Army | 8 March 1936 | 25 August 1938 | |
15 | Milutin Nedić | 1882–1945 | General of the Army | 25 August 1938 | 26 August 1939 | |
16 | Milan Nedić | 1877–1946 | General of the Army | 26 August 1939 | 6 November 1940 | |
17 | Petar Pešić | 1871–1944 | General of the Army | 6 November 1940 | 27 March 1941 | 2nd Term |
18 | Bogoljub Ilić | 1881–1953 | General of the Army | 27 March 1941 | 14 April 1941 | |
19 | Dragoljub Mihailović | 1893–1946 | Divisional General | 19 January 1942 | 1944 | Promoted to General of the Army in 1942. |
The Federal Secretary of People's Defense of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Serbo-Croatian, Croatian, Serbian, Macedonian: Savezni sekretar za narodnu odbranu SFRJ , Cyrillic: Савезни секретар за народну одбрану СФРЈ) was that country's defense minister during its existence from 1945 to 1992. He was the head of the Federal Secretariat of People's Defense (Savezni sekretarijat za narodnu odbranu - SSNO) and it was the most effective military person, while the Chief of the General Staff of Yugoslav People's Army (which was the formational part of SSNO) was the most professional and staff body.
It was the part of the Federal Executive Council (Federal Government).
# | Name | Born–Died | Rank | Start | End | Note |
1 | Josip Broz Tito | 1892–1980 | Marshal | 7 March 1945 | 14 January 1953 | |
2 | Ivan Gošnjak | 1909–1980 | General of the Army | 14 January 1953 | 18 May 1967 | Considered for promotion to General of the Yugoslav People's Army in 1955 |
3 | Nikola Ljubičić | 1916–2005 | General of the Army | 18 May 1967 | 5 May 1982 | |
4 | Branko Mamula | 1921– | Admiral | 5 May 1982 | 15 May 1988 | Promoted to Admiral of the Fleet in 1983 |
5 | Veljko Kadijević | 1925– | General of the Army | 15 May 1988 | 8 January 1992 | |
Blagoje Adžić | 1932– | Colonel General | 8 January 1992 | 27 February 1992 | Acting Federal Secretary of People's Defense | |
Života Panić | 1933–2003 | Colonel General | 27 February 1992 | 20 May 1992 | Acting Federal Secretary of People's Defense |
Following the breakup of Yugoslavia and the secession of four out of six constituent republic in the SFR Yugoslavia the remaining two (Serbia and Montenegro) established a federation in 1992 called the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (FR Yugoslavia). This lasted until 2003 when it was reconstituted as a political union called Serbia and Montenegro. In 2006 both countries declared independence and parted ways.
# | Name | Born-Died | Rank | Start | End | Note |
1 | Milan Panić | 1929– | No military rank | 14 July 1992 | 2 March 1993 | |
2 | Pavle Bulatović | 1948–2000 | No military rank | 2 March 1993 | 7 February 2000 | Assassinated |
3 | Dragoljub Ojdanić | 1941– | General of the Army | 15 February 2000 | 4 November 2000 | |
4 | Slobodan Krapović | 1948– | No military rank | 4 November 2000 | 29 January 2002 | |
5 | Velimir Radojević | 1956– | No military rank | 29 January 2002 | 17 March 2003 | |
6 | Boris Tadić | 1958– | No military rank | 17 March 2003 | 16 April 2004 | |
7 | Prvoslav Davinić | 1938– | No military rank | 16 April 2004 | 21 October 2005 | |
8 | Zoran Stanković | 1954– | Major General (Ret.) | 21 October 2005 | 4 June 2006 |
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