Ubio je upravo čovjeka koji je htio izjednačiti u pravima Slavene (i južne i Čehe i Poljake) sa Austrijancima i Ugarima - ali to velikosrpskim krugovima u Beogradu nije odgovaralo. I utjerali su nas u tamnicu naroda pod Karađorđevićima... Treba svaki dan fatihu Paveliću i VMRO-vcima proučit, što upucaše Kralja Aleksandra u Marseju 1934
Čitaj malo historiju, šta npr engleski autori kažu o Ferdinandu (a Englezi su vaši saveznici, je li?). "He proposed to replace Austro-Hungarian dualism with 'Trialism,' a triple monarchy in which the empire's Slavs would have an equal voice in government with the Germans and Magyars." (http://www.firstworldwar.com/bio/ferdinand.htm) ili "To counteract this, archduke Franz Ferdinand developed a plan which should enlarge the previous Dualism in the Habsburg empire of Austria and Hungaria to a Trialism Austria-Hungary-Southern Slavia. In addition he wanted to grant the individual Slavic population groups equal rights and far-reaching inner autonomy. Ferdinand thought that this would be the way to keep them in the empire association and to safeguard the continuance of the multinational state. " (http://www.docjordan.de/aufsatzsammlung/militaerhistorische-themen/why-did-austria-go-to-war-1914.html)
Kakve to veze ima sa kraljem Aleksandrom? Jel dokazana ikakva veza Karadjordjevica (koje inace smatram totalno promasenim vladarima) sa ubistvom Ferdinanda? Ili velicas Pavelica iz nekih drugih razloga? Citajuci tvoje ostale komentare, stekao sam utisak da je zal za Ferdinandom i AU ipak sekundarna pojava kod tebe.
Ima veze utoliko što Bosni nikad nije bilo gore nego pod Karađorđevićima - i zato sam vječno zahvalan ustašama i VMRO-u što ga "ohladiše". A čitavo je ubistvo diigovano iz Beograda. I poslije su se Aleksandar & Co riješili šefa Vojne obavještajne službe Apisa, da zataškaju tragove...
"In late 1916 and early 1917, secret peace talks took place between Austria-Hungary and France. There is circumstantial evidence that parallel discussions were held between Austria-Hungary and Serbia with Prime Minister Pašić dispatching his righthand man Stojan Protić and Regent Alexander dispatching his confidant Colonel Petar Živković to Geneva on secret business. Charles I of Austria laid out Austria-Hungary's key demand for returning Serbia to the control of the Serbian Government in exile: that Serbia should provide guarantees that there be no further political agitation emanating from Serbia against Austria-Hungary."
For some time, Regent Alexander and officers loyal to him had planned to get rid of the military clique headed by Apis as Apis represented a political threat to Alexander's power. The Austro-Hungarian peace demand gave added impetus to this plan. On 15 March 1917 Apis and the officers loyal to him were indicted, on various false charges unrelated to Sarajevo (the case was retried before the Supreme Court of Serbia in 1953 and all defendants were exonerated), by Serbian Court Martial on the French-controlled Salonika front. On 23 May Apis and eight of his associates were sentenced to death; two others were sentenced to 15 years in prison. The Serbian High Court reduced the number of death sentences to seven. Regent Alexander commuted four of the remaining death sentences, leaving just three death sentences in place. In justifying the executions, Prime Minister Pašić wrote to his envoy in London:"...Dimitrijević (Apis) besides everything else admitted he had ordered Franz Ferdinand to be killed. And now who could reprieve them?"
Pavelić je vladao u doba rata, kad je sve ekstremno, Karađorđevići u doba mira. Ali tako očajno da je bilo malne k'o u ratno doba.
Za vrijeme Austrije, Sarajevo je pretvoreno u moderan srednjoeuropski grad - i nisu Austrijanci gradili samo za svoje potrebe: zgradu Šerijatske sudačke škole, gdje je danas Fakultet islamskih nauka, dao je izgraditi lično Car Franjo Josip - isto kao i jednu džamiju u Bileći: https://bs.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carska_džamija_u_Bileći
I zato smo se mi Bošnjaci junački borili za našeg Cara i Kralja Franju Josipa, bošnjačka jedinica bila je najodlikovanija u K.u.K. vojsci, čak ima i marš u njihovu slavu... "In 1895 Eduard Wagner wrote the "Die Bosniaken Kommen" march to honour the k.u.k. Bosnian soldiers, the second Infantry Regiment in particular.
Many Bosnian soldiers from the Second Regiment were killed over 1916 and 1917 in fighting in north Italy during World War I and were subsequently buried in the small village of Lebring-Sankt Margarethen, near Graz, Austria. Since 1917 locals have held a modest memorial service to mark the anniversary of the Battle of Monte Meletti in South Tyrol, only interrupted briefly during the Nazi period. Currently there is a Memorial plaque and a street named "Zweierbosniakengasse" ("Second Bosniak Street") in Graz. The Italians and the Austrians have also erected a Memorial plaque to the role of the Bosnian soldiers in the biggest Italian military defeat of the war. An impassable ridge defended by Bosnian soldiers four kilometers north of Gorizia is now called the "Passo del Bosniaco" (Pass of the Bosniak). In honour of the Fourth regiment a monument has been erected on the eastern slope of Rombon mountain in Slovenia. Two Bosnian soldiers wearing fez are carved on granite, which takes into account the Rombon. The monument was made by Ladislav Kofranek, a sculptor from Prague. In 1929 the Army History Museum in Vienna erected a Memorial Plaque to the Bosnian veterans."
http://www.uni-regensburg.de/Fakultaeten/phil_Fak_III/Geschichte/istrien/route-log-pod-mangartom.html
Remembering the Bosnian Infantry (Fabian Bonertz): During the war, Bosnians soldiers were considered to be elite troops (Imamović 2007, p.467) and were known to show extraordinary bravery (Schindler 2001, p.70). To use the words of an Austrian battlefield guide published in 1917 by i.r.(1) officers: "Every single one a hero!“ (Stefan 1917, p.8); at the same time, they were dreaded by the Italians (Wörsdörfer 2004, p.94). Like most Bosnian Muslims during the war, Bosnian soldiers were known for their loyalty (cf. Malcolm 1996, p.159 et 163).