Operation Bura
Operation Bura, also known as the Mitrovdan Offensive, was a military operation conducted from 8 to 13 November 1992 during the Bosnian War.
It took place in the area of Vranjevići near Nevesinje in eastern Herzegovina, where combined Croat–Bosniak forces attempted to break through the defensive lines of the Army of Republika Srpska. The battle ended in a defensive victory for the VRS, which maintained control of the region and repelled the attacks.
Background
Following the implementation of the Vance plan, 55,000 JNA personnel from Bosnia and Herzegovina were transferred to a new Bosnian Serb army, later the Army of Republika Srpska, after the declaration of the Serbian Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina on 9 January 1992, preceding the 29 February–1 March independence referendum. Bosnian Serbs began fortifying Sarajevo on 1 March, with the first war fatalities in Sarajevo and Doboj on 2 March. In late March, Bosnian Serb forces shelled Bosanski Brod, and JNA artillery began shelling Sarajevo on 4 April.The JNA and VRS faced the Army of the [Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina], the Croatian Defence Council, and the Croatian Army, though a UN arms embargo limited preparations. By late April, the VRS had 200,000 troops with heavy equipment, the HVO and Croatian Defence Forces about 25,000 with limited heavy weapons, and the ARBiH lacked sufficient heavy weapons for its 100,000 troops. By mid-May, after remaining JNA units withdrew to the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, the VRS controlled roughly 60% of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
After the disintegration of the Yugoslav federation in 1991–1992,
eastern Herzegovina became a contested zone between Serb, Croat and Bosniak forces. By late 1992, units of the Croatian Defence Council, the Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and elements of the Croatian Army sought to push into VRS-held areas of Nevesinje and the upper Neretva valley.
Timeline
In June 1992, Croatian forces launched Operation Jackal against the Herzegovina Corps of the VRS, capturing areas around Mostar and Stolac and inflicting the first significant defeat on Bosnian Serb forces. The operation demonstrated the effectiveness of coordinated HV–HVO actions and provided tactical knowledge used in later offensives against the VRS in that area. The new attack coincided with the Serbian Orthodox feast day of St. Demetrius, giving rise to the alternative name "Mitrovdan Offensive."The Croat–Bosniak plan was to overrun the VRS defensive belt around Nevesinje and to open a route deeper into Herzegovina.
The combined HVO–ARBiH forces began a large-scale artillery barrage early on 8 November 1992, followed by infantry assaults toward the villages of Vranjevići and Kifino Selo. The VRS defence was led primarily by the 8th (Nevesinje) Motorized Brigade, supported by volunteers from Bileća. The existence of two parallel commands caused problems in coordinating the two armies against the VRS, a structural weakness evident from the very start of the war. Tensions between Bosniak and Croat forces further exacerbated these difficulties, as mutual distrust and competing political objectives hindered effective cooperation during this period. During the attack, the prominent Bosnian Croat commander Božan Šimović was killed after stepping on a mine, which caused a significant morale decline among the Croatian forces. After several days of intense fighting, the offensive failed to achieve a breakthrough. By 13 November, the attacking forces withdrew, having sustained heavy losses.
Aftermath
VRS reports record 42 killed in action and around 200 wounded.Estimates of Croat–Bosniak losses vary; several hundred fatalities have been suggested in later military summaries, though no official combined figure exists.
Operation Bura ended with the VRS maintaining control over Nevesinje and the wider region of eastern Herzegovina.
The failed offensive marked one of the last major coordinated HVO–ARBiH operations before relations between the two sides deteriorated into open conflict in 1993.
In Republika Srpska, the battle is remembered as a key defensive victory and is commemorated annually on Mitrovdan.
Local ceremonies in Nevesinje and Bileća honour participants from the VRS units involved.