1995
Srebrenica massacre
In a UN-declared safe area in eastern Bosnia, Dutch peacekeepers stood by as Bosnian Serb forces under General Ratko Mladic separated men and boys from their families. Over a few days around eight thousand Muslim males were killed and bulldozed into mass graves. It was the worst massacre in Europe since the Second World War.
Oklahoma City bombing
A rented Ryder truck packed with four thousand pounds of ammonium nitrate exploded in front of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City. One hundred sixty-eight died, nineteen of them children in the daycare center. The bomber was Timothy McVeigh, a white army veteran who hated the federal government. Domestic terrorism was now American.
Rabin assassinated
After a peace rally in Tel Aviv, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was shot in the back by a young religious nationalist opposed to the Oslo Accords. He died in the ambulance. The peace process survived him in name only. Within a few years the second intifada would begin and the Oslo era would be buried with its architect.
Kobe earthquake strikes Japan
A 6.9 earthquake struck the Japanese port city of Kobe at dawn, killing more than six thousand, destroying highways that had been thought earthquake-proof, and exposing the inadequacy of Japan's emergency response. The yakuza organized faster relief than the government in some neighborhoods. It was a hard blow to Japanese postwar confidence.
Dayton Accords end Bosnian war
After three and a half weeks at an Ohio air force base, the presidents of Serbia, Croatia, and Bosnia initialed a deal that ended the Bosnian war. Bosnia was divided into two entities held together on paper. Sixty thousand NATO troops moved in to enforce the peace. The guns fell silent; the grievances did not.
Tokyo subway sarin attack
During the morning rush hour, members of the Aum Shinrikyo doomsday cult released sarin nerve gas in five Tokyo subway trains. Thirteen commuters died and thousands were injured. Japanese society, which had thought of itself as safe from terrorism, was shaken. The attack previewed twenty-first-century fears of weaponized science in the wrong hands.
Kobe earthquake
A 6.9 quake hit the Japanese port city before dawn, collapsing elevated highways that had been considered earthquake-proof and pancaking apartment blocks. Sixty-four hundred people died. The government response was slow and disorganized, revealing dangerous complacency in Japanese disaster planning. Yakuza gangsters organized better relief than the state in some neighborhoods. Japan's postwar self-image cracked.