commemorating the attack was placed in 2011 In a television report taped and broadcast shortly after the bombing, Tuđman said that the attack appears to have been meant to destroy the Banski Dvori as the seat of the
statehood of Croatia, and as a
decapitation strike. He concluded with statements of resolve to end foreign occupation and rebuild the nation. Marković telephoned his office in Belgrade blaming Yugoslav Defence Secretary General
Veljko Kadijević for the attack. He demanded his resignation, threatening not to return to Belgrade until Kadijević was out of office. The Yugoslav Defence Ministry brushed away the accusation, claiming that the attack was not authorized by the central command and suggesting that the event might have been stage-managed by the Croatian authorities. The Yugoslav military later suggested that Croatian leadership planted
plastic explosives in the Banski Dvori. In response to the situation, the
United States consulate advised American nationals, including journalists, to leave Croatia. The US
State Department announced that it would consider introducing
economic sanctions against Yugoslavia.
Germany condemned the attack, calling it barbarous, and blamed it on the Yugoslav military. On 8 October 1991, as the independence declaration moratorium expired, the Croatian Parliament severed all remaining ties with Yugoslavia. That particular session of the parliament was held in the
INA building in
Šubićeva Street in Zagreb due to security concerns provoked by the recent
air raid; Specifically, it was feared that the Yugoslav Air Force might attack the parliament building. After the bombing, the residence of the President of Croatia was moved from the Banski Dvori to the
Presidential palace—formerly known as
Villa Zagorje—in the
Pantovčak area of Zagreb. Funds to repair the Banski Dvori were approved in 1995, and the site became the official residence of the
Croatian Government. A
plaque commemorating the bombing was placed at the Banski Dvori facade 20 years after the attack, in 2011. The bombing is also commemorated by the
Zagreb City Museum as the event is featured in the
Zagreb in Independent Croatia collection of its permanent display. ==Footnotes==