The RAM (lit. "frame") Plan was developed over the course of 1990. It was finalized in
Belgrade,
Serbia during a military strategy meeting in August 1991 by a group of
Serb officers of the
Yugoslav People's Army (JNA), including General
Blagoje Adžić, General Major
Milan Gvero, Major
Čedo Knežević, Lieutenant Colonel
Radenko Radinović, and General
Aleksandar Vasiljević, and experts from the JNA's Psychological Operations Department. In the same month Serbian president
Slobodan Milošević and
Radovan Karadžić met to discuss when to attack
Bosnia and Herzegovina during which Karadžić was told his weapons delivery would arrive soon from General
Nikola Uzelac, JNA commander of
Banja Luka. During the conversation, Milošević mentioned RAM, asking Karadžić “You know what RAM is?“ to which Karadžić responded positively. Milošević and Karadžić were in regular contact by phone. In September 1991, the existence of the RAM Plan was leaked by
Yugoslav Prime Minister Ante Marković and its details were published in the Belgrade weekly
Vreme. He says "the line has been clearly established [between the Serbian government, the army and Serb politicians in Bosnia and Herzegovina]. I know because I heard Milošević give the order to Karadžić to get in contact with General Uzelac and to order, following the decisions of the meeting of the military hierarchy, that arms should be distributed and that the
TO of Krajina and Bosnia be armed and utilized in the realization of the RAM plan.". He accused the JNA of having "placed itself directly in the service of one side" and requested that
Yugoslav Defense Minister Veljko Kadijević and Adžić resign, claiming the two were "waging their own war in Croatia" and that they had arranged a secret arms deal with conservative
Soviet Union military leaders during their March 1991 visit to
Moscow. Marković pressed Kadijević to comment on the RAM plan. The transcript of the tape leaked said:
Vreme had reported that in addition to Bosnian Serb declarations of autonomy, effort was being taken to arm Serb villages and towns in Bosnia and Herzegovina as early as 1990 and continued into 1991. It detailed the origin of the weaponry and the JNA's involvement in the matter. During
Milošević's trial at the
International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia a tape played from 8 July 1991 stated: Milošević later claimed that RAM was a
codename indicating switching to
secure communications and did not stand for a
war plan, even though no such switch subsequently happened which Milošević did not explain as to why. Croatian historian Davor Marijan subsequently described the RAM plan claims as based on circumstantial evidence, saying no specific evidence of the plan has been provided . The September 1991 leak alarmed the Bosnian government, which decided to proclaim independence on 15 October. At the time the
Croatian War of Independence was in full swing, and Serbian actions in Bosnia mirrored those of the Serbs in Croatia. In December 1991,
Ante Marković resigned in protest against the excessive use of the Yugoslav budget on military spending which was dedicated 86 percent. ==Arrangements==