Croatia
Facts (21)
Sources
Independence play: Europe's pursuit of strategic autonomy ecfr.eu Jul 18, 2019 12 facts
claimThe Croatian government believes that NATO’s Article 5 promotes European solidarity in defense.
claimCroatia views its NATO membership as a cornerstone of its national security.
claimThe Croatian government believes European Strategic Autonomy could enable the European Union to assume a larger share of the defense burden, addressing United States requests.
perspectiveThe Croatian government advocates for making European Strategic Autonomy and NATO compatible with each other.
claimAustria, Croatia, Estonia, and Malta perceive European Strategic Autonomy primarily as information autonomy, which involves intelligence, analysis, and data collection.
claimThe Croatian government views European Strategic Autonomy (ESA) as an opportunity for its domestic defense sector.
claimThere is almost no public or expert discussion of European strategic autonomy in Croatia, and the country's prime minister, defence minister, and foreign minister have rarely mentioned the concept in public.
claimCroatia's focus on cyber defence is reflected in its creation of the Center for Pilotless Air Systems and Cyberspace Command.
claimMost EU countries view European Strategic Autonomy (ESA) efforts as having mixed results, with Slovenia and Malta seeing little progress, and Croatia believing the EU is further away from achieving ESA than it previously was.
claimCroatia prioritizes information autonomy over decision-making autonomy or autonomy of action in its approach to European strategic autonomy efforts.
perspectiveThe Croatian government perceives United States concerns regarding European Strategic Autonomy as a misunderstanding that Europe needs to resolve.
claimCroatia supports the reform of the European defence industry because the sector is relatively important to the Croatian economy, particularly in cyber defence.
Sustainability through business model innovation and climate ... nature.com Jan 20, 2025 2 facts
claimThe developing European economies sample in the study consists of 10 countries: Poland, Ukraine, Russia, Romania, Albania, Croatia, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Georgia, and Armenia.
claimThe European subset of countries analyzed in the research includes Poland, Ukraine, Russia, Romania, Albania, Croatia, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Georgia, and Armenia.
CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE FIFTH KIND -- A Ridiculous ... disappointmentmedia.com Apr 7, 2020 2 facts
accountNillco reports witnessing an unexplained aerial sighting in Croatia years ago, which was observed by at least seven other people and was not an airplane.
accountAn anonymous commenter claims to have witnessed an unidentified aerial phenomenon in Croatia years ago, which they assert was not an airplane, and that at least seven other people witnessed the same event.
Nutraceutical Compounds of edible wild plants collected in Central ... wildlife-biodiversity.com Sep 26, 2024 1 fact
referenceŁuczaj et al. (2013) documented the wild vegetable mixes sold in the markets of Dalmatia, southern Croatia.
A Knowledge Graph-Based Hallucination Benchmark for Evaluating ... arxiv.org Feb 23, 2026 1 fact
referenceThe paper 'MTEB: massive text embedding benchmark' was published in the Proceedings of the 17th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics in Dubrovnik, Croatia, pp. 2014–2037.
Global overview of dietary outcomes and dietary intake assessment ... link.springer.com Aug 21, 2021 1 fact
measurementStudies on diet in maritime settings were conducted in the UK, Germany, Denmark, Iran, India, China, Croatia, Italy, Brazil, the Philippines, Lithuania, and Poland, in addition to the United States.
How do we know what they ate? - The Australian Museum australian.museum Oct 21, 2020 1 fact
claimOver 800 Neanderthal bones discovered at Krapina Cave in Croatia display cut marks and hammerstone fragments, with marrow-rich bones missing and marrow-poor bones remaining intact.
Ethnobotanical and Food Composition Monographs of Selected ... ouci.dntb.gov.ua 1 fact
referenceŁuczaj, Fressel, and Perkovic (2013) documented the wild food plants used in the villages of the Lake Vrana Nature Park in Northern Dalmatia, Croatia.