The Socialist Republic of Yugoslavia is a country located in the western Balkans. As a federation it is made up from the following sovereign nations; SR of Serbia, SR of Croatia, SR of Bosnia and Herzegovina, SR of Croatia, SR of Macedonia, SR of Kosovo, SR of Vojvodina and SR of Montenegro. It is led by General-Secretary Josip Broz Tito, a renowned military leader in his own right and national hero. After World War I, the Greater Habsburg Vienna had annexed practically all of the Balkans, but this new state soon collapsed under its own weight and disintegrated. Bosnia, Serbia, Montenegro, Albania and Croatia allied against the communist South European Pact, finding themselves defeated in the Third Balkan War. While originally broken down into a number of less threatening states, most of these voted for pan-slavic communist parties, agreeing to form the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia (renamed in 1963). During World War II, Yugoslavia was instrumental in holding back the Germans at one of the closest points of the front. Slovenia was lost to the Danubian Federation during the Second Treaty of Versailles. Yugoslavia distinguishes itself amongst the communist east for its rather independent foreign policy, with Tito often pushing the SEP away from Soviet influences, and for its extremely strong electronics industry.