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Maybe - in his desperate quest to identify terrorist threads 
behind Tuesday's tragic bombings in New York and Washington
- George Bush should take another look at this article in
the Washington Times, published - (but evidently kept very
quiet) - little more than 2 years ago, at the hight of his
presidential predescessor's bombing of Serbian cities?...

John Jay


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http://www.diaspora-net.org/food4thought/binladen__kla.htm


KLA rebels train in terrorist camps
By Jerry Seper
The Washington Times, May 4, 1999

Some members of the Kosovo Liberation Army, which has
financed its war effort through the sale of heroin, were
trained in terrorist camps run by international fugitive
Osama bin Laden -- who is wanted in the 1998 bombing of two
U.S. embassies in Africa that killed 224 persons,
including 12 Americans.

The destruction of the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya
was blamed by the U.S. on Osama bin Laden's group.
Well before the start of the NATO operation reports
were pointing to his ties to KLA.

The KLA members, embraced by the Clinton administration in
NATO's 41-day bombing campaign to bring Yugoslav President
Slobodan Milosevic to the bargaining table, were trained in
secret camps in Afghanistan, Bosnia and elsewhere, according
to newly obtained intelligence reports.

The reports also show that the KLA has enlisted Islamic
terrorists -- members of the Mujahideen --as soldiers in its
ongoing conflict against Serbia, and that many already have
been smuggled into Kosovo to join the fight.

Known to its countrymen as the Ushtria Clirimatare e
Kosoves, the KLA has as many as 30,000 members, a number
reportedly on the rise as a result of NATO's continuing
bombing campaign. The group's leadership, including
Agim Ceku, a former Croatian army brigadier general,
has rapidly become a political and military force in the
Balkans. The intelligence reports document what is described
as a "link" between bin Laden, the fugitive Saudi including
a common staging area in Tropoje, Albania, a center for
Islamic terrorists.

The reports said bin Laden's organization, known as
al-Qaeda, has both trained and financially supported
the KLA.

 Many border crossings into Kosovo by "foreign fighters"
also have been documented and include veterans of the
militant group Islamic Jihad from Bosnia, Chechnya and
Afghanistan. Many of the crossings originated in neighboring
Albania and, according to the reports, included parties of
up to 50 men.

Jane's International Defense Review, a highly respected
British Journal, reported in February that documents
found last year on the body of a KLA member showed that he
had escorted several volunteers into Kosovo, including
more than a dozen Saudi Arabians. Each volunteer carried a
passport identifying him as a Macedonian Albanian.

Bin Laden and his military commander, Mohammed Atef, were
named in a federal indictment handed up in November in New
York for the simultaneous explosions Aug. 7 at the U.S.
embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
The indictment accused the two men of directing the attacks,
which injured more than 5,000 people.

The indictment said bin Laden, working through al-Qaeda,
forged alliances with government officials in Iran,
the National Islamic Front in the Sudan and an Iranian
terrorist organization known as Hezbollah. He was
indicted earlier this year by a federal grand jury in
New York for his suspected terrorist activities. The
al-Qaeda is believed to have targeted U.S. embassies and
American soldiers stationed in Saudi Arabia and Somalia.
The organization also is accused of housing and training
terrorists, and of raising money to support their causes.

The State Department, along with other federal agencies,
offered a $5 million reward last year for information
leading to the arrest and conviction of the two men.
Mr Clinton ordered a retaliatory attack on training bases
controlled by bin Laden in Afghanistan and a chemical
factory near Khartoum, Sudan, after the bombings.

Last year, while State Department officials labeled the
KLA a terrorist organization, saying it bankrolled its
operations with proceeds from the heroin trade and from
loans from known terrorists like bin Laden, the department
listed the group as an "insurgency" organization in its
official reports. The officials charged that the KLA
used terrorist tactics to assault Serbian and ethnic
Albanian civilians in a campaign to ruthlessly induce
Western media sympathy and achieve independence.

The KLA's involvement in drug smuggling as a means of
raising funds for weapons is long-standing. Intelligence
documents show it has aligned itself with an extensive
organized crime network in Albania that smuggles heroin
to buyers throughout Western Europe and the United States.

Drug agents in five countries believe the cartel is one
of the most powerful heroin smuggling organizations in
the world. The documents show heroin and some cocaine is
moved over land and sea from Turkey through Bulgaria,
Greece and Yugoslavia to Western Europe and elsewhere.
The circuit has become known as the "Balkan Route."

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration said in a recent
report that drug smuggling organizations composed of
Kosovo's ethnic Albanians were considered "second only
to Turkish gangs as the predominant heroin smugglers
along the Balkan Route." Greek Interpol representatives
have called Kosovo's ethnic Albanians "the primary
sources of supply for cocaine and heroin in that country."

France's Geopolitical Observatory of Drugs said the KLA
was a key player in the rapidly expanding drugs-for-arms
business and helped transport $2 billion in drugs a year
into Western Europe. German drug agents said $1.5 billion
in drug profits is laundered annually by Kosovo smugglers,
through as many as 200 private banks or currency-exchange
offices.

Jane's Intelligence Review estimated in March that drug
sales could have netted the KLA profits in the "high
tens of millions of dollars." It said the KLA had rearmed
itself for a spring offensive with the aid of drug money,
along with donations from Albanians in Western Europe and
the United States.

--- mlad <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

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