The Swiss timer used by a Palestinian (Muslim Brohood) bomb maker was
purchased by Muslim Brotherhood handlers, Prescott Bush's associates
from WW2, Gehlen Org, to make a bomb placed on Pan Am 103 at Frankfort
Germany by CIA asset Monzer Al Kasser. Franfurt, that is in Germany,
Gehlen Org, German, Muslim Brotherhood, German run, Palestinian
extremists, Muslim Brotherhood and German again, Prescott Bush and
Adolf Hitler from the 1920's.

If anyone doubts that the Germans (Boeringer, see Hopsicker
http://madcowprod.com ) connected to 911 hijacker Atta might have
knowingly been working with CIA, Saudi, Pak, and Syrian(Monzer Al
Kasser and Lebanese heroin funding for 911) intel in the 911 false
flag operation which killed 3000 civilians, here is proof that German
intel does flag flag ops that kill civilians:

http://www.google.com/search?q=german+kosovo+caught
http://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php?threadid=3018247
http://wiredispatch.com/news/?id=463166
http://forum.prisonplanet.com/index.php?topic=71836.0
http://statismwatch.ca/2008/11/24/german-intelligence-agents-caught-staging-false-flag-terror-in-kosovo/
http://www.sott.net/articles/show/169604-German-intelligence-caught-in-Kosovo-false-flag-terror-op-refuses-to-comment
http://www.totse.com/community/showthread.php?p=10719958
http://news.google.com/news?q=german kosovo caught
http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,2144,3817641,00.html
Kosovo | 25.11.2008
Terror Row Escalates as Germany, Kosovo Trade Accusations 
Would German agents bomb an EU office in Pristina? Maybe, say
authorities in Kosovo; "absurd," according to the government in
Berlin. This difference of opinion is now threatening to become an
international incident.

Relations between Europe's biggest economy and the tiny former Serb
province that Germany is helping to rebuild have been under a cloud
since the arrest of three Germans in connection with the blast.

The men are agents of Germany's foreign intelligence service BND,
according to German and Albanian media, although neither the German
government nor the BND would confirm this.

A judge in Kosovo has ordered the trio to remain in investigative
custody for 30 days on terrorism charges related to the Nov. 14 blast,
which damaged the EU headquarters in the Kosovo capital.

German officials were outraged when the men, wearing handcuffs, were
hauled before the television cameras on their way to prison after the
court hearing at the weekend.

"The idea that the government of the Federal Republic of Germany could
be involved in terrorist attacks is absurd," government spokesman
Thomas Steg said on Monday, also ruling out involvement by government
agencies like the BND.

No one is above the law, says Thaci

Kosovo's Prime Minister Hashim Thaci Bildunterschrift: Großansicht des
Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift:  Thaci defended his country's actions
and judiciary

Kosovo Prime Minister Hashim Thaci defended the behavior of the
territory's judiciary as well as that of the security services, who
had reportedly been shadowing the Germans for months.

"No one is above the law ... The rule of law in Kosovo should be
respected in its entirety, regardless of its national background. We
should believe in the judicial bodies, and therefore should not have
any prejudice or political assessments," he said.

The three Germans were not registered as intelligence agents,
according to Kosovo President Fatmir Sejdiu. Sources said they were
undercover operatives working for a BND front company called Logistic
Coordination Assessment Services.

There are conflicting reports as to how they were caught. One version
is they were spotted fleeing the scene after one of them tossed an
explosive device at the EU office from an adjacent, empty building.

They were arrested five days later after a search of their home turned
up weapons and incriminating documents, including a sketch of the
premises, which houses the European Union's Special Representative for
the region.

Lawyers for the men, aged between 41 and 47, were quoted in German
media as saying the trio was not involved in the attack but went to
the scene "out of curiosity" four hours after the blast to take
photographs.

Kosovo's Koha Ditore daily said police were looking into a possible
link between the attack and similar bombings in 2007, targeting the UN
Mission in Kosovo, the office of the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) and the Kosovo assembly building.

No injuries occurred in any of the attacks but there are similarities,
such as the use of TNT and the make-up of the explosive device.

German press speculates on anti-EU cell

A burning EU flagBildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der
Bildunterschrift:  Some Kosovar Serbs resent the EU for its support of
Kosovo's independence

Germany's mass-circulation newspaper Bild speculated the blast was the
work of an anti-EU faction in Kosovo, which declared independence from
Serbia in February after nine years under UN protection.

Four days before the bomb attack, the Albanian majority in Kosovo
rejected a deal between the UN and Serbia for the EU police and
justice mission EULEX to take over administration of the territory's
law enforcement operations.

German officials are wondering how the affair managed to escalate the
way it did, especially in view of the fact that Berlin has been a
prominent backer of Kosovo's independence and is its biggest financial
donor after the United States.

Usually in cases involving intelligence-gathering actives, foreign
agents that run foul of domestic authorities are quietly ordered to
leave the country away from the glare of publicity.

DPA news agency


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