Al Qaeda in Kosovo 

By M. Bozinovich 

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"It's not true there were mujahideen in Kosovo. That is a figment of your
imagination." Sabit Kadriu, Albanian 'human rights' activist in Kosovo while
testifying against Milosevic at the Hague 
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At the April's international police conference held in Sofia, Bulgaria
reiterated that Islamic terrorism is creeping up in the Balkans. Speaking at
a regional police anti-crime conference, Bulgarian General Boiko Borisov
urged for "joint efforts to fight the global terrorism network" calling on
the participants from the likes of Germany, Albania and Turkey to join
efforts in limiting militants' access to financing and to enhance security
of transport and border control. 
Earlier in March, the Bulgarian spy chief Kircho Kirov issued a more
specific warning on presence of al Qaeda in the Balkans and bluntly stated
that extremists with links to Osama Bin Laden's Al Qaeda network are present
in the Balkans and are infiltrating other European countries. In a joint
NATO-Bulgarian report published in March 2005, Kirov cities Kosovo as a
direct source of regional instability and a hub for international terrorism.


Indeed, speaking by proxy is nothing new, so these broad and sweeping
statements by Bulgaria are significant because it is the US with its FBI
offices in Sofia that ultimately stand behind these statements. What is not
new is that Washington itself, as usual, has elected to remain mute on the
specific al-Qaeda presence among Kosovo Albanians so one is left to search
for the terrorist dots elsewhere in order to connect them. 

For example, Reuven Paz, who teaches at Haifa University and is regarded as
one of Israel's leading researchers of radical Islamic movements, says that
the Islamic countries and particularly Saudi Arabia view the conflicts in
Kosovo as that of Islam against Christianity. "All of the Sunni Muslim
groups as well as Iran are making lots of propaganda for Kosovo and see it
as a symbol," Paz said. The reason for the propaganda is to attract Muslim
volunteers to go to Kosovo and fight. Al-Qaeda then is the only well
established network that can provide such a trip for a young prospective
Muslim eager to do his Islamic tour of duty and willingly die for Allah. 

While reports abound that Bosnian Jihadists simply swerved upon Kosovo
during the 1995-1999 period, Jane's International Defense Review reported
that some fresh Jihadists were entering Kosovo via Albania as well. In
February 1999 Jane's cites that documents found on the body of a KLA member
showed that he had escorted several volunteers into Kosovo, including more
than a dozen Saudi Arabians. 

A more specific case is that of a Syrian-German businessman, Mamoun
Darkazanli, who was arrested in Hamburg in October of 2004 on charges that
he "helped fund the al-Qaeda terrorist network for years and who is seen in
a video at a mosque with some of the Sept. 11 hijackers." According to the
Hamburg authorities, "Darkazanli is alleged to have been involved in the
purchase of a ship for bin Laden, handling administrative details, and
paying bills. He also allegedly traveled to Kosovo in late 2000 on an
al-Qaeda mission". 

In 2003, NBC News acquired a videotaped statement of Muhammad Talal al-Jafar
al Tallani Ackbar al-Walid, described as al-Qaeda's Deputy Under-Emir for
Defensive Intelligence and Holy War Operations, denouncing US and calling
for world Jihad against the West. The report then goes on to describe
Muhammad Talal as one that was "involved in noteworthy military operations
in the past, serving in covert operations alongside the CIA in Afghanistan
and in Bosnia and Kosovo before joining al-Qaeda." The report cites that
American soldiers Lt. Gen. William Boykin and Will Dunham contributed to the
report. 
  
 
Reported al-Qaeda cells in Kosovo are indicated in red, resembling a
satellite structure. 
 
  http://www.serbianna.com/columns/mb/035_files/map_small.jpg
   
 
Yet, the most blunt admittance that al-Qaeda is in Kosovo comes from the big
dogs themselves - Britain and the US. 
Alarmed that al-Qaeda may hit Britain during the run-up to the May 5 general
elections, UK says that "the main threat is posed by around 200 people based
here who have been trained by al Qaeda in Afghan camps for conflict in
places such as Chechnya, Bosnia and Kosovo." 

Also stated as an inadvertent afterthought that al-Qaeda is in Kosovo came
few weeks earlier by the FBI citing an arrest warrant for a certain Kifah
Wael Jayyousi accused of "conspiring with two other men in the 1990s to
finance, recruit and provide equipment to extremists fighting in Bosnia,
Chechnya, Kosovo and Somalia." 

The question then is no longer whether al-Qaeda is in Kosovo, but rather how
could al-Qaeda have infiltrated Albanian inhabited areas of the Balkans
precisely during the period when the US was blanketing it with its own
troops. 

The Albania Romance 

Following the collapse of Stalinism in Albania, the newly elected President
Sali Berisha quickly decided to leverage his strategic European location and
Islamic heritage by placing his country on sale to the highest Muslim bidder
and acquire money from that Islamic sponsor. According to the IWPR "The
Islamic connection [in Albania] can be traced back to 1992, when the
Tirana-based Economic Tribune published a letter from Berisha to his prime
minister, Aleksander Meksi, in which he said was going to help accept aid
from Muslim countries because the West had not lived up to promises of
financial assistance." 

Islamic countries, and especially Saudi Arabia, were long interested in
using Albania as a hub via which to infiltrate Europe and Islamize it.
Albania quickly became a distinguished member of world Islamic institutions,
including the Islamic Conference and The Islamic Development Bank. 

Although there is no indication that the US was alarmed of the new Islamic
sponsors at the time, Washington initiated a takeover of Albania and dully
began supplying direct assistance following Berisha's visit to the US in
March 1991 while in 1992 Washington deployed a Military Liaison Team to the
country and started outfitting the Albanian military. Albania was
subsequently used by the US and Turkey to provide supplies to Bosnian
Muslims in their war against Serbs. 

While US was instituting a military takeover of Albania, Albanian-Jihadist
nexus was maintained by Albania's Chief of Security Baskim Gazidede. Israeli
Mossad documented that the Security Chief Gazidede had extensive connections
with the Jihadists and was the chief link between al-Qaeda, Albania and KLA.
Says Albanian Gazeta Shqiptare: "'The Gazidede file', widely disputed of
connections with the Islamics must have already been completed with data
which 'Mossad' has gathered over the last years". Gazidede subsequently ran
off to Syria, another terror sponsoring nation. 

Before his departure to Syria, however, Gazidede established training camps
across Albania and the often cited ones are in Tropoje and Bajram Curi.
Given the influx of al-Qaeda into Albania it is then logical to conclude
that these Jihadists had to have, at least, some form of an orientation
meeting somewhere in Albania before let lose in Kosovo. 

Indeed, reports abound that US, British SAS and German BND trained, equipped
and used the Kosovo Liberation Army units, by now pregnant with al Qaeda
Jihadists, to destabilize Serbia. In March of 2000, for example, London
Times uncovered American agents that "admitted they helped to train the
Kosovo Liberation Army [KLA] before Nato's bombing" of Serbia while in
August of 2000 the KLA deputy chief of staff Colonel Dilaver Goxhaj gave an
interview to UPI stating that senior Albanian commanders were trained in
Albania since 1991. 

French Le Monde, furthermore, states that by "1996 the BND intelligence
service was building up its offices in Tirana and Rome to select and train
prospective KLA cadres. Special forces in Berlin provided the operational
training and supplied arms and transmission equipment from ex-East German
Stasi stocks as well as black uniforms." 

During March-May 1999 when NATO bombed Serbia, NATOs General Wesley Clark's
cell phone number was found among the killed KLA commanders in Kosovo. 

Seized KLA weapons such as American Barrett M82 .50 cal sniper rifles along
with German models, as well as reports of American 'Stinger' SAMs used by
KLA Albanians during their war with Macedonia also point to the US-Albanian
collaboration. 

Finally, in February 2005, German Network TV ZDF concluded that the Albanian
"KLA has stronger ties with the CIA than the [German] BND. Commander Hoxha
had ties with the CIA, the BND and with the Austrian military intelligence
service which has devoted great attention to this region and has very good
connections with the KLA." 

Far from ignorant of al-Qaeda in Albania, the US appears to have had an
uneasy relationship with them. Illustrates Tirana based Gazeta Shqiptare:
"The arrests of Ahmed Ibrahim Al Naggar and Mohammed Hassan Mahmoud, and the
extradition of the director of the Revival of Islamic Legacy foundation as a
jihad collaborator in Tirana in June 1998, the arrest of Amoid Naji in Turin
of Italy and his deposition before Italian investigators that he was in
Albania to blow up the US embassy in Tirana, and other facts of this kind go
to prove that the activity of terrorist jihad organizations is present and
well-organized in Albania." 

Gazeta Shqiptare goes on to say that "Islamic terrorist organizations
managed to set up Albania's first cell of the Islamic Jihad, which was
headed by Aiman Al Zavahiri." the famous Osama bin Laden No. 2. 

Regarding Naggar, the New York Times says that he is "the Jihad member,
[who] tied Mr. bin Laden directly to the network in Albania". The Times then
provides a vivid detail: "Albania cell's members, most employed at Islamic
charities in Tirana, were forced to transfer 26 percent of their salaries to
Islamic Jihad." The chief of the Albanian al-Qaeda, the Egyptian Shawki
Salama Mustafa, moved in there with his wife Jihan Hassan, who later
testified that their business was to turn out passports and that she "saw a
passport with my name on it and it said I was Albanian". 

According to the Global Policy, in addition to the drug and human
trafficking, Albanian criminal network in Brussells specializes in forging
of documents and false passports. An al-Qaeda operative, Djamel Beghala, was
arrested in Dubai after the customs agent recognized one of these Albanian
type false passports. 

What these reports suggest is that Clinton extended his "don't ask, don't
tell" policy to Albania allowing it to assimilate al Qaeda within the
Albanian KLA army and only then to provide the training, equipment and arms
to them in order to wage war on Serbia. The "assimilation" part is what kept
Clinton safe from being accused of being in bed with the al-Qaeda. 

Since 9/11, the original mandate of waging war on Serbia appears to have
been appended with a danger sign: "Our presence in the Balkans has not only
promoted peace in the region, it has also enhanced our ability to conduct
counter-terrorism operations." said Gen. Richard Myers in 2003 following his
trip to Camp Bondsteel in Kosovo. 

Has the US established a firm enough infrastructure in the Balkans to combat
the terrorist Islamic plague emanating out of the Albanian-dominated Kosovo?


The Bulgarian Romance 

Denying Russia airspace in 1999 was historically unprecedented move by
Bulgaria that initiated its gambit to be the Western spy proxy in the
Balkans. During the bombing of Serbia that followed, moreover, Bulgarian
intelligence agents were used to point sensitive targets in Serbia and later
were inserted as a spy unit within the Dutch contingent of KFOR, the NATO
army that runs Kosovo. The KFOR Commander Reinhardt was rather impressed by
the Bulgarian spies so he extended their mission in order "to activate the
collaboration with the Kosovo population in the spying and the collection of
information". 

To speed up the American intelligence approachment, Bulgaria made another
gambit and removed Russia from the Bulgarian picture. Impressed by
Bulgaria's removal of Russian spies out of their country, the director of
the FBI, Louis Freeh, said, "Bulgaria is a key strategic partner for the
U.S., not just in the security area," and announced in March 2001 that FBI
may open an office in Bulgarian capital Sofia. 

In 2002, General Borisov was summoned to the US and, to his delight, told
that FBI will establish a permanent FBI office in Bulgaria. 

In 2004, the US Embassy in Bulgaria announced that a permanent office is in
place and the mission is "to protect and defend the United States against
terrorist and foreign intelligence threats." 

This year, FBI is undergoing an expansion that will open up 2,086 new spy
jobs, 615 agent and 508 Intelligence Analyst positions, of which FBI plans
to have permanent Legal Attaches in Bulgaria and Bosnia. 

The NATO-Bulgaria spying agreement also indicates that NATO has decided to
make Bulgaria the spymaster not only for the Muslim Kosovo Albanians but of
Chechens with whom Bulgaria once shared a common Stalinist brotherhood. The
conspicuous Bulgarian spying on Chechnya along with Kosovo indicates that
the US may be alarmed at the already reported Kosovo-Chechen terror network.
In February of 2000, Russian intelligence from the Federal Security Service
(FSB) made a claim that "Chechen warlords started buying up real estate in
Kosovo... through several real estate firms registered as a cover in
Yugoslavia" and have extensive ties with the Albanian organized crime
figures in Kosovo whose relatives are involved in Kosovo politics and are
seeking independence from Serbia. 

Therefore, Bulgarian blunt claims that al-Qaeda is in Kosovo are not some
haphazard blabber but rather a carefully orchestrated plan where the burden
of spying and intelligence discovery is shifted away from the West because
it is a diplomatic burden in their dealings with Kosovo Albanians who were
their proxy fighters and a manufactured, and a well processed, ready-to-use
pretext against Serbia. 

Sidelining of Serbia 

Sensing the imminent decision to anoint Bulgaria as the Balkan spymaster,
Serbian intelligence chief Momir Stojanovic gave an interview to the
official government news agency Tanjug in February 2004 and said that
Islamist militants - including al Qaeda - are actively operating in Kosovo,
Albania and Macedonia. 

While the official pretext for Stojanovic's interview was to protest
previous day's NATOs declaration that Kosovo operations are "a success and a
benchmark for future NATO missions", Stojanovic's interview reads more like
an invitation to the US rather then criticism. 

Heavy on specifics, Stojanovic began touting that Serbia has "procured"
loads of detail on al-Qaeda in the Balkans: "We have also procured evidence
that Al Qaeda has its strongholds in Kosovo and northern Albania. and their
activities have also been reported in western Macedonia", said Stojanovic
then proceeded to make a direct sales pitch of Serbia to the US with the
statement that Serbia has a well established spying infrastructure across
the Balkans because the Serbian intelligence agents have been monitoring the
Islamists for more than a year. 

The then-Serbian Minister of Defense Boris Tadic, now President of Serbia,
quickly denied Stojanovic's claims although in September 2003 Tadic himself
told a Macedonian newspaper that militant Islamic organizations are active
in the region and are acting in concert. Tadic's denunciation of
Stojanovic's statement was followed with a similar NATO statement that
publicly trashed Stojanovic's statement as another Serbian gibberish. 

The trashing of Stojanovic effectively sidelined Serbia and sealed
Bulgaria's anointing as the Balkan spymaster. 

That Stojanovic was not talking gibberish, however, was proved in December
2004 when an intelligence tip was made that al Qaeda operatives were
planning to land in Kosovo capital, Pristina, and use the Albanian terror
cells in Kosovo to attack US and the West but abruptly changed these plans
and moved in to another Albanian stronghold in the village of Kondovo near
Macedonia's capital Skopje. The US took this intelligence tip seriously
enough and shut the US embassy and all US government offices in Skopje. 

Washington Mute 

While American stubborn denial, and often a belittling public denouncing,
especially of Serb sources, that al-Qaeda is in Kosovo may be politically
motivated, it is, nevertheless, fueling delusional belief among Albanian
public that al-Qaeda is not among them. 

For example, Balkan Affairs Adviser for the Albanian lobby group in
Washington, the AACL, claims that "Bogus reports have proliferated since the
bombing of New York's World Trade Center about Bin Laden's forays into
Albania and the existence of mujahedin training camps in Kosova" and that
those reports have Serbian origin. The problem with this spin is not that
the followers of this lobby group get indoctrinated in believing statements
that are contrary to the facts, but that the policy-makers close with the
AACL may compromise the security of the US in that region. For example, the
most notable recepient of Albanian money and a great friend of AACL, Senator
Joseph Biden sits on the powerful Foreign Relations Committe and is
contempleting a presidential run in 2008. 

Although reports on al-Qaeda's Kosovo presence by FBI, USA Today, New York
Times or German papers hardly qualify as spin, the American silence on
specifics of al-Qaeda in Kosovo also impacts the Serbian side. Infuriated by
the silence, Serbian officials issue bellicose responses: "Belgrade should
have done more and should have looked for partners in the fight against
terrorism" laments Rada Trajkovic, a deputy of the President of the People
council of the north Kosovo. Trajkovic is in effect, blaming Belgrade for
its inability to translate presence of Islamic terrorists in Kosovo into a
pro-Serb policy shift of the West on the issue of the Kosovo status. 

Of course, having Milosevic give a presentation on al Qaeda in Kosovo is
indeed the case where the messinger is killing the message, the case of the
US Embassy shut down in Skopje indicates that the the likes of Stojanovic
should be taken seriously. In fact, the January 2005 report of the
Washington based Center For Strategic & International Studies indicates that
what Stojanovic has "procured" is taken seriously: "Al Qaeda's influence in
the Balkans was established a few years ago... Islamist extremist groups in
the Balkans such as 'Vehabija', 'Crvena Ruza' (Red Rose), and 'Teratikt',
which remain closely linked with Al Qaeda, are active in Kosmet...,
Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Albania, and Macedonia." 

Furthermore, in eastern Kosovo's city of Pec, Wahhabies have established an
orientation camp where holy Muslim warriors congregate around a recently
erected Wahhabi mosque. The Mosque is run by certain Mahmutovic from
Sjenica, a Serbian city in area of Sadzak that is a brewing hotbed of
Islamic hatred of the West and the Jews. Sandzak is also the center of the
Islamic Community, an outfit that governs Balkan Muslim Imams including the
Albanian ones in Kosovo. 

Based on these reports then, the map of al-Qaeda centers in Kosovo indicates
a satellite-type organizational structure: KLA controls the center of Kosovo
with Drenica as the stronghold with strategic satellite to the west near
Junik necessary for control of smuggling routes from Albania. Just across
from Junik range is Tropoje and Bajram Cura, another reportedly al-Qaeda
centers in Albania itself. 

The control of Shar Mountain range to the southeast can be used by al-Qaeda
to send groups into Macedonia to wage violence there as well as maintain
logistical support for their criminal enterprise in other al-Qaeda centers
in western Macedonia such as the cities of Tetovo, Gostivar and Kichevo. 

The reported Al-Qaeda presence in the Pomoravlje region in the East Kosovo
appears to be the staging area for fomenting violence into southern Serbia
while the northern al-Qaeda satellites such as in Bajgora, north of
Mitrovica, is there to foment fear among Serb communities in Mitorvica, most
sizable in Kosovo, and thus give them an incentive to leave. The reports
also indicate that a so-called Abu Baqr Sadiq mojahedin unit is operating in
southern Mitrovica, indicating that the city is surrounded and ready to be
cleansed of Serbs at the next outbreak of violence in Kosovo that may dwarf
the one that occured in March 2004. 

Could this be a deliberate set up that will be used as the pretext to allow
the Serbian troops back into Kosovo according to the UN Resolution 1244? Or
is a deliberate in the other direction: to finally exterminate all Serbs out
of Kosovo? 

One can interpret Washington's silence both ways. 
http://www.serbianna.com/columns/mb/035.shtml

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