Terrorist Cells Find Foothold in Balkans
Arrests Point to Attacks Within Europe

By Rade Maroevic and Daniel Williams
Washington Post Foreign Service
Thursday, December 1, 2005; Page A16

SARAJEVO, Bosnia -- The raid netted explosives, rifles, other arms and
a videotape pledging vengeance for the "brothers" killed fighting
Americans in Afghanistan and Iraq. Police found the cache in an
apartment occupied by an underground group that was aiming to blow up
the British Embassy in Sarajevo, Western intelligence officials said.

The Oct. 19 bust in Sarajevo confirmed a suspicion among several
intelligence agents that Bosnia and other parts of the Balkans are
becoming a launching pad for terrorist attacks in Europe.

In particular, Islamic radicals are looking to create cells of
so-called white al Qaeda, non-Arab members who can evade racial
profiling used by police forces to watch for potential terrorists.
"They want to look European to carry out operations in Europe," said a
Western intelligence agent in Belgrade, the capital of Serbia and
Montenegro, adjacent to Bosnia. "It's yet another evolution in the
tools used by terrorists."

Parts of the Balkans, stuck in lawless limbo after years of war in the
1990s, are ripe recruitment territory for Middle East radicals,
intelligence officials say. Bosnia is still divided among Muslim, Croat
and Serb population areas, even if nominally united under the
10-year-old Dayton peace agreement that ended ethnic warfare.

Muslim enclaves in Serbia are restive, and Muslim-majority Kosovo
remains an estranged province campaigning for independence six years
after NATO bombing forced out Serb-dominated Yugoslav troops.

The Balkans have long been a freeway for smugglers of cigarettes,
drugs, weapons and prostitutes. "All the conditions are present.
Embittered Muslims, arms, corruption -- everything underground
operators need to get established," said the Western intelligence
official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The raid on the Sarajevo group, which was said to have had contacts
with cells in Denmark and Britain, was not the only event that raised
concern. During the summer, Italian and Croatian police arrested five
people who allegedly plotted to bomb the funeral of Pope John Paul II
in Vatican City in April.

In addition, Serbian police accidentally came across a key suspect in
the March 2004 bombings of Madrid commuter trains while he was
traveling through the country by train. He arrived in the Balkans in
July, and Serbian police investigators conjecture that he was seeking
haven either in Bosnia or Kosovo and perhaps safe passage to the Middle
East. They quickly extradited the man, Abdelmajid Bouchar, a Moroccan
citizen, to Spain.

U.S. and allied intelligence officers have long worked together in
Sarajevo to keep an eye on Islamic radicals in Bosnia. After the Sept.
11, 2001, attacks in the United States, the CIA and other foreign
agencies set up a joint, fortified headquarters to keep tabs on
terrorism suspects in Bosnia, a Western intelligence source in Sarajevo
said.

The spy teams operate separately from the chief international overseers
of Bosnia, the Office of the High Representative, according to the
official.

During the three-sided war in Bosnia, hundreds of fighters from Arab
and other Middle Eastern countries flocked to Bosnia to fight on behalf
of the Muslim faction against Croats and Serbs. Many of the foreign
mujaheddin , or holy warriors, were expelled after the war, according
to the Bosnian government, but others remained and received passports.

Today, parts of Bosnia framed by the cities of Zenica, Tuzla, Sarajevo
and Travnik are home to these immigrants and compose the core regions
for Islamic militancy, Bosnian police and Western intelligence
officials say.

Until recently, the immigrants tried to keep a low profile. Western
intelligence officials here and in Belgrade surmised that they wanted
to exploit Bosnia as a logistics and transit point and not invite a
crackdown from local police or European Union peacekeepers.

The Sarajevo arrests changed that perception. A Bosnian Interior
Ministry official, Robert Cvrtak, released the names of four detainees
from the raid: Cesur Abdulkadir, who is of Turkish heritage; Mirsad
Bektasevic, a Swedish citizen of Bosnian origin; and Bajro Ikanovic and
Almir Bajric, both Bosnian citizens. Among their activities, Bosnian
police said, were hiding explosives inside lemons and tennis balls and
trying to set up training camps in the hills near Sarajevo.

Last Thursday night, Bosnian police arrested a fifth suspect in the
town of Hadzici, near Sarajevo. The police found about 20 pounds of
explosives hidden in woods near his home. The man, whose name has not
been made public, is suspected of being in charge of providing
explosives to the rest of group.

Police officials here say Bektasevic, 19, also ran a Web site on behalf
of Abu Musab Zarqawi, the Jordanian who heads the insurgent group al
Qaeda in Iraq. He had pictures of the White House in his computer, they
added.

Bektasevic operated under the code name Maximus and kept in touch with
a group of at least three men in Britain. British police arrested them
in early November, according to press reports.

A week after the original Sarajevo arrests, police in Copenhagen
detained four men ages 16 to 20 and said they had planned suicide
bombings somewhere in Europe. "We had a very short period to
investigate, but our information indicated that their action was
imminent," said a police spokesman, Joern Bro. The Danes believed that
the Copenhagen suspects had been in contact by phone and e-mail with
Bektasevic.

In August, police in Croatia arrested five Bosnians whom Italian
military intelligence had fingered for involvement in a plot to bomb
the papal funeral. The group originated in Gornja Maoca, a town in
northeastern Bosnia, and had planned to smuggle rocket launchers,
explosives and detonators into Italy. The plot fell apart, Western
intelligence officials said, when a suspect was arrested in Rome in
April. The Croatian police, acting on a tip from the Italians, found
the others in Croatia.

The capture of Bouchar, suspected in the Madrid train bombings, in
Serbia in July surprised police there. They had thought he was just
another Middle Easterner traveling illegally through the country until
an Interpol fingerprint check revealed his identity.

Authorities say Bouchar had narrowly escaped death or capture shortly
after the Madrid attacks, when police there sealed off an apartment
where suspects were hiding. Seven men died in the residence by
detonating explosives. Bouchar, however, was taking out garbage at the
time and fled, Serbian and Spanish officials say.

He traveled to Brussels, where he expected to obtain forged documents,
authorities said. However, his contacts there were either under arrest
or fleeing police. He moved on and spent time in Austrian and Hungarian
jails, but was freed. No one in either country checked his
fingerprints.

When picked up heading toward Belgrade, he was wearing a new business
suit. Western intelligence officials in Belgrade note that Serbia,
although predominantly non-Muslim, has pockets of Muslims in the Sanjak
region near Montenegro as well as Kosovo and other areas along the
province's border.

Williams reported from Belgrade.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/30/AR2005113002098.html

                                   Serbian News Network - SNN

                                        [email protected]

                                    http://www.antic.org/

Reply via email to