The "Pro-American" Terrorists
By Julia Gorin
FrontPageMagazine.com | May 22, 2007

On cue, within minutes of news that four Albanians were involved in a
plot to attack American soldiers in New Jersey, we were treated to the
familiar disclaimers of Albanian pro-Americanism, meant to keep us on
program — lest the American people finally demand a reevaluation of
our self-destructive 1990s alliances which still dictate current
policy.


"3 Brothers implicated in Fort Dix plot had roots in fiercely pro-U.S.
region," rang out an International Herald Tribune headline of a widely
printed AP story:



Three Muslim brothers who allegedly helped plot to kill soldiers at a
U.S. Army base have roots in one of Europe's most pro-American corners
— a region that remains grateful to the United States for ending the
Kosovo war.
…
Albania was among the first countries to answer Washington's call for
troops to help support U.S.-led military offensives in Iraq and
Afghanistan. In Pristina, the capital of Kosovo…U.S. flags are
commonplace…



A Washington Post article began: "They hail from one of the most
pro-American and secular parts of the Muslim world — the ethnic
Albanian regions of Macedonia, where gratitude for U.S. assistance in
Kosovo during the 1990s still runs high." The same week, an
Albanian-Canadian broadcaster assured Canucks, "No one loves Americans
more than Albanians do" -- something that one Albanian spokesman after
another repeats.



Albanians are the most pro-American people in the world! everyone
proclaims as Albanians burn churches, kill nuns and behead monks in
Kosovo, the "most pro-American state-in-progress." Ah yes, this is who
loves America. A dubious endorsement indeed. Everywhere else, we are
hated for trying to beat back jihad. In Kosovo, Albania and the
Albanian Diaspora, they love us for enabling it. Any time you help
Muslims kill Christians, just like any time you help one nationality
clean out its ethnic rival, it'll thank you. For a little while.



Don't be fooled. Albanian love is conditional. And it's waning fast.



This was the overnight bus ride from Pristina to Montenegro that
Weekly Standard contributor and longtime champion of Balkan Muslims
Stephen Schwartz described last year for a site called
FamilySecurityMatters.com:



A man behind me began speaking almost immediately and without
stopping, in Albanian — which I understand…insistently focused on the
nature of God…[and on] the evil intentions of Americans, Iraq, and
bloodshed. I was startled because it is rare to hear Albanians, after
the rescue of Kosovo, badmouth Americans…"God is one, who are these
people like this American who come and try to tell us how to be
Muslims? What about Iraq? Why is this American here with his friend?"



Schwartz then described a rest stop:



I did not find out where I was until I asked a waiter in the
restaurant, because none of the Albanians crowded in the back with me
and my Sufi companion and the whisperer in darkness would speak
civilly to me. When I asked one man, in Albanian, the name of the
town, he answered in Serbian: "ne znam," "I don't know." Another said
it was the Montenegrin capital, Podgorica (it wasn't). And finally a
thin punk who could not have been over 20, and who, I soon realized,
had been encouraging the voice behind me, said in perfect English, "I
don't understand English." At the end of the rest period all three
people filed back into the bus and avoided looking at me.



Muhammad woke up and asked me what was going on. I told him, "Someone
back here is making Wahhabi speeches." He grinned as if in disbelief,
but said, "I'm not surprised."



The befuddled Mr. Schwartz continued: "But I am known in the Balkans
as an opponent of radical Islam…I had repeatedly been recognized
during this trip on the streets and in mosques in Albania and Kosovo,
and was previously warmly greeted."



When good will is acquired by doing someone's bidding, pro-Americanism
is won for the wrong reasons, and the gratitude will turn the moment
we stop furthering that party's agenda. In Kosovo, it began happening
as early as 2000, when the Kosovars started calling for the UN and
NATO "occupiers" to get out. Nor do the American and British flags
hanging upside-down from Pristina's Victory Hotel bode well for the
future of pro-Americanism in "Kosova". Meanwhile, the Wahhabi Muslims
who started flooding Kosovo upon our intervention have been making
sure that young Albanians sour on us anyway. In an article titled
"Behind Kosovo's Façade," Balkans observer Russell Gordon writes:



In many areas young Kosovo Albanians are being converted to the
Wahabist faction, and are highly visible in their telltale short
haircuts, beards, and ankle-length pants. As well, many Arabs are
present from the Middle East and France….Moreover, anti-Western
jihadist sermons are now a regular feature at many of the new mosques.
Western military intelligence officials have stated that the findings
of their investigations into the jihadist terror networks is routinely
ignored or blocked by NATO, UN and US officials.



And yet, just one year before his eye-opening bus ride, Mr. Schwartz
wrote what many Albanians still claim:



There are not now and never have been, in recent times, 'Muslim
militants' in Kosovo, aside from a handful of individuals and some
Saudi and other Gulf Arab-state cells operating through relief
agencies…No 'international Islamist factions' are present in Kosovo or
presently involved with Kosovo. No 'international Islamist factions'
were involved in the Kosovo war…Kosovar Muslims are extremely
anti-Islamist and pro-American.



Kosovo is the most heavily-policed, militarily-occupied region in
Europe. It does not now and has never had a 'fundamentalist minority'
in the sense the term is now understood, and no serious evidence to
the contrary can be produced.



So what happened? Did the Albanians whom Mr. Schwartz encountered on
his bus trip turn fundamentalist overnight? Not according to a 1992
report by the Task Force on Terrorism and Unconventional Warfare, as
Insight Magazine reported:



…Islam experienced an unexpected renaissance in communist Yugoslavia
in the mid-1970s…According to a TFTUW report, the Yugoslav government
in Belgrade was concerned about what it saw as evidence that within
its 40 percent Muslim population there were ''Muslim terrorists
operating against the West'' and that ''Yugoslav Muslim youths were
drawn into cooperation with and emulation of Arab terrorists.''



Our NATO invasion only sped up a process that was already well
underway. Here was the scene in 1980s Kosovo, as reported by almost
every major paper at the time. From a 1987 New York Times article:



…Slavic Orthodox churches have been attacked, and flags have been torn
down. Wells have been poisoned and crops burned. Slavic boys have been
knifed, and some young ethnic Albanians have been told by their elders
to rape Serbian girls.
…
The goal of the radical nationalists among them, one said in an
interview, is an ''ethnic Albania that includes western Macedonia,
southern Montenegro, part of southern Serbia, Kosovo and Albania
itself.''
…
As Slavs flee the protracted violence, Kosovo is becoming what ethnic
Albanian nationalists have been demanding for years, and especially
strongly since the bloody rioting by ethnic Albanians in Pristina in
1981 — an ''ethnically pure'' Albanian region, a "Republic of Kosovo"
in all but name.
…
Last summer, the authorities in Kosovo said they documented 40 ethnic
Albanian attacks on Slavs in two months…Officials in Belgrade view the
ethnic Albanian challenge as imperiling the foundations of the
multinational experiment called federal Yugoslavia, which consists of
six republics and two provinces.
…
The federal Secretary for National Defense, Fleet Adm. Branko Mamula…
said ethnic Albanian subversives had been preparing for ''killing
officers and soldiers, poisoning food and water, sabotage, breaking
into weapons arsenals and stealing arms and ammunition, desertion and
causing flagrant nationalist incidents in army units.''
…
Ethnic Albanians already control almost every phase of life in the
autonomous province of Kosovo, including the police, judiciary, civil
service, schools and factories. Non-Albanian visitors almost
immediately feel the independence — and suspicion — of the ethnic
Albanian authorities.
…
The hope is that something will be done…to exert the rule of law in
Kosovo while drawing ethnic Albanians back into Yugoslavia's
mainstream.



We certainly precluded that.



Between the plan to kill American soldiers in New Jersey and the
Bosnian jihadist in Utah earlier this year — police still don't have a
motive, which usually means it's jihad — the reevaluation of our
Balkan policies almost began. (The Kosovo and Bosnia connections to
the Madrid and London bombings apparently weren't enough). But the
reevaluation and the turning of the Kosovo independence tide that it
could bring threaten to once again recede into oblivion, as Americans
are coaxed into accepting the ubiquitous explanation that the Ft. Dix
four were an exception, a fluke, an aberration, and that the genesis
of their act has nothing to do with Albanianism, but with a scourge
that Albanians, like everyone else, suffer from and are averse to:
militant Islam.



"Few ethnic Albanians embrace militant Islam," assured the
aforementioned AP report. "Most are moderate or secular."



That line, present in every news item about Albanian or Bosnian
Muslims for the past decade, has been repeated ad nauseum by the many
Albanians interviewed for various follow-up articles to the Ft. Dix
story, with many insisting that this kind of religiousness is "not
Albanian." But when you cast your lot with the radicals who help your
land grab, when you accept help from them and align your early goals
with theirs, do you really think they won't come to collect?



When Albanians object to depictions of them based on events in recent
years, their sentences start with "Albanians have never been…", or
"Albanians historically are not…" — without understanding that they
should be speaking in the past tense. However this "nominally" Muslim
population started out, there is only one direction for it to go  from
here. (Besides, the long-existent mosques serving the Albanian
communities of Staten Island and New Jersey, not to mention the
Albanian-American Islamic Cultural Centers that dot the American
landscape, belie the "nominal" claim.)



Not being religious, and not being even a "cultural Muslim", didn't
keep former Kosovo prime minister Ramush Haradinaj (currently on trial
for war crimes) from meeting with bin Laden in Tirana in 1995, along
with his fellow non-religious Christian-killer (and Albright darling)
Hashim Thaci – at the Albanian president's offices (Sali Berisha, who
is now the Albanian prime minister).



And as we know by now, one doesn't need to be a practicing Muslim to
feel aggrieved when Muslims are arrested for plotting or committing
terrorism:



"We all have been supporters of America. We were always thankful to
America for its support during the wars in Kosovo and Macedonia," a
cousin, Elez Duka, 29, told The Associated Press.



"These are simple, ordinary people and they've got nothing to do with
terrorism. I expect their release and I expect an apology," he said,
waving his hands. "I see injustice. These are ridiculous charges."



His indignation captured the mood among Muslims in Kosovo, Macedonia
and Albania — places that have repeatedly expressed gratitude to the
United States for intervening in the 1998-99 Kosovo war and a 2001
ethnic conflict that pushed Macedonia to the brink of civil war.
…
"I don't see that they committed any act or that (the authorities)
have facts," he said. "They live in America and grew up in the
American culture. How can you say they are anti-American? These
accusations are totally unfounded. They have recordings of words, not
deeds."



As this report illustrates, even nominally Muslim pro-Americanism is a
brittle thing. And as soon as you deviate from the agenda, the
honeymoon is over.



The same report quotes Kosovo "Prime Minister" Agim Ceku, who wrote a
letter to the U.S. mission in Pristina, "expressing the 'extraordinary
feeling that Kosovo's people have for the U.S.' Ceku also denounced
what he called 'the disgusting idea' that Albanians could be involved
in an attack 'against a nation that has been very generous so far.'"



So far.



That means more is expected, and when those are the terms of
"friendship", the future for a pro-American Kosova doesn't look
bright.



When the architects of our Kosovo war continually boast that not a
single American life was lost in their "successful" war, the
appropriate response is "Not yet." The Albanian strategy in Kosovo in
fact has been a replay of the Oslo accords: Accept Western/infidel
help for as long as it furthers your territorial ambitions; then, once
the great powers are no longer willing to carry you to the next stage,
revert to "traditional" methods and take up arms against them. This
has been the modus operandi of Islamic conquest for the past several
decades. So either we're looking at a striking confluence of
methodology between Islam and "Albanianism" -- which is strongly bound
by nationalist and clan loyalties --  or its' no coincidence at all.



Those Albanian weapons, meanwhile, have been turned against the area's
Western benefactors for some time already. When shot at by Albanians
in trying to protect Serbs, KFOR troops are directed to flee rather
than return fire, which would draw attention to the region and beg the
question, "Why are the people we went to war for shooting at us?"



In addition to the intermittent threats to go to war against NATO
(which is in addition to actually shooting at peacekeepers since
2001), it turns out that both KLA and its mujahideen accomplices were
fighting Americans at the same time that Americans were fighting the
Serbs for them. As one American peacekeeper who was deployed to the
area admitted last week in an article meant to defend Albanians, "One
of our central missions was to protect ancient Christian churches that
the Mujahideen were blowing up. Our area experienced the occasional
IED and drive by shooting almost never aimed at US forces."



This would help explain how an Albanian applicant to al Qaeda could
claim, "I have Kosovo Liberation Army combat experience against Serb
and American forces. I need no further training. I recommend (suicide)
operations against (amusement) parks like Disney." (Emphasis added.)



And, writes Serbianna.com's Mickey Bozinovich:



[The] recent beating of an American peacekeeper by local Albanian
Muslims illustrates the fragility of the American military position in
that province if Muslim Albanian drug interests are threatened: an
unnamed American soldier was found off duty at a gas station and
beaten silly by Muslim Albanians because his unit took part in foiling
an unidentified illegal plot.



During a February mission to Brussels, after getting the usual empty
assurances of protections for Kosovo's non-Albanian minority, American
Council for Kosovo Director Jim Jatras asked a Hungarian member of the
European Parliament, "Isn't all this talk of protections for Serbs a
tacit admission that among the Kosovo Albanians are a lot of violent
and intolerant people? Why would you reward their violence with state
power?"



Looking Jatras in the eye, the parliamentarian replied, "Because we're
afraid of them."



Afraid…of pro-American people?



If pro-Americanism is what we so desperately seek, what about the
pro-American deed of rescuing 500 American pilots shot down in
Yugoslavia during WWII? The airmen were rescued by the Serb Draza
Mihailovich and his anti-Axis guerillas. The late U.S. Major Richard
Felman wrote:



A few days after the Germans had seen us bail out and counted ten
parachutes, they sent an ultimatum to the Chetnik [Serb] Commander in
the hills to either turn over my crew of ten to them or they would
wipe out an entire village of 200 women and children…But Gen. [Draza]
Mihailovich would hear none of it… He told us how life is just as
precious to the Serb as it is to the American.



Mihailovich's resistance to Nazi forces "would have far-reaching
implications for the outcome of the entire war," explained Aleksandra
Rebic, a military daughter who lived down the street from one of the
rescued men. Of the 500 Americans rescued, she wrote:



They would be nursed back to health by the Serbs loyal to Mihailovich,
who at great risk to themselves, would shelter, feed, and protect
these men who were foreigners on their soil. 500 American young men
would return home to become fathers and husbands and later
grandfathers who would tell their children and grandchildren the story
of how their lives had been saved so many thousands of miles away by a
man named Draza Mihailovich.



Writes author William Dorich:



The Serbs lost 52% of their adult male population fighting in the
First World War as American allies. Twenty-four years later the Serbs
were the only people in the Balkans to declare war on Nazi Germany.
Hitler bombed the "open city" of Belgrade on Palm Sunday in 1942,
killing 17,000 Serbs in one day. Surrender followed ten days later as
the Nazis invaded. The Serbs lost another one-third of their
population in the Holocaust again fighting as American allies,
especially against their own Croat, Bosnian Muslim and Albanian Nazis.



Then there are always pro-American acts of omission. While we see more
and more reports of terrorism being plotted against the U.S. from the
"unlikely" Balkan quarters of Kosovo, Bosnia and Albania, there seems
to be a lack of anti-U.S. Serb terror in the works. Except, of course,
in the movies and TV shows we write about them.



But no, we preferred, and prefer, to cast our lot with the Balkans'
most primitive elements — sacrificing friends to make friends of our
enemies. Men who severed Christian heads, killed federal employees who
were Albanian for "collaborating", and violently purged their own
ranks are the "statesmen" whom Condoleezza Rice and Nicholas Burns
meet with regularly, the men we've set up as the legitimate rulers of
an ethnically pure pro-American Kosovo, and who were honored guests at
the 2004 Democratic Convention.



Rather than rule of law, religious freedom, ethnic diversity, equal
justice and civil rights, Kosovo is governed by lawless, tribalistic,
blood-code-following, clan-oriented mob justice. While reports out of
Serbia concern debates in public schools over Evolution versus
Intelligent Design theory — similar to our own — a typical report out
of Kosovo concerned a debate over whether to kill the KFOR (NATO)
mascot because the dog was Serbian.



"We're defending our way of life," our leaders told us in 1999.
Perversely enshrining those 'common values,' a crude replica of the
Statue of Liberty overlooks our mono-ethnic handiwork from atop the
Victory Hotel where the American flag hangs upside-down just a few
yards below. Nearby are Bill Clinton Boulevard and Wesley Clark Avenue
— tributes cited recently as examples of the area's pro-Americanism.
(There are also streets named for Eliot Engel, Bob Dole and Madeleine
Albright.) Meanwhile, the former terrorists whom we installed as the
"Kosovo Protection Force" and as the legitimate government of the
province attend annual July 4th celebrations at the U.S. Consulate in
Pristina. One proposed banner for the competition to design "Kosova's"
new flag mimics the American flag, with the two-headed black Albanian
eagle in the corner where the 50 stars would be, plus red and white
stripes.



Great. The narco-terrorist gangster state we created is pro-American.
Are we so desperate for an endorsement that we must grasp it even if
it comes from a terror-friendly horde, our support of whom is already
coming home to roost?



Here is a description of the lifestyles of the families of the Ft. Dix
suspects from The Washington Post:



…Living among those varied families for the past seven years were the
Dukas, a three-generational clan of ethnic Albanians. Their Muslim
religious garb, repeated minor run-ins with the law, and a brood of up
to 20 children, grandchildren and other relatives…



And from the AP:



…the women in the ethnic Albanian family wore head scarves. They kept
farm animals in the backyard until others in the neighborhood of tidy
two-story houses complained…Neighbors there said four or five families
appeared to be living in the house...



Among Albanians, Bosnians, Croats and Serbs — even with all the
documented and imagined crimes attributed to the Serbs — the Serbs
were the Balkans' most civilized element. Add up Serb crimes, multiply
them by 10, and they're still not as scary as the people they were
fighting. (Or do we need to get into the skull-crushing, eye-gouging,
bloody-knife-licking,  using the "Serb-cutter", raping-and-burning,
neck-sawing, beheading and disemboweling that Bosnians, Croats and
Albanians engaged in?) So now ask why Serbs were so hated by those
they were fighting. And ask why KLA targeted Americans and Serbs
together.



Before you accept Albanian pro-Americanism, you must first ask what
made Albanians anti-Serb. Then you must look at photos of what the KLA
did to its enemies, so that when you're exchanging niceties and
recipes with your Albanian neighbors, keep in mind that, by and large,
the KLA terrorists remain their national heroes.



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