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<https://dissidentvoice.org/2020/07/key-u-s-ally-indicted-for-organ-trade-murder-scheme/>
  


Key U.S. Ally Indicted for Organ Trade Murder Scheme


by Nicolas J.S. Davies / July 6th, 2020

14-17 minutes

  _____  

When President Clinton dropped 23,000 bombs 
<http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/kosovo/etc/facts.html>  on what 
was left of Yugoslavia in 1999 and NATO invaded and occupied the Yugoslav 
province of Kosovo, U.S. officials presented the war to the American public as 
a “humanitarian intervention” to protect Kosovo’s majority ethnic Albanian 
population from genocide at the hands of Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic. 
That narrative has been unraveling piece by piece ever since.

In 2008 an international prosecutor, Carla Del Ponte, accused U.S.-backed Prime 
Minister Hashim Thaci of Kosovo of using the U.S. bombing campaign as cover to 
murder hundreds of people to sell their internal organs 
<https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-53169808>  on the international 
transplant market. Del Ponte’s charges seemed almost too ghoulish to be true. 
But on June 24th, Thaci, now President of Kosovo, and nine other former leaders 
of the CIA-backed Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA,) were finally indicted for these 
20-year-old crimes by a special war crimes court at The Hague.

>From 1996 on, the CIA and other Western intelligence agencies covertly worked 
>with the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) to instigate and fuel violence and chaos 
>in Kosovo. The CIA spurned mainstream Kosovar nationalist leaders in favor of 
>gangsters and heroin smugglers like Thaci and his cronies, recruiting them as 
>terrorists and death squads to assassinate Yugoslav police and anyone who 
>opposed them, ethnic Serbs and Albanians alike.

As it has done 
<http://original.antiwar.com/Nicolas_Davies/2017/10/31/america-spreads-global-chaos/>
  in country after country since the 1950s, the CIA unleashed a dirty civil war 
that Western politicians and media dutifully blamed on Yugoslav authorities. 
But by early 1998, even U.S. envoy Robert Gelbard called the KLA a “terrorist 
group” and the UN Security Council condemned “acts of terrorism” by the KLA and 
“all external support for terrorist activity in Kosovo, including finance, arms 
and training.” Once the war was over and Kosovo was successfully occupied by 
U.S. and NATO forces, CIA sources openly touted the agency’s role 
<https://www.globalpolicy.org/component/content/article/192/38782.html>  in 
manufacturing the civil war to set the stage for NATO intervention.

By September 1998, the UN reported that 230,000 civilians had fled the civil 
war, mostly across the border to Albania, and the UN Security Council passed 
resolution 1199 
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Security_Council_Resolution_1199> 
, calling for a ceasefire, an international monitoring mission, the return of 
refugees and a political resolution. A new U.S. envoy, Richard Holbrooke, 
convinced Yugoslav President Milosevic to agree to a unilateral ceasefire and 
the introduction of a 2,000 member “verification” mission from the Organization 
for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE). But the U.S. and NATO 
immediately started drawing up plans for a bombing campaign to “enforce” the UN 
resolution and Yugoslavia’s unilateral ceasefire.

Holbrooke persuaded the chair of the OSCE, Polish foreign minister Bronislaw 
Geremek, to appoint William Walker 
<http://emperors-clothes.com/analysis/sixty.htm> , the former U.S. Ambassador 
to El Salvador during its civil war, to lead the Kosovo Verification Mission 
(KVM). The U.S. quickly hired 150 Dyncorp mercenaries 
<https://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-8031154.html>  to form the nucleus of 
Walker’s team, whose 1,380 members used GPS equipment to map Yugoslav military 
and civilian infrastructure for the planned NATO bombing campaign. Walker’s 
deputy, Gabriel Keller, France’s former Ambassador to Yugoslavia, accused 
Walker of sabotaging the KVM, and CIA sources 
<https://www.globalpolicy.org/component/content/article/192/38782.html>  later 
admitted that the KVM was a “CIA front” to coordinate with the KLA and spy on 
Yugoslavia.

The climactic incident of CIA-provoked violence that set the political stage 
for the NATO bombing and invasion was a firefight at a village called Racak, 
which the KLA had fortified as a base from which to ambush police patrols and 
dispatch death squads to kill local “collaborators.” In January 1999, Yugoslav 
police attacked the KLA base in Racak, leaving 43 men, a woman and a teenage 
boy dead.

After the firefight, Yugoslav police withdrew from the village, and the KLA 
reoccupied it and staged the scene to make the firefight look like a massacre 
of civilians. When William Walker and a KVM team visited Racak the next day, 
they accepted the KLA’s massacre story and broadcast it to the world, and it 
became a standard part of the narrative to justify the bombing of Yugoslavia 
and military occupation of Kosovo.

Autopsies by an international team of medical examiners 
<https://web.archive.org/web/20081022225255/http:/www.b92.net/eng/news/politics-article.php?yyyy=2008&mm=10&dd=22&nav_id=54412>
  found traces of gunpowder on the hands of nearly all the bodies, showing that 
they had fired weapons. They were nearly all killed by multiple gunshots as in 
a firefight, not by precise shots as in a summary execution, and only one 
victim was shot at close range. But the full autopsy results 
<http://balkanwitness.glypx.com/racakautopsies.htm>  were only published much 
later, and the Finnish chief medical examiner accused Walker of pressuring her 
<https://web.archive.org/web/20081022225255/http:/www.b92.net/eng/news/politics-article.php?yyyy=2008&mm=10&dd=22&nav_id=54412>
  to alter them.

Two experienced French journalists and an AP camera crew at the scene 
challenged the KLA and Walker’s version of what happened in Racak. Christophe 
Chatelet’s article in  
<https://www.lemonde.fr/archives/article/1999/01/21/les-morts-de-racak-ont-ils-vraiment-ete-massacres-froidement_3533047_1819218.html>
 Le Monde was headlined, “Were the dead in Racak really massacred in cold 
blood?” and veteran Yugoslavia correspondent Renaud Girard concluded his story 
<https://www.investigaction.net/fr/Le-massacre-serbe-de-Racak-n-a/>  in Le 
Figaro with another critical question, “Did the KLA seek to transform a 
military defeat into a political victory?”

NATO immediately threatened to bomb Yugoslavia, and France agreed to host 
high-level talks. But instead of inviting Kosovo’s mainstream nationalist 
leaders to the talks in Rambouillet, Secretary Albright flew in a delegation 
led by KLA commander Hashim Thaci, until then known to Yugoslav authorities 
only as a gangster and a terrorist.

Albright presented both sides with a draft agreement in two parts, civilian and 
military. The civilian part granted Kosovo unprecedented autonomy from 
Yugoslavia, and the Yugoslav delegation accepted that. But the military 
agreement would have forced Yugoslavia to accept a NATO military occupation, 
not just of Kosovo but with no geographical limits, in effect placing all of 
Yugoslavia under NATO occupation <https://www.serendipity.li/nato/app_b.htm> .

When Milosevich refused Albright’s terms for unconditional surrender, the U.S. 
and NATO claimed he had rejected peace, and war was the only answer, the “last 
resort 
<https://original.antiwar.com/nicolas_davies/2016/10/03/americas-deceptive-model-aggression/>
 “.  They did not return to the UN Security Council to try to legitimize their 
plan, knowing full well that Russia, China and other countries would reject it. 
When UK Foreign Secretary Robin Cook told Albright the British government was 
“having trouble with our lawyers” over NATO’s plan for an illegal war of 
aggression against Yugoslavia, she told him to “get new lawyers 
<http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/fr/1689291/posts> “.

In March 1999, the KVM teams were withdrawn and the bombing began. Pascal 
Neuffer 
<https://original.antiwar.com/nicolas_davies/2016/10/03/americas-deceptive-model-aggression/>
 , a Swiss KVM observer reported, “The situation on the ground on the eve of 
the bombing did not justify a military intervention. We could certainly have 
continued our work. And the explanations given in the press, saying the mission 
was compromised by Serb threats, did not correspond to what I saw. Let’s say 
rather that we were evacuated because NATO had decided to bomb.”

NATO killed thousands 
<http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/kosovo/etc/facts.html>  of 
civilians in Kosovo and the rest of Yugoslavia, as  it bombed 
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NATO_bombing_of_Yugoslavia>  19 hospitals, 20 
health centers, 69 schools, 25,000 homes, power stations, a national TV station 
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NATO_bombing_of_the_Radio_Television_of_Serbia_headquarters>
 , the Chinese Embassy 
<https://www.theguardian.com/theobserver/1999/nov/28/focus.news1>  in Belgrade 
and other diplomatic missions 
<http://www.cuba.cu/gobierno/documentos/1999/ing/d010699i.html> . After it 
invaded Kosovo, the U.S. military set up the 955-acre Camp Bondsteel, one of 
its largest bases in Europe, on its newest occupied territory. Europe’s Human 
Rights Commissioner, Alvaro Gil-Robles, visited Camp Bondsteel in 2002 and 
called it “a smaller version of Guantanamo,” exposing it as a secret CIA black 
site <https://www.dw.com/en/questions-arise-over-us-base-in-kosovo/a-1810615>  
for illegal, unaccountable detention and torture.

But for the people of Kosovo, the ordeal was not over when the bombing stopped. 
Far more people had fled the bombing than the so-called “ethnic cleansing” the 
CIA had provoked to set the stage for it. A reported 900,000 refugees, nearly 
half the population, returned to a shattered, occupied province, now ruled by 
gangsters and foreign overlords.

Serbs and other minorities became second-class citizens, clinging precariously 
to homes and communities where many of their families had lived for centuries. 
More than 200,000 Serbs, Roma and other minorities fled, as the NATO occupation 
and KLA rule replaced the CIA’s manufactured illusion of ethnic cleansing with 
the real thing. Camp Bondsteel was the province’s largest employer, and U.S. 
military contractors also sent Kosovars to work in occupied Afghanistan and 
Iraq. In 2019, Kosovo’s per capita GDP was only $4,458 
<https://www.worldbank.org/en/country/kosovo/overview> , less than any country 
in Europe 
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sovereign_states_in_Europe_by_GDP_(nominal)_per_capita>
  except Moldova and war-torn, post-coup Ukraine.

In 2007, a German military intelligence report described Kosovo as a “Mafia 
society <http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Europe/Kosovo_NATO_Colony.html> ” 
based on the “capture of the state” by criminals. The report named Hashim 
Thaci, then the leader of the Democratic Party, as an example of “the closest 
ties between leading political decision makers and the dominant criminal 
class.” In 2000, 80% of the heroin 
<https://books.google.com/books?id=mOcDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA64#v=onepage&q&f=false>  
trade in Europe was controlled by Kosovar gangs, and the presence of thousands 
of U.S. and NATO troops fueled an explosion of prostitution and sex 
trafficking, <https://www.theguardian.com/world/2004/may/07/balkans>  also 
controlled by Kosovo’s new criminal ruling class.

In 2008, Thaci was elected Prime Minister, and Kosovo unilaterally declared 
independence from Serbia. (The final dissolution of Yugoslavia in 2006 had left 
Serbia and Montenegro as separate countries.) The U.S. and 14 allies 
immediately recognized Kosovo’s independence, and ninety-seven 
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_recognition_of_Kosovo>  countries, 
about half the countries in the world, have now done so. But neither Serbia nor 
the UN have recognized it, leaving Kosovo in long-term diplomatic limbo.

When the court in the Hague unveiled the charges against Thaci on June 24th, he 
was on his way to Washington for a White House meeting with Trump and President 
Vucic of Serbia to try to resolve Kosovo’s diplomatic impasse. But when the 
charges were announced, Thaci’s plane made a U-turn  
<https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/war-crimes-charge-forces-hashim-thaci-to-abandon-trump-meeting-2z33857tj>
 over the Atlantic, he returned to Kosovo and the meeting was canceled.

The accusation of murder and organ trafficking against Thaci was first made in 
2008 by Carla Del Ponte <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carla_Del_Ponte> , the 
Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former 
Yugoslavia (ICTFY), in a book she wrote after stepping down from that position. 
Del Ponte later explained that the ICTFY was prevented from charging Thaci and 
his co-defendants by the non-cooperation of NATO and the UN Mission in Kosovo. 
In an interview for the 2014 documentary, The Weight of Chains 2, she 
explained, “NATO and the KLA, as allies in the war, couldn’t act against each 
other.”

Human Rights Watch 
<https://www.hrw.org/news/2008/05/04/kosovo/albania-investigate-postwar-abductions-transfers-albania>
  and the BBC <http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7990984.stm>  followed up on 
Del Ponte’s allegations, and found evidence that Thaci and his cronies murdered 
up to 400 mostly Sebian prisoners during the NATO bombing in 1999. Survivors 
described prison camps in Albania where prisoners were tortured and killed, a 
yellow house where people’s organs were removed and an unmarked mass grave 
nearby.

Council of Europe investigator Dick Marty interviewed witnesses, gathered 
evidence and published a report, which the Council of Europe endorsed 
<https://balkaninsight.com/2011/01/25/council-adopts-kosovo-organ-trafficking-resolution/>
  in January 2011, but the Kosovo parliament did not approve the plan for a 
special court in the Hague until 2015. The Kosovo Specialist Chambers 
<https://balkaninsight.com/2020/06/24/kosovo-specialist-prosecutor-charges-thaci-with-war-crimes/>
  and independent prosecutor’s office finally began work in 2017. Now the 
judges have six months to review the prosecutor’s charges and decide whether 
the trial should proceed.

A central part of the Western narrative on Yugoslavia was the demonization of 
President Milosevich of Yugoslavia, who resisted his country’s Western-backed 
dismemberment throughout the 1990s. Western leaders smeared Milosevich as a 
“New Hitler” and the “Butcher of the Balkans,” but he was still arguing his 
innocence when he died in a cell at The Hague in 2006.

Ten years later, at the trial of the Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic, the 
judges accepted the prosecution’s evidence that Milosevich strongly opposed 
Karadzic’s plan to carve out a Serb Republic in Bosnia. They convicted Karadzic 
of being fully responsible for the resulting civil war, in effect posthumously 
exonerating 
<https://www.counterpunch.org/2016/08/01/the-exoneration-of-milosevic-the-ictys-surprise-ruling/>
  Milosevich of responsibility for the actions of the Bosnian Serbs, the most 
serious of the charges against him.

But the U.S.’s endless campaign to paint all its enemies as “violent dictators 
<https://www.politico.com/news/2020/06/27/florida-democrats-karen-bass-vp-341931>
 ” and “New Hitlers” rolls on like a demonization machine on autopilot, against 
Putin, Xi, Maduro, Khamenei, the late Fidel Castro and any foreign leader who 
stands up to the imperial dictates of the U.S. government. These smear 
campaigns serve as pretexts for brutal sanctions and catastrophic wars against 
our international neighbors, but also as political weapons to attack and 
diminish any U.S. politician 
<https://www.politico.com/news/2020/06/27/florida-democrats-karen-bass-vp-341931>
  who stands up for peace, diplomacy and disarmament.

As the web of lies spun by Clinton and Albright has unraveled, and the truth 
behind their lies has spilled out piece by bloody piece, the war on Yugoslavia 
has emerged as a case study in how U.S. leaders mislead us into war. In many 
ways, Kosovo established the template that U.S. leaders have used to plunge our 
country and the world into endless war ever since. What U.S. leaders took away 
from their “success” in Kosovo was that legality, humanity and truth are no 
match for CIA-manufactured chaos and lies, and they doubled down on that 
strategy to plunge the U.S. and the world into endless war.

As it did in Kosovo, the CIA is still running wild, fabricating pretexts for 
new wars and unlimited military spending, based on sourceless accusations 
<https://www.rt.com/op-ed/493174-nyt-report-russia-afghanistan/> , covert 
operations 
<https://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/how-america-armed-terrorists-in-syria/>
  and flawed, politicized intelligence 
<https://original.antiwar.com/nicolas_davies/2020/01/28/the-us-is-recycling-its-big-lie-about-iraq-to-target-iran/>
 . We have allowed American politicians to pat themselves on the back for being 
tough on “dictators” and “thugs,” letting them settle for the cheap shot 
instead of tackling the much harder job of reining in the real instigators of 
war and chaos: the U.S. military 
<https://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/west-point-prof-pens-blistering-takedown-of-u-s-military-academies/>
  and the CIA.

But if the people of Kosovo can hold the CIA-backed gangsters who murdered 
their people, sold their body parts and hijacked their country accountable for 
their crimes, is it too much to hope that Americans can do the same and hold 
our leaders accountable for their far more widespread and systematic war crimes?

Iran recently indicted 
<https://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/afp/2020/06/iran-us.html>  Donald Trump for 
the assassination of General Qassem Soleimani, and asked Interpol to issue an 
international arrest warrant for him. Trump is probably not losing sleep over 
that, but the indictment of such a key U.S. ally as Thaci is a sign that the 
U.S.”accountabilty-free zone 
<https://www.amnesty.org.uk/press-releases/rendition-new-report-criticises-eu-lack-progress-over-investigations>
 ” of impunity for war crimes is finally starting to shrink, at least in the 
protection it provides to U.S. allies. Should Netanyahu, Bin Salman and Tony 
Blair be starting to look over their shoulders?

This article was posted on Monday, July 6th, 2020 at 7:03pm and is filed under 
(Ex-)Yugoslavia <https://dissidentvoice.org/category/europe/ex-yugoslavia/> , 
Bill Clinton 
<https://dissidentvoice.org/category/hillary-clinton/bill-clinton-hillary-clinton/>
 , CIA <https://dissidentvoice.org/category/espionage/cia/> , Disinformation 
<https://dissidentvoice.org/category/language/disinformation/> , Kosovo 
<https://dissidentvoice.org/category/europe/ex-yugoslavia/kosovo/> , Media 
<https://dissidentvoice.org/category/media/> , NATO 
<https://dissidentvoice.org/category/militarism/nato/> , Serbia 
<https://dissidentvoice.org/category/europe/serbia/> , United States 
<https://dissidentvoice.org/category/united-states/> , War Crimes 
<https://dissidentvoice.org/category/crime/war-crimes/> . 

 

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