| WAR
ON TERRORISM SKIPPED THE KLA |
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| For National
Post |
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by James
Bissett
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| U.S. President George W. Bush has made
it clear the war against terrorists will be unremitting and
relentless. Even those countries affording shelter to terrorists
will not be spared. These words come too late for the Serbs,
Gypsies, Jews, Turks and other non-Albanians who have been driven
from their ancestral homes in Kosovo by the terrorist Kosovo
Liberation Army. | |
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| It is too late as well
for Macedonia, which has been forced by the United States, the European
Union and NATO to yield to all the demands of the Albanian terrorists in
that country. This double standard and lack of
consistency when dealing with terrorists calls into question the policies
the United States and its NATO allies followed in the Balkans. It also
underlines the necessity for the United States and its allies to clean up
their act if they wish to retain credibility in the war against
terrorism. |
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| The bombing of
Yugoslavia in the spring of 1999 allegedly to stop ethnic cleansing and
prevent the Balkans from becoming once again the powder keg of Europe has
backfired. Kosovo has become exclusively an Albanian province with the
exception of a few stalwart Serbians in the Mitrovica area who live
surrounded by barbed wire and are threatened daily with murder and mayhem
by their Albanian neighbours. The Balkans, since the end of the bombing,
have been in constant turmoil caused by the KLA terrorist
activities. |
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| NATO allowed the KLA,
which under the terms of United Nations Resolution 1244 was to be disarmed
after the end of the bombing, to keep its weapons. The KLA was renamed the
Kosovo Protection Force and been given the task of maintaining peace and
security in Kosovo. How well it has been able to carry out this task is
summed up in a report dated Feb. 26, 2001, to the Secretary-General of the
United Nations, Kofi Annan, which accuses the protection corps of
widespread acts of murder, torture and extortion. |
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| That condemnation should not have
come as a surprise. As early as 1998, the U.S. State Department listed the
KLA as a terrorist organization financing its operations with money from
the international heroin trade and funds supplied from Islamic countries
and individuals, including Osama bin Laden. This did not stop the United
States from arming and training KLA members in Albania and in the summer
of 1998 sending them back into Kosovo to assassinate Serbian mayors,
ambush Serbian policemen and intimidate hesitant Kosovo Albanians. The aim
was to destabilize Kosovo and overthrow Serbian strongman Slobodan
Milosevic. |
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| Bin Laden and radical
Muslim groups have been deeply involved in the Balkans since the civil
wars in Bosnia from 1992 to 1995. Despite a UN arms embargo and with the
knowledge and support of the United States, arms, ammunition and thousands
of Mujahideen fighters were smuggled into Bosnia to help the Muslims. Many
remain in Bosnia today and are recognized as a serious threat to Western
forces there. The Bosnian government is said to have presented bin Laden
with a Bosnian passport in recognition of his contribution to their cause.
He and his al-Qaeda network were also active in Kosovo, and KLA members
trained in his camps in Afghanistan and Albania. |
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Emboldened by the
knowledge it could achieve its political objectives by terror, the KLA
moved into southern Serbia and initiated, under the eyes of 40,000 NATO
troops, a campaign of terror against the Serbian population. Not until
NATO permitted the new democratic government of Serbia to send the Serb
army back into the area was the KLA routed and sent back across the border
into Kosovo. Macedonia, with its large Albanian minority, was the KLA's
next target. In February, its forces moved against this small and newly
independent democracy. |
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