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March 31, 1999
The
Kosovo Liberation Army: Does Clinton Policy Support Group with Terror,
Drug Ties?
http://www.fas.org/irp/world/para/kla.htm
http://www.fas.org/irp/world/para/docs/fr033199.htm
UCK
TERRORISTS - Amb. Holbrooke with an UCK commander, summer 1998
KLA Leaders have denied any responsibility for the war and post-war violence
against Serb and other non-Albanian citizens
From
'Terrorists' to 'Partners'
The Kosovo
Liberation Army "began on the radical fringe of Kosovar Albanian politics,
originally made up of diehard Marxist-Leninists (who were bankrolled in
the old days by the Stalinist dictatorship next door in Albania) as well
as by descendants of the fascist militias raised by the Italians in World
War II" ["Fog of War -- Coping With the Truth About Friend and Foe: Victims
Not Quite Innocent," New York Times, 3/28/99]. The KLA made its
military debut in February 1996 with the bombing of several camps housing
Serbian refugees from wars in Croatia and Bosnia [Jane's Intelligence
Review, 10/1/96]. The KLA (again according to the highly regarded
Jane's,) "does not take into consideration the political or economic
importance of its victims, nor does it seem at all capable of seriously
hurting its enemy, the Serbian police and army. Instead, the group has
attacked Serbian police and civilians arbitrarily at their weakest points.
It has not come close to challenging the region's balance of military
power" [Jane's, 10/1/96].
The group expanded
its operations with numerous attacks through 1996 but was given a major
boost with the collapse into chaos of neighboring Albania in 1997, which
afforded unlimited opportunities for the introduction of arms into Kosovo
from adjoining areas of northern Albania, which are effectively out
of the control of the Albanian government in Tirana. From its inception,
the KLA has targeted not only Serbian security forces, who may be seen
as legitimate targets for a guerrilla insurgency, but Serbian and Albanian
civilians as well.
In view of such
tactics, the Clinton Administration's then-special envoy for Kosovo,
Robert Gelbard, had little difficulty in condemning the KLA (also known
by its Albanian initials, UCK) in terms comparable to those he used
for Serbian police repression:
" 'The
violence we have seen growing is incredibly dangerous,' Gelbard said.
He criticized violence 'promulgated by the (Serb) police' and condemned
the actions of an ethnic Albanian underground group Kosovo Liberation
Army (UCK) which has claimed responsibility for a series of attacks
on Serb targets. 'We condemn very strongly terrorist actions in Kosovo.
The UCK is, without any questions, a terrorist group,' Gelbard said."
[Agence France Presse, 2/23/98]
Mr. Gelbard's remarks
came just before a KLA attack on a Serbian police station led to a retaliation
that left dozens of Albanians dead, leading in turn to a rapid escalation
of the cycle of violence. Responding to criticism that his earlier remarks
might have been seen as Washington's "green light" to Belgrade that a
crack-down on the KLA would be acceptable, Mr. Gelbard offered to clarify
to the House Committee on International Relations:
"Questioned
by lawmakers today on whether he still considered the group a terrorist
organization, Mr. Gelbard said that while it has committed 'terrorist
acts,' it has 'not been classified legally by the U.S. Government as
a terrorist organization.' " [New York Times, 3/13/98]
The situation in Kosovo
has since been transformed: what were once sporadic cases of KLA attacks
and often heavy-handed and indiscriminate Serbian responses has now become
a full-scale guerrilla war. That development appeared to be a vindication
of what may have been the KLA's strategy of escalating the level of violence
to the point where outside intervention would become a distinct possibility.
Given the military imbalance, there is reason to believe the KLA -- which
is now calling for the introduction of NATO ground troops into Kosovo
[Associated Press, 3/27/99] -- may have always expected to achieve
its goals less because of the group's own prospects for military success
than because of a hoped-for outside intervention: As one fighter put it,
"We hope that NATO will intervene, like it did in Bosnia, to save us"
["Both Sides in the Kosovo Conflict Seem Determined to Ignore Reality,"
New York Times, 6/22/98].
By early 1999, the
Clinton Administration had completely staked the success of its Kosovo
policy on either the acceptance by both sides of a pre-drafted peace
agreement that would entail a NATO ground occupation of Kosovo, or,
if the Albanians signed the agreement while Belgrade refused, bombing
of the Serbs. By committing itself so tightly to those two alternatives,
the Clinton Administration left itself with as little flexibility as
it had offered the Albanians and the Serbs.
At that point for
the Administration, cultivating the goodwill of the KLA -- as the most
extreme element on the Albanian side, and the element which had the
weapons capable of sinking any diplomatic initiative -- became an absolute
imperative:
"In order
to get the Albanians'... acceptance [of the peace plan], Ms. Albright
offered incentives intended to show that Washington is a friend of Kosovo...Officers
in the Kosovo Liberation Army would . . . be sent to the United States
for training in transforming themselves from a guerrilla group into
a police force or a political entity, much like the African National
Congress did in South Africa." [New York Times, 2/24/99]
The Times' comparison
of treatment of the KLA with that of the African National Congress (ANC)
-- a group with its own history of terror attacks on political opponents,
including members of the ethnic group it claims to represent -- is a telling
one. In fact, it points to the seemingly consistent Clinton policy of
cultivating relationships with groups known for terrorist violence --
not only the ANC, but the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) and
the Irish Republican Army (IRA) -- in what may be a strategy of attempting
to wean away a group from its penchant for violence by adopting its cause
as an element of U.S. policy.
By the time the
NATO airstrikes began, the Clinton Administration's partnership with
the KLA was unambiguous:
"With ethnic
Albanian Kosovars poised to sign a peace accord later Thursday, the
United States is moving quickly to help transform the Kosovo Liberation
Army from a rag-tag band of guerrilla fighters into a political force.
. . . Washington clearly sees it as a main hope for the troubled province's
future. 'We want to develop a good relationship with them as they transform
themselves into a politically-oriented organization,' deputy State Department
spokesman James Foley said. 'We want to develop closer and better ties
with this organization.'
"A strong signal
of this is the deference with which U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright treats the Kosovar Albanians' chief negotiator Hashim Thaci,
a 30-year-old KLA commander. Albright dispatched her top aide and
spokesman James Rubin to Paris earlier this week to meet with Thaci
and personally deliver to him an invitation for members of his delegation
to visit the United States. Rubin, who will attend the ceremony at
which the Kosovar Albanians will sign the accord, is expected to then
return to Washington with five members of the delegation, including
Thaci. Thaci and Rubin have developed a 'good rapport' during the
Kosovo crisis, according to U.S. officials who note that Thaci was
the main delegate they convinced to sign the agreement even though
the Serbs have refused to do so. [ . . . ]
" '[W]e believe
that we have a lot of advice and a lot of help that we can provide
to them if they become precisely the kind of political actor we would
like to see them become.' Foley stressed that the KLA would not be
allowed to continue as a military force but would have the chance
to move forward in their quest for self government under a 'different
context.' 'If we can help them and they want us to help them in that
effort of transformation, I think it's nothing that anybody can argue
with.' "
Such an effusive embrace
by top Clinton Administration officials of an organization that only a
year ago one of its own top officials labeled as "terrorist" is, to say
the least, a startling development.
Even more importantly,
the new Clinton/KLA partnership may obscure troubling allegations about
the KLA that the Clinton Administration has thus far neglected to address.
Charges of Drugs,
Islamic Terror -- and a Note on Sources
No observer doubts
that the large majority of fighters that have flocked to the KLA during
the past year or so (since it began large-scale military operations)
are ordinary Kosovo Albanians who desire what they see as the liberation
of their homeland from foreign rule. But that fact -- which amounts
to a claim of innocence by association -- does not fully explain the
KLA's uncertain origins, political program, sources of funding, or political
alliances.
Among the most troubling
aspects of the Clinton Administration's effective alliance with the
KLA are numerous reports from reputable unofficial sources -- including
the highly respected Jane's publications -- that the KLA is closely
involved with:
- The extensive
Albanian crime network that extends throughout Europe and into North
America, including allegations that a major portion of the KLA finances
are derived from that network, mainly proceeds from drug trafficking;
and
- Terrorist organizations
motivated by the ideology of radical Islam, including assets of Iran
and of the notorious Osama bin-Ladin -- who has vowed a global terrorist
war against Americans and American interests.
The final two sections
of this paper give samples of these reports. (Many of these reports are
available in full at www.siri-us.com, the website of an independent think
tank called the Strategic Issues Research Institute of the United States,
under "Background Issues".) In presenting samples of such reports for
the consideration of Republican Senators and staff, RPC does not claim
that these reports constitute conclusive evidence of the KLA's drug or
terror ties. Nor are these reports necessarily conclusive as to the policy
advisability of the Clinton Administration's support for that organization.
They do, however, raise serious questions about the context in which decisions
regarding American policy in the Balkans are being made by the Clinton
Administration.
All of these sources
are unclassified and unconnected to official agencies of the U.S. government,
although some quote sources in intelligence agencies. Possible objections
could be raised that the relevant U.S. government agencies may not have
made available similar reports concerning the KLA. While it is not possible
to discuss, in the context of this paper, what information is or is
not available from classified sources, the author of this paper offers
what he regards as two helpful observations. First, one should recognize
that the absence of reporting on a given topic may indicate that the
information has not been obtained, assembled, or disseminated by the
agencies in question, but not necessarily that it does not exist. That
is, silence by official sources does not constitute disproof of unofficial
sources. The second and more troubling observation is that the Clinton
Administration has demonstrated, to an unprecedented degree, an unfortunate
tendency -- in some cases possibly involving an improper politicization
of traditionally non-political government agencies -- to manage or conceal
inconvenient information that might call into question some of its policies.
Examples of this tendency include:
China espionage:
Numerous critics have faulted the Clinton Administration's less-than-forthcoming
attitude towards the investigation of possible negligence regarding
Chinese theft of U.S. nuclear secrets; obstruction efforts may have
included misuse of the classification process. [For details, see RPC's
"Contradictions Abound: Did the Administration Respond 'Vigorously'
to Chinese Nuclear Espionage?" 3/24/99; "The Public Record: China's
Theft of U.S. Nuclear Secrets," 3/12/99; and "Commentators Hit Clinton
Administration on Nuclear Technology Theft and Suspicious China Ties,"
3/12/99.] The effectiveness of the current Kosovo crisis in getting
the China espionage scandal off Page 1 has not gone unnoticed: "In the
days leading up to the initiation of hostilities with Serbia, it had
become increasingly apparent that the usual administration damage control
techniques (official denials, misleading statements, obstruction of
inquiries, attacks on the accusers, etc.) were not working in the face
of cascading revelations that the Clinton team had abysmally failed
to address [Chinese] penetration of America's nuclear weapons laboratories....
The only option: change the subject, regardless of the cost in American
lives, national treasure, and long-term interests" [Frank Gaffney, Jr.,
Center for Security Policy, "Hidden Trigger on Guns of Intervention?"
Washington Times, 3/30/99].
Mexico drug certification:
The Clinton Administration has consistently certified that Mexican authorities
are cooperating with U.S. anti-drug efforts -- despite strong evidence
to the contrary. [See, for example, Los Angeles Times, 3/25/99;
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 2/27/99; and The San Francisco
Chronicle, 2/26/99].
Iranian arms shipments
to Bosnia: The Clinton Administration concealed its active cooperation
with the Iranians for arms shipments to the Muslim fundamentalist regime
of Alija Izetbegovic in Bosnia in violation of the United Nations arms
embargo on the former Yugoslavia. [For details on the Clinton Administration's
active connivance with the Iranians, see RPC's "Clinton-Approved Iranian
Arms Transfers Help Turn Bosnia into Militant Islamic Base," 1/16/97.]
This track record undermines the Clinton Administration's insistence
that Russia, as a permanent member of the U.N. Security Council, is
obligated to observe the same embargo with respect to Serbia [as stated
by State Department spokesman James Rubin, daily briefing, March 24,
1999].
Eradication of the
Serbs in Krajina: The Clinton Administration has stalled efforts to
investigate what has been called the "biggest ethnic cleansing" of the
Balkan wars, one which the Clinton Administration may itself have helped
to facilitate:
"Investigators
at the international war crimes tribunal in The Hague have concluded
that the Croatian Army carried out summary executions, indiscriminate
shelling of civilian populations and 'ethnic cleansing' during a 1995
assault that was a turning point in the Balkan wars, according to tribunal
documents. The investigators have recommended that three Croatian generals
be indicted, and an American official said this week that the indictments
could come within a few weeks. . . . Any indictment of Croatian Army
generals could prove politically troublesome for the Clinton Administration,
which has a delicate relationship with Croatia, an American ally in
preserving the peace in Bosnia with a poor human rights record. The
August 1995 Croatian offensive, which drove some 100,000 Serbs from
a large swath of Croatia over four days, was carried out with the tacit
blessing of the United States by a Croatian Army that had been schooled
in part by a group of retired American military officers. Questions
still remain about the full extent of United States involvement. In
the course of the three-year investigation into the assault, the United
States has failed to provide critical evidence requested by the tribunal,
according to tribunal documents and officials, adding to suspicion among
some there that Washington is uneasy about the investigation. Two senior
Canadian military officers, for example, who were in Croatia during
the offensive, testified that the assault, in which some 3,000 shells
rained down on the city of Knin over 48 hours, was indiscriminate and
targeted civilians. . . . A section of the tribunal's 150-page report
is headed: 'The Indictment. Operation Storm, A Prima Facie Case.': 'During
the course of the military offensive, the Croatian armed forces and
special police committed numerous violations of international humanitarian
law, including but not limited to, shelling of Knin and other cities,'
the report says. 'During, and in the 100 days following the military
offensive, at least 150 Serb civilians were summarily executed, and
many hundreds disappeared.' The crimes also included looting and burning,
the report says." ["War Crimes Panel Finds Croat Troops 'Cleansed' the
Serbs," New York Times, 3/21/99]
The Krajina episode
-- the largest in the recent Yugoslav wars, at least until this week in
Kosovo -- exposes the hypocrisy of the Clinton claims as to why intervention
in Kosovo is a humanitarian imperative:
"Within
four days, the Croatians drove out 150,000 Serbs, the largest [until
this week] ethnic cleansing of the entire Balkan wars. Investigators
in the Hague have concluded that this campaign was carried out with
brutality, wanton murder, and indiscriminate shelling of civilians.
. . . Krajina is Kosovo writ large. And yet, at the same time, the U.S.
did not stop or even protest the Croatian action. The Clinton Administration
tacitly encouraged it." [Charles Krauthammer, "The Clinton Doctrine,"
Time magazine, 4/5/99]
In short, the absence
of official confirmation of the reports cited below can hardly be considered
the last word in the matter. And given this Administration's record, one
might treat with some degree of skepticism even a flat denial of KLA drug
and terror ties -- which thus far has not been offered. As the Clinton
Administration searches for new options in its Kosovo policy, these reports
about KLA should not be lightly dismissed.
Reports on KLA Drug
and Criminal Links
Elements informally
known as the "Albanian mafia," composed largely of ethnic Albanians
from Kosovo, have for several years been a feature of the criminal underworld
in a number of cities in Europe and North America; they have been particularly
prominent in the trade in illegal narcotics. [See, for example,"The
Albanian Cartel: Filling the Crime Void," Jane's Intelligence Review,
November 1995.] The cities where the Albanian cartels are located are
also fertile ground for fundraising for support of the Albanian cause
in Kosovo. [See, for example, "Albanians in Exile Send Millions of Dollars
to Support the KLA," BBC, 3/12/99.]
The reported link
between drug activities and arms purchases for anti-Serb Albanian forces
in Kosovo predates the formation of the KLA, and indeed, may be seen
as a key resource that allowed the KLA to establish itself as a force
in the first place:
"Narcotics
smuggling has become a prime source of financing for civil wars already
under way -- or rapidly brewing -- in southern Europe and the eastern
Mediterranean, according to a report issued here this week. The report,
by the Paris-based Observatoire Geopolitique des Drogues, or Geopolitical
Observatory of Drugs, identifies belligerents in the former Yugoslav
republics and Turkey as key players in the region's accelerating drugs-for-arms
traffic. Albanian nationalists in ethnically tense Macedonia and the
Serbian province of Kosovo have built a vast heroin network, leading
from the opium fields of Pakistan to black-market arms dealers in Switzerland,
which transports up to $2 billion worth of the drug annually into the
heart of Europe, the report says. More than 500 Kosovo or Macedonian
Albanians are in prison in Switzerland for drug- or arms-trafficking
offenses, and more than 1,000 others are under indictment. The arms
are reportedly stockpiled in Kosovo for eventual use against the Serbian
government in Belgrade, which imposed a violent crackdown on Albanian
autonomy advocates in the province five years ago." ["Separatists Supporting
Themselves with Traffic in Narcotics," San Francisco Chronicle,
6/10/94]
At the same time, many
Albanians in the diaspora have made voluntary contributions to the KLA
and are offended at suggestions of drug money funding of that organization:
"Nick Ndrejaj,
who retired from the real estate business, lives on a pension in Daytona
Beach, Fla. But the retiree has managed to scrape up some money to send
to the Kosovo Liberation Army, the rebel force that is opposing Yugoslav
strongman Slobodan Milosevic. 'It's hard, but we have had to do this
all our lives,' says the elderly man. Mr. Ndrejaj is one of many Albanians
in America who are sending all they can spare to aid their beleaguered
compatriots in central Europe. The disaster in Kosovo is uniting the
minority into a major fund-raising and congressional lobbying effort.
[ . . . ]
"Typical of the
donors is Agim Jusufi, a building superintendent on Manhattan's West
Side. Mr. Jusufi gets a weekly paycheck. He describes himself as an
ordinary 'working man.' However, he has donated $5,000 to the KLA.
'It is always stressed that we should donate when we can,' he says,
'We are in a grave moment, so we are raising money.' Jusufi bridles
over reports that drug money funds the KLA. There has been an Albanian
organized-crime element involved in the drug trade for decades. But,
he says, in this country, the money comes from hard-working immigrants.
'We have canceled checks to prove it,' he says. " ["Pulling Political
and Purse Strings," Christian Science Monitor, 3/31/99]
Without access to the
KLA's ledgers, it is hard to estimate what part of the group's funds might
come from legitimate sources and what part from drugs. One unnamed intelligence
source puts the percentage of drug money in the KLA's coffers at one-half
["Drugs Money Linked to the Kosovo Rebels," The Times (London),
3/24/99]. The following is a sample of the reports linking the KLA to
funding by narcotics-smuggling crime organizations:
"The Kosovo
Liberation Army, which has won the support of the West for its guerrilla
struggle against the heavy armour of the Serbs, is a Marxist-led force
funded by dubious sources, including drug money. That is the judgment
of senior police officers across Europe. An investigation by The Times
has established that police forces in three Western European countries,
together with Europol, the European police authority, are separately
investigating growing evidence that drug money is funding the KLA's
leap from obscurity to power. The financing of the Kosovo guerrilla
war poses critical questions and it sorely tests claims to an 'ethical'
foreign policy. Should the West back a guerrilla army that appears to
be partly financed by organised crime? Could the KLA's need for funds
be fuelling the heroin trade across Europe? . . . As well as diverting
charitable donations from exiled Kosovans, some of the KLA money is
thought to come from drug dealing. Sweden is investigating suspicions
of a KLA drug connection. 'We have intelligence leading us to believe
that there could be a connection between drug money and the Kosovo Liberation
Army,' said Walter Kege, head of the drug enforcement unit in the Swedish
police intelligence service. Supporting intelligence has come from other
states. 'We have yet to find direct evidence, but our experience tells
us that the channels for trading hard drugs are also used for weapons,'
said one Swiss police commander. . . . One Western intelligence report
quoted by Berliner Zeitung says that DM900 million has reached Kosovo
since the guerrillas began operations and half the sum is said to be
illegal drug money. In particular, European countries are investigating
the Albanian connection: whether Kosovan Albanians living primarily
in Germany and Switzerland are creaming off the profits from inner-city
heroin dealing and sending the cash to the KLA. Albania -- which plays
a key role in channelling money to the Kosovans -- is at the hub of
Europe's drug trade. An intelligence report which was prepared by Germany's
Federal Criminal Agency concluded: 'Ethnic Albanians are now the most
prominent group in the distribution of heroin in Western consumer countries.'
Europol, which is based in The Hague, is preparing a report for European
interior and justice ministers on a connection between the KLA and Albanian
drug gangs. Police in the Czech Republic recently tracked down a Kosovo
Albanian drug dealer named Doboshi who had escaped from a Norwegian
prison where he was serving 12 years for heroin trading. A raid on Doboshi's
apartment turned up documents linking him with arms purchases for the
KLA." ["Drugs Money Linked to the Kosovo Rebels," The Times (London),
3/24/99]
"Western intelligence
agencies believe the UCK [KLA] has been re-arming with the aid of
money from drug-smuggling through Albania, along with donations from
the Albanian diaspora in Western Europe and North America. . . . Albania
has become the crime capital of Europe. The most powerful groups in
the country are organized criminals who use Albania to grow, process,
and store a large percentage of the illegal drugs destined for Western
Europe. . . . Albania's criminal gangs are actively supporting the
war in Kosovo. Many of them have family links to Albanian groups in
Kosovo and support them with arms and other supplies, either out of
family solidarity or solely for profit. These links mean the UCK fighters
have a secure base area and reasonably good lines of communiction
to the outside world. Serb troops have tried to seal the border but
with little success." ["Life in the Balkan 'Tinderbox' Remains as
Dangerous as Ever," Jane's Intelligence Review, 3/1/99]
"Drugs traffickers
in Italy, in Germany, in Spain, in France, and in Norway: Kosovo Albanians.
The men from the Special Operations Section [ROS] of the carabinieri
[i.e., Italian national police], under the leadership of General Mario
Mori, have succeeded in neutralizing a fully fledged network of Albanian
drugs traffickers. The leader of this network is a certain Gashi Agim,
aged 33, originally from Pristina, the capital of the small region
that is being torn apart by the struggle between on the one hand the
local population, 90 percent of whom are of Albanian ethnic origin
and who are calling for independence from Serbia, and [the Yugoslav
government] on the other . . . Gashi was arrested early this summer
along with 124 drugs traffickers. 'Milan at this juncture has become
a crossroads of interests for many fighting groups,' a detective with
the ROS explained. 'These groups include also the Albanians from Kosovo
who are among the most dangerous traffickers in drugs and in arms.
. . . The war in Kosovo has partly slowed down the criminals' business
because many Albanians have been forced to take care of their families.
Some of them are activists in the armed movement of the KLA fighters
and have gone home to fight. They feel Albanian. They are fighting
to achieve annexation to Albania. And it is precisely there that at
least a part of the sea of money that the Albanian drugs traffickers
have amassed is reported to have ended up, to support the families
and to fund both certain political personalities and the anti-Serb
movement. In spring, a number of Albanian drugs traffickers actually
went as far as to take part in the organization of a rally in favor
of independence for Kosovo. . . . Drugs, arms, and the Koran: Could
this be the murderous crime mix of the next few years?" ["Albanian
Mafia, This Is How It Helps The Kosovo Guerrilla Fighters," Corriere
della Sera (Milan, Italy), 10/15/98]
"A group of Kosovo
Albanians smuggling arms back to their troubled province were among
100 people arrested in a massive, countrywide anti-drug operation
in Italy, police here said Tuesday. All the 100 -- 90 of whom were
arrested in Italy, the rest in other European countries -- face weapons
charges related to international drug trafficking. Anti-Mafia prosecutors
in Milan, who conducted the operation with paramilitary police units,
identified eight criminal structures active on an international scale.
One hundred kilos (220 pounds) of heroin and cocaine was seized in
the bust across several Italian regions. Investigators said the groups
used Milan as a base, with cafes, restaurants, garages and other firms
acting as fronts. The Kosovar Albanian gang allegedly used drug money
to buy the weapons in Italy, which were then sent to Kosovo where
a three-month conflict is pitting Serbian forces against armed ethnic
Albanians seeking independence. Another separate group of Egyptians
with links to Calabrian and Albanian gangs were arrested on suspicions
of laundering money through Switzerland for use by fundamentalists
in Egypt." ["Major Italian Drug Bust Breaks Kosovo Arms Trafficking,"
Agence France-Presse, 6/9/98]
"The Kosovo Liberation
Army (KLA) has claimed responsibility for more than 50 attacks on
Serbs and Albanians loyal to the Belgrade government, but little is
known about the separatist group. . . . Details of the KLA, which
the United States calls a terrorist organization, are sketchy at best.
Western intelligence sources believe there are no more than several
hundred members under arms with military training. Serbian police
estimate there are at least 2,000 well-armed men. The KLA is said
to rely heavily on a huge network of informers and sympathizers, enabling
it to blend easily among the population. The Western sources also
believe the core of the organization consists of Albanians who fled
into exile in the 1970s and based their operation in Switzerland,
where its funding is gathered from all over the world. 'If the West
wants to nip the KLA in the bud, all it has to do is crack down on
its financial nerve center in Switzerland,' one source said. Part
of the funding, this source believes, comes from the powerful Albanian
mafia organizations that deal in narcotics, prostitution and arms
smuggling across Europe. The KLA has admitted having training bases
in northern Albania, which the Albanian government does not condone
but is powerless to stop." ["Speculation Plentiful, Facts Few About
Kosovo Separatist Group," Baltimore Sun, 3/6/98]
"The bulk of the
financing of the UCK [KLA] seems to originate from two sources: drug-related
operations and Kosovo Albanian emigres in the West. The former Yugoslavia
has always been on the main European drug transit route. With the
break-up of that country, the route has been somewhat modified; West-Europe-bound
narcotics now enter Macedonia and Albania and are then distributed
towards Western Europe through Kosovo, Montenegro, Bosnia, and Croatia."
[Jane's Intelligence Review, "Another Balkans Bloodbath? --
Part One," 2/1/98]
"Socially organized
in extended families bound together in clan alliances, Kosovar Albanians
dominate the Albanian mafia in the southern Balkans. Other than Kosovo,
the Albanian mafia is also active in northern Albania and western
Macedonia. In this context, the so-called 'Balkan Medellin' is made
up of a number of geographically connected border towns . . . . If
left unchecked, this growing Albanian narco-terrorism could lead to
a Colombian syndrome in the southern Balkans, or the emergence of
a situation in which the Albanian mafia becomes powerful enough to
control one or more states in the region. In practical terms, this
will involve either Albania or Macedonia, or both. Politically, this
is now being done by channelling growing foreign exchange (forex)
profits from narco-terrorism into local governments and political
parties. In Albania, the ruling Democratic Party (DP) led by President
Sali Berisha is now widely suspected of tacitly tolerating and even
directly profiting from drug-trafficking for wider politico-economic
reasons, namely the financing of secessionist political parties and
other groupings in Kosovo and Macedonia." ["The Balkan Medellin,"
Jane's 3/1/95; Albanian then-president Berisha lost power in
1997 and is now a known KLA patron in northern Albania.]
Reports on Islamic
Terror Links
The KLA's main staging
area is in the vicinity of the town of Tropoje in northern Albania [Jane's
International Defense Review, 2/1/99]. Tropoje, the hometown and
current base of former Albanian president Sali Berisha, a major KLA
patron, is also a known center for Islamic terrorists connected with
Saudi renegade Osama bin-Ladin. [For a report on the presence of bin-Ladin
assets in Tropoje and connections to anti-American Islamic terrorism,
see "U.S. Blasts' Possible Mideast Ties: Alleged Terrorists Investigated
in Albania, Washington Post, 8/12/98.]
The following reports
note the presence of foreign mujahedin (i.e., Islamic holy warriors)
in the Kosovo war, some of them jihad veterans from Bosnia, Chechnya,
and Afghanistan. Some of the reports specifically cite assets of Iran
or bin-Ladin, or both, in support of the KLA. To some, "mujahedin" does
not necessarily equal "terrorists." But since the foreign fighters have
not been considerate enough to provide an organizational chart detailing
the exact relationship among the various groups, the reported presence
of foreign fighters together with known terrorists in the KLA's stronghold
at least raises serious questions about the implications for the Clinton
Administration's increasingly close ties to the KLA:
"Serbian
officials say Mujahideen have formed groups that remained behind in
Bosnia. Groups from Saudi Arabia, Yemen, and Chechnya are also involved
in Albanian guerrilla operations. A document found on the body of Alija
Rabic, an Albanian UCK member killed in a border crossing incident last
July, indicated he was guiding a 50-man group from Albania into Kosovo.
The group included one Yemeni and 16 Saudis, six of whom bore passports
with Macedonian Albanian names. Other UCK rebels killed crossing the
Albanian frontier have carried Bosnian Muslim Federation papers." [Jane's
International Defense Review, "Unhealthy Climate in Kosovo as Guerrillas
Gear Up for a Summer Confrontation," 2/1/99]
"Mujahidin fighters
have joined the Kosovo Liberation Army, dimming prospects of a peaceful
solution to the conflict and fuelling fears of heightened violence
next spring.. . . . Their arrival in Kosovo may force Washington to
review its policy in the Serbian province and will deepen Western
dismay with the KLA and its tactics. . . . 'Captain Dula', the local
KLA commander, was clearly embarrassed at the unexpected presence
of foreign journalists and said that he had little idea who was sending
the Mujahidin or where they came from; only that it was neither Kosovo
nor Albania. 'I've got no information about them,' Captain Dula said.
'We don't talk about it.' . . . American diplomats in the region,
especially Robert Gelbard, the special envoy, have often expressed
fears of an Islamic hardline infiltration into the Kosovo independence
movement. . . . American intelligence has raised the possibility of
a link between Osama bin Laden, the Saudi expatriate blamed for the
bombing in August of US embassies in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam, and
the KLA. Several of Bin Laden's supporters were arrested in Tirana,
the Albanian capital, and deported this summer, and the chaotic conditions
in the country have allowed Muslim extremists to settle there, often
under the guise of humanitarian workers. . . . 'I interviewed one
guy from Saudi Arabia who said that it was his eighth jihad,' a Dutch
journalist said." ["U.S. Alarmed as Mujahidin Join Kosovo Rebels,"
The Times (London), 11/26/98]
"Diplomats in
the region say Bosnia was the first bastion of Islamic power. The
autonomous Yugoslav region of Kosovo promises to be the second. During
the current rebellion against the Yugoslav army, the ethnic Albanians
in the province, most of whom are Moslem, have been provided with
financial and military support from Islamic countries. They are being
bolstered by hundreds of Iranian fighters, or Mujahadeen, who infiltrate
from nearby Albania and call themselves the Kosovo Liberation Army.
US defense officials say the support includes that of Osama Bin Laden,
the Saudi terrorist accused of masterminding the bombings of the US
embassies in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam. A Defense Department statement
on August 20 said Bin Laden's Al Qa'ida organization supports Moslem
fighters in both Bosnia and Kosovo. . . . The KLA strength was not
the southern Kosovo region, which over the centuries turned from a
majority of Serbs to ethnic Albanians. The KLA, however, was strong
in neighboring Albania, which today has virtually no central government.
The crisis in Albania led Iran to quickly move in to fill the vacuum.
Iranian Revolutionary Guards began to train KLA members. . . . Selected
groups of Albanians were sent to Iran to study that country's version
of militant Islam. So far, Yugoslav officials and Western diplomats
agree that millions of dollars have been funnelled through Bosnia
and Albania to buy arms for the KLA. The money is raised from both
Islamic governments and from Islamic communities in Western Europe,
particularly Germany. . . . 'Iran has been active in helping out the
Kosovo rebels,' Ephraim Kam, deputy director of Tel Aviv University's
Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies, said. 'Iran sees Kosovo and Albania
as containing Moslem communities that require help and Teheran is
willing to do it.' But much of the training of the KLA remains based
in Bosnia. Intelligence sources say mercenaries and volunteers for
the separatist movement have been recruited and paid handsome salaries.
. . . The trainers and fighters in the KLA include many of the Iranians
who fought in Bosnia in the early 1990s. Intelligence sources place
their number at 7,000, many of whom have married Bosnian women. There
are also Afghans, Algerians, Chechens, and Egyptians." ["Kosovo Seen
as New Islamic Bastion," Jerusalem Post, 9/14/98]
". . . By late
1997, the Tehran-sponsored training and preparations of the Liberation
Army of Kosovo (UCK -- Ushtria Clirimtare e Kosoves -- in Albanian,
OVK in Serbian), as well as the transfer of weapons and experts via
Albania, were being increased. Significantly, Tehran's primary objective
in Kosovo has evolved from merely assisting a Muslim minority in distress
to furthering the consolidation of the Islamic strategic axis along
the Sarajevo-to-Tirane line. And only by expanding and escalating
subversive and Islamist-political presence can this objective be attained.
. . In the Fall of 1997, the uppermost leadership in Tehran ordered
the IRGC [Revolutionary Guards] High Command to launch a major program
for shipping large quantities of weapons and other military supplies
to the Albanian clandestine organisations in Kosovo. [The supreme
Iranian spiritual leader, the Ayatollah] Khamene'i's instructions
specifically stipulated that the comprehensive military assistance
was aimed to enable the Muslims 'to achieve the independence' of the
province of Kosovo. . . . [B]y early December 1997, Iranian intelligence
had already delivered the first shipments of hand grenades, machine-guns,
assault rifles, night vision equipment, and communications gear from
stockpiles in Albania into Kosovo. The mere fact that the Iranians
could despatch the first supplies within a few days and in absolute
secrecy reflect extensive advance preparations made in Albania in
anticipation for such instructions from Tehran. Moreover, the Iranians
began sending promising Albanian and UCK commanders for advanced military
training in al-Quds [special] forces and IRGC camps in Iran. Meanwhile,
weapons shipments continue. Thus, Tehran is well on its way to establishing
a bridgehead in Kosovo. . . The liberation army was to be only the
first phase in building military power. Ultimately, the Kosovo Albanians
must field such heavy weapons as tanks, armoured personnel carriers,
artillery, and rocket launchers, if they hope to evict the Serbian
forces from Kosovo. . . . The spate of UCK terrorism during the Fall
of 1997, . . . should be considered intentional provocations against
the Serbian police aimed to elicit a massive retaliation that would
in turn lead to a popular uprising. Thus, the ongoing terrorism campaign
in Kosovo should be considered the initial phases in implementing
the call for an uprising. Iran-sponsored activists have already spread
the word through Kosovo that the liberation war has already broken
out. If current trends prevail, the increasingly Islamist UCK will
soon become the main factor in overturning the long-term status quo
in the region. Concurrently, the terrorist activities have become
part of everyday life throughout Kosovo. Given the extent of the propaganda
campaign and the assistance provided by Iran, the spread of terrorism
should indeed be considered the beginning of an armed rebellion that
threatens a major escalation." ["Italy Becomes Iran's New Base for
Terrorist Operations," by Yossef Bodansky, Defense and Foreign
Affairs Strategic Policy (London), February 1998. Bodansky is
Director of the House Congressional Task Force on Terrorism and Unconventional
Warfare. This report was written in late 1997, before the KLA's offensive
in early 1998.]
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Secretary Albright greets Hahim Thaci, UCK
leader August 1999, after the war
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Serbs killed by UCK Aug 99
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VICTORY
OR SHAME
After the NATO deployment many Serb civillians were
killed by UCK extremists
in the West seen as freedom fighters and allies
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