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US (And UK) Backed
Islamic Terrorism
in the Balkans
http://www.btinternet.com/~nlpwessex/Documents/balkansUSbackterrorism.htm
PRESS REPORTS
"You're either with us or against
us in the fight against terror."
George W.Bush
CNN, 6 November 2001
"I know a terrorist when I see
one and these men are terrorists."
United States special envoy to the Balkans, Robert
Gelbard, speaking about the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) 1998
BBC Online, 28 June 1998
Happy Days Building Empire In The Balkans
With The Terrorists |
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| Left: Hashim Thaci, Head of the KLA
- a State Department designated terrorist organisation, closely linked to Osama bin
Laden's Al Qaeda Right: US General Wesley Clark, NATO Supreme Commander |
Above: Madeleine Albright, US Secretary of State, greets KLA Hashim Thaci |
"... the Albanian
security situation reflects the volatility of the clan-based rivalries and the related
narco-trafficking and criminal activities which are linked with global terrorism. But by
admitting this as the basis for the need to move [US] facilities out of Albania, the US
would then have to admit that this terrorism-related criminal activity, and particularly
narco-trafficking, is intrinsically linked into the al-Qaida and Iranian-backed terrorist
infrastructure of the region, and into the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA), which now, under
new names, controls the Serbian province of Kosovo.... no-one
in the State Department or Defense Department is willing to admit that US support for this
terrorist and narco-trafficking base of Albanians in 1999 -- when the US led NATO into
attacks on Serbia in order to assist the KLA -- was wrong. This is part of the distortion of US foreign and strategic policy: no-one
will admit that they made a mistake. There are many Congressmen on Capitol Hill who
understand that this distortion exists with regard to Balkan policy. But equally,
there are politicians in both major parties who supported the KLA during the 1990s, so
that today it is impossible for a Republican-controlled Bush White House and Congress to
attack the logic and merit of the 1999 war, waged against Serbia by the then-Democratic
Party-controlled Clinton White House. It is difficult for the White House, for example, to
criticize the 1990s support by the Clinton
Administration for the al-Qaida -linked KLA without
also opening up to criticism some senior members of the Republican Party..... The fact
that the US has been forced to remove its assets from Albania, despite the quiet manner in
which this has been undertaken, is just one indication of the ongoing degradation of the
situation there. And yet the US still refuses to acknowledge that this is integrally
linked with the Albanian-based terrorism underway in the former Yugoslav republic of
Macedonia, or that it is at the very heart of the creation of what is already a criminal sub-state in Kosovo, which is directly under the
control of the KLA...."
Special Report; US Policy in the Balkans and the Eastern Mediterranean: Time to Stop
Choosing Sides, and to Start Choosing Strategic Interests
Defense & Foreign
Affairs Special Analysis, 13 April 2005
"The Clinton administration followed
up by providing strong support to the KLA, even
though it was known that the KLA supported the Muslim mujahadeen. Despite that knowledge, then Secretary of State Madeleine Albright had
the KLA removed from the State Department list of terrorists. This action paved the way
for the United States to provide the KLA with needed logistical support. At the same time,
the KLA also received support from Iran and Usama bin Laden, along with 'Islamic holy
warriors' who were jihad veterans from Bosnia, Chechnya and Afghanistan. Swiss journalist
Richard Labeviere, in his book, 'Dollars for Terror,' said that the international Islamic
networks linked to bin Laden received help from U.S. intelligence community. Indeed,
Chechen sources claim that U.S. intelligence also aided them in their opposition to
Russia. Given that U.S. policy in the post-Cold War period has not only been anti-Russian
but anti-Iranian, the United States worked closely
with Pakistan's predominantly Sunni Inter-Services Intelligence organization. Through ISI, the United States recruited Sunni mujahadeen by staging
them in Chechnya to fight in Bosnia and later in Kosovo."
F.Michael Maloof, former Pentagon Counterterrorism Adviser
Iran subversion in Balkans
G2 Bulletin,
25 September 2006
(Who is Michael Maloof? - Click Here)
Omar Sheikh And British Covert Terrorist Operations In The Balkans
"Pakistani
intelligence chiefs are concerned that General Musharraf may jeopardise their relationship
with British intelligence agencies after claiming that a convicted terrorist was once an MI6 informer. The President
outlines the role played by a former London public schoolboy, Omar
Sheikh, in the kidnap and murder of Daniel Pearl, the Wall
Street Journal reporter, in February 2002. General
Musharraf says that Sheikh, who orchestrated the abduction, was recruited by MI6 while he
was studying at the London School of Economics and sent to the Balkans to take part in
jihad operations there. He alleges that Sheikh later
double-crossed British intelligence. 'At some point he probably became a rogue or double
agent,' General Musharraf says." |
"During the Soviet occupation of
Afghanistan in the 1980s, the US funded large numbers of jihadists through Pakistan's
secret intelligence service, the ISI. Later the US wanted to raise another jihadi corps,
again using proxies, to help Bosnian Muslims fight to weaken the Serb government's hold on
Yugoslavia. Those they turned to included Pakistanis in Britain. According to a recent
report by the Delhi-based Observer Research Foundation, a contingent was also sent by the
Pakistani government, then led by Benazir Bhutto, at the request of the Clinton
administration. This contingent was formed from the Harkat-ul- Ansar (HUA) terrorist group
and trained by the ISI. The report estimates that about 200 Pakistani Muslims living in
the UK went to Pakistan, trained in HUA camps and joined the HUA's contingent in Bosnia. Most significantly, this was 'with the full knowledge and
complicity of the British and American intelligence agencies'. As the 2002 Dutch government report on Bosnia makes clear, the US provided
a green light to groups on the state department list of terrorist organisations, including
the Lebanese-based Hizbullah, to operate in Bosnia - an episode that calls into question
the credibility of the subsequent 'war on terror'. For
nearly a decade the US helped Islamist insurgents linked to Chechnya, Iran and Saudi
Arabia destabilise the former Yugoslavia. The
insurgents were also allowed to move further east to Kosovo. By the end of the fighting in
Bosnia there were tens of thousands of Islamist insurgents in Bosnia, Croatia and Kosovo;
many then moved west to Austria, Germany and Switzerland. Less well known is
evidence of the British government's relationship with a wider Islamist terrorist network.
During an interview on Fox TV this summer, the former US
federal prosecutor John Loftus reported that British
intelligence had used the al-Muhajiroun group in London to recruit Islamist militants with
British passports for the war against the Serbs in Kosovo. Since July Scotland Yard has been interested in an alleged member of
al-Muhajiroun, Haroon Rashid Aswat, who some sources have suggested could have been behind
the London bombings. According to Loftus, Aswat was detained in Pakistan after leaving
Britain, but was released after 24 hours. He was subsequently returned to Britain from
Zambia, but has been detained solely for extradition to the US, not for questioning about
the London bombings. Loftus claimed that Aswat is a British-backed double agent, pursued
by the police but protected by MI6."
Michael Meacher, former UK Environment Minister
Britain now faces its own blowback
Guardian, 10
September 2005
"... the KLA is
closely involved with Terrorist organizations motivated by the ideology of radical Islam,
including assets of Iran and of the notorious Osama bin-Ladin". "Sky News has obtained evidence of hundreds of radical
Islamic Holy warriors hiding in Bosnia, a decade after the end of the war. Tim Marshall
went to Zenica in search of answers. He found a growing radicalisation, and a new base for
Al Qaeda." |
"If Senator Kennedy wants to talk
about fraud [in relation to the Bush administration's invasion of Iraq], he ought to
talk..... about what he and President Clinton told us in 1999 when they told us to bomb
innocent Serbs, we'd find 100 thousand mass graves. Those mass graves were never found.
They lied to the America people to justify the aerial bombardment campaign."
Congressman Curt Weldon (R) Pennsylvania on 'Hardball with Chris
Matthews'
NBC News, 19 September 2003
Press Reports On False Claims Of Genocide By Serbs In Kosovo - Click Here
"General
Sir Michael Rose, the former United Nations military
commander in Bosnia.... said false facts about the
war in Bosnia were being fed to Congress.... he was
visited by General John Galvin, former Supreme Allied Commander Europe who had been
appointed by President Clinton to advise on a new structure for the Bosnian Army. General
Rose said: 'We were escorted by a woman from the US Embassy who, in my view, was the most
hostile American I met during all my time in Bosnia.' As they flew by helicopter towards
Tuzla in the north, she pointed at all the destroyed villages high in the Zvijezda
mountains and 'exclaimed excitedly' to General Galvin: 'Look at what the criminal Serbs
have done.' In fact, General Rose said, they were Bosnian Croat villages ethnically
cleansed by the Muslim forces. Later when they visited Mostar in the south where the
Croats had virtually destroyed the Muslim sector in the eastern part of the town, the US
official 'planted her hands on her ample hips' and cried: 'Well, at least this was done by
the criminal Serbs.' General Rose said the woman burst into tears when it was pointed out
that the Croats had been to blame. 'The fact was not lost on Galvin,' he said."
US bugged me in Bosnia, says General Rose
London Times, 10 November 1998
"The
War on Terror suffered a major blow three years before it was ever announced. It happened
when the people of this democracy [in America] were misled into attacking the sovereign,
emerging post-Communist democracy of Yugoslavia - over rumors of genocide and ethnic
cleansing that proved false. In so doing, we put the final touch on delivering the
Balkans to al Qaeda. Today we are being asked to seal that historical blunder, whose
repercussions seven years later are only escalating as those we 'rescued' turn their
weapons against UN and NATO forces.
While NATO spends most of its time rooting
out terror cells in Kosovo and Bosniawhich served as the logistics bases for
the London and Madrid
bombings--the 2006 deadline to complete our eagerly forgotten debacle and determine
the provinces final status is fast approaching.... [Deputy commander of the
Kosovo Liberation Army Niam Behljulji, known as Hulji],
according to the December issue of the Defense & Foreign
Affairs Strategic Policy journal, is the man who supplied the Semtex-like
explosives used in the London and Madrid attacks. But to perpetuate the version of events we were sold from the
beginning, all these connections have gone purposefully unmade by our nations
'journalists,' who were gung-ho supporters of our 1999 offensive against a historical ally and
the culmination of our pro-terror policies in 1990s Yugoslavia.... Only
Britain's Sky News has caught on, in December airing a segment
entitled 'The Hidden Army of Radical Islam,' about Bosnia, where there
is 'growing radicalization' and a base for Al Qaeda: 'In the
heart of Europe, thousands of Arab fighters. Zenica [Bosnia], 1995. They come to wage holy
war in support of the Bosnian Army. [Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic shown
welcoming the mujahadeen.] ...They committed many atrocities; the tapes Sky News has
obtained include beheadings and signs of torture.
This isnt just about
history; it's about now. Western intelligence agencies are now pressing the Bosnians
to look into exactly where these people are and what they are doing, and
asking have any of these men been in contact with the three young Bosnian
Muslims arrested last month on terrorism charges. ...In Sarajevo now
the influence of Saudi ideas can be found all over the city. ...Radical
Islam is attempting to plant deep roots in the community.
The seeds for change
were planted back in 1995.'... The narration continues: 'There
were some serious players sent to Bosnia, among them the man who planned 9/11, Khalid
Sheikh Mohamed...' A similar picture began to
emerge in Kosovo, where the late Wall St. Journal reporter Daniel
Pearl was uncovering that
'Ethnic-Albanian militants, humanitarian organizations, NATO and the news media fed off
each other to give genocide rumors credibility.' The anti-Serb propaganda which misled
Americans throughout the 90s and which Daniel Pearl was debunking continues to guide
our perceptions and foreign policy in the Balkans today. But
despite the medias blackout on the subject of Balkans terror--including by Pearl's
own Wall St. Journal--more and more Americans have been scratching their heads, wondering
why we forcibly precluded the Serbs from doing in their own backyard what weve gone
halfway around the globe to do.... For the
past four years, the Hague's International Criminal Tribunal for the Former
Yugoslavia has been finding what multiple international forensic teams have
found--that claims of Serb 'atrocities' were exaggerated and
often invented. It turns out we confused an attempt to create an Islamic 'Greater Albania' with one to create a 'Greater
Serbia.' Surely if the latter were Slobodan Milosevics goal,
he would have started by ethnically cleansing the nearly 300,000 Muslims of
Serbia. Though he built his career in whatever dirty ways Tito's Yugoslavia allowed,
he was the least of the Balkans' villains. For most Serbs, he was not a
hero until he was called upon to defend an entire nation at the Hague. Now that Milosevic is dead, we are spared the worldwide
riots that would have ensued had the tribunal mustered the courage to issue a verdict
based on the evidence. And we can all sleep comfortably as the disproved charges
are accepted as history.... In early 2001, German TV broadcast a report titled 'It Began
with a Lie,' which publicized the findings of the observer force Organization for Security
and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) that no genocide had taken place in Kosovo. The revelations set off a huge public debate in Germany, a
member of the NATO coalition, after the
public realized their country had been party to a hoax, and they held the responsible politicians feet to the
fire. Its long past time that we also set the record straight on what
we 'achieved' in the Balkans -- and change course. As the world closes in on
the Serbs again this year, we must stop bin Laden from establishing a terror
state in Europe. We know from Madrid and London that well pay for it with our
own blood. In fact, we already have."
A Balkan Base For Al Qaeda?
FrontPageMagazine,
20 March 2006
"The Clinton administration followed
up by providing strong support to the KLA, even though it was known that the KLA supported
the Muslim mujahadeen. Despite that knowledge, then Secretary of State Madeleine Albright
had the KLA removed from the State Department list of terrorists. This action paved the
way for the United States to provide the KLA with needed logistical support. At the same
time, the KLA also received support from Iran and Usama bin Laden, along with 'Islamic
holy warriors' who were jihad veterans from Bosnia, Chechnya and Afghanistan. Swiss
journalist Richard Labeviere, in his book, 'Dollars for Terror,' said that the
international Islamic networks linked to bin Laden received help from U.S. intelligence
community. Indeed, Chechen sources claim that U.S. intelligence also aided them in their
opposition to Russia. Given that U.S. policy in the post-Cold War period has not only been
anti-Russian but anti-Iranian, the United States
worked closely with Pakistan's predominantly Sunni Inter-Services Intelligence
organization. Through ISI, the United States recruited Sunni mujahadeen by staging them in
Chechnya to fight in Bosnia and later in Kosovo."
F.Michael Maloof, former Pentagon Counterterrorism Adviser
Iran subversion in Balkans
G2 Bulletin, 25 September 2006
(Who is Michael Maloof? - Click Here)
"American intelligence agents have
admitted they helped to train the Kosovo Liberation Army [KLA] before Nato's bombing of
Yugoslavia. The disclosure angered some European diplomats, who said this had undermined
moves for a political solution to the conflict between Serbs and Albanians... Several KLA
leaders had the mobile phone number of General Wesley Clark, the Nato commander..."
CIA aided Kosovo guerrilla army
Sunday
Times , 12 March 2000
"General
Wesley Clark, the former Nato commander and presidential hopeful, will testify next month
at the war crimes trial of Slobodan Milosevic under conditions of strict censorship and
confidentiality imposed by the United States. Washington is believed to be fearful of
potentially damaging revelations about its Balkan realpolitik during the 1990s and in the
Bosnian War. General Clark, who is seeking the Democratic Party nomination for President,
will be one of the highest-profile witnesses to take the stand. The former Nato commander
directed the alliance's 78-day bombing campaign in Kosovo in 1999, after Serbian forces
had launched an onslaught against ethnic Albanian separatists. General Clark will testify
on December 15 and 16. Public galleries will be closed and the broadcast system that
transmits the proceedings on the internet and on closed-circuit television will be shut
down. The conditions of General Clark's testimony include a 48-hour delay to enable the US
Government to review the transcript and seek the court's consent to censor parts on the
ground of national security. Two US representatives will attend the sessions. The
three-judge panel hearing Mr Milosevic's case agreed to the conditions, which are unique,
because they decided that they were justified by the potential importance of General
Clark's testimony, Jim Landale, the tribunal spokesman, said. In his cross-examination of
General Clark, Mr Milosevic could reveal sensitive information about the West's diplomatic
and military strategy for dealing with the crisis in the Balkans."
General Clark to testify against Milosevic
London
Times, 20 November 2003
"The retired General who had been
refusing to declare himself a Democrat or Republican is now declaring himself a Democratic
presidential candidate. But more important than his party affiliation is Wesley Clark's
bizarre view on how to fight terrorism. The media refer to Clark's impressive military
credentials but they fail to note that his main accomplishment under President Clinton was
presiding over the establishment of a base for radical Islamic terrorism, including Osama
bin Laden, in Kosovo... Clark, who has been making headlines by claiming that the U.S.
decision to go to war in Iraq was a misjudgment based on scanty evidence, ran Clinton's
NATO war against Yugoslavia on behalf of the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA). The House of
Representatives failed to authorize the war under the War Powers Act, making it illegal.
Thousands of innocent people in Serbia, Yugoslavia's main province, were killed to stop an
alleged 'genocide' by Yugoslavia that was not in fact taking place. Investigations
determined that a couple thousand had died in the civil war there.... The 1998 State
Department human rights report had described the KLA as a group that tortured and abducted
people and made others 'disappear.' Yet a photograph was taken of
Clark and [KLA leader] Thaki with their hands together in a gesture of solidarity. The KLA's ties to Osama bin Laden were also well-known and
reported.... Another Democratic presidential candidate, Rep. Dennis Kucinich, has tried to
prohibit funding for the Kosovo Protection Corps (KPC), the successor to the KLA now being
protected by U.N. troops as a result of the outcome of the conflict. Kucinich said an
internal United Nations Report found the KPC responsible for violence, extortion, murder
and torture.... Clark's presidential decision suggests that he believes the media will not
ask him about supporting the same extremist Muslim forces in Kosovo that militarily
attacked us on 9/11. He's right: during interviews on ABC's Good Morning America and the
NBC Today show on September 17, the subject didn't come up. "
Wesley Clark's Ties To Muslim Terrorists
Accuracy in Media, 17 September 2003
| US Backed Islamic Terrorism in the Balkans Press Reports |
|
| 1. Oil and US Geopolitical Objectives in the Balkans | Click here |
| 2. US backed terrorism in Croatia | Click here |
| 3. US backed terrorism in Bosnia | Click here |
| 4. US backed terrorism in Kosovo | Click here |
| 5. US backed terrorism in Macedonia | Click here |
| 6. The human cost of US backed terrorism in the Balkans | Click here |
| American Sponsored Islamic Jihad In Yugoslavia Article by former British government Minister, Michael Meacher - click here |
|
| Post 911 - Some Habits Die Hard "The Pentagon is considering a massive covert action program to overthrow Iran's ruling ayatollahs... The proposal, sources say, includes ... backing armed Iranian dissidents and employing the services of the Mujahedeen e Khalq, a group currently branded as terrorist by the United States..." The Iran Debate ABC News, 29 May 2003 "The Peoples
Mujahidin is seen by Washington as a possible instrument for 'regime change' in
Tehran....The Marxist movement, which initially supported the Islamic revolution and then
broke with the fundamentalist regime, was formally designated last year as 'terrorist' by
the State Department
and the EU but it is known to have links with the CIA and other US agencies." |
|
"The UK Defence
Intelligence Staff (DIS) was also aware of the American secret arms supplies to the ABiH
[the Bosnian Muslim Army]. According to a British intelligence official, the DIS never
made an issue of them, so as not to further damage the sensitive relationship with the US
services. An internal DIS analysis concluded that the arms were delivered via 'a different
network', and that the entire operation was probably led by the NSC [National Security
Council]..... the DIS received a direct order from the British government not to
investigate this affair. This was not permitted for the simple reason that the matter was
too sensitive in the framework of American-British relations. The DIS also obtained
intelligence on the secret supplies to the ABiH from the German military intelligence
service and the Bundesnachrichtendienst, because some of the flights departed from
Frankfurt. However, no American-German alliance existed in the matter of clandestine
support to the ABiH."
Srebrenica - A Safe Area?
Appendix II - Intelligence and the war in Bosnia 1992
1995: The role of the intelligence and security services
Chapter 4, Secret arms supplies and other covert actions
Report Published on Behalf of The Dutch Government, 10 April
2002
"The US goal was to assist the
Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA). Yet the year before, the US state department had branded the
KLA a terrorist organisation, financing its operations from the heroin trade and funds
from Islamic countries and individuals, including Osama bin Laden. As James Bissett, the
former Canadian ambassador to Yugoslavia, has subsequently reported: 'This did not stop
the US from arming and training KLA members in Albania and sending them back into Kosovo
to assassinate Serbian mayors, ambush Serbian policemen and intimidate hesitant Kosovo
Albanians ... Despite a UN arms embargo, and with the support of the US, arms, ammunition
and thousands of fighters were smuggled into Bosnia to help the Muslims ... Bin Laden and
his network were also active in Kosovo, and KLA members trained in his camps in
Afghanistan and Albania.' According to reports in April 1999, assistance
was also provided by Britain's SAS. Through much of the
1990s, US support for Islamic militants in former Yugoslavia was backed up by covert US airdrops of arms, especially at Tuzla
in northern Bosnia. These took place in the face of Operation Deny Flight, the
UN-imposed and Nato-policed no-fly zone over Bosnia. The US House of Representatives also
failed to authorise the war under the War Powers Act, making it illegal (shades of Iraq).
But the airdrops were only the tip of the iceberg. Retired US
officers heading Military Professional Resources Inc, a private paramilitary firm based in
Virginia, planned the bloody Croatian 'liberation' of the Serb-held Krajina enclave, which
resulted in the ethnic cleansing of 200,000 Serbs. US
goals in the use of the KLA as a proxy force, similar to the funding of the Contras
against the leftwing Sandinista government in Nicaragua in the 1980s, were partly to
remove Milosevic and break up Yugoslavia as one of the remaining Communist regimes. But
related motives were to break Russia's monopoly over oil and gas transport routes and
secure pro-western governments in the strategic Black Sea-Caspian Sea oil-rich basin. A
crucial oil corridor, called the Trans-Balkan pipeline, designed to become the main route
to the west for oil and gas extracted in central Asia, was to run from the Black Sea to
the Adriatic via Bulgaria, Macedonia near the border with Kosovo, and Albania. Another was to run across Serbia to
Adriatic ports in Croatia and Italy, fed by a pipeline running from a Black Sea port in
Romania. The implications of this are stark."
Michael Meacher - Former Blair Minister
The path to friendship goes via the oil and gas fields
Guardian, 27 March
2004
"A new and potentially explosive
Great Game is being set up and few in Britain are aware of it. There are many players: far
more than the two - Russia and Britain - who were engaged a century ago in imperial
rivalry in central Asia and the north-west frontier. And the object this time is not so
much control of territory. It is the large reserves of oil and gas in the Caucasus,
notably the Caspian basin. Pipelines are the counters in this new Great Game. There are
plans for pipe-lines through Azerbaijan, Georgia, Turkey, Iran, Bulgaria, Macedonia - and
Albania. Traditional rivalries between east and west are complicated by other threats -
from Chechen separatists, Kurds, Albanian guerrilla groups, the dispute between Azerbaijan and Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh and,
throughout the region, Islamic groups whose activities are causing deep concern to Moscow,
Tehran and Washington alike. 'In addition to instability and conflict in the Caucasus and
parts of central Asia, there is a longer-term fear that Russia may rebuild its military
capabilities, perhaps under a strongly nationalist regime,' notes Paul Rogers, professor
of peace studies at Bradford University, in his recent book, Losing Control. Such a fear
he adds, 'rarely recognises the significance of a near-endemic Russian perception that
Nato expansion and US commercial interests in the Caspian basin are part of a strategic
encroachment into Russia's historic sphere of influence'. This is the region both west and
east have their eyes on. It is rich in untapped oil and gas while US reserves are running
down, China is desperate for more oil, and no one outside the Gulf wants to rely on Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait or Iraq - which have the biggest oil reserves. Oil is the bait as the US,
Russia, Turkey, Iran - and Nato - jockey for alliances, power and influence in this highly
combustible but, for most people, little-known, region. The EU is now getting in on the
act. 'The European Union cannot afford to neglect the southern Caucasus. Georgia, Armenia
and Azerbaijan form a strategic corridor linking southern Europe with central Asia,' Chris
Patten, the European external relations commissioner, and Anna Lindh, the Swedish foreign
minister, told Financial Times readers last month before the first high-level EU visit to
the region. 'There is perhaps as much oil under the Caspian sea as under the North sea and
a huge amount of gas there and in central Asia - good news for energy-hungry Europe,' they
said. Soon after the EU visit, Georgia's president, Eduard Shevardnadze, welcomed European
and US support for the 'Great Silk Road idea'. The plan, backed by Washington and American
oil companies, including Chevron, is for a pipeline taking Turkmenistan and Kazakh oil to
Baku, the Azerbaijani capital, through Tbilisi, the Georgian capital, and through eastern
Turkey to the Mediterranean port of Ceyhan. Russia is desperate to maintain oil flows
through its territory. Iran wants a pipeline running from the Caspian due south. China
wants one going due east. There is also a plan, backed by the US, for a pipeline running
from the Bulgarian Black sea port of Burgas through Macedonia to the Albanian Adriatic
port of Vlore. The idea is for Caspian oil to be shipped to Burgas by tanker from the
Black sea ports of Novorossiysk in Russia and Supsa in Georgia.... While the US and Nato -
and now the EU - hold out the prospect of untold wealth for the Caucasian states of the
former Soviet Union, the west will also have an important economic stake in Albania and
Macedonia. The US already seems to take the view that all
Serbs are bad and all Albanians good. The implications for Kosovo, a Serbian province with
an overwhelming ethnic Albanian population, and for Macedonia, with armed groups from
Kosovo stirring up trouble among the ethnic Albanian population, are potentially immense....Watch this space."
The new Great Game - East and west are jockeying for influence in the Caucasus. The prize
is oil and gas
Guardian, 5 March
2001
How much should we
spend on the armed services? ... My view is we dont spend on you, we invest in you.
The men and women in the armed services are not a drain on our economic strength. Indeed you safeguard it.
Youre not a burden on our economy, you
are the critical foundation for growth.
US Defence Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld
addressing US troops at Camp Bondsteel in Kosovo, 5 June
2001
US Defense Department Press Release
"This
is about America's energy security. It's also about preventing strategic inroads by those
who don't share our values. We're trying to move these newly independent countries toward
the west. We would like to see them reliant on western commercial and political interests
rather than going another way. We've made a substantial political investment in the
Caspian, and it's very important to us that both the
pipeline map and the politics come out right."
Bill Richardson 1998, US energy
secretary, on US policy on the extraction and transport of Caspian oil
'A discreet deal in the pipeline - Nato mocked those who claimed there was a plan for
Caspian oil'
Guardian,
15 February 2001
|
|
"During the 1999 Balkans
war, some of the critics of Nato's intervention alleged that the western powers were
seeking to secure a passage for oil from the Caspian sea. This claim was widely mocked....
[However] For the past few weeks, a freelance researcher called Keith Fisher has been
doggedly documenting a project which has, as far as I can discover, has been
little-reported in any British, European or American newspaper. It is called the
Trans-Balkan pipeline, and it's due for approval at the end of next month. Its purpose is
to secure a passage for oil from the Caspian sea. The line will run from the Black sea
port of Burgas to the Adriatic at Vlore, passing through Bulgaria, Macedonia and Albania.
It is likely to become the main route to the west for the oil and gas now being extracted
in central Asia. It will carry 750,000 barrels a day: a throughput, at current prices, of
some $600m a month. The project is necessary, according to a paper published by the US
Trade and Development Agency last May, because the oil coming from the Caspian sea 'will
quickly surpass the safe capacity
of the Bosphorus as a shipping lane'. The scheme, the agency
notes, will 'provide a consistent source of crude oil to American refineries', 'provide
American companies with a key role in developing the vital east-west corridor', 'advance
the privatisation aspirations of the US government in the region' and 'facilitate rapid
integration' of the Balkans 'with western Europe'...."
'A discreet deal in the pipeline - Nato mocked those who
claimed there was a plan for Caspian oil'
Guardian,
15 February 2001

"Albania, Bulgaria and
Macedonia have given the go ahead for the construction of a $1.2bn oil pipeline that will
pass through the Balkan peninsula. The project aims to allow alternative ports for the
shipping of Russian and Caspian oil, that normally goes through the Bosphorus straits.
It aims to transport 750,000 daily barrels of oil. The pipeline will be built by
the US-registered Albanian Macedonian Bulgarian Oil Corporation (AMBO). The pipeline will
run for nearly 900 kilometres from the Bulgarian port of Burgas, over the Black Sea to the
Albanian city of Vlore on the Adriatic coast, crossing Macedonia.... According to AMBO
president Edward Ferguson, work on the pipeline will begin in 2005 and it is expected to
be ready in three or four years. He added that the company had already raised about $900m
from the Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) - a US development agency - the
Eximbank and Credit Suisse First Boston, among others."
Go-ahead for Balkan oil pipeline
BBC Online, 28 December 2004
"On June 2, the U.S. Trade and
Development Agency announced it had awarded the $588,000 grant to Bulgaria to carry out a
feasibility study for the pipeline. Under the proposed plan, Caspian oil would be shipped
by tanker from the Black Sea ports of Novorossiysk in Russia and from Supsa in former
Soviet Georgia and then pumped by overland pipeline across Bulgaria, Macedonia and Albania
to waiting European consumers. 'The continuing conflicts in Yugoslavia have made [the
proposed trans-Balkan line] appear impractical in past years. But the prospect that the
U.S. government would guarantee security in the region ... now makes it a much more
attractive proposition. This grant represents a significant step forward for this policy
(of multiple pipeline routes) and for U.S. business interests in the Caspian region,' said
TDA Director J. Joseph Grandmaison. The decision came shortly before NATO and Russia
reached agreement on how to force an end to the Kosovo conflict. The decision has raised
speculation among regional experts that it may be part of a larger economic development
plan envisioned by the Clinton administration to stabilize the southern Balkans after the
massive dislocations and infrastructure damage caused by the Serbian repression in Kosovo
and the U.S.-led NATO bombing of Serbia. The new strategic importance of the trans-Balkans
region to U.S. policy makers could now justify its designation as a Main Export Pipeline
for Caspian oil. The continuing conflicts in Yugoslavia have made it appear impractical in
past years. But the prospect that the U.S. government would guarantee security in the
region and also provide financial guarantees now makes it a much more attractive
proposition... The Bulgaria-Macedonia-Albania route has already won support in Moscow and
from the Chevron-led Caspian Pipeline Consortium that is developing the Caspian-Kazakhstan
oil deposits. The main export line for Caspian crude will run through Russian territory to
the Black Sea deposit at Novorossiysk and then by oil tankers to consumers."
Looking at Balkans route for Caspian crude
United Press
International, 23 June 1999
"The
`AMBO' Corporation (Pound Ridge, NY) has announced, on 17th January 1997, that Mr. E.L.
(Ted) Ferguson - formerly Director of Oil & Gas Development for Europe and Africa for
`Brown & Root Energy Services' has joined `AMBO' as President & CEO.... The `AMBO'
Corporation (an acronym for the `Albanian- Macedonian-Bulgarian Oil Corporation') is the
project developer of the 826 million $ Trans-Balkan Oil Pipeline which will carry crude
oil from the Bulgarian Black Sea port of Bourgas to the Albanian Adriatic Sea port of
Vlor....The feasibility study for `AMBO's ` Trans-Balkan Oil Pipeline, conducted by the
international engineering company of `Brown & Root Ltd.' in
London.... The resulting pipeline will become a part of the region's critical East-West
corridor infrastructure which includes highway, railway, gas and fiber optic
telecommunications lines. This pipeline will bring oil directly to the European market by
eliminating tanker traffic through the ecologically sensitive waters of the Aegean and
Mediterranean Seas."
M I L S N E W S
Skopje, 23 January, 1997
"Mediterranean
refiners are suffering shortages of crude oil as Turkish security restrictions and bad
weather cause a traffic jam of tankers carrying Russian oil through the straits of the
Bosporus and Dardanelles... The congestion threatens a supply crunch similar to that
experienced by European refiners during the Gulf war of 1991.... The jam has forced
Russian producers to halt one pipeline sending oil to the Black Sea because storage tanks
are full and tanker loadings are delayed. 'The Bosporus problem is hitting very hard,'
said one refiner in Spain. The transit route of the Bosporus and Dardanelles straits, one
of the most important export points for Russia, Europe's biggest supplier, is known for
problems and delays. But the delays this year are compounded by the fact that refiners can
no longer rely on the Iraqi substitute for Russian oil. Kirkuk oil, from Iraq's northern
oilfields, resembles Russia's Urals oil. But Kirkuk, which is transported by pipeline to
the Turkish port of Ceyhan, has not been available since March because of the sabotage of
Iraq's section of the pipeline."
Bosporus tanker jam threatens shortage of oil
Financial
Times, 11 January 2004
"As Alvaro
González, captain of the Bosco Tapias, waited three weeks for a 30-vessel traffic jam to
clear so he could begin the treacherous journey through the Bosporus and Dardanelles
straits, he used the time to get his 274-meter oil tanker shipshape.... The reason for the
delays, of up to 25 days since the start of the gridlock in the Turkish straits in
December, is a mix of environmental, security and geopolitical factors which few
industries other than oil face to such a degree....Collisions and groundings are the most
frequent accidents for a waterway that at its narrowest point could not fit a tanker
lengthwise. The doubling of oil exports from Russia in eight years, and the rush of oil
expected from the Caspian have worried Turkish authorities and international oil
companies, whose reputations ride on their safety record...This battle over control of the
Caspian's oil and natural gas riches has raged since the early 1990s, with the US backing
a system of pipelines that would bypass Iran as well as reduce Moscow's grip over
countries such as Azerbaijan, Tajikistan and Kazakhstan."
Geopolitics slows tankers' passage in busy Bosporus
Financial
Times, 11 January 2004
"As the region stabilizes, the
Balkans may play an important role as a transit center for Russian and Caspian Sea region
oil exports... the region is becoming more important as a transit center for Russian and Caspian Sea region oil exports to Western
consumers."
US
Energy Information Administration - Statement on Balkans October 2002
"Today, the
circumstances which we have created here have changed. Today, it is absolutely necessary
to guarantee the stability of Macedonia and its entry into NATO. But we will certainly remain here a long time so that
we can also guarantee the security of the energy
corridors which traverse this country."
General Michael Jackson, commander of KFOR in
Macedonia
Italian daily, Sole 24 Ore, 13
April 1999
"The routes of potential trans-Balkan oil pipelines were laid down according to the interests of
their future [EU and US] users....The territory of Yugoslavia (both former and present
federation) is significant, therefore, because of its geographic position. Influential
American analysts insist on the claim that Yugoslavia is in the immediate neighborhood of
a zone of vital US interests - Black Sea/Caspian Sea region. And wherever there are vital
US interests, there are NATO troops to protect them. European interests, claim our
interlocutors, are even greater, because it is definitely not in the interest of the
European Union countries that the key to their supplies is held by someone else....The
project SEEL (South East European Line), initiated by the Italian company ENI is actually
the corridor for transportation of Caspian oil from Constanta to Trieste, which passes
through Serbia and uses the existing system of the Adriatic oil pipeline, all the way to
Omisalj... Because of the political situation in Serbia this project was delayed for some
better times... Until the fall of Slobodan Milosevic's regime
Croatia insisted that the connection with Constanta bypass Serbia by going through Hungary [a less economic route]. However, after
October 5 and the political changes in Yugoslavia, the meeting of this same group held in
Brussels on October 26 and 27, 2000, expressed support for the transport of Caspian oil
following the route from Black Sea, Romania, Yugoslavia and Croatia, respectively from
Romanian port Constanta, through Pitesti, and Pancevo to Delnice in Croatia, from where
the new pipeline would go towards Trieste and the old one continue to Omisalj on the
island of Krk."
Underground Games in Kosovo
Reporter, Banja Luka, Srpska, B-H, February 27, 2001
"The project envisages
construction of a new spur from Delnice to Trieste, 100 kilometers long, and conversion of
the Omisalj port into the leading spot-market
for resale of oil in the Mediterranean [Adriatic]..... One should recall that Milosevic
did not end up in the Hague only as a war criminal, but above all because with his
policies he stood in the way of a new network of Euro-Asian
oil pipelines. His political
fate was sealed in Zagreb, where two years ago a large ministerial-business conference of
the EU INOGATE program was held. A hundred
days later, Milosevic was not in power anymore, and at the time of the signing of a new oil pipeline from
Constanta to Trieste he was already on the way to the Hague,
supposedly by chance."
Mega Pipeline Becomes Reality
Novi List (Croatian Newspaper), 23 July 2002
"..the Balkans are
becoming an important transit center for energy supplies from the Black Sea area and
beyond to Europe"
US Energy Information Administration - Previous
statement on Balkans now updated with statement of October 2002 (see top)
"The Honorable U.S. Ambassador to
Croatia Lawrence Rossin and the Croatian Minister of Economy Hrvoje Vojkovic signed a US$
202,000 Trade and Development Agency (TDA) grant to fund a feasibility study for an
international oil pipeline in Southeast Europe. The Serbian Minister of Mining and Energy,
Ms. Kori Udovicki ....took part in the signing ceremony in Zagreb. The oil pipeline would
originate in Constanta, Romania go through Serbia and Croatia and end in Trieste,
Italy."
Southeastern Europe Business Brief
Volume 7.26, July 26, 2002
"On April 8 [1999] the Party of
Democratic Socialism in Germany [PDS],
an opponent of the war, issued
a report describing an alleged CIA covert operation
named 'Operation Roots' aimed at sowing ethnic divisions in
Yugoslavia to encourage its breakup. The report claimed that this operation has been going
on 'since the beginning of Clinton's presidency.' It was supposedly a joint operation with
the German secret service, which also sought to destabilize Yugoslavia. The final
objective 'is the separation of Kosovo, with the aim of it becoming part of Albania; the
separation of Montenegro, as the last means of access to the Mediterranean; and the
separation of the Vojvodina, which produces most of the food for Yugoslavia. This would
lead to the total collapse of Yugoslavia as a viable independent state.' The report also
asserts that the KLA was founded by the CIA with funding was funneled through drug-smuggling operations in Europe."
Fun Facts About Our New Allies
The Progressive
Review (Washington), 22 June 1999
"General Sir Michael Rose, the
former United Nations military commander in Bosnia.... said false facts about the war in
Bosnia were being fed to Congress.... he was visited by General John Galvin, former
Supreme Allied Commander Europe who had been appointed by President Clinton to advise on a
new structure for the Bosnian Army. General Rose said: 'We were escorted by a woman from
the US Embassy who, in my view, was the most hostile American I met during all my time in
Bosnia.' As they flew by helicopter towards Tuzla in the north, she pointed at all the
destroyed villages high in the Zvijezda mountains and 'exclaimed excitedly' to General
Galvin: 'Look at what the criminal Serbs have done.' In fact, General Rose said, they were
Bosnian Croat villages ethnically cleansed by the Muslim forces. Later when they visited
Mostar in the south where the Croats had virtually destroyed the Muslim sector in the
eastern part of the town, the US official 'planted her hands on her ample hips' and cried:
'Well, at least this was done by the criminal Serbs.' General Rose said the woman burst
into tears when it was pointed out that the Croats had been to blame. 'The fact was not
lost on Galvin,' he said."
US bugged me in Bosnia, says General Rose
London Times, 10 November 1998
"A
more revealing report was released April 8 by Jurgen Reents,
press spokes person for the Party of Democratic Socialism in Germany. The PDS received
almost as many votes as the Green Party, which is part of Germany's ruling coalition. The
PDS has actively opposed the NATO war on Yugoslavia. Reents said the report came from
someone who holds a 'strictly confidential and high position in the offices of the German
government.' The report came through a
Catholic priest who has kept the individual's identity secret but has verified the
person's authenticity. The report asserts that top NATO, U.S., British and German
officials are 'utterly lying in public concerning almost all the facts in regard to the
Balkan War.' ...The report says that
the German government knows NATO consciously created the refugee crisis. For example, the
report says, NATO has targeted and destroyed nearly every fresh-water facility in Kosovo.
It also asserts that there are KLA units in Kosovo--one is entirely U.S. mercenaries, the
other German mercenaries--who report to the military commands of those countries. Perhaps
most revealing is the report's description of a CIA covert operation cynically named
'Operation Roots.' It is aimed at sowing ethnic divisions in Yugoslavia to encourage its
breakup. The report says that this operation has
been going on 'since the beginning of Clinton's presidency.' It is a joint operation with
the German secret service, which has also sought to
destabilize Yugoslavia. .. The report asserts that the KLA was founded by the CIA. And
the funding was funneled through drug-smuggling operations in
Europe. The authenticity of this report cannot be independently verified at this time. But
much of it is consistent with what is already known. It helps to expose the real forces
behind the war on Yugoslavia and shows who are the true aggressors."
Who's The KLA? - German document reveals secret CIA
role
Workers World
Service, April 29, 1999
"I mean Kosovo is just one of the points of destabilization of
Yugoslavia... I want people to know the truth about what happened here.... The United
States, for its own geopolitical reasons, deliberately encouraged the secessionist
tendency among Albanians, used
them against the Yugoslav government in order to destabilize
the Balkans.... One book has a great hold over Kosovo Albanians. It's called the 'Canon of Leke
Dukagjiniis'. It's a 15th century text that spells out codes of behavior. It goes into
great detail on how to carry out blood feuds, when and whom it is proper to kill. It lays
out the proper methods to use when killing, rules and regulations and so on. And this Canon is alive
among Albanians today, especially since the fall of communism. This is an intensely
tradition-oriented culture. Blood feud is a constant threat for Albanians.... By
methodically killing those who refused to support them, the KLA was striking a deep fear
among Albanians: the refusal of one Clan member to obey could lead to revenge against his
entire clan. And now the KLA had NATO bombers to enforce blood feud. ... [the KLA] knew their own people, their fears, their
traditions. They knew that if they could prove they were deadly, the clan leaders would fall in line. Now they live in a society dominated by gangsters. None of this
would have happened were it not for years of effort by the United States."
Cedomir Prlincevic, President of the Jewish Community
in Pristina, and Chief Archivist of Kosovo
Interview with 'Emperors
Clothes', 3 December 2000
"Albania ... offered NATO and the
U.S. an important military outpost in the turbulent southern Balkans (in the 1990-96
period Albania opened its ports and airstrips for U.S. military use and housed CIA spy
planes for flights over Bosnia).... The U.S. played a major role in the DPs 1992
electoral victory, and it then provided the new government with military, economic, and
political support. In the 1991-96 period Washington directly provided Albania $236 million
in economic aid, making the U.S. the second largest bilateral economic donor (following
Italy).....Following Berishas visit to the U.S. in March 1991, Washington began
supplying direct assistance to the DP, including donations of computers and cars for the
1992 electoral campaign. William Ryerson, the first U.S. ambassador, stood next to Berisha
on the podium at election rallies. The U.S. failed to criticize, and at times encouraged,
the new president as he purged critics of his policies within the judicial system, police,
and the DPoften through illegal means. By 1993 DP loyalists and family members held
most of the prominent positions in Albanias ministries, institutes, universities,
and state media. Citing the threat of communisms return, Berisha successfully
instilled fear in the population and discredited his rivals. The U.S. embassy in Albania
contributed to the polarization of Albanian politics by refusing to meet most of the
opposition parties (former communists as well as others) for the first two years of DP
rule. This one-sided view of democratization helped Berisha dismantle most political
alternatives, some of which were moderate and truly democratic. Albania had become a
strategic outpost in the region, and the U.S. did not want to jeopardize its new control
and political influence in the country. In 1992 Washington deployed a Military Liaison
Team to the country and started outfitting the Albanian military with nonlethal equipment,
technical expertise, and training. Albania was the first East European state to request
NATO membership, and in February 1994 it became a member of the NATO-associated
Partnership for Peace. Albania has participated in numerous military training operations
with the U.S. and other NATO powers, and the CIA has used Albania as a base for air
reconnaissance missions over Bosnia. In January 1995, the U.S. Army finished building a
radar station in northern Albania for use by the Albanian military. In addition, Albania
opened its land, marine, and airport facilities to NATO operations in the former
Yugoslavia....In the volatile Balkans, the U.S. is faced with a serious crisis that it
helped fuel. The raging anarchy in Albania is both a serious setback for Albanias
democratic development and a threat to regional security. In this regard, the
disintegration of police and military forces has resulted in the widespread availability
of weapons. These are easily purchased or stolen not only by Berishas opponents but
also by criminal gangs and terrorist elements both inside and outside Albania. "
Albania
Foreign Policy In Focus, Volume 2, Number 33 May 1997
"For amid the
present furore over the no-show of Iraqi WMDs, let us remember that in Kosovo our
humanitarian Prime Minister dragged this country into an illegal, US-sponsored war on
grounds which later proved to be fraudulent. In 2003 Tony's Big Whopper was that Saddam's
WMDs 'could be activated within 45 minutes'. In 1999 it was that Slobodan Milosevic's
Yugoslavia was 'set on a Hitler-style genocide equivalent to the extermination of the Jews
during World War Two'..... In fact, the Yugoslavs had by February 1999 already agreed to
most of the autonomy proposals and had assented to a UN (but not Nato) peacekeeping team
entering Kosovo..... It was the unwelcome prospect of Milosevic signing up to a peace deal
and thereby depriving the US of its casus belli that caused Secretary of State Albright,
with the connivance of Cook, to insert new terms into the Rambouillet accord purposely
designed to be rejected by Belgrade. Appendix B to
chapter seven of the document provided not only for the Nato occupation of Kosovo, but
also for 'unrestricted access' for Nato aircraft, tanks and troops throughout Yugoslavia.
The full text of the Rambouillet document was kept secret from the public and came to
light only when published in Le Monde Diplomatique on 17 April. By this time, the war was
almost a month old...The Kosovan war was, we were repeatedly told, fought 'to stop a
humanitarian catastrophe'. 'It is no exaggeration to say that what is happening is racial
genocide' - claimed the British Prime Minister - 'something we had hoped we would never
again experience in Europe. Thousands have been murdered, 100,000 men are missing and
hundreds forced to flee their homes and the country.' The Serbs were, according to the US
State Department, 'conducting a campaign of forced population movement not seen in Europe
since WW2'....With public support for war faltering, and a Downing Street spokesman
talking of a 'public-relations meltdown', it was time for the Lie Machine to go into
overdrive.... To date, the total body count of civilians killed in Kosovo in the period
1997-99 is still fewer than 3,000, a figure that includes not only those killed in open
fighting and during Nato air strikes, but also an unidentified number of Serbs. Clearly it
was an exaggeration - of Munchausenian proportions - for the Prime Minister to describe
what happened in Kosovo as 'racial genocide'. In both Kosovo and Iraq, the government's
war strategy seems to have been threefold:
1. In
order to whip up public support for war, tell lies so outrageous that most people will
believe that no one would have dared to make them up.
2. When
the conflict is over, dismiss questions about the continued lack of evidence as
'irrelevant' and stress alternative 'benefits' from the military action, e.g.,
'liberation' of the people.
3. Much
later on, when the truth is finally revealed, rely on the fact that most people have lost
interest and are now concentrating on the threat posed by the next new Hitler.
An admission of the government's culpability for the Kosovan war only slipped out in July
2000, when Lord Gilbert, the ex-defence minister, told the House of Commons that the
Rambouillet terms offered to the Yugoslav delegation had been 'absolutely intolerable' and
expressly designed to provoke war. Gilbert's bombshell warranted scarcely a line in the
mainstream British media, which had been so keen to label the Yugoslavs the guilty party a
year before."
How the battle lies were drawn
Spectator, 14 June 2003
"Almost before the Berlin Wall
came down in 1989, then Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney called together a group of players
to chart out a strategy for the post-Cold War world. The names should be familiar, because
they run the present administration: Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, Deputy
Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz, Secretary of State Colin Powell, and Lewis 'Scooter'
Libby, Cheney's chief of staff. The goal was to 'shape' the world in order to, in the
words of another team member, Zalmay Khalizad (now special envoy to Afghanistan),
'preclude the rise of another global rival for the indefinite future.' In his book 'From
Containment to Global Leadership?' Khalizad argues that it is 'vital' to prevent such a
rival from developing and 'to be willing to use force if necessary.'.."
Are we on the road to war?
The San Francisco Examiner, 19
April 2002
"The greatest untapped oil reserves in the world are located in the former Soviet republics bordering the Caspian Sea (Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan)...... This is the fuel that is feeding renewed militarism and must lead to new wars of conquest .... This is the key to understanding the bellicosity of US foreign policy over the past decade. The bombardment of Yugoslavia is the latest in a series of wars of aggression that have spanned the globe. Though they had certain regional motivations, these wars have been the US response to the opportunities and challenges opened by the demise of the USSR. Washington sees its military might as a trump card that can be employed to prevail over all its rivals in the coming struggle for resources.... For reasons both of world strategy and control over natural resources, the US is determined to secure for itself a dominant role in the former Soviet sphere.... The US House Committee on International Relations has begun holding hearings on the strategic importance of the Caspian region. At one meeting in February 1998, Doug Bereuter [said] Stated US policy goals regarding energy resources in this region,' he continued, 'include fostering the independence of the States and their ties to the West; breaking Russia's monopoly over oil and gas transport routes; promoting Western energy security through diversified suppliers; encouraging the construction of east-west pipelines that do not transit Iran; and denying Iran dangerous leverage over the Central Asian economies.'.... This is the significance of the present military action against Yugoslavia and the growth of militarism generally. Kosovo is a testing ground for wars that will follow in the former Soviet region.... The United States for its part gives the impression of a society on the verge of a nervous breakdown. Public life is punctuated by outbreaks of violence by schoolchildren that have left the country in a state of semi-shock. No explanation, beyond the most banal, has been offered by officials or experts for these explosions of violent anti-social behavior. In their own way, however, they testify to the brutality of contemporary American life and the suppressed antagonisms that lie just under the surface.... The country will continue to be remade as a high-tech garrison, where the bulk of public expenditure will be devoted towards military purposes abroad. Social programs will increasingly be replaced by naked domestic repression."
"General
Wesley Clark, the former Nato commander and presidential hopeful, will testify next month
at the war crimes trial of Slobodan Milosevic under conditions of strict censorship and
confidentiality imposed by the United States. Washington is believed to be fearful of
potentially damaging revelations about its Balkan realpolitik during the 1990s and in the
Bosnian War. General Clark, who is seeking the Democratic Party nomination for President,
will be one of the highest-profile witnesses to take the stand. The former Nato commander
directed the alliance's 78-day bombing campaign in Kosovo in 1999, after Serbian forces
had launched an onslaught against ethnic Albanian separatists. General Clark will testify
on December 15 and 16. Public galleries will be closed and the broadcast system that
transmits the proceedings on the internet and on closed-circuit television will be shut
down. The conditions of General Clark's testimony include a 48-hour delay to enable the US
Government to review the transcript and seek the court's consent to censor parts on the
ground of national security. Two US representatives will attend the sessions. The
three-judge panel hearing Mr Milosevic's case agreed to the conditions, which are unique,
because they decided that they were justified by the potential importance of General
Clark's testimony, Jim Landale, the tribunal spokesman, said. In his cross-examination of
General Clark, Mr Milosevic could reveal sensitive information about the West's diplomatic
and military strategy for dealing with the crisis in the Balkans."
General Clark to testify against Milosevic
London
Times, 20 November 2003
"The final toll of civilians confirmed massacred by Yugoslav forces in Kosovo is
likely to be under 3,000, far short of the numbers claimed by Nato governments during last
year's controversial air strikes on Yugoslavia. When Yugoslav
forces withdrew from Kosovo in June last year, Nato spokesmen estimated that the Serbs had
killed at least 10,000 civilians. While the bombing was under way William Cohen, the US
defence secretary, announced that 100,000 Kosovo Albanian men of military age were missing
after being taken from columns of families being deported to Albania and Macedonia. 'They
may have been murdered,' he said....The exhumation of less than 3,000 bodies is sure to
add fuel to those who say Nato's intervention against Yugoslavia was not 'humanitarian' and that it had other motives ..."
Serb killings 'exaggerated' by west
Guardian, 18
August 2000
"The last
time [before Iraq] American bombers were sent over the horizon to rain democracy on a
reluctant constituency was in the spring of 1999, when the NATO alliance engaged the
hearts and minds of the Serbian government. The regime to be changed was that of Slobodan
Milosevic. For 78 days, NATO
-- but mostly American bombers -- attacked military and civilian
targets throughout Serbia and Montenegro.... The bombings killed almost as many Serbs as
the number of Americans who later died in the World Trade Center.... During the week
before Djindjic's March 12 assassination, I traveled extensively in the former Yugoslavia,
now called the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro.... Djindjic had come to power
courtesy of the oddest of bed fellows: the U.S. government and local gangsters, who
flourished in the 1990s because American sanctions had put legitimate business to the
wall. In the beginning, both the United States and the gangsters thought that their
interests would best be served with a new government in Serbia, and both agreed to
sacrifice Milosevic on the altar of war guilt in The Hague. But more recently, this
coalition found itself with conflicting agendas. The gangsters thought that support for
Djindjic would exempt them from a summons to the International Criminal Tribunal, but the
U.S. made
further aid to Serbia conditional on Serbia's serving up more
suspects to that court."
Bombing down to Belgrade - An unholy alliance with Serb gangsters
US's Providence
Journal, Rhode Island, 4 April 2003
"...there is evidence that
underworld groups, controlled by Zoran Djindjic and linked to US intelligence, carried out
a series of assassinations of key supporters of the Milosevic regime, including Defence
Minister Pavle Bulatovic and Zika Petrovic, head of Yugoslav Airlines.... Despite the
opposition of most of its citizens, [Djindjic] the 'heralder of democracy' followed the requirements of the
'international community' and after 74 years the name of Yugoslavia disappeared off the
political map. The strategic goal of its replacement with a series of weak and divided
protectorates had finally been achieved....The lesson from Serbia for today's serial
regime changers is a simple one. You can try to subjugate a people by sanctions,
subversion and bombs. You can, if you wish, overthrow governments you dislike and seek to
impose your will by installing a Hamid Karzai, General Tommy Franks or a Zoran
Djindjic to act as imperial consul. But do not imagine
that you can then force a humiliated people to pay homage to them."
The quisling of Belgrade
The murdered Serbian prime minister was a reviled
western stooge whose economic reforms brought misery
Guardian, 14 March
2003
"The political stakes are high
and the financial risks many but the spoils are huge for investors seeking a way to pipe
Russian and Caspian oil around the treacherous Turkish straits to the energy-hungry West.
Oil producers lost at least $700 million last winter as bad weather and heavy seas kept
their tankers stuck for as long as two weeks at the Bosphorus and Dardanelles
straits - the only way for sea-bound crude to exit the Black Sea. Delayed for
years by political wrangling and environmental fears, several billion-dollar pipeline
projects are finally inching toward start dates, with countries and investors around the
vast Black Sea vying for pole position. 'An exit-Black Sea pipeline is a necessity,
because the oil market requires diversified supplies,' said Max Shein, chief equity
strategist at Moscow-based Broker Credit Service..... 'One day the ships will carry the
oil to us,' said Nikolov, whose company, the Albanian Macedonian Bulgarian Oil Corporation
(AMBO), aims to link the Bulgarian Black Sea port of Bourgas with Vlore, on Albanias
Adriatic coast. The need is clear: already booming oil production in the Urals and the
Caspian Sea regions is expected to double crude traffic through the Turkish straits
through 2015. Russia has increased exports by 50 percent since 2001 to become the
worlds second largest oil exporter behind Saudi Arabia, and Kazakhstan expects to
more than double its output of 1.3 billion tonnes of crude in the next decade. AMBO hopes
to build a 912-km (567-mile) pipeline from Bourgas through Macedonia to Vlore, a deep port
accessible to huge tankers. Analysts warn the pipelines length and political risks
in the region continue to hinder the plan, which originally surfaced in 1994, but Nikolov
said a deal could be imminent. 'I expect the final political accord on the pipeline to be
endorsed next year,' he said. 'No pipeline will ever lose money. But a pipeline is as much
economics as it is politics.'.... Alongside the AMBO plan is a project to run a link
between Romanias Black Sea port of Constanta to Italys Trieste......"
Black Sea Pipelines Look to Bypass Straits
Reuters, 28 November 2005
"Five countries are expected to
sign in January an agreement to build an oil pipeline from Romania to Italy. The project,
which includes rehabilitating Romania's Black Sea port
Constanta, would cost at least $2.4bn (2bn, £1.4bn), a feasibility study has
found. People close to the project said two key oil companies, one international energy
group and one state-owned energy company, had expressed interest. Henry Owen, a financial
adviser to the project, said the pipeline would feed refineries in south-eastern Europe,
Italy, Austria and Bavaria and would send oil to tankers via an existing pipeline from
Trieste to the deepwater port at Genoa. It would reduce European dependence on Middle
Eastern oil, would be outside Russian control and would help to alleviate some of the
congestion in the Bosphorus and Dardanelles straits, analysts said. But they warned that
the pipeline faced several competitors and that an agreement could still be scuttled by
one of the five states. If the signing ceremony proceeds, the next big hurdle will be
reaching agreement on the pipeline tariffs. Ian Woollen, senior analyst at Wood Mackenzie,
the UK-based consultants, said: 'It is a step forward, but there is still a long way to
go. There are a lot of competing options that make more sense logistically and
commercially.' Two pipelines that would originate in Burgas, Bulgaria, compete with the
so-called Pan-European Pipeline from Constanta to Trieste. One would send oil to
Alexandroupolis in Greece, the other to Vlore on Albania's Adriatic coast. Politics plays
as much of a role as money. Russia's interest in controlling the region's oil flow, and
the US opposing objective in diversifying the power away from Moscow, mix with the broader
tug between Asia and Europe, both large markets keen to receive the oil. Meanwhile, Turkey
wants to reduce the strain of shipping almost all the region's oil through the dangerously
busy Bosphorus and Dardanelles straits, but does not want to lose control of the power and
the income that comes with being such an important trading gateway. Altogether a dozen
pipelines are proposed for the region. The most significant new pipeline is the BP-led
Baku to Ceyhan line, expected to open this spring."
Five countries to build joint oil pipeline
Financial
Times, 20 December 2005
"The defence lawyers assigned to
ex-Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic have asked for the former NATO commander General
Wesley Clark to be recalled to the witness stand for further questioning.... In their
latest submission, filed on February 10, defence lawyers Steven Kay and Gillian Higgins,
whose assistance is imposed on Milosevic against his will, objected to the fact that
questioning of Clark at the time was restricted to the contents of a statement he had
given to prosecutors. By pressing for such restrictions, they argued, 'The prosecution and
the [United States] government structured the appearance of General Clark in the trial in
such a way that only issues in support of the prosecutions case could be
adduced.'... The US embassy in The Hague has since written to the court, reminding judges
of Washington's desire to protect 'sensitive information and legitimate national
interests' and seeking leave to file a lengthier written submission on the matter.'"
Milosevic Lawyers Seek Recall of General Clark
Instituted
For War And Peace Reporting, 17 February 2006
Serbia - Four periods of American espionage

Find Out How Similar Dirty Games Are Being Played In The
Caucacus
As The Oil Makes Its Way From The Caspian To The Coast Of Yugoslavia
Via The Black Sea Region
Click Here
"Former Croatian General Ante
Gotovina stands accused of war crimes in connection with a 1995 military offensive. Some
150 civilians were killed in the advance. Now, it looks like he may have had help from the
United States. His trial may not get started before the end of 2006 or the spring of 2007,
but already the case against former Croatian general Ante Gotovina promises some
surprises. Gotovina, who is accused of being responsible for the murder of at least 150
Serbian civilians and the eviction of some 150,000 Serbs from the Krajina region in August
1995, may have had some American help. Croatian military sources told SPIEGEL that
Gotovina had direct though secret support from both the Pentagon and the Central
Intelligence Agency in planning and carrying out the 'Storm' offensive, which was designed
to retake the Krajina region from the Serbs. The International Criminal Tribunal for the
Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) behind chief prosecutor Carla del Ponte has charged Gotovina and
the late Croatian leader Franco Tudjman with committing a 'joint criminal undertaking'
with the goal of ethnically cleansing the Serbs from Croatia. In preparing for the
offensive, Croatian soldiers were allegedly trained at Fort Irwin in California and the
Pentagon purportedly aided in planning the operation. Additional training assistance is
said to have come from the American firm Military Professional Resources Incorporated.
Immediately prior to the offensive, then-Deputy CIA Director George Tenet allegedly met
with Gotovina and Tudjman's son -- then in charge of Croatian intelligence -- for last
minute consultations. During the operation, a US aircraft is said to have destroyed
Serbian communication and anti-aircraft centers and the Pentagon allegedly passed on
information gathered by satellite to Gotovina. Earlier this month, the Zagreb weekly
Globus, claiming sources within Gotovina's defense team, alleged that then US President
Bill Clinton knew all about the planned offensive. Clinton, the paper alleged, was angry
at the Serbs for having overrun the UN protected Bosnian 'safe area' of Srebrenica the
previous month and wanted them punished. Gotovina was arrested in early December after
having been in hiding for years. The European Union had made his arrest a
precondition to resuming accession negotiations with Croatia. Gotovina has pled
not guilty to the war crimes charges levied by the Hague tribunal. News reports have
indicated that Gotovina's lawyers may be planning to rest his defense on the American
participation in the offensive. A recent addition to the Gotovina defense team, though,
may alter that strategy. At the insistence of the Pentagon, the American lawyer Greg Kehoe
will help defend Gotovina at his trial. If convicted, the former general who many in
Croatia still consider a hero could face life in prison."
US Links to Croatian War Crime?
Der Spiegel,
23 January 2006
What Did The CIA's George Tenet
Know About The US Covert Operations In Yugoslavia? - Click
Here
CIA Uses Belgian Arms Dealer To
Supply Iranian Weapons To
Anti-Serb Forces In Croatia
"It has been reported in
the Iranian capital, Tehran, that a Belgian citizen arrested on spying charges is a well
known international arms dealer. .... informed sources have now confirmed press
reports circulating in France and Belgium that the arrested man is a well known Belgian
arms dealer, Jacques Monsieur.... Mr Monsieur was apparently no stranger to Iran - he is
reported to have played a big role in exporting Iranian arms
to Bosnia in the early 1990s as well as to other countries in
Africa and elsewhere."
Belgian arms dealer held in Iran
BBC Online, 24 January 2001
"A certain company from
Bratislava, Joy Slovakia, was Cappiau's main long-time connection, and it also served as a
cover for a Belgian arms dealer, Jacques Monsieur. Monsieur, who is claimed by foreign
news media to having smuggled over 650 tons of various
weapons at the height of the war in the former Yugoslavia, on his part had numerous
contacts with the Belgian, French, American and Israeli intelligence services, and his name was linked to many illegal arms deals with Iran,
Congo-Brazzaville and Croatia."
Links between Organized Crime and Croatia's Top Brass
AIM,
16 April 2001
"48 years old, this former
officer of the Belgian army [Jacques Monsieur] was of all the wars and all the traffics of
weapons of these twenty last years. Before [his] arrest in Iran in November 2000, [he] was
the subject of a judicial enquiry on behalf of French justice for deliveries of weapons in
Croatia between 1991 and 1995 after the bursting of Yugoslavia. But to the French judge
who questioned [him], [he] answered that [he] had the support of the French secret service
in this business.... after the end of the war Iran-Iraq (1988) and the bursting of the
USSR and Yugoslavia, [he] started to deliver weapons, in particular Iranian, with the
Croats and later with the Bosnians. In 1991, the United Nations issued an embargo on the
sales of weapons to the belligerents of ex-Yugoslavia. 'I was
contacted in Brussels by an agent of the CIA to organize this operation and to deliver
weapons to the anti-Serb forces', [he] declared."
[Google Translation From Original French]
Jacques Monsieur condemned in Iran
RFI
Actualite, [Date not indicated - Dec 2001?]
"After 18 months spent behind the
bars of an Iranian prison, the merchant of weapons Jacques Mister left Teheran.
Destination: Brussels.... In Brussels, Jacques Mister was already judged with the last
autumn for related facts with his activity. A judgment by default (imprisoned in Teheran,
[he] could not answer the convocation of the court) which opens the way with a new
lawsuit, in front of the same jurisdiction..... This man impassioned by the horses
Lusitanians could then tell the lower parts and the springs of the traffic of weapons.
How [he] settled in France, in 1992, to organize the
deliveries of Iranian weapons to the Bosnian soldiers and Croatian during the conflict of
Balkans
"
[Google Translation From Original French]
Jacques Monsieur judged soon in Europe
RFI
Actualite, 18 May 2002
"Believed to be among the biggest
arms traffickers in Europe, [Jacques] Monsieur had violated a United Nations embargo by
shipping arms to Bosnia and Croatia during the long bloody conflict in those countries,
with the approval, he later claimed, of both the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency and the
Direction de Surveillance de Territoire (DST), the French domestic intelligence
service.... In September 2000, Monsieur told a French judge
of having been contacted in 1991 in Brussels by the CIA, and, with the blessing of the
French DST, of having sent tens of millions of dollars of weapons to Croatia. From 1991 to
1995, he found his best markets in Croatia and Bosnia, even though the two countries were
under a United Nations embargo..... Another French
magistrate, who is well versed in the Croatian trafficking case, said it was a political
operation. 'A decision from on high led, in 1995, to the cancellation of a fourth wave of
weapons deliveries to former Yugoslavia,' implying that French authorities had tacitly
approved the prior three 'waves' of weapons shipments."
The Field Marshal
The Centre For Public
Integrity, 15 November 2002
"Belgian arms trafficker Jacques
Monsieur appeared in a Brussels court on 12 November, Brussels' 'Le Soir' reported two
days later. A long-time supplier of Iran's who held an Iranian diplomatic passport, he was
arrested in Tehran in November 2000 (see 'RFE/RL Iran Report,' 27 September 1999 and 14
May 2001). The hearing in Brussels confirmed Tehran's provision to Croatia and Bosnia of artillery shells, white
phosphorous, and other military goods via Monsieur..."
Belgian Arms Trial Reveals Iranian Connection
RFE/RL
Newsline, 15 November 2002
"I
had relationships to certain American [intelligence] services. But I prefer not to specify
it..... The mandate of the soldiers of UNO and NATO sent was
very restrictive. They had just a mandate of observation, even not a mandate of response.
Therefore, it was decided to help them. [I] was thus organized an appointment with
president Tudjman, whom I did not know. We made a review of the military situation,
equipment of which laid out the adversary, the Serb ones, and of all the lacks of the new
Croatian army. Afterwards, I submitted my reports/ratios, I transmitted to the appropriate
authority and then one studied what one could do. I organized a series of military
deliveries of materials, in Croatia initially, then in Bosnia. There was of all:
equipment, ammunition, armament..... In Croatia, the supplies
were done mainly by sea, therefore it was consequent, yes. For Bosnia, the deliveries were
done by air.... First, at the time where the war burst only
in Croatia, UNO had issued a naval blockade in all the Adriatic Sea. Thus it was
practically impossible to have access to a Croatian or Yugoslav port without passing by
this blockade with all that that implied: controls at sea Adriatic, monitoring in the
Yugoslav ports
Therefore, indeed, without a certain 'green
light' it was impossible to convey these materials over there
on the spot."
[Google Translation From Original French]
Confessions of a merchant of weapons (Interview with Jacques Monsieur)
RFI
Actualite, 6 December 2004
"In the Eighties, Jacques
Monsieur affirms to have accomplished many voyages in the Eastern European countries....
At the time of the conflict in ex-Yugoslavia, 1992 to 1995, [he] is again that which
implements the double game of the policy of the Western allies, while equipping with the
belligerents normally subjected to an embargo of UNO.... [His] Team [includes]
Jean-Bernard Lasnaud: correspondent of Jacques Monsieur installed close to Miami in
Florida. This French, very known on the market of the armament, seems to profit from a direct protection of the CIA.... James Marty
Cappiau: former Belgian parachutist, reconverted into private safety, after having been
useful in the rows of the Croatian army."
[Google Translation From Original French]
The device of Jacques Mister
RFI
Actualite, 6 December 2004
"At 51 years, Jacques Monsieur
leaves his silence and speaks about his activity about merchant about weapons. French
justice with [his]cases, the man lives in Belgium where it benefits from a bail. For [his]
defense [he] ensures that the traffic of weapons was only one cover for activities of
espionage to the profit of Western services of information [i.e. western intelligence]
..... Refined and polyglot, the agent Monsieur would have initially worked for the SGR,
the military secret service Belgian, while being supervised by the American services on
which [he] refuses to be more precise. The nature even of the operations of which [he]
participle lets think that the CIA is not foreign with [his] activities. In particular at
the time of Irangate (supply of weapons in Iran by the Americans in full Iran-Iraq war and
whereas Washington and Teheran are with drawn knives). In this context, the pecuniary
motivation of the services is not to exclude, because the values of the tenders concerned
are colossal. Certain services of information could engage these operations to finance
their own clandestine activities or to weaken the enemy....Beyond the principles, the way
in which the intermediary circumvents the embargoes or the devices legal into force shows
that such an activity cannot be considered without the active complicity of the military
authorities. The supply of weapons and ammunition in Croatia
and Bosnia is the example more completed. Whereas UNO and the forces of NATO impose a
naval blockade Adriatique at sea, several cargo liners deliver their goods directly in
Croatian ports. For Bosnia, the deliveries are carried out by Iliouchine cargo aircrafts
being posed on airports theoretically controlled by the blue helmets! Consequently, difficult not to give a certain credit to the assumption of
the 'amber light' (semi-official agreement) granted by the secret service."
[Google Translation From Original French]
Jacques Monsieur says 'the Fox': merchant of weapons and spy?
RFI
Actualite, 6 December 2004
"In view of the US
covert support to the Croats it will be interesting to see if the International War Crimes
Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia in the Hague will seriously investigate this
matter."
Srebrenica - A Safe Area?
Report Published on Behalf of The Dutch
Government, 10 April 2002
"British and American special
forces teams are working undercover in Kosovo with the rebel Kosovo Liberation Army to
identify Serbian targets for Nato bombing raids.....It is the latest evidence of the
growing co-operation between Nato and the KLA, a movement once denounced by the West's
leaders as 'terrorists'...... The alliance is now
quietly drafting the KLA into its war against Slobodan Milosevic, the Serbian leader. It
is even considering plans to train them and ease the arms embargo on Yugoslavia to supply
them with weapons such as mortars and rocket-propelled grenades.... They are negotiating
for a long-term training deal with Military and Professional Resources International, a
mercenary company run by former American officers who operate with semi-official approval
from the Pentagon and played a key role in building up Croatia's armed forces..."
SAS teams move in to help KLA 'rise from the ashes'
Sunday
Telegraph, 18 April 1999
"The US governments
favourite private security service has trained both sides in the latest ethnic flare-up in
the Balkans. Only two years ago the rag-tag Kosovar Albanian rebels were taken in hand by
the Virginia-based company of professional soldiers, Military Professional Resources
Incorporated. An outfit of former US marines, helicopter pilots and special forces teams,
MPRIs missions for the US government have run from flying Colombian helicopter
gunships to supplying weapons to the Croatian army...."
Private US firm training both sides in Balkans
The Scotsman, March 02, 2001
"Ceku officially remained in the
Croatian army, in which he has been decorated, until the beginning of this year. As an
ethnic Albanian, he has long had links to the KLA, however. Last month he was appointed
head of the Kosovo Protection Corps (TMK), a lightly armed civilian force of 5,000 members
created from the KLA, with the blessing of the
Lieutenant-General Sir Mike Jackson.... Sources familiar with
the investigation into Ceku said the most serious crimes with which he had been linked
were committed in the so-called Medak pocket of Krajina in 1993..... American diplomats,
who have been the most supportive of the creation of the TMK, have suggested any
indictment of Ceku would most likely be 'sealed' and thereby kept
out of the public domain.... Another diplomat said he believed Kfor, the Nato-led
peacekeeping force, could not contemplate a public relations disaster with the Albanians
by arresting Ceku."
Kosovo defence chief accused of war
crimes
Sunday Times, 10 October
1999
"... Now we have the
full story of the secret alliance between the Pentagon and radical Islamist groups from
the Middle East designed to assist the Bosnian Muslims... in flagrant violation of the UN security council arms
embargo against all combatants in the former Yugoslavia. The result was a vast secret
conduit of weapons smuggling though Croatia. This was arranged by the clandestine agencies of the US, Turkey
and Iran, together with a range of radical Islamist groups, including Afghan mojahedin and the
pro-Iranian Hizbullah...."
America used Islamists to arm the Bosnian Muslims
Guardian, 22 April
2002
"Ceku is the former Military
Chief of Staff of the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) and the man handpicked by the US to
head the KPC [Kosovo Protection Corps] .... Ceku [is] one of
the top 'ethnic cleansers' in the Balkans, alongside Bosnian
Serb leaders Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic. Ceku refined his brutality as a general in
the US-backed Croatian Army
during the Balkan war and was trained by Military Professional Resources Inc., a private
paramilitary firm founded in 1987 and based in Alexandria, Virginia with former
high-ranking US generals and NATO officials on its board. These officers include the
former Commanders in Chief of the US Army in Europe and US Central Command, the Supreme
Allied Commander-Atlantic and the former US Representative to the NATO Military Committee.
In 1994, armed with a contract authorized by the Clinton Administration, MPRI officially
began to train Croatian forces. Just months after MPRI arrived on the scene, Croatian
forces carried out the notorious Operation Storm. In a
brutal four-day blitzkrieg in 1995, these forces expelled some 200,000 Serbs from the
Krajina region of Croatia after their villages were mercilessly shelled. Jane's Defense
Weekly reported that Ceku was 'one of the key planners' of the operation that the New York
Times called 'the largest single 'ethnic cleansing' of the war'..."
Washington's Men In Kosovo
Common Dreams, 19 July 2000
"When the Croatian military, in a
highly effective offensive called Operation Storm, captured
the Serb-held Krajina enclave later that year, there were suspicions that MPRI instructors
must have been directly involved. The operation played a key role in reversing the tide of
war against the Serbs and, consistent with American policy, in bringing both sides to the
negotiating table. But the same Croatian military was subsequently implicated in uprooting
more than 150,000 Serbs from their homes.... critics charge that the help MPRI provided
the Croatians may have allowed the U. S. to secretly influence events in the war while
maintaining its neutral posture and without sending U. S. troops, advisors or trainers.
'MPRI had all these different meetings with top Croatian defense officials right before
the offensive. It's inconceivable that they did not have some kind of impact,' said one
military analyst who has followed the company's involvement in the Balkans. 'It was
followed by massive ethnic cleansing. Now, had American troops been on the ground, we
would have been held accountable for that. The fact that it was a private company made the
connection a lot less clear.'..."
U.S. Companies Hired to Train Foreign Armies
Los Angeles Times, 14
April 2002
"The clandestine arms supplies were therefore of greater importance to
the Croats and the Bosnian Muslims. The training and the supplying of arms, for example,
simplified the Croatian operations in the Krajina in mid 1995. Alongside secret arms
supplies, the company MPRI provided training.... By engaging this company, Washington at
the same time also reduced the danger of 'direct' involvement. The operation resulted in
the killing of more than 500 civilians and the exodus of more than 150.000 ethic Serbs
from the Krajina. In view of the US covert support to the Croats it will be interesting to
see if the International War Crimes Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia in The Hague will
seriously investigate this matter."
Srebrenica - A Safe Area?
Appendix II - Intelligence and the war in Bosnia 1992
1995: The role of the intelligence and security services
Chapter 4, Secret arms supplies and other covert actions
Report Published on Behalf of The Dutch
Government, 10 April 2002
"In 1995, Gen.Ceku was a player
in Operation Storm, a
covert Clinton-backed and
MPRI-trained Croatian military operation that ethnically cleansed 200,000 Serbs from their
homes in Croatia, killing thousands of civilians. Since taking over the KLA, Ceku has
purged all of its moderates."
Defang the KLA
WorldNetDaily, 11 June
1999
"United Nations sources have
already revealed that Agim Ceku, the guerrillas' former commander, may be the subject of a
secret 'sealed' indictment for his activities while fighting for the Croatian army against
the Serbs.... The investigation could radically alter the international perception of the
conflict, in which Albanians were seen as the largely innocent victims of Serbian
aggression. After a year of growing concern about hundreds of revenge killings of Serbs by
Albanians in the province, there are signs that the public relations pendulum may begin to
swing the Serbs' way. The investigations by the International War Crimes Tribunal for the
former Yugoslavia are among its most secretive, with officials fearing retaliation by the
Albanians. 'The operations of the KLA clearly involved many activities we should
scrutinise,' said one Hague official."
KLA faces trials for war crimes on Serbs
Sunday Times, 3 September 2000
"Americans in military uniform, operating from a cream-colored trailer near the runway, directed the GNAT-750 drone to photograph Serb troop positions and weapons emplacements. The images were transmitted back to base, analyzed and then passed on to the Pentagon. According to top Croat intelligence offi