Ist mal wieder Zeit für Märchenstunden?
Wie gut, dass Srebrenica noch nicht unter § 130 fällt.
Ist mal wieder Zeit für Märchenstunden?
Wie gut, dass Srebrenica noch nicht unter § 130 fällt.
03.12.2006
Weiße Qaida in Bosnien "Mit Motorsägen zerstückeln"
"Kein General durfte uns Befehle erteilen", berichtet der ehemalige Qaida-Aktivist Ali Hamad über seine Zeit als Kommandeur einer Mudschahidin-Einheit im Bosnien-Krieg. Im Interview mit SPIEGEL ONLINE warnt der frühere Terrorist vor einem "Schläfer"-Netzwerk auf dem Balkan.
...
[Links nur für registrierte Nutzer]
Spezial Kommandos haben vor Jahren 360 Islam Terroristen enttarnt, welche die Bosnische Staatsbürgerschaft hatten.
SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND: A TWENTY YEAR HISTORY
As the missions and budgets for U.S. Special Operations Command
steadily expand, a new official history looks back at the
origins and development of SOCOM.
"Since its creation in 1987, USSOCOM has supported conventional
forces and conducted independent special operations throughout
the world, participating in all major combat operations,"
writes SOCOM Commander General Bryan D. Brown.
The new account, prepared by the SOCOM history office and
obtained by Secrecy News, describes in new detail the major
SOCOM operations of the past two decades up through the
present.
"After 9/11, the first SOF [special operations forces]
counterterrorism operations were not conducted in Afghanistan
or even in the Middle East, but in Europe," the SOCOM history
notes.
"In late September 2001, U.S. SOF learned that Islamic
extremists with connections to Usama bin Laden were in Bosnia.
SOCEUR forces quickly put together Operation RESOLUTE EAGLE to
capture them. U.S. SOF surveilled the terrorists, detained one
of the groups, and facilitated the capture of another group by
coalition forces. These raids resulted in the capture of all
the suspected terrorists and incriminating evidence for
prosecution and intelligence exploitation."
Other operations, like the battle of Tora Bora, were admittedly
less successful.
"The fact that SOF came as close to capturing or killing UBL
[Usama bin Laden] as U.S. forces have to date makes Tora Bora
a controversial fight. Given the commitment of fewer than 100
American personnel, U.S. forces proved unable to block egress
routes from Tora Bora south into Pakistan, the route that UBL
most likely took."
See "United States Special Operations Command, 1987-2007,"
SOCOM History and Research Office, MacDill Air Force Base,
April 2007 (143 pages in a very large 32 MB PDF file):
[Links nur für registrierte Nutzer]
Special Report: Terrorism and Organized Crime in South-Eastern Europe:
Special Report: Terrorism and Organized Crime in South-Eastern Europe: The Case of Bosnia-Herzegovina, Sanzak, and Kosovo
Defense & Foreign Affairs Special Analysis - March 1, 2007 Thursday
Analysis. By Darko Trifunovic, GIS Belgrade Station.<1> The territory of Bosnia-Herzegovina has become a haven for a widespread network of organized crime. Wars, economic crises, social, political and other upheavals have all created fertile soil for this maelstrom. The primary objective of organized crime is the acquisition of material wealth; this is accomplished through illicit activities with a high rate of return on investment: drug-smuggling, gunrunning, prostitution, trade in human organs and persons, etc. Corruption appears alongside organized crime.
In Bosnia-Herzegovina (hereafter: BiH), corruption is endemic,<2> ranging from abuse of police power and suspicious privatization deals, to involvement in smuggling of high-tariff goods, copyright piracy, gunrunning and human trafficking.
Problems multiply and there are no solutions in sight. Few believe the authorities' declarations of readiness to confront local and regional crime syndicates.<3>
One of the biggest problems is certainly the illicit narcotics trade, which directly affects EU countries. Seventy percent of all heroin arriving in the EU comes via one of three Balkan routes. BiH is part of one of the routes, but is increasingly becoming a storage zone for illicit narcotics and an emerging market in its own right, as the number of users grows. Local crime syndicates are connected with Albanian, Kosovo, Serb, Turkish, and Bulgarian mafias. There are two heroin routes into BiH: One starts in Afghanistan, through Turkey, Greece, Albania, and Serbia, and then through BiH westwards. The second starts in Albania, and then goes across Montenegro into southern BiH and Croatia, to proceed into Western Europe.<4>
Heroin and other substances are abundant in BiH - in restaurants, cafes, schools, and universities - and general dissatisfaction with quality of life has enabled the crime syndicates to recruit users and pushers among the youth.
This recent situation is being exploited by various Islamic fundamentalist terrorist organizations in BiH.
During the civil war, some of the Muslim military commanders were petty criminals, such as Ramiz Delalic - CELO<5> (deputy commander, 9<th> Motorised Brig.), Ismet Bajramovic - CELO (Military police commander<6>), Musan Topalovic - CACO<7> and Jusuf-Juka Prazina.<8> Also, members of the mentioned group are: Sead Becirevic-Sejo, Zulfikar Alic-Zuka (Military commander of the terrorist unit call Black Swans) and Bojadzic Nihat, a former officer of the R BiH Army. Political support to this group was given by prominent Muslim politicians in Sarajevo, such as Ejup Ganic and Haris Silajdzic. Haris Silajdzic was a member of the BiH Presidency. His sister, Salidza Silajdzic, married in Iran to a man believed to be a high-ranking officer of VEVAK, the Iranian intelligence service; and Haris' brother, Husref Silajdzic, is thought to be an agent of the Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI).
New information indicates that Haris Silajdzic is trying to restart the work of "Patriot League".<9> The center of the "Patriot League" is to be in Sarajevo with Gen. Vahid Karavelic as its head.
This organization used patriotism as a cover for its criminal activities during the war. Afterwards, however, a portion of the Muslim population in BiH replaced nationalism with a new ideology of Islamic fundamentalism. Islamic fundamentalists with a criminal background have substantial advantages in BiH:
1. Fast and easy access to weapons and explosives;
2. In-depth knowledge of smuggling routes;
3. Connections with corrupt officials and politicians;
4. Influence in local media and NGOs;
5. Connections with a large diaspora in the US and Western Europe
Terrorist networks have seized on these advantages of local criminals-turned-Islamic fundamentalists, creating a new model of terrorist funding.
While terrorists and criminal syndicates have different motivations, they both seek financial gain; only terrorists see it as a source of funding their ideological pursuits. As a result, terrorist networks in cooperation with organized crime syndicates generate significant sums of money. Both parties profit from cooperation. Terrorists provide supplies of narcotics, weapons, and contacts with drug-makers and smugglers worldwide. They also provide safe havens for organized crime syndicates, because they often control large territories where there is no rule of law. On the other hand, the terrorists readily and effectively use smuggling routes and undertake, as part of their operations, the illicit trade in goods. Both groups gather and exchange intelligence on corrupt state officials in all branches of government.
Islamic fundamentalists, including al-Qaida members, realize profits from the drug trade in two ways. One is by taking a percentage from the local criminal syndicates, and the other is taking a portion of illicit substances transported towards Western Europe. Profits from those drug sales are used by the terrorists to purchase arms and offer bribes, but increasingly often as well for hiring professional public relations and lobbying firms to come up with political justifications of Islamic fundamentalist terrorists.
Recent discoveries in BiH indicate that the trend of terrorist organizations funding themselves from drug sales is on the rise, due to a series of factors:
Financial scrutiny and the closing of so-called "humanitarian" organizations which were terror fronts;
Greater pressure on state sponsors of terrorism, resulting in their inability to funnel money to terrorists openly;
Increase in supply of heroin coming from Afghanistan; and
Connections between Islamic fundamentalists and organized crime syndicates
Of special consideration is the fact that Islamic terrorists have a widespread network of members and supporters in BiH, which is used for trafficking in people, weapons and, increasingly, drugs. Due to this, one can purchase a kilo of heroin in BiH through the "mujahedin connection" for anywhere between 11,000 and 13,000 euros . The street value would be three or four times more, because pure heroin is subsequently laced with other substances.
The BiH capital, Sarajevo, has become the base of a narco-cartel. After the murder of Lullzim Krasniqi<10> in Croatia, one of the major drug-dealers on the Balkans route, the investigation which took place in several countries uncovered the existence of a widespread network composed of criminals and former soldiers from the BiH Army. Almost all of them are Kosovo Albanians or Sanzak Muslims. Krasniqi's murder was linked to a large shipment of drugs via Kosovo, Sanzak, BiH, Croatia, and into Austria, where a portion was supposed to be retained for local distribution and the rest shipped to Germany, Switzerland, and the rest of the EU. Distribution was to be handled by numerous members of the Krasniqi family living in Graz and the surrounding areas.<11>
Krasniqi's main partners in Kosovo are Florim Maloku, Arben Viti, Dauti Kurtalli, Besim Ismaili, Ismet Osmani and EKREM (Kurtesh) LLUKA (a.k.a "Vuka"] linked to radical Islamic circles in Syria.<12> Ekrem Luka is the owner of the company "Banana" and is a close friend of Bexhet Pacoli. Bexhet Pacoli is very close friend of Raumush Haradinaj, who, on March 1, 2007, appeared before the International Criminal Tribunal on the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The Hague, where he pleaded not guilty to war crimes.<13>..................
[Links nur für registrierte Nutzer]
Die Selbstverwaltungsstrukturen, die die NATO im Kosovo wachsen ließ, kritisierte eine als „Verschlusssache“ eingestufte Studie des Instituts für Europäische Politik (IEP) 2007 als „fest in der Hand der Organisierten Kriminalität“, die „weitgehende Kontrolle über den Regierungsapparat“
Wer immer noch glaubt, die Musel wären mit den serbischen Zivilisten zimperlich umgegangen, der sollte einmal nach Naser Orić googeln.....
>>> DEM DEUTSCHEN VOLKE <<<
***
Um aufs neue wach werden zu können, musst Du ohne Frage vorher einmal eingeschlafen sein, und analog dazu, um geboren werden zu können, musst Du vorher schon einmal gestorben sein (Kabalah)
Genau! siehe Anklage Schrift beim ITCY, wo er dann billig mit so 3 Jahren Haft davon kam, obwohl er gezielt Serben ermordet, Dörfer überfiel und zerstörte. Fotos gibts auch, trotzdem diese erbärmliche Strafe. Inzwischen sind viel mehr Bosnische Verbrecher verurteilt, was die Deutsche Presse verschweigt. Sogar mehr Bosnische Islamisten, als Serben!
In Bosnien gab es 98.000 Tode, davon 28.000 tode Serben. vor allelm in der Anfangs Phase, wurden mehrere JVA Militär Konvois überfallen, welche ohne Waffen abzogen, wie vereinbart und viele Serben wurden ermordet: in Tuzla, Sarajewo wo es regelrechte Massaker gab und die Welt schwieg damals.
Die Selbstverwaltungsstrukturen, die die NATO im Kosovo wachsen ließ, kritisierte eine als „Verschlusssache“ eingestufte Studie des Instituts für Europäische Politik (IEP) 2007 als „fest in der Hand der Organisierten Kriminalität“, die „weitgehende Kontrolle über den Regierungsapparat“
***
Um aufs neue wach werden zu können, musst Du ohne Frage vorher einmal eingeschlafen sein, und analog dazu, um geboren werden zu können, musst Du vorher schon einmal gestorben sein (Kabalah)
Aktive Benutzer in diesem Thema: 1 (Registrierte Benutzer: 0, Gäste: 1)