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Al Qaeda's Balkan Links
Wall Street Journal Europe | November 1, 2001 | Marcia Christoff Kurop

Posted on 11/01/2001 3:53:17 AM PST by Stand Watch Listen

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To: bluester
The major bummer about the whole thing is that there was a pretty good chance that there wouldn't have been a war in Bosnia in the first place if outside powers hadn't had their finger in the pie (USA-Izetbegovic-Lisbon Agreement (amongst others)). If you look at balkan history, they certainly had their own reasons for a big punch up, but on every occaison, the major powers have chosen sides and manipulated the situation to their own benefit - in one way, it's proof that history does repeat itself - the more people that get involved, the more likely the sh*t will hit the fan. Very depressing really.

VRN

101 posted on 11/05/2001 2:24:57 PM PST by Voronin
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To: ratcat
In 1992, the Bosnian government asked the JNA, that is, the Federal Yugoslav Army, to protect its citizens against Serbian Paramilitaries which were, in effect, invading Bosnia from Serbia.

The JNA offered no protection to Bosnians, and instead worked hand in hand with the Paramilitaries.

Bosnia then applied to the international community to allow it to buy arms to defend itself, having been recognized as a legitimate country by the international community in December of 1992.

The international community instead decreed that the arms embargo, which, in effect locked in the overwhelming superiority of weapons in the Serb's favor, should remain in effect.

The Bosnians, therefore, turned to the only people who would offer them succor, being the Iranians and other Muslim countries.

Don't be surprised that the Bosnians didn't refuse the only hand that offered them the chance of salvation when the rest of the world turned it's back on their being slaughtered.

As to the KLA, the Al Quaeda link isn't there, or has yet to be proven. The Serb Nationalist side would have us believe that the two worked hand in hand, but lack the proof to back up their assertions, and your DEA source speaks to the nature of the KLA's drug running operation and their ruthlessness, but doesn't address any factual linkage between themselves and Al Quaeda.

105 posted on 02/05/2002 12:23:09 PM PST by Hoplite
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Bosnia Raid Yields al-Qaida Donor List
Miami Herald Wed, Feb. 19, 2003 JOHN SOLOMON

WASHINGTON - U.S. authorities recovered a list of 20 financiers they suspect funneled money to Osama bin Laden and others extremist Muslim causes among a cache of documents that provide insight into the financing of terrorism, an unsealed court record shows.


The seized documents are a "treasure trove" and among other things indicate al-Qaida military leaders were at times paid salaries from Muslim charity proceeds and purchased weapons with money from charity leaders, prosecutors said in the once-secret court filing.


Other evidence seized in March 2002 from the Bosnian offices of the Benevolence International Foundation, an Illinois-based Muslim charity, includes handwritten correspondence to and from bin Laden and documents detailing the origins, growth and expansion of his al-Qaida network in the 1980s and 1990s, the filing said.


Though the original documents remain secret, the prosecutor described their contents and English translations for the first time in the filing unsealed this month in the case of the head of the Muslim foundation who reached a plea deal with federal prosecutors in Chicago.


Enaam Arnaout pleaded guilty last week to illegally buying boots and uniforms for fighting forces in Bosnia and Chechnya under a deal in which prosecutors, in exchange for his cooperation, dropped charges that he aided bin Laden.


In a pretrial document known as a "proffer," prosecutors said handwritten documents scanned into computer formats in the Bosnia office included a file titled "Osama's history" that contained "a handwritten draft list of people referred to within al-Qaida as the 'Golden Chain,' wealthy donors to mujahedeen efforts."


"The list contained 20 names, and after each name a parenthetical indicating the person who received the money from the specified donor," the proffer said.


The list suggested at least seven of the donors gave directly to bin Laden, and six of the others were listed as giving to the founder of a Muslim charity, the court document said.


U.S. officials declined to identify any of the 20 donors, but said the list is one of several pieces of evidence the government has obtained since the war on terror began after Sept. 11 that identifies spigots of money that have financed bin Laden and Middle Eastern and Asian terrorists over the past two decades.


U.S. officials estimate they have frozen roughly $124.5 million in financial assets belonging to terrorist groups, including al-Qaida, since the Sept. 11 attacks.


One letter found in the files instructed a charity leader to pay a monthly salary of 4,500 Saudi riyals each - about $1,200 - to two of al-Qaida's top military leaders. The letter establishes "that military commanders were salaried by the support organizations," the prosecutors said in the proffer.


Other documents discuss the purchases of weapons such as missiles, dynamite, fuses, rocket-propelled grenades and bayonets, the proffer stated.


The documents found in the charity's Bosnian office also chronicle the evolution of bin Laden's movement from support of the once U.S.-based muhajedeen warriors fighting Soviet occupation of Afghanistan to a global terror network that posed threats to the United States and rest of the Western world.


In one letter, an unidentified author writes to bin Laden asking for help for followers in the African country of Eritrea. The letter identifies as its top goal "facilitating the travel of the youth to the field of Jihad so they can benefit from the training possibilities, by providing them with tickets and entry visas," according to the government translation.


Another letter from bin Laden "explains the time has come for an attack on the Russians," the court documents said. Other correspondence describe money transfers and weapons purchases showing that al-Qaida often facilitates such transactions with a simple letter from bin Laden or a top lieutenant asking the recipient to provide money to the bearer of the letter.


For instance, one letter instructed the recipient to send 400,000 rupees of Pakistani money - about $7,200 - "to the owner of the weapon for delivery in Parachinar ... for security reasons," the proffer said.


Another used an alias to refer to bin Laden and his request that a charity leader "give 500,000 rupees to the man bearing the letter," the proffer said. That's about $9,000.


While most of the documents were a decade or more older, they provided U.S. authorities with significant insight into al-Qaida and helped confirm many suspicions about its finances, structure and evolution, U.S. officials said. Some details in the documents "were not known to the public," the proffer said.


Handwritten notes detail the original formation of al-Qaida, including minutes of an Aug. 11, 1988, meeting bin Laden held to discuss "the establishment of a new military group." Those notes record bin Laden's own statements on the efforts to recruit members from Saudi Arabia for his network and to raise money.


The notes quote bin Laden as saying "we took very huge gains from the country's people in Saudi. We were able to give political power to the mujahedeen, gathering donations in very large amounts, restoring power," the court document states.
106 posted on 10/07/2003 5:11:16 AM PDT by anglian
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http://www.balkanpeace.org/our/our09.shtml
107 posted on 10/07/2003 5:15:16 AM PDT by anglian
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To: RussianConservative
*Ping*!

Free Milosevich!
108 posted on 11/10/2003 2:03:46 PM PST by Pubbie (Vote "No" On Recall, "Yes" On Bustamante)
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To: Stand Watch Listen
November 1, 2001>>>

Old news. But fishwrap is still read meat for gibbering racists.
109 posted on 11/10/2003 3:22:16 PM PST by Ronly Bonly Jones
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To: Pubbie
Free Milosevic! Collect all seven! Trade him with your friends!
110 posted on 11/10/2003 3:22:58 PM PST by Ronly Bonly Jones
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To: Pubbie
Free Milosevic! Collect all seven! Trade him with your friends!
111 posted on 11/10/2003 3:23:01 PM PST by Ronly Bonly Jones
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To: Stand Watch Listen
Without a doubt Clinton was bombing the wrong people in the Balkans.

After all,it wasn't the Serbs who flew the planes on 9-11,it was the KLA's bosom buddies in Al Qaeda.

112 posted on 11/10/2003 4:30:55 PM PST by gitmogrunt (Dubya ain't tough enough on the religion of peace)
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To: Calpernia; Velveeta; Revel

Oldie but goodie, 2001, OBL, alQaeda

clinton goofed, i think.


113 posted on 12/14/2004 3:20:03 AM PST by nw_arizona_granny (Today, please pray for God's miracle, we are not going to make it without him.)
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