November.
1, Nov-2001.

Home

1, Nov-2001.
2, Nov-2001.
3, Nov-2001.
4, Nov-2001.
5, Nov-2001.
6, Nov-2001.
7, Nov-2001.
8, Nov-2001.
9, Nov-2001.
10, Nov-2001.
11, Nov-2001.
12, Nov-2001.
13, Nov-2001.
14, Nov-2001.
15, Nov-2001.
16, Nov-2001.
17, Nov-2001.
18, Nov-2001.
19, Nov-2001.
20, Nov-2001.
21, Nov-2001.
22, Nov-2001.
23, Nov-2001.
24, Nov-2001.
25, Nov-2001.
26, Nov-2001.
27, Nov-2001.
28, Nov-2001.
29, Nov-2001.
30, Nov-2001.

Thursday.

Enter content here

Wall Street Journal: Albanian Separatism - Part of Global Islamic Jihad.

RealityMacedonia

albright_tachi.jpg

Former US Secretary of State Albright and Albanian terrorist warlord Hashim Tachi, "the Snake."

The Wall Street Journal Europe from November 1, 2001 published the article Al Qaeda's Balkan Links by Marcia Christoff Kurop, offering a candid review of the development of the Islamic militancy in the Balkans, and the unholy alliance with the Western powers taking place there. Since the Wall Street Journals site (www.wsj.com) is open only to subscribers, and we do not have a reprinting permission, we can only post several essential lines. Fortunately, the full text is available on the freedom of the speech site linked on the left.

Islamist infiltration of the Kosovo Liberation Army advanced, meanwhile. Bin Laden is said to have visited Albania in 1996 and 1997, according to the murder-trial testimony of an Algerian-born French national, Claude Kader, himself an Afghanistan-trained mujahideen fronting at the Albanian-Arab Islamic Bank. He recruited some Albanians to fight with the KLA in Kosovo, according to the Paris-based Observatoire Geopolitique des Drogues.

Controversial Relationship

By early 1998 the U.S. had already entered into its controversial relationship with the KLA to help fight off Serbian oppression of that province. While in February the U.S. gave into KLA demands to remove it from the State Department's terrorism list, the gesture amounted to little. That summer the CIA and CIA-modernized Albanian intelligence (SHIK) were engaged in one of the largest seizures of Islamic Jihad cells operating in Kosovo.

Fearing terrorist reprisal from al Qaeda, the U.S. temporarily closed its embassy in Tirana and a trip to Albania by then Defense Secretary William Cohen was canceled out of fear of an assassination attempt. Meanwhile, Albanian separatism in Kosovo and Metohija was formally characterized as a "jihad" in October 1998 at an annual international Islamic conference in Pakistan.

Nonetheless, the 25,000 strong KLA continued to receive official NATO/U.S. arms and training support and, at the talks in Rambouillet, France, then Secretary of State Madeleine Albright shook hands with "freedom fighter" Hashim Thaci, a KLA leader. As this was taking place, Europol (the European Police Organization based in The Hague) was preparing a scathing report on the connection between the KLA and international drug gangs. Even Robert Gelbard, America's special envoy to Bosnia, officially described the KLA as Islamic terrorists.

With the future status of Kosovo still in question, the only real development that may be said to be taking place there is the rise of Wahhabi Islam -- the puritanical Saudi variety favored by bin Laden -- and the fastest growing variety of Islam in the Balkans. Today, in general, the Balkans are left without the money, political resources, or institutional strength to fight a war on terrorism. And that, for the Balkan Islamists, is a Godsend.

It comes as no surprise to learn that the Islamic internet network, centered around the site Muslim Online, obviously tries to get support for the Albanian Islamists by describing the Albanians living in Macedonia as the most fervent followers of Islam in the region and exaggerating the number of Albanians living in Macedonia.

Enter supporting content here