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Treasury Designates Bin Laden, Qadi Associate and the Albanian Mafia
July 04, 2007
Ending the Balkan Quagmire at American Thinker
By Julia Gorin
For the past eight years, I’ve been in a lonely place politically. I don’t mean the kind of lonely that conservatives generally find themselves in. I’m talking about utter desolation, for there are just as few conservatives as liberals where I’ve been. One of the only non-Serbian Americans to do so, I watched with steady interest for the better part of a decade the clockwork predictability of the fallout from our forgotten Kosovo intervention, a bombing campaign against an emerging post-Communist democracy rooted in Judeo-Christian values–on behalf of tribalistic, blood-code-following nominal Muslims claiming oppression and no less than genocide and ethnic cleansing.
Watching the Albanians predictably move on to terrorize Macedonia within a few months of our intervention that would “contain” the conflict, and then watching Albanians turn their weapons on NATO peacekeepers within 18 months, I wondered what it would take to get a national discussion going about that huge, self-destructive debacle. What would it take to have the debate that, it must be said despite my hobby of mocking Europeans, the German public had in 2001 when it put its politicians’ feet to the fire after learning the hoax that their country had been party to, thanks to a German documentary unapologetically titled “It Began with a Lie.”
In sharp contrast to every other cynically reported war, this time not only were our peacenik presses on board, but conspicuously they didn’t try to ingratiate us to the enemy perspective by letting us hear incessantly from the other side, as they’re otherwise fond of doing. Something was off. Even the evolving “alternative media”-self-tasked with policing the mainstream press and usually very wary of “facts” coming from the mainstream media and of cause celebres–were either silent on this or on precisely the same page as the New York Times, with its Sontag yentas for the first time explaining the concept of “just war”. I found that, aside from Serbian-Americans (and Serbian-Canadians), who would later describe 1999 as a surreality they observed as if outside themselves, the only other people who as a group understood that our action meant something awful for the free world were the Russian-Jewish community that I myself had come from-a cartoonishly patriotic and capitalistic immigrant group with less than zero feeling for “Mother Russia” (if we’re talking about the 70s and 80s wave).
Every now and again, a glimmer of hope that the fraud would be revealed surfaced, first in March, 2000 with a Washington Post article titled “Was it a Mistake? We were Suckers for the KLA” and then in April, 2001, with a Toronto Sun article titled “The Hoax that Started a War“. Now, I thought, the story of the century-a fabricated genocide and PR campaign starting a war-would finally “break.”
But the silence persisted, and none of the rare newspapers giving the occasional op-ed space to the dissenting perspective was interested in actually investigating. Nothing changed in this regard after the attacks of September 11th. Not even after a Washington Times article titled “Hijackers connected to Albanian terrorist cell” came out a week after 9/11, reading:
Albania is one of several places U.S. intelligence agencies are focusing their resources…Islamic radicals, including supporters of bin Laden, have been supporting Albanian rebels fighting in the region, including members of the Kosovo Liberation Army…KLA members have been trained at bin Laden training camps in Afghanistan…As of last year, the group operated a residence in Tirana, and the CIA has been pressing Albania’s government to expel all associates of the Islamic terrorists.
Meanwhile, every one of my own articles attempting to expose the hoax-relegated to a small segment of the alternative media because of a near blackout on the subject everywhere else-dropped with a thud. As did an article coming out two months after 9/11, titled “Al Qaeda’s Balkan Links“(which appeared only in the European edition of the Wall St. Journal). Same thing with a March 2002 National Post article titled “U.S. Supported al-Qaeda Cells during Balkan Wars, Fought Serbian Troops“:
Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda terrorist network has been active in the Balkans for years, most recently helping Kosovo rebels battle for independence from Serbia with the financial and military backing of the United States and NATO…In the years immediately before the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999, the al-Qaeda militants moved into Kosovo…to help ethnic Albanian extremists of the KLA mount their terrorist campaign against Serb targets in the region.
Even after another National Post article in 2004 by Canadian former UN General Lewis MacKenzie, titled “We Bombed the Wrong Side?”, came out, Kosovo remained off the media’s and public’s radar-something that vested politicians were counting on.
But then came March 2004, when rumors, proved false, that Serbs drowned three Albanian boys, were used as a spark for the orchestrated pogroms of March 2004, leading to the deaths of 19 people, the displacement of 4,000 Serbs, the destruction of dozens of churches and medieval monuments plus hundreds of homes. Surely people would demand to know what on earth was going on over there, I thought, and what are these people whom we “rescued”. All the questions that weren’t asked in 1999 would finally be asked, I thought.
They weren’t. And the silence grew louder. The questions still weren’t asked even when the 9/11 Commission found that Bosnia, with our help, had been the breakout event that transformed al Qaeda into a truly global network; they weren’t asked even when the Commission found that two of the 9/11 hijackers had fought alongside Bosnian and international forces against the Serbs, and that five of the hijackers had been trained in Bosnia, and that Australian David Hicks trained in a KLA camp. But the national dialogue that the issue demanded remained absent, and the media maintained its blackout, one door after another slamming in my face every time I proposed a piece on the repercussions of our Balkans intervention.
…………..
Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda terrorist network has been active in the Balkans for years, most recently helping Kosovo rebels battle for independence from Serbia with the financial and military backing of the United States and NATO…In the years immediately before the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999, the al-Qaeda militants moved into Kosovo…to help ethnic Albanian extremists of the KLA mount their terrorist campaign against Serb targets in the region.
Even after another National Post article in 2004 by Canadian former UN General Lewis MacKenzie, titled “We Bombed the Wrong Side?”, came out, Kosovo remained off the media’s and public’s radar-something that vested politicians were counting on.
But then came March 2004, when rumors, proved false, that Serbs drowned three Albanian boys, were used as a spark for the orchestrated pogroms of March 2004, leading to the deaths of 19 people, the displacement of 4,000 Serbs, the destruction of dozens of churches and medieval monuments plus hundreds of homes. Surely people would demand to know what on earth was going on over there, I thought, and what are these people whom we “rescued”. All the questions that weren’t asked in 1999 would finally be asked, I thought.
They weren’t. And the silence grew louder. The questions still weren’t asked even when the 9/11 Commission found that Bosnia, with our help, had been the breakout event that transformed al Qaeda into a truly global network; they weren’t asked even when the Commission found that two of the 9/11 hijackers had fought alongside Bosnian and international forces against the Serbs, and that five of the hijackers had been trained in Bosnia, and that Australian David Hicks trained in a KLA camp. But the national dialogue that the issue demanded remained absent, and the media maintained its blackout, one door after another slamming in my face every time I proposed a piece on the repercussions of our Balkans intervention.
…………..
At the same time, a Washington Post article Poole cited demonstrates that Albanians are grateful for the foreign money:
Many Albanians interviewed here said they are grateful for the money and manpower from foreign religious groups. Not only has the largess built new churches and mosques, it has funded job training, food, roads, irrigation, schools and other projects…The frantic pace of mosque construction has continued at a break-neck pace, as dozens of new Wahhabi-financed mosques have opened in every major city, staffed by foreign-trained Wahhabi imams.
If anyone has any illusions about the budding militancy of Kosovo, here is a small sampling of headlines to dispel them:
Albanian Gunmen Hijack Bus in Italy
Kosovo Link to [U.S.] Embassy Strike
Al Qaeda in Kosovo
Montenegro accuses ethnic Albanians of plotting insurgency
Ethnic Albanians protest outside U.S. Embassy, demand release of terrorist suspects
Ethnic Albanian Terror Suspects Appear in Court in Montenegro (Four of them live in the U.S., including three citizens from Michigan and one Tom Lantos contributor.)
Bin Laden’s Balkan Connections
We Buy Bag of Semtex from Terrorists [in Kosovo] (”a breeding ground for fanatics with al-Qaeda links.”) Video here.
Bin Laden’s Camps Teach Curriculum of Carnage (KLA fighter’s application found at al Qaeda offices in Afghanistan, boasting experience fighting Serbian and American troops in Kosovo and recommending suicide operations against Disneyland)
Serbian Church Condemns Calls for Destruction of Churches
Albanian Sought by Italy Captured in New Jersey
Albanians in Southern Serbia Press for Greater Autonomy
Police Attacked in South Serbia
Albanians in Greece Form Paramilitary Formation
Ignore at Peril: the Growing Cauldron of Kosovo and Bosnia
Kosovo Albanian Drug Boss Admits Friendship with Al Qaeda Leader
US Tackles Islamic Militancy in Kosovo
Kosovo Seen as New Islamic Bastion
Bin Laden Operated Terrorist Network Based in Albania
Bin Laden Opens European Terror Base in Albania
Iranians Move In
And once again we are hearing from former al Qaeda operative Ali Hamad, who is still trying to warn the West about Bosnia and Kosovo:
Former Al-Qa’idah officer Ali Hamad [as transcribed] has said that the Bosnia-Hercegovina state still protects members of Al-Qa’idah, adding that members of this terrorist organization are also to be found in Kosmet [Kosovo-Metohija] where they are supported by ethnic Albanians.
………

Albania moves against terrorists’ assets
24/10/2005
After a ten month delay, Albanian authorities have seized property in downtown Tirana that was being used to launder financial activities of the al-Qaeda terrorist network.
By Erlis Selimaj for Southeast European Times in Tirana – 24/10/05
Albania Takes Action Against Terrorist Suspect
28/01/2002
The Albanian government has taken control of a construction project co-owned by a Saudi businessman suspected of funding the al-Qaeda terrorist network. Tirana has frozen Yassin Kadi’s accounts and charged him with money laundering.
(Radio Free Europe - 25/01/02; UPI, Radio Free Europe - 23/01/02; BBC Monitoring - 22/01/02
Adul Latif Salef Ausweisung und Beschlagnahme

September 19, 2005
js-2727
Treasury Designates Bin Laden, Qadi Associate
The U.S. Department of the Treasury today designated Dr. Abdul Latif Saleh pursuant to Executive Order 13224 for providing support to Usama bin Laden and al Qaida.
“Saleh has multiple ties to al Qaida, ranging from the Al Haramain Foundation to Yasin Qadi to Usama bin Laden,” said Stuart Levey, the Treasury’s Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence (TFI). “This designation identifies him as a terrorist facilitator and ensures that he will no longer be able to operate unencumbered.”
Saleh is closely associated with Usama bin Laden and was expelled from Albania on suspicion of membership in a “radical Islamic Jihad group.” Bin Laden provided Saleh with $600,000 to encourage the establishment of extremist groups in Albania. In addition, Saleh is closely associated with a number of non-governmental organizations in Albania with links to the Egyptian Islamic Jihad, a terrorist organization tied to al Qaida.
Saleh founded and organized an Albanian jihadist organization that has been financed by the Al Haramain Foundation, a non-governmental organization linked to al Qaida. The mission of the Albanian jihadist group has been to destabilize the internal situation in Albania by fomenting conflict among the different religious groups in the country. Al Haramain recruited members from this organization, which Saleh directly assisted in vetting.
Saleh is also associated with Yasin Qadi, who was named a specially designated global terrorist by the Treasury Department in October 2001. Qadi was known to be an active supporter of, and fundraiser for, Saleh’s jihadist group.
……………
http://www.ustreas.gov/press/releases/js2727.htm
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8.4.2008 bei 18:21
But former president Izetbegovic quickly denied the report. In the NATO defense ministers’ meeting (December 18th 2001), NATO’s Secretary General, George Robertson, claimed that SFOR in Bosnia and Herzegovina had eradicated the Al Qa’ida network there; also, KFOR in Kosovo was investigating alleged terrorists there.
When the war ended in Bosnia and Herzegovina, political turmoil subsided, but the tension in Kosovo increased . Mujahedeen from Bosnia and Herzegovina and Albania’s training camps were active in inciting the Kosovo conflict (1998/1999). Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung67 cites dates when the first Islamic terrorist branches were established in Albania.
…………………….
Hundreds of Arabian, Chechen, Albanian, Pakistani, Macedonian, Albanian, and Bosnian Muslim passports and other documents were found in the Al Qa’ida camps, evidence of the role of terrorists in Bosnia, Kosovo, and Macedonia. For example, “Albanian daily news”73 reported that five Arab families were expelled from Albania. Mostly Egyptian, they were members of Islamic relief organizations, such as “World organization of Islamic aid,” “Incarnation of Islamic heritage,” “Al Haramein,” and “Al Waffk”. Pakistan’s “The Frontier post”74 reported that border troops arrested 28 Al Qa’ida fighters escaping Afghanistan. They were Sudanese, Saudi, Turkish, and Albanian nationals. It appears that Albanians were successfully recruited. Whether Albanians went first to wage war in Afghanistan or were only training there to later return and fight in Kosovo, South Serbia, or Macedonia, is irrelevant.
http://www.nsf-journal.hr/issues/v2_3-4/medimorec.htm