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The NATO training camps with the Islam Albanian Terrorist in North Albania

akshaksh

ANA - UCK - AKSH - FBKsh: Albanians Kosovo Islam Terrorist Organisation

October 15, 2003

Strong Warning Indicators for New Surge in European Islamist Terrorism

Exclusive. Analysis. By Gregory R. Copley, Editor, GIS. Intelligence sources in the Balkans and Middle East indicate that the Iranian and Osama bin Laden terrorist networks, assets and alliances built up in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo, Albania, Macedonia, Southern Serbia and elsewhere in the Balkans are preparing for significant new slate of operations. Initial operations in this “new slate” have already begun in Kosovo, and are expected to expand in southern Serbia in late October and into November 2003.
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During the first half of August 2003, 300 Albanian-trained guerillas — including appr. 10 mujahedin (non-Balkan Muslims) — were infiltrated across the Albanian border into Kosovo, where many have subsequently been seen in the company (and homes) of members of the so-called Kosovo Protection Corps which was created out of Kosovo Albanian elements originally part of the KLA. In fact, the Kosovo Protection Force seems almost synonymous with the Albanian National Army (ANA), the new designation for the KLA. The guerillas were trained in three camps inside the Albanian border at the towns of Bajram Curi, Tropoja and Kuks, where the camps have been in operation since 1997.

The US Government, during the Clinton Administration, supported these camps, and some sources have said that US and German nationals were still involved in training guerillas in the camps. Their existence is known to the Albanian Government, which reportedly also provides both protection and support for the facilities. They brought with them from Albania a variety of light weapons, including mortars and landmines. Some elements of the 300 in the August 2003 group — believed to be the mujahedin element — went into action almost immediately, in the Serbian-occupied Kosovo town of Gorazdevac, near the city of Pec (in the West, close to Montenegro), on four occasions and on one occasion killing some children. Significantly, the Albanian doctor who examined two of the children injured in one of the attacks, Dragana Srbljaka and Djordje Ugrinovic, was accused by Serbian Government authorities and by other local medical authorities of having “purposefully making a wrong diagnosis of fractures, instead of gunshot wounds”. He put plaster over the gunshot wounds and discharged the children, rather than hospitalizing them.

GIS Report

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