Wednesday, September 19, 2007

The Wrong Side

Here is an interesting article entitled "We bombed the wrong side?" written by a Canadian officer who served in the Balkans. I have been unable to find the original, which appeared at the National Post. Copies are at Global Research and Free Republic. It is dated April 6, 2004.

Here it is, in its entirety, with my comments:

Five years ago our television screens were dominated by pictures of Kosovo-Albanian refugees escaping across Kosovo's borders to the sanctuaries of Macedonia and Albania. Shrill reports indicated that Slobodan Milosevic's security forces were conducting a campaign of genocide and that at least 100,000 Kosovo-Albanians had been exterminated and buried in mass graves throughout the Serbian province. NATO sprung into action and, in spite of the fact no member nation of the alliance was threatened, commenced bombing not only Kosovo, but the infrastructure and population of Serbia itself -- without the authorizing United Nations resolution so revered by Canadian leadership, past and present.

Those of us who warned that the West was being sucked in on the side of an extremist, militant, Kosovo-Albanian independence movement were dismissed as appeasers. The fact that the lead organization spearheading the fight for independence, the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA), was universally designated a terrorist organization and known to be receiving support from Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda was conveniently ignored.


Even today, his Majesty King George W. Bush is supporting the Kosovo-Albanian independence movement, despite known ties between this movement and narcotics-trafficking Islamic terrorists -- the very terrorists blamed for 9/11!

The recent dearth of news in the North American media regarding the increase in violence in Kosovo compared to the comprehensive coverage in the European press strongly suggests that we Canadians don't like to admit it when we are wrong. On the contrary, selected news clips on this side of the ocean continue to reinforce the popular spin that those dastardly Serbs are at it again.

A case in point was the latest crisis that exploded on March 15. The media reported that four Albanian boys had been chased into the river Ibar in Mitrovica by at least two Serbs and a dog (the dog's ethnic affiliation was not reported).Three of the boys drowned and one escaped to the other side. Immediately, thousands of Albanians mobilized and concentrated in the area of the divided city. Attacks on Serbs took place throughout the province resulting in an estimated 30 killed and 600 wounded. Thirty Serbian Christian Orthodox churches and monasteries were destroyed, more than 300 homes were burnt to the ground and six Serbian villages cleansed of their occupants. One hundred and fifty international peacekeepers were injured.

Totally ignored in North America were the numerous statements from impartial sources that said there was no incident between the Serbs, the dog and the Albanian boys. NATO Police spokesman Derek Chappell stated on March 16 that it was "definitely not true" that the boys had been chased into the river by Serbs. Chappell went on to say that the surviving boy had told his parents that they had entered the river alone and that three of his friends had been swept away by the current. Admiral Gregory Johnson, the overall NATO commander, further stated that the ensuing clashes were "orchestrated and well-planned ethnic cleansing" by the Kosovo-Albanians. Those Serbs forced to leave joined the 200,000 who had been cleansed from the province since NATO's "humanitarian" bombing in 1999. The "cleansees" have become very effective "cleansers."


Ethnic cleansing does not necessarily refer to people being killed. It refers to certain groups of people being removed from an area. Killing them is one way to remove them; compelling them to leave, driving them out, is another way, and that is the way more often chosen. A refugee crisis doesn't get the same kind of headlines as mass-murder.

In the same week a number of individuals posing as Serbs ambushed and killed a UN policeman and his local police partner. During the firefight one of them was wounded which caused an immediate switch from Serbian to Albanian as he screamed, "I've been hit!" The UN pursued the attackers and tracked them to an Albanian-run farm where they discovered weapons and the wounded Albanian who had died from his wounds. Four Albanians were arrested. Once again, the ambush had been reported in the United States but not the follow-up which clearly indicated yet another orchestrated provocation by the Albanian terrorists.


Is it because we Americans have such short memories and so a follow-up story doesn't sell? Or is it because the media doesn't like to run a big story, and then later admit that they had been "had"?

Kosovo is administered by the UN, the very organization many Canadians have indicated they would like to see take over from the United States in Iraq. The fact the UN cannot order its civilian employees to go or stay anywhere -- they have to volunteer -- combined with recent history that saw the UN abandon Iraq after a single brutal attack on their compound in Baghdad and the reality that Kosovo, under the organization's administration, is a basket case, disqualifies it from consideration for such a role.


The UN can be pretty useless.

Since the NATO/UN intervention in 1999, Kosovo has become the crime capital of Europe. The sex slave trade is flourishing. The province has become an invaluable transit point for drugs en route to Europe and North America. Ironically, the majority of the drugs come from another state "liberated" by the West, Afghanistan. Members of the demobilized, but not eliminated, KLA are intimately involved in organized crime and the government. The UN police arrest a small percentage of those involved in criminal activities and turn them over to a judiciary with a revolving door that responds to bribes and coercion.


As my readers know, much of those narcotics moves via Turkey. Islamic terrorists control the production, but Turkish organized crime controls the trafficking and wholesale distribution through extensive infiltration and corruption of the Turkish government.

Turkish government helicopters and trucks help transport the vast quantities of illegal narcotics that come out of Afghanistan; the Turkish government's fairly obvious involvement using official vehicles begins at the Turkish border, but continues throughout Western Europe and into the United States, where mobsters with Turkish diplomatic identification and people affiliated with quasi-governmental organizations distribute not only the drugs, but also the bribes needed to keep policies in place favorable to narcotrafficking.

The objective of the Albanians is to purge all non-Albanians, including the international community's representatives, from Kosovo and ultimately link up with mother Albania thereby achieving the goal of "Greater Albania." The campaign started with their attacks on Serbian security forces in the early 1990s and they were successful in turning Milosevic's heavy-handed response into worldwide sympathy for their cause. There was no genocide as claimed by the West -- the 100,000 allegedly buried in mass graves turned out to be around 2,000, of all ethnic origins, including those killed in combat during the war itself.

The Kosovo-Albanians have played us like a Stradivarius. We have subsidized and indirectly supported their violent campaign for an ethnically pure and independent Kosovo. We have never blamed them for being the perpetrators of the violence in the early '90s and we continue to portray them as the designated victim today in spite of evidence to the contrary. When they achieve independence with the help of our tax dollars combined with those of bin Laden and al-Qaeda, just consider the message of encouragement this sends to other terrorist-supported independence movements around the world.

Funny how we just keep digging the hole deeper!

Maj-Gen. Lewis MacKenzie, now retired, commanded UN troops during the Bosnian civil war of 1992.


What the average Albanian on the street wants or knows is one thing; at issue here is what the "elite" are involved in, and that is organized crime. In Chicago in the last century, organized crime nearly took over the city. In Kosovo, organized Islamic mafia might very soon be the government, thanks to Bush's policy insisting, in clear violation of international law and historical precedent, that Kosovo be independent of Serbia.

Serbia, which has traditionally been the guardian of the gates of Europe against militant Islamic conquest, has been sold out for drug money.

More to follow.

September 20 clarification: Balkan Blame.

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