Hier nur ein weiteres Beispiel, wie die Englischen Geheimdienste,
Wesley Clark und die Amerikaner direkt Terroristen, Mörder- und
Drogen Banden unterstützen.
auch wenn Alles bekannt ist, so ist das eine nette Zusammenfassung
DANGER! WAR CRIMINALS!
By Edward Teague
Dec 4, 2004, 12:24
....................
Before becoming NATO Commander, Clark was the Director for Strategic
Plans and Policy within the Joint Chiefs of Staff. From this vantage
point, Clark was well aware of and it is possible supported the
arming of the Bosnian government by accepting contributions from
various deep-pocketed Muslim countries, including Saudi Arabia, Iran,
Malaysia, Brunei, Jordan, and Egypt. The Bosnia Defense Fund, was
used to take these millions of dollars to buy weapons for the
Bosnians and train them in their use through the use of private
military contractors like Military Professional Resources, Inc.
(MPRI). (Some of the weapons and cash for the Bosnians became
"unaccounted for," and it is rumoured ended up in the hands of Al
Qaeda and Iranian Pasdaran (Revolutionary Guard) units in Bosnia).
Wesley Clark was in permanent liaison with the Kosovo Liberation Army
(KLA). Under Wesley Clark's command, NATO therefore directly
sponsored a terrorist paramilitary army, with links to Al Qaeda and
the trans-Balkan narcotics trade.
The role of the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) as a terrorist
organization is amply documented by Congressional transcripts.
According to Frank Ciluffo of the Globalized Organised Crime Program,
in a testimony presented to the House of Representatives Judicial
Committee:
"What was largely hidden from public view was the fact that the KLA
raise part of their funds from the sale of narcotics. Albania and
Kosovo lie at the heart of the "Balkan Route" that links the "Golden
Crescent" of Afghanistan and Pakistan to the drug markets of Europe.
This route is worth an estimated $400 billion a year and handles 80
percent of heroin destined for Europe." (House Judiciary Committee,
13 December 2000)
The relationship between the KLA and Osama bin Laden is confirmed by
Interpol's Criminal Intelligence division:
"The U.S. State Department listed the KLA as a terrorist
organization, indicating that it was financing its operations with
money from the international heroin trade and loans from Islamic
countries and individuals, among them allegedly Usama bin Laden .
Another link to bin Laden is the fact that the brother of a leader in
an Egyptian Jihad organization and also a military commander of Usama
bin Laden, was leading an elite KLA unit during the Kosovo conflict."
(US Congress, Testimony of Ralf Mutschke of Interpol's Criminal
Intelligence Division, to the House Judicial Committee, 13 December
2000).
The evidence regarding the KLA contained in Congressional
transcripts, news reports and intelligence documents directly
implicates General Wesley Clark.
During his stint as NATO Supreme commander (1997-2000). Clark had
close personal ties with KLA Chief of Staff Commander Brigadier Agim
Ceku and KLA Leader Hashim Thaci (see photo) Madeleine Albright also
had close ties with Hacim Thaci (see photo)
The development and training of KLA forces was part of NATO planning,
directly led by General Wesley Clark. In the words of former Drug
Enforcement Administration (DEA) secret agent Michael Levine, writing
at the height of the 1999 bombing of Yugoslavia:
"Ten years ago we were arming and equipping the worst elements of the
Mujahideen in Afghanistan - drug traffickers, arms smugglers,
anti-American terrorists…Now we're doing the same thing with the KLA,
which is tied in with every known middle and far eastern drug cartel.
Interpol, Europol, and nearly every European intelligence and
counter-narcotics agency has files open on drug syndicates that lead
right to the KLA, and right to Albanian gangs in this country." (New
American Magazine, May 24, 1999)
The KLA acted as a military force, present on the ground in Kosovo.
It was integrated by US and British SAS Special Forces and remained
in close liaison with NATO. The KLA was used by NATO High Command to
acquire intelligence on bombing targets during the 1999 Kosovo
campaign.
Confirmed by British military sources, the task of arming and
training of the KLA had been entrusted in 1998 to the US Defence
Intelligence Agency (DIA) and Britain's Secret Intelligence Services
MI6, together with "former and serving members of 22 SAS [Britain's
22nd Special Air Services Regiment], as well as three British and
American private security companies". (The Scotsman, Glasgow, 29
August 1999)
"The US DIA approached MI6 to arrange a training program for the KLA,
said a senior British military source. `MI6 then sub-contracted the
operation to two British security companies, who in turn approached a
number of former members of the (22 SAS) regiment. Lists were then
drawn up of weapons and equipment needed by the KLA.' While these
covert operations were continuing, serving members of 22 SAS
Regiment, mostly from the unit's D Squadron, were first deployed in
Kosovo before the beginning of the bombing campaign in March [1999]."
(Ibid)
http://www.axisoflogic.com/artman/publish/article_14195.shtml
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Wesley Clark und die Amerikaner direkt Terroristen, Mörder- und
Drogen Banden unterstützen.
auch wenn Alles bekannt ist, so ist das eine nette Zusammenfassung
DANGER! WAR CRIMINALS!
By Edward Teague
Dec 4, 2004, 12:24
....................
Before becoming NATO Commander, Clark was the Director for Strategic
Plans and Policy within the Joint Chiefs of Staff. From this vantage
point, Clark was well aware of and it is possible supported the
arming of the Bosnian government by accepting contributions from
various deep-pocketed Muslim countries, including Saudi Arabia, Iran,
Malaysia, Brunei, Jordan, and Egypt. The Bosnia Defense Fund, was
used to take these millions of dollars to buy weapons for the
Bosnians and train them in their use through the use of private
military contractors like Military Professional Resources, Inc.
(MPRI). (Some of the weapons and cash for the Bosnians became
"unaccounted for," and it is rumoured ended up in the hands of Al
Qaeda and Iranian Pasdaran (Revolutionary Guard) units in Bosnia).
Wesley Clark was in permanent liaison with the Kosovo Liberation Army
(KLA). Under Wesley Clark's command, NATO therefore directly
sponsored a terrorist paramilitary army, with links to Al Qaeda and
the trans-Balkan narcotics trade.
The role of the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) as a terrorist
organization is amply documented by Congressional transcripts.
According to Frank Ciluffo of the Globalized Organised Crime Program,
in a testimony presented to the House of Representatives Judicial
Committee:
"What was largely hidden from public view was the fact that the KLA
raise part of their funds from the sale of narcotics. Albania and
Kosovo lie at the heart of the "Balkan Route" that links the "Golden
Crescent" of Afghanistan and Pakistan to the drug markets of Europe.
This route is worth an estimated $400 billion a year and handles 80
percent of heroin destined for Europe." (House Judiciary Committee,
13 December 2000)
The relationship between the KLA and Osama bin Laden is confirmed by
Interpol's Criminal Intelligence division:
"The U.S. State Department listed the KLA as a terrorist
organization, indicating that it was financing its operations with
money from the international heroin trade and loans from Islamic
countries and individuals, among them allegedly Usama bin Laden .
Another link to bin Laden is the fact that the brother of a leader in
an Egyptian Jihad organization and also a military commander of Usama
bin Laden, was leading an elite KLA unit during the Kosovo conflict."
(US Congress, Testimony of Ralf Mutschke of Interpol's Criminal
Intelligence Division, to the House Judicial Committee, 13 December
2000).
The evidence regarding the KLA contained in Congressional
transcripts, news reports and intelligence documents directly
implicates General Wesley Clark.
During his stint as NATO Supreme commander (1997-2000). Clark had
close personal ties with KLA Chief of Staff Commander Brigadier Agim
Ceku and KLA Leader Hashim Thaci (see photo) Madeleine Albright also
had close ties with Hacim Thaci (see photo)
The development and training of KLA forces was part of NATO planning,
directly led by General Wesley Clark. In the words of former Drug
Enforcement Administration (DEA) secret agent Michael Levine, writing
at the height of the 1999 bombing of Yugoslavia:
"Ten years ago we were arming and equipping the worst elements of the
Mujahideen in Afghanistan - drug traffickers, arms smugglers,
anti-American terrorists…Now we're doing the same thing with the KLA,
which is tied in with every known middle and far eastern drug cartel.
Interpol, Europol, and nearly every European intelligence and
counter-narcotics agency has files open on drug syndicates that lead
right to the KLA, and right to Albanian gangs in this country." (New
American Magazine, May 24, 1999)
The KLA acted as a military force, present on the ground in Kosovo.
It was integrated by US and British SAS Special Forces and remained
in close liaison with NATO. The KLA was used by NATO High Command to
acquire intelligence on bombing targets during the 1999 Kosovo
campaign.
Confirmed by British military sources, the task of arming and
training of the KLA had been entrusted in 1998 to the US Defence
Intelligence Agency (DIA) and Britain's Secret Intelligence Services
MI6, together with "former and serving members of 22 SAS [Britain's
22nd Special Air Services Regiment], as well as three British and
American private security companies". (The Scotsman, Glasgow, 29
August 1999)
"The US DIA approached MI6 to arrange a training program for the KLA,
said a senior British military source. `MI6 then sub-contracted the
operation to two British security companies, who in turn approached a
number of former members of the (22 SAS) regiment. Lists were then
drawn up of weapons and equipment needed by the KLA.' While these
covert operations were continuing, serving members of 22 SAS
Regiment, mostly from the unit's D Squadron, were first deployed in
Kosovo before the beginning of the bombing campaign in March [1999]."
(Ibid)
http://www.axisoflogic.com/artman/publish/article_14195.shtml
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