Der inszenierte Terrorrismus: Die CIA und Al Qaida
Von MICHEL CHOSSUDOVSKY.
Italy Targets Kosovo-linked ISIS Network- But Laws Lag behind the Online Jihad Era
Stavros Markos um SManalysis - vor 23 Stunden
*By Chris Deliso and Matteo Albertini *
The sustained and ongoing anti-terrorist operations by police across Europe
before and after the ISIS Paris attacks are indicative of just how well
established and dangerous Islamist radical networks on the continent have
become.
The new state of the war on terror must be appreciated- as must the fact
that the Balkans (and the ‘Balkan Route’ of migration) are already becoming
of much greater interest to the European authorities, as a recent Italian
operation dramatically showed. However, the relative novelty of the
internet jihad also means th... mehr »
On March 24, 1999, NATO initiated air attacks on Yugoslavia (a federation of two republics, Serbia and Montenegro) in order to impose a peace agreement in the Serbian province of Kosovo, which has an ethnic Albanian majority. The Clinton Administration has not formally withdrawn its standing insistence that Belgrade sign the peace agreement, which would entail the deployment in Kosovo of some 28,000 NATO ground troops -- including 4,000 Americans -- to police the settlement. But in recent days the Clinton public line has shifted to a demand that Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic halt the offensive he has launched in Kosovo, which has led to a growing humanitarian crisis in the region, before there can be a stop to the bombing campaign.
One week into the bombing campaign, there is widespread discussion of options for further actions. One option includes forging a closer relationship between the United States and a controversial group, the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA), a group which has been cited in unofficial reports for alleged ties to drug cartels and Islamic terrorist organizations. This paper will examine those allegations in the context of the currently unfolding air campaign.
Results of Week One The air assault is a product of a Clinton policy, which for months has been directed toward intervention in Kosovo, in either the form of the use of air power or of the introduction of a peacekeeping ground force -- or of air power followed by a ground force. [For details on the turbulent history of Kosovo and of the direction of Clinton policy leading to the current air campaign, see: RPC's Senate to Vote Today on Preventing Funding of Military Operations in Kosovo: Airstrikes Likely This Week," 3/23/99;
"Bombing, or Ground Troops -- or Both: Clinton Kosovo Intervention Appears Imminent," 2/22/99; and "Bosnia II: The Clinton Administration Sets Course for NATO Intervention in Kosovo," 8/12/98.] Just hours before the first bombs fell, the Senate voted 58 to 41 (with 38 Republicans voting in the negative) to authorize air and missile strikes against Yugoslavia (S. Con. Res. 21). The Senate then approved by voice vote a second resolution expressing support for members of the U.S. Armed Forces engaged in military operations against Yugoslavia (S. Res. 74).
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http://fas.org/irp/world/para/docs/fr033199.htm
Vollkommen dumme Deutsche machen immer mit, inklusive älteren Frauen, die nochmal einen Hormon Schub haben, nach Jamika, Afrika in den Urlaub gehen, oder sich einen jungen Afrikaner ins Haus holen.
Die Dummheit der Islamverteidiger
Lux um Luzifer-Lux - vor 1 Tag
Es gibt sicherlich auch Verbrechen, die von Alkoholisierten verübt werden.
Doch erfahren diese keine Rechtfertigung durch die Gutmenschen. Jedenfalls
habe ich noch auf keinem Transparent die Aussage “Angst vor Alkohol?
Letztes Jahr sind Abertausende an den Folgen des Islam krepiert. Haben sie
Angst vor Islam?“* gesehen. Die Vollpfost*innen auf dem Foto würden diesen
Vergleich erfahrungsgemäß dann auch als primitiv, unzulässig, rassistisch
und so weiter und so fort bezeichnen. Logik ist eben nicht *jederfraus*
Sache.
* Solche Plakate sollen sich besonders gut in Saudi-Arabien oder i... mehr »
26 Nov 15
AntwortenLöschenAlbanian Jihadist’s Easy Passage to Syria’s Brutal War
A former Islamist fighter in Syria recalls why he went to Syria, how easy it was to get there – and why he would go again, if he could.
Aleksandra Bogdani, Flamur Vezaj BIRN Tirana
90 Albanians went to Syria between 2012 and 2014 to take part in what they believed was a holy war. Photo: BIRN
On his first trip abroad, he left with 400 euros in his pocket, a printed map from the internet and the belief that he was fulfilling his destiny in eyes of Allah. The destination was the frontline of the war in Syria, but his jihad ended faster than it started.
Two years later, in a bar full of people in his hometown in northern Albania, Ebu Merjem stands out with his long beard and his trousers cut short above the ankle.
He does not like the attention he attracts and chooses a half-empty corner of the bar to explain what that pushed him towards a far-away war.
“If I had the chance, I would go even today and fight in Syria,” Ebu Merjem says. “It was God that created jihad and you have to love something that God loves,” he added.
The 37-year-old unemployed father-of-two has been a practicing Muslim for 17 years.
He is one of 90 Albanians who went to Syria between 2012 and 2014 to take part in what they believed was a holy war.
Since the Syrian conflict began, ten Albanian jihadists have lost their lives there. Thirty others returned home before the adoption of a law that criminalizes participation in conflicts abroad.
According to documents obtained by BIRN, nearly 50 Albanian jihadists identified by the security services are still fighting in Syria.
Albania is a Muslim majority country with a long tradition of interfaith coexistence, and few understand why local Muslims like Ebu Merjem have traveled to fight in Syria.
Merjem has lived all his life in Albania, but believes his homeland is wherever there are Muslim believers. If his Muslim brothers are being attacked, even if they are thousands of kilometers away, he feels it his duty to protect them.
“My brother is the American, Syrian or French Muslim. My enemy may even be my brethren,” he says. “This has nothing to do with nationality or blood. I went there for my faith and my biggest regret is that I couldn’t experience war,” he added.
....
http://www.balkaninsight.com/en/article/albanian-jihadist-s-easy-passage-to-syria-s-brutal-war-11-25-2015