Kosovo
Liberation Army and Albanian Sponsors
Have Well Documented Roots in The Heroin Trade
By Michael C. Ruppert
The
Drug Trade Is Entrenched in NATO Politics
An
exceptional record of respected media sources from the U.S. and Europe have
documented that the Kosovo Liberation Army and their Albanian sponsors are
heroin financed organized crime groups struggling to dominate the flow of middle
eastern heroin into Europe and even the Eastern United States.
The
Christian Science Monitor
reported on Oct. 20, 1994: "Disrupted by the Yugoslav conflict, drug
trafficking across the Balkans is making a comeback as Albanian mafia barons
carve out a new smuggling route to Western Europe, bypassing the peninsula's war
zones, according to United Nations and other narcotics experts." To
document the increase in traffic through the Albanian Kosovar region The
Monitor continued, "For example, just 14 pounds of hard drugs were
seized by Hungarian police in 1990, but by August this year [1994] the figure
had risen to 1,304 pounds."
In
describing the then evolving trade, which was coming to be dominated by Kosovar
Albanians The Monitor added,
"But European police chiefs fear the conduit will strengthen Kosovo
Albanian drug syndicates - some of the most powerful on the continent - whose
tentacles have stretched as far as the East coast of the United States…
"From
their base in Velki Trnovac in southern Serbia, dubbed the 'Medellin of the
Balkans,' Albanian mafia chiefs oversee their European drug operation and are
suspected of masterminding the new Balkan route."
Colombia
in the Balkans
The
highly respected Jane's Intelligence
Review from Great Britain went much deeper in predicting the coming crisis
in
a February 1, 1995 article entitled The
Balkan Medellin. Three paragraphs from that article are so compelling we
reprint them here in their entirety.
"The
Albanian-dominated region of western Macedonia accounts for a disproportionate
share of Macedonia's (FYROM) shrinking GDP. This situation has strengthened
Albanophobic sentiments among the ethnic Macedonian majority, especially as a
great deal of revenue is thought to derive from Albanian narco-terrorism as well
as associated gun-running and cross-border smuggling to and from Albania,
Bulgaria and the Kosovo province of Serbia. Although its extent and forms remain
in dispute, this rising Albanian economic power is helping to turn the Balkans
into a hub of criminality.
"Previously
transported to Western Europe through former Yugoslavia, heroin from Turkey, the
Transcaucus and points further east is now being increasingly routed to Italy
via the Black Sea, Albania, Bulgaria and Macedonia. This is a development that
has strengthened the Albanian mafia which is now thought to control 70% of the
illegal heroin market in Germany and Switzerland. Closely allied to the powerful
Sicilian mafia, the Albanian associates have also greatly benefited from the
presence of large numbers of mainly Kosovar Albanians in a number of western
European countries; Switzerland alone now has over 100,000 ethnic Albanian
residents. As well as providing a perfect cover for Albanian criminals, this
diaspora is also a useful source of income for racketeers…
"If
left unchecked, this growing Albanian narco-terrorism could lead to a Colombian
syndrome in the Southern Balkans, or the emergence of a situation in which the
Albanian mafia becomes powerful enough to control one or more states in the
region. In practical terms, this will involve either Albania or Macedonia, or
both. Politically, this is now being done by channeling growing foreign exchange
(forex) profits from narco-terrorism into local governments and political
parties. In Albania, the ruling Democratic Party (DP) led by President Sali
Berisha is now widely suspected of tacitly tolerating and even directly
profiting from drug-trafficking for wider politico-economic reasons, namely the
financing of secessionist political parties and other groupings in Kosovo and
Macedonia."
These
four-year-old evaluations, along with an abundance of other evidence of
Albanian-Kosovar mafia expansion paint a whole new picture of what is really
happening in Kosovo. Clearly Serbia is legitimately defending itself from an
organized crime syndicate taking control of one of its provinces.
How
powerful is the Albanian mafia? Well, as far back as 1985 it was powerful enough
to frighten New York U.S. attorney Rudy Giulliani who, according to a Wall
Street Journal story dated September 9, was receiving special personal
protection after prosecuting a heroin case in New York City connected to a ring
of powerful Albanian traffickers.
The
Journal wrote, "But it is drug
trafficking that has gained Albanian organized crime the most notoriety. Some
Albanians, according to federal Drug Enforcement Agency officials, are key
traders in the 'Balkan connection' the Istanbul-to-Belgrade heroin route. While
less well known than the so-called Sicilian and French connections, the Balkan
route in some years may move 24% to 40% of the U.S. heroin supply, officials
say."
If
the Albanians were moving 24 to 40% fourteen years ago then, given their growing
control over the traffic through the region, their access to Western Europe and
mobility throughout
the
world, they may well control more than half of the heroin now entering the
United States and law enforcement sources indicate that they control 75% of the
heroin entering Western Europe.
A
Brilliant Voice From Canada
Michel
Chossudovsky, Professor of Economics at the University of Ottawa has written an
absolutely brilliant article on the Kosovo war which decimates, in its entirety,
the U.S. government's stated version of events and lays bare a plan to
re-colonize the region on behalf of Germany and the United States. The
meticulously footnoted article sums up the entire Kosovo nightmare in one
sentence by saying, "The west was relying on its KLA puppets to
rubber-stamp an agreement which would have transformed Kosovo into an occupied
territory under Western administration."
After
describing in detail the heroin-financed, organized crime, political power
structure of the region, and noting carefully that there are other organized
political entities not involved in the drug trade speaking on behalf of ethnic
Albanians from Kosovo, Chossudovsky documents the military and intelligence
alliance between Bonn (now Berlin) and Washington to create the KLA.
"Since
the early 1990s, Bonn and Washington have joined hands in establishing their
respective spheres of influence in the Balkans. Their intelligence agencies have
also collaborated. According to intelligence analyst John Whitley, covert
support to the Kosovo rebel army was established between the CIA and Germany's
[BND]…The task to create and finance the KLA was initially given to Germany:
"They used German uniforms, East German weapons and were financed, in part,
with drug money. According to Whitley, the CIA was subsequently instrumental in
training and equipping the KLA in Albania."
Giving
the overall economic perspective, Chossudovsky notes the effect of often brutal
economic sanctions imposed by the IMF and other banking institutions which so
often presage a region's descent into apparent anarchy before its rescue by the
"benevolent" industrial powers.
"The
application of strong 'economic' medicine' under the guidance of the Washington
based Bretton Woods institutions had contributed to wrecking Albania's banking
system and precipitating the collapse of Albania's economy. The resulting chaos
enabled American and European transnationals to carefully position themselves.
Several western oil companies [some represented by Richard Armitage] including
Occidental, Shell and British Petroleum had their eyes riveted on Albania's
abundant and unexplored oil deposits. Western investors were also gawking
Albania's extensive reserves of chrome, copper, gold nickel and platinum…"
Given
these undeniable facts, and a well documented history which the Internet and
publications like this will not forget, the current propaganda and very real war
being fought in Kosovo takes on a new and unforgivable light. Ronald Reagan's
comparison of the Contras in Central America to America's Founding Fathers is
today as comical as it is offensive in light of what we know about the Contra
war and how the Contras were financed. The Mujahedeen Freedom Fighters of
Afghanistan and Pakistan who we financed with heroin from the same fields which
now supply the KLA have
become
terrorists who attack embassies and target American citizens. The forgotten Meo
tribesman of Laos, who Ted Shackley created with heroin from the Golden Triangle
are now basically forgotten - those who survived having been resettled in the
U.S. and elsewhere. But the warlords remain in Washington, Berlin, London, the
Golden Triangle, the Golden Crescent, Albania and Kosovo.
This
writer has said many times and in many places that these wars, destabilizations
and "economic cleansings" are planned and orchestrated years, even
decades in advance. It was a bittersweet affirmation for me to read
Chossudovsky's own analysis:
"The
fate of Kosovo had already been carefully laid out prior to the signing of the
1995 Dayton agreement. NATO had entered an unwholesome 'marriage of convenience'
with the mafia. "Freedom Fighters were put in place, the narcotics trade
enabled Washington and Bonn to "finance the Kosovo conflict" with the
ultimate objective of destabilizing the Belgrade government and fully
recolonizing the Balkans."
What
remains to be seen is whether or not a badly misled American public will be
willing to sacrifice the blood of her sons in this utterly dishonest conflict. I
read somewhere once that the historical memory of a nation lasts only about one
generation. Funny, Vietnam doesn't seem that long ago.
Suggested
Reading: KOSOVO
FREEDOM FIGHTERS FINANCED BY ORGANIZED CRIME by Michel Chossudovsky, Department
of Economics, University of Ottawa. Voice Box 1-613-562-5800 ext 1415, e-mail chossudovsky@sprint.ca
Michael C. Ruppert
P.O. Box 6061-350, Sherman Oaks, CA 91413
(818)788-8791 * fax(818)981-2847 *
mruppert@copvcia.com
⌐ COPYRIGHT 1998, 1999, MICHAEL C. RUPPERT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.