POTENTIAL NEW EU MEMBER IS
JIHAD'S TROJAN HORSE, Clinton-Obama legacy in crosshairs
as truth about 'freedom fighters' now revealed, 2/4/17
Fourteen people were arrested last Friday in raids in the Austrian capital of Vienna and the city of Graz. Prosecutors said the coordinated action, which involved 800 officers, was part of an ongoing investigation into suspected membership in the terrorist organization ISIS. Police also reportedly raided unofficial mosques where supporters of ISIS, against which the Trump administration has declared war, may have been meeting.
Among those arrested, at least four
were from the Balkan country of Bosnia-Herzegovina, a former federal unit of
Yugoslavia. They are suspected of being part of the so-called Bosnian Network,
run by a preacher who received a 20-year sentence in July 2016 for recruiting
young fighters for ISIS.
Known by the name of Ebu Tejma (real
name Mirsad Omerovich), he “brainwashed” dozens of people ages 14 to 30 and enlisted a
number of them to fight for ISIS in Syria.
Among other things, Ebu Tejma was
implicated in the recruitment of two minor-age girls to fight in Syria.
According to
Bosnia-based terrorism expert Dzevad Galijasevich, the true base of Ebu Tejma’s network is in the Wahhabi
community operating in the Bosnian village of Maoca. Wahhabism, the radical
strain of Islam that originated in Saudi Arabia, has been identified by the
European Parliament as the “main
source of global terrorism.”
The problem, according to
Galijasevich, is that very little is being done in Bosnia to counter Islamic
radicalism, even though “practically every terrorist attack launched in Europe
over the past years can be linked to Bosnia.”
Bosnia’s status as an Islamic terror
sanctuary was recently confirmed by the updated U.N. Security Council
sanctions list, which said the country has the offices of seven
terrorist organizations, including ISIS and al-Qaida. Also, a leading
commander of the al-Qaida-linked al-Nusra Front, Nusret Imamovich, hails from
Bosnia.
Another Bosnian based security
expert, Predrag Ceranich, underlines that the problem of terrorism has been “minimized for
years in Bosnia, and there is no political will to solve it.” He
said “para-jamaats” — unregistered mosques or Muslim congregations
preaching radical Islam — in Bosnia are “spreading like viruses,” even as
Bosnian Muslim political leaders, such as Bosnian Presidency member Bakir
Izetbegovich, claim the country is successfully integrating with the EU
and the West.
And therein lies the problem,
according to Galijasevich. For the past 25 years or so, Bosnia has been
the darling of liberal “humanitarian interventionists” who have nurtured its
image as a supposedly helpless victim of Serbian, i.e., Christian “aggression.”
That narrative has allowed an
Islamist base in the Balkans, the southeastern gateway to Europe, through which
almost a million mostly Muslim migrants have poured in over the past 18 months,
causing social and political upheaval on the continent.
According
to Galijasevich, “during the 1990s, mujahideen
from the Arab world flooded Bosnia, and after the war settled there, married
Bosnian women, and continued to live there. These people to this day have close
ties with the centers of terrorist power that finance various extremists groups
with money from Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and similar countries.”
As former NSA analyst John Schindler
shows in his well-documented book,
“Unholy Terror: Bosnia, al-Qaida, and the Rise of Global Jihad,” in the 1990s Bosnia was the successor of Afghanistan,
becoming a “training ground” for mujahideen and other holy warriors, with
“substantial support” from the U.S. government. The support included illicit
arms shipments, training, logistical and, perhaps most importantly, political
and media support.
In the Clinton-era State Department,
Bosnian Islamists, led by Alija Izetbegovich — author of the “Islamic
Declaration” and founder of a Muslim Brotherhood-inspired Bosnian Muslim youth
organization, the so-called Young Muslims — were portrayed to the West as
“democrats,” “freedom fighters” and victims of “persecution” at the hands of
the Christian Serbs. The Serbs ultimately were bombed by NATO, which
served to advance Izetbegovich’s vision of an Islamist Bosnia.
The 1999 U.S.-led NATO bombing of
Yugoslavia served to support another majority Muslim population, the Albanians
of Kosovo, whose goal was to break away from Serbia – the larger of rump
Yugoslavia’s remaining two republics.
Again, Islamist radical help
was engaged, including that of Osama bin Laden himself, who was
seen meeting
at least twice with Hashim Thaçi,
then leader of the terrorist Kosovo Liberation Army and the breakaway statelet
of Kosovo in late 1998.
Poverty,
gangs, smuggling, radical Islam So, what is the
result of the Clinton-Bush-Obama pro-Islamicist policies in the Balkans after
all these years? The region is rife with poverty, criminal gangs, human and
drug smuggling and a hotbed of radical Islamic indoctrination and expansion.
Muslim Albanian-majority populated
Kosovo was unilaterally recognized by the U.S. and other Western powers as an
independent state in 2008, even as its structures have cleansed more than
200,000 Christian Serbs from the province, destroyed more than 150 churches, some of them several
hundred-year-old cultural monuments, while keeping the remaining Christian
population living in ghetto-like enclaves, with no freedom of movement, work or
life. All this with the tacit, and often active approval of Western diplomats,
international officials and NATO “peacekeepers.”
According
to a 2011 report by the London Guardian newspaper, “NATO documents, which are marked ‘Secret,’ indicate that
the U.S. and other Western powers backing Kosovo’s government have had
extensive knowledge of its criminal connections for several years.”
Criminal activity included the
smuggling of weapons, drugs and even human organs, with current Kosovo leader
Thaçi being named
as “head of (Kosovo’s) human organ and crime ring” by a Council of Europe
inquiry. All this did not stop then-senator
and recently departed U.S. Vice President Joe Biden from promoting
“democracy” in Kosovo: “[A]droit diplomacy to secure Kosovo’s independence
could yield a victory for Muslim democracy … a much-needed example of a
successful U.S.-Muslim partnership.”
In Bosnia, while continuing their
support for the Islamist leadership in the capital of Sarajevo, Western, and
especially U.S. diplomats, have been busy pressuring and applying sanctions
against Bosnian Serb leaders, including current president of the
Serbian-majority entity, Republika Srpska – who are fiercely resisting Western
efforts to force them to become a minority in a Muslim majority state.
As one of its last acts, Obama’s
State Department first refused to issue a diplomatic visa to Milorad Dodik,
president of Republika Srpska, to attend the presidential inauguration on Jan.
20, and then slapped
sanctions against him for supposedly
violating the U.S.-brokered Dayton Peace Agreement, which has held Bosnia
together since 1995.
On the other hand, the Bosnian
Muslim leader, Bakir Izetbegovich, who has been photographed flashing the
four-fingered sign of the Muslim Brotherhood, an organization that the
Trump administration may soon designate as a terrorist organization – apparently can do no
wrong in Western governments’ eyes.
In fact, Dodik’s main offense lies
in his continued resistance against the Sarajevo Islamists in their efforts to
abolish the celebration of Republika Srpska’s Day of the Republic, as part of
what he sees as a larger ploy to slowly extinguish the majority Christian
Serb-governed unit within Bosnia.
The Obama State Department’s
last-minute sanctions imposed against Dodik were a parting demonstration of
America’s continuing pro-Islamist policy in Bosnia and the Balkans as a whole.
The Trump administration has the opportunity to make that policy a thing
of the past.
Naturally, the first theater in the
newly announced war against ISIS and its affiliates and related Islamist groups
will be the Middle East, beginning with Syria and Iraq. However, if ISIS is to
be thoroughly defeated, it will be necessary to eradicate its offshoots and
affiliates worldwide.
One of its chief sanctuaries and
seeding grounds is the Balkans, thanks to the Clinton-G.W. Bush-Obama legacy.
The strategy must entail not only the elimination of illegal mosques,
congregations, training camps and Shariah law-governed enclaves, and the
cutting off of terrorist financing, money laundering, people and drug smuggling
channels, but a change in policy toward the region’s political and state
actors. The West must move away from favoring pro-Islamist
politicians and policies, as has been the case in Bosnia, Kosovo and Macedonia
over the past two and half decades, and form new alliances with majority
Christian states, entities and political forces willing and eager to join the
new global anti-radical Islamist coalition in the making.
Looming is whether U.S. policy still
will force Bosnia’s Christians to succumb to an aggressive Islamist
majority in Sarajevo, which has pretensions to taking over all of Bosnia and
consolidating, through the so-called Green
Transverse, a large Islamist stronghold in the
Balkans.
In addition, critics say, the
process of so-called state building in majority Muslim Kosovo, at the expense
of majority Christian Serbia, should be halted and reversed. Its eventual
unification with neighboring, crime-ridden, majority Muslim Albania, which has
been tacitly encouraged by the liberal West, would make the entire region into
a permanent European trouble spot and terror base.
Indeed, if one was to trace back to
the roots of Russia’s post-Soviet resurgence, one would need look no further
than Kosovo and the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia. Having accepted Western
promises of cooperation and peaceful coexistence during the 1990s, Russia
watched in anger as the U.S.-led Western powers effectively provided air
and bomb cover for Islamist terrorists and criminals on the heels of what they
had already done in Bosnia.
It was only a few months
later that the docile Boris Yeltsin resigned his presidency in favor of a
previously little known former intelligence officer by the name of Vladimir
Putin on New Year’s Eve in 1999. Having seen how the West operates in the
Balkans, the Russians weren’t going to allow a repeat under their noses, first
in Chechnya, and then in Georgia and the Ukraine.
So, if trust is to be rebuilt and a
true, pro-active and successful anti-Islamist terrorist coalition is to be
formed around the axis of the U.S. and Russia, after the Middle East, the next
best place to move is the Balkans.
And more than that – the U.S.
treatment of the region’s Christians will be a litmus test of the sincerity of
the Trump administration’s commitment to preserve and restore the foundations
the common, Christian-rooted civilization.
http://www.wnd.com/2017/02/potential-new-eu-member-is-jihads-trojan-horse/
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