The Brooklyn-Kosovo-London Connection 

By M. Bozinovich 

Last week's airing of a documentary "The Brooklyn Connection" that glorifies
an Albanian gunrunner, Florin Krasniqi, has prompted, according to the
author of the documentary, an investigation by the US Department of Homeland
Security. What the agency is exactly investigating is not clear at this
point, but anyone who read Stacy Sullivan's book used as a base for the
documentary, Be Not Afraid, For You Have Sons In America, should be afraid:
a young uneducated Muslim Albanian illegally enters America via porous
Mexican border, goes gun shopping to Pakistan and repeatedly ships guns via
plane and in full sight of American flight attendants. 

While the ranting in the Sullivan's book may be dismissed as a hearsay in
the courts, the investigation into Krasniqi and his Albanian charity network
may hit a brick wall because it may expose high level dirty laundry, most of
them Clinton's administrators. 

Consider: Ten minutes into the documentary we see the illegal immigrant
Florin Krasniqi with an Albanian "guerilla" entourage known as KLA
contributing at a John Kerry fundraiser and having a laugh with Democrats
Wesley Clark and Richard Holbrooke. Fundrace.org indicates that Krasniqi
indeed donated money to Kerry. 

Krasniqi laments that "With money, you can do amazing things in this
country... Senators and congressmen are looking for donations, and if you
raise the money they need for their campaigns, they pay you back." 

The political power of money that Krasniqi alludes to may have also caused
the mischaracterization of the KLA from a "terrorist" into a "guerilla"
group. Sullivan says that Albanian lobby chief, Joseph DioGuardi had a
silent talk with Clinton's Balkan envoy Robert Gelbard who was adamant in
referring to KLA as terrorists, and after the chat miraculously switched his
reference to a more desirable "guerilla rebels". In fact, FBI has warned
Krasniqi on 2 occasions that the KLA will be soon listed on a terror list
and "advised" him to cease the "charity" fundraising. 

Soon thereafter, a shadowy and Clinton-connected covert operations
specialist Giles Pace was standing with Krasniqi's political moneyman
DioGuardi at an airport. Jill Nicholson radio talk show in Las Vegas
featured Pace on a Sept. 10, 1998 show billing him to have "direct links
with the Albanian government". Krasniqi says that Pace may have been a CIA
operative although some have said that he was Clinton's personal contact for
dirty wars. Pace disappears when NATO starts bombing Serbia over KLA
instigated warfare in Kosovo. 

Terror Connections 

Clinton allegedly pressured Albania to curb gun smuggling but that the
pressure meant nothing was recounted by Krasniqi himself. Retelling
Krasniqi's tale, Sullivan says that the US pressured Albanian President
Berisha to establish a "special anti-arms-trafficking police force" and when
this Albanian force intercepted Krasniqi running guns to Kosovo "the
Krasniqis and their weapons were free to go." In fact, President Berisha's
farm was used as a weapons stash for the Kosovo Albanians, a fact that could
hardly be overlooked by Clinton's administration. 

Clinton made it similarly clear that the US would "not tolerate the rebels
receiving any assistance from Islamic fundamentalists." In a footnote,
Sullivan cites that "This was confirmed to me both by Florin and two other
KLA leaders." but cites that "[I]n April 1998, an Egyptian-born Frenchman
named Claude Cheik Ben Abdel Kader, who claimed to be an operative for Al
Qaeda, had approached the KLA Supreme Command in Tirana and offered to
provide guns, money and fighters." KLA allegedly refused because of their
already demonstrated loyalty to Clinton's clarities. 

Kader was eventually arrested and sentenced to 20 years in jail. 



   
  
 
People look at the bombed police building in Macedonia's capital Skopje, on
Saturday, July 16, 2005. 
  
   
 
Recent bombings in Macedonia, however, indicate possible al Qaeda-Krasniqi
links. Skopje-based Vecer says that Agim Krasniqi's group was involved in
the bombing attack on a police station in the village of Vratnica, while a
Saudi Ramadan Shiti also triggered a similar police station bombing in
Skopje. Both used "plastic" explosives and both reside in a Macedonian
village of Kondovo where the police are afraid to go in because the armed
Albanians and mujahedeen gangs have made the village their military base.
Agim Krasniqi claims that he allegedly did not know anything at all about
the Skopje bombing. 
Sullivan's Krasniqi is rather clear of Albanian intentions in Macedonia.
"...we'll take over that country because we'll be the majority." Presumably,
coordinated Al Qaeda-Albanian bombings of police stations across Macedonia
help in this endeavor. 

KLA and London Bombings 

According to Christope Chaboud, the new commandant of the anti-terrorist
unit of France UCLAT, a unit of the French criminal police which specializes
in the fight against terrorism, said that the explosives used in the London
terrorist bombings on July 7, 2005, were of military derivation and had come
to the UK from Kosovo. 

Similarly, British military and defense analyst Paul Beaver said that "a
part of the investigation dealing with the London blasts is aimed at links
between radical Islamists in Bosnia and Kosovo with international terrorist
groups." Beaver says that the KLA and Muslim federations developed close
links with the criminal mafias in Albania. 

"These clans are involved in drugs and arms smuggling," Beaver says. "The
cooperation did not cease, and that is why the director of CIA Porter Goss
recently visited both Sarajevo and the Albanian capital Tirana to express
grave concerns of Washington because of their cooperation with radical
Islamic groups." 

Meanwhile, UK security officials flew to Belgrade to discuss the matter with
Serbia-Montenegro security officials because the explosive was ex-Yugoslav
Semtex, an explosive no longer made by Serbia but freely available for sale
in Kosovo. 

http://www.serbianna.com/columns/mb/038.shtml

   
  
 
A Christian village of Vratnica, bombed by Agim Krasniqi in July 2005. 
  
   
 
Titled We buy bag of Semtex from terrorists, London Mirror describes the
ease with which their investigative reporters bought plastic explosives from
KLA. "We made our deal in Kosovo, a breeding ground for fanatics with
al-Qaeda links." writes Graham Johnson, Mirror's Investigations Editor. "Our
contact was the deputy commander of the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) Niam
Behljulji, known as Hulji. The group were trained by Bin Laden's men."
Johnson "bought enough Semtex to blow up Oxford Street and the Houses of
Parliament or down 40 Lockerbie jets." 
A Criminal Connection? 

The appearance that a Brooklyn Connection has spread its sinister plot
across the globe is inexorable. That a roofer is implicated in all of this
is unlikely but what is likely is that some of the endeavors that CBS and
PBS glorified in their documentary may actually connect more dots then
intended by the Documentary's Dutch filmmaker Klaartje Quirijns. 

In November 2004, FBI broke up a Brooklyn-based Albanian Mafia clan and
among the 21 indicted is a certain Ljusa Nuculovic whom FBI describes to
have "held a knife to the throat of a suspected [FBI] informant and was
involved in an August 2001 shoot-'em-up at an Astoria social club called
Soccer Fever. Nuculovic, an admitted gun-runner for the Kosovo Liberation
Army [KLA] during the Balkan wars of the early 1990s, wound up taking over
the Lucheses' Astoria operation" cites Manhattan Federal Court prosecutor
Tim Treanor. 

Stacy Sullivan states that Krasniqi's gunrunning fund was the only game in
town, records of which FBI should clearly have. What in fact is FBI
investigating now - terror, criminal or both - is therefore rather unclear. 

That there is some secrecy in the money trail of the Brooklyn Connection,
however, is attested by Stacy Sullivan who received an undisclosed amount of
money by an "anonymous foundation that funded my fellowship" at a lavish
MacDowell Colony, an expensive sanctuary that caters to artists providing
them physical stimuli for their creations. Her book is a wealth of
information, some of it faulty, but in the afterthought, she did manage to
start the book with a quote from Nietzsche that warns those who fight
monsters "should look to it that he himself does not become a monster." 

FBI investigation should clarify who is now the monster and how has it
become. 


http://www.antic.org











 
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