Stratfor: Balkan Training Camps Pose a New Attack Threat

Stratfor Global intelligence ^ | 4/1/05 | Stratfor


Posted on 04/10/2005 7:08:22 AM PDT by MadelineZapeezda


Balkan Training Camps Pose a New Attack Threat

Apr 01, 2005


Summary 

German intelligence's discovery of a militant Islamist training network in
Bosnia and Kosovo, with roots on the Afghan-Pakistani border, suggests that
some jihadist networks are still able to reach across the globe and stage
attacks. 

Analysis 
Europe faces potential attack threats from European-looking Islamist
militants. Sources in German intelligence and the Israeli government say the
militants in question, Muslim Albanians from Kosovo's Orahovac region, are
getting advanced training in Kosovo. 

The information, if correct, suggests that a certain group of international
militant Islamists have developed an intricate global network, operating
basic training camps on the Afghan-Pakistani border and advanced training
programs in the Balkans -- where they are relying on the advanced skills of
combat-tested veterans from the Chechen and Iraqi wars. This particular
network, according to the sources, aims to conduct operations in Europe and
Israel, though other similar networks also likely exist in Germany and North
America. It is unclear whether such networks are linked to each other -- or
to al Qaeda. 

Sources in German intelligence and in the Israeli government independently
reported the same information on Islamist militant training camps in Kosovo
that have sent their most recent "graduates" to Bosnia. Germany in
particular, through its Federal Intelligence Service and other intelligence
services, is keeping a keen eye on the Balkans -- where Kosovo and Bosnia
are located -- as it tries to reclaim its interests there. Also,
intelligence sources in KFOR, the NATO-led peacekeeping force in Kosovo, say
they are aware of Islamist training activities in Kosovo in general but do
not know about the militants sent to Bosnia. Reports of militant Islamist
training in the Balkans date as far back as 2002. 

The actual intelligence pertains to several dozen ethnic Kosovar Albanian
militants discovered in Bosnia. No arrests have been made, however, perhaps
because counterterrorism authorities are tracking them. According to the
intelligence, these militants, from Kosovo's Orahovacs region, received
basic training near the Afghan-Pakistani border and then returned to Kosovo
for advanced training. They then relocated to Bosnia, where Imam Sulejman
Bugari -- an ethnic Albanian from Orahovac in Kosovo and head of the White
Mosque in Vratnik, a Muslim-dominated part of Sarajevo -- offered them
religious support. This also is where Bosnian-based Islamist commanders
supposedly are posed to provide the militants with their instructions on
where and how to attack.


The advantage of sending white Islamists into Europe, of course, is that
they blend in well with the local populations and would attract little
attention during the planning phase of an operation. According to the
Israeli sources, these Kosovar Albanian militants are trained to launch
terrorist-style attacks -- possibly including suicide bombings -- in Europe
and Israel.


The fact that the network's training program includes basic and advanced
levels -- in different countries -- indicates both a high level of
organization and a system designed to turn out well-trained combatants.
Instructors in charge of basic training on either side of the
Afghan-Pakistani border most likely are regional veterans of the 1980s war
in Afghanistan. Training in this region is considered basic because the
instructors have had only low-intensity, somewhat sporadic combat experience
-- meaning they have used machine guns or other basic firearms in
guerrilla-type combat or perhaps have planted the simplest of road bombs.


Advanced training takes place in Kosovo for two main reasons: location and
the quality of the instructors. As a result of ethnic wars in the early
1990s, Kosovo and Bosnia have very weak central authorities that cannot --
or will not -- monitor and combat terrorist-training activity. The
authoritative bodies within the region, NATO and EU peacekeepers, are there
to control ethnic uprisings and might not be looking for other potential
security threats in the area.


Though some intelligence officers in the EUFOR, the EU-lead peacekeeping
force in Bosnia, and KFOR in Kosovo sometimes report on Islamist activities
in both regions, such leads are rarely investigated, sources in the Italian
contingent said. For instance, militant Albanians practicing on firing
ranges have been known to pose as police recruits, according to Albanian
sources. Counterterrorism authorities in the area probably would not think
twice about such activity, since they would assume nothing so sinister could
be going on right under the peacekeepers' noses.


In addition to working in a secure area in Kosovo, the Albanians and perhaps
other new jihadists are receiving advanced-level training from
battle-hardened Iraqi and Chechen Islamists -- German intelligence sources
say -- who have come up against two challenging and capable opponents: U.S.
and Russian troops. The intensity of the opposition faced by Iraqi and
Chechen militants has forced them to develop and improve their tactics --
lessons they can pass on to the Albanian Islamist militants.


The sources say this group of militants is now in Bosnia. It is unclear
whether Bosnia is a target or merely a transit zone for these militants,
although the latter seems the more plausible, as the sources have pinpointed
Europe and Israel as the targets. Also, considering that the Islamist
militant commanders are in the Bosnian capital of Sarajevo, Bosnia likely
serves as the command and control center for this network, so staging
attacks there could jeopardize their safe haven. EU peacekeepers in Bosnia,
however, would offer a handy target should they want to stage an attack from
their present position.


It should be noted that neither the German nor the Israeli source linked the
Albanian Islamist militants to the al Qaeda network. The failure to mention
al Qaeda could be another indication that Osama bin Laden's network is
losing influence over the transnational jihadist movement. 

The recently-uncovered network, however, is not the only such group. Other
international Islamist networks also have been established to train and
distribute militants to target various areas. According to the March 30
Washington Post, an FBI affidavit, for example, has reported on a possible
North American network of Islamist militants, in which militants are
recruited to fight in Bosnia, Kosovo, Chechnya and Somalia. There also is a
group of militants trained in Georgia's Pankisi Gorge and a group in
Germany, where, media sources say, officials have acknowledged that Iraq's
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi was planning chemical attacks against Europe. It is
unclear whether these networks are connected to one another, or to al Qaeda.



Whether the Albanian Islamist militants graduated from this training network
pose a credible security threat depends on two primary factors. The first is
how well security services react to the network. Judging by what Stratfor
has learned, German intelligence and the Israeli government are aware of the
networks' existence, which, of course, is the first step in thwarting an
attack -- though it is not a guarantee.


The second factor is the militants' capabilities. Albanians have cropped up
among Islamist militants in the past, but no information suggests Albanians
have played a major role -- either in planning or executing major attacks --
anywhere in the jihadist theaters of operations. This suggests the group's
capabilities could be limited to small-scale guerrilla-style attacks and
individual assassination attempts. On the other hand, the Albanians could
still surprise.




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