Δευτέρα 22 Νοεμβρίου 2010

Spy master claims Kosovo Albanian separatists all worked for Serb secret service


SERBIANNA

November 2, 2010 – 5:39 am

Former spy master, Bozidar Spasic, photo left, who worked for the Yugoslav secret service, the SDB, says that virtually all of the Kosovo Albanian separatist leaders in Kosovo and Macedonia had once been secret agents that worked for the former Yugoslav spy agency where Spasic was the chief.
“Large number of Albanians that are currently in power in Macedonia and Kosovo were active in the SDB service and for them, especially in Kosovo, that represents a very serious problem. If that issue gets out in the open, I believe that all of them will kill one another and Kosovo will collapse,” said Spasic.
Spasic was a long time chief of the SDB section for combating Croatian and Albanian terror and was credited for a successful campaign against them from 1978 until the collapse of Yugoslavia.
Spasic’s claims come after a paper in Macedonia, Utrinski Vesnik, came out with documents claiming that Macedonia’s Albanian leader, Ali Ahmeti was SDB agent that spied on the Albanian separatist activities. The document points to Ahmeti as being a spy with the nickname of Ibar that was present at the secret formation of the terrorist Kosovo Liberation Organization in Zurich.
Spasic has declined to confirm or deny the credibility of the documents Utrinski Vesti revealed but said that it was natural for the SDB to have its informants and that the SDB stirred them into leadership position of the Croatian Ustasa as well as the Albanian terror groups.
“You will never get a confirmation from me because it is my duty to safeguard identity of anyone that worked for the Service,” commented Spasic on the Ahmeti spy affair.
Macedonia’s former Minister of Interior, Ljubomir Frckovski, has expressed skepticism at the revelations about Ahmeti asking whether the documents are legitimate.
“At the collapse of Yugoslavia I do not believe that the [SDB] had powers to recruit for themselves,” said Frckovski.
The documents allege that the very top of the Albanian separatist gunmen, Kosovo Liberation Army or the KLA, was under control of the Serbian spies. The documents further allege that the KLA top operative known as Ibar was the chief link between the Serbian secret service and the KLA.
On his personal web site, Spasic has an document posted which corroborates that the Serbian secret service had a substantial control over the Albanian gunmen led, at the time by an Albanian bandit Adem Jasari.
“The Serbian Secret and State service had 24hrs oversight of Adem Jasari’s group. We controlled them every second of the day. Robert Gelbart, then said the U.S. is not supporting Kosovo and classified the UCK as a ‘terrorist organization’. He even threatened on March 4th, 1998 that U.S. will intervene should there be any trouble. The following day, someone ordered action against Jasari’s group. More than 50 people of his group were wiped out. With this action, the UCK was created,” the document quotes SDB agent Zoran Stijovic.
Spasic accuses Milosevic’s spy master Jovica Stanisic for orchestrating the war in Kosovo which started by the mysterious massacre at Racak.
Stanisic is at the Hague where he stands accused for war crimes. During the trial, a CIA operative confirmed that Stanisic was CIA link in the region and sources say that it was Stanisic that brought the CIA into Bosnia. Others say that Stanisic may have been a double agent also working for Moscow.
Stanisic says that documents on Albanian agents that worked for Belgrade may be missing because they were all located in Pristina.
“You must not forget that the center of SDB for Kosovo was in Pristina and when people started running the archive stayed in Kosovo and it is a question where it is now,” said Spasic.
“During the [NATO] bombing [of Serbia] much of the archive was destroyed and documents and many, in fact, almost all agents that held connections with them [Albanians] have either died or do not know their names and that is why it is difficult to talk about this,” says Spasic.
Spasic says that Stanisic recruited Serbia’s criminals like Arkan, Captain Dragan (sought by Croatia), and Legija (accused of killing Djindjic), were used to stir up violence in Kosovo.
In his statement to the Croatian media in 2005, Spasic said that these well known Serbian criminals that paraded as patriots were in fact hired assassins by the SDB during the communist times.
“All those that did the action are now dead. They are, besides Djordje Boskovic Giske [shot in Krajina], …Arkan [assassinated in 2000], Ranko Rubezic [killed in 1980s in a street shutout], Dragan Malesevic Tapi [heart attack during questioning] and Dragan Joksic Joksa [assassinated in Belgrade],” told Spasic.
According to Spasic, all these men worked by orders of the very top of the former communist Yugoslav power elite controlled by Stane Dolanc, Mika Spiljak, Nikola Ljubicic and recently deceased Milka Planinc.
Another Albanian leader in Macedonia, Abdulhakim Ademi, dismissed the allegations against Ahmeti.


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