Clinton's war in the former Yugoslavia started within days of his

taking office in 1993. In 1993, Croat and Bosnian Serbs, backed by the

Milosevic regime in Belgrade, were battling with Croat and Bosnia

Muslims. The war was dominated by a U.N. arms embargo against the

fractured Yugoslavia. No new weapons could get into the country to feed

the widening civil war. The arm embargo was strictly enforced by NATO

and the newly elected Clinton.

Initially, the Serbs were winning. They out-gunned the larger Croat

and Bosnian forces, because they were backed by tanks from their friend

in Belgrade, Milosevic.

Starting in 1993, the Croats and Bosnians suddenly acquired loads of

Chinese-made artillery and anti-tank rockets. The new arms arrived in

Bosnia on Iranian C-130 cargo planes, in violation of the NATO embargo.

The Iranian arms shipments were credited with stopping a major Serbian

offensive and costing Milosevic victory in the long war.

Ironically, the same weapons also cost former the Clinton National

Security advisor, Anthony Lake, his bid to be CIA Director. During

Senate hearings, Lake was forced to admit that the U.S. knew of the

Iranian arms flights and did nothing to stop them. Lake, who was then up

for the newly vacated CIA Directorship, admitted the misdeeds and

resigned in disgrace.

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The sudden admission of a U.S./Iranian plot to arm the Muslims

strained relations and embarrassed the Clinton administration. European

allies and Russia had enforced the embargo with aircraft and naval

warships.

Yet, Iran did more than just send guns. Ali Fallahan, the top spy for

Iran, was also sent into Yugoslavia along with the Chinese-made AK-47s,

artillery and rocket launchers. Ali Fallahan was then head of the

Iranian Ministry of Intelligence and Security, or Vavak. Fallahan also

is known to preside over the Iranian overseas operations planning

committee. It is this committee that approves all Iranian sponsored

terrorist attacks abroad.

In 1996, the accidental discovery of a Vavak base in Bosnia by NATO

forces provided the hard evidence of Iranian actions and of Fallahan's

activities. NATO troops found a treasure trove of advanced

communications and bugging devices from around the world purchased by

Fallahan. The equipment was quickly tracked back to each respective

supplier and thus the Germans re-constructed Fallahan's travels.

Once in Europe, Fallahan drove anywhere he wanted, and frequently

did. It was during one stop in Germany that Fallahan helped set up the

assassination of Kurd rebel leaders exiled in Berlin.

Fallahan also masterminded a huge buy of German, Russian and Japanese

state-of-the-art listening devices, encryption and communications

equipment, which was shipped to Iran in 1994 and 1995. This equipment

was used to outfit both the Iranian and Bosnian intelligence services,

some of which was found by the NATO forces in the Bosnian Vavak raid.

In 1997, Fallahan was found guilty -- in absentia -- by the Germans

for the assassination of Kurdish leaders in Berlin. The discovery of

Fallahan, the advanced equipment, plans and hordes of Iranian spies on

Euro soil finally shocked western Europe into demanding Bosnia

disconnect itself from Tehran.

Today, while American airpower hurls itself on the suburbs of

Belgrade for CNN cameras, there is another war. The flashy shows of

missile strikes and stealth attacks being played out in the skies

dominate the press. The real dirty war in Kosovo is fought with an AK-47

or SKS rifle at close range.

The initial supply of guns for the KLA was taken from the armories of

the Yugoslavian and Albanian communist states as they disintegrated. The

first batch of local guns was not enough to sustain a war. The aging

equipment has since been re-enforced with brand new Chinese made rifles.

In the 1980s, the CIA combined with Middle Eastern heroin smugglers

and Chinese weapons makers to assist the Afghans during their long war

against the ex-Soviet Union. The dirty war in Afghanistan bred the CIA

trained, Saudi millionaire, Bin

Laden. Bin Laden fought the Soviets with U.S. and Chinese made

equipment.

The KLA has rearmed using the same not-so-old religious connection

through the Iranians and Chinese arms smugglers. The KLA "Praise the

Lord and pass the ammunition" strategy includes drug smugglers well

known to the CIA and former

Albanian communists, now backing the KLA.

Two benefactors from Clinton's dirty little war in Kosovo are Poly

Technologies and NORINCO, both arms firms owned by Chinese Generals.

Norinco SKS assault rifles currently grace the KLA forces operating

inside Kosovo. NBC and CNN have shown KLA rebels, armed with Chinese SKS

rifles and their distinctive, fixed, 10 round clip. You can see the same

SKS rifles in the well known picture of Clinton reviewing Chinese troops

in Tiananmen square on the cover of the book "Year of the Rat."

Poly Tech is better known to the Clinton administration. Poly

Technologies was busted in 1996 by U.S. Customs agents posing as drug

dealers trying to buy a couple of AK-47s. The customs raid netted over

2,000 fully automatic AK-47s, hand grenades, anti-tank rockets and

shoulder fired surface-to-air (SAM) missiles. The Chinese arsenal was

hidden in a cargo container freshly unloaded from a COSCO (China Ocean

Shipping Company) ship, docked in Los Angeles.

The Poly Tech workers have all been released by the inept Reno Dept.

of Justice. Some fled the country and have returned to China. Following

the fiasco, Clinton officials issued a statement, saying the arms were

destined for "drug" dealers in the United States.

Poly Tech is also known to Janet Reno for another reason. Charlie

Trie and Poly Tech President Wang Jun met with Commerce Secretary Ron

Brown after donating over $50,000 to the DNC. In fact, Poly Tech

President Wang Jun met with Ms. General Reno's boss, Mr. Clinton, inside

the White House just after that donation through Trie and Brown.

In April 1996, Secretary Brown lost his life in the former

Yugoslavia. Brown died in a plane crash just outside of Dubrovnik,

Croatia. Brown died along with a host of the highest and mightiest of

U.S. Corporate heads.

The death of the Secretary came as a blow to the White House and to

the criminal investigations of Ron Brown's Commerce Dept. It was well

known that a Special Prosecutor was preparing heavy evidence of

corruption. Brown's death stopped that investigation just before the

1996 election.

The blow to the White House was displayed by Clinton himself who

personally burst into tears at Ron's funeral. Clinton had just stepped

out of his limo, laughing his guts out, when he noticed several TV

cameras were focused on him. It was then Clinton burst into the

"boo-hoos" for Brown.

However, another Commerce employee was involved in the fatal Croatia

trip. Ira Sockowitz, a DNC fundraiser, New York banker and co-worker of

John Huang at the Commerce Dept. was scheduled to fly into Cilipi

airport along with Brown. Curiously,

Sockowitz chose to leave ahead of Brown on an advance flight instead of

going with the Secretary on a flight packed with DNC fat-cats.

After the crash, Sockowitz was the man in Croatia that identified Ron

Brown's body. Once he was safely back in D.C., Ira Sockowitz collected a

vast array of information on Bosnia and Croatia given to Ron Brown for

that last flight.

In August of 1996, Ira Sockowitz quietly took detailed bios of the

Bosnian and Croatian leaders out of the secured facility at the Commerce

Department to his new job at the Small Business Administration. These

secret documents would join a host of other classified material from the

Department of State, NSA, CIA, Commerce, Russia, and France. All hidden

in a personal safe just before the 1996 Presidential election.

There are many questions about that last fatal flight. For example,

there were several interesting companies represented on Brown's trip

into Dubrovnik. Dubrovnik is an ex-Yugoslav submarine base and a few of

the dead had their own under-water kills.

For example, Stuart Tholan, President of Bechtel Corp., a well known

contractor to the CIA and a prime contractor on sub base building for

DOD. Another flyer was David Ford, President and Chief Executive Officer

for Interguard Corp., a company that provides high tech security guards

for Navy bases. Finally, there was Walter Murphy, Senior Vice President

for AT&T Submarine Systems Sub Communications Systems.

In July 1996, Secretary Kantor replaced Ron Brown and led a new

delegation of corporate contributors to Bosnia. The list of big

companies riding with Kantor is covered with blacked-out sections

withheld by the Commerce Dept. Some of those traveling with Kantor

include ABB, AT&T, Bechtel, Boeing, Enron, McDonalds, and Motorola.

In his televised attempt to explain the NATO airstrikes, Clinton

noted that there was some amount of money at stake in the crisis over

Kosovo. So far, the Pentagon estimated we have spent $500 million in

bombing Serbia. After the bombs, Clinton will propose a "re-building"

package of U.S. aid to repair the Serb Police HQ and all the bridges

destroyed by NATO forces. More billions to hand out as corporate pork.

Yet, while the bombs fall and the innocent victims die, liberal

lovers of Bill Clinton need to ask themselves, just what are we fighting

for? Is it to save the Kosovo people or to protect the profits of war?