Andreas Broeckmann on Tue, 20 Apr 1999 09:01:08 +0100 |
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Syndicate: <nettime> Serbs used CIA phone to call in convoy raid |
From: "Eveline Lubbers" <evel@xs4all.nl> Date: Mon, 19 Apr 1999 22:03:27 +0200 http://www.theherald.co.uk/news/archive/19-4-1999-0-9-58.html Glasgow Herald, 19 april 1999 Serbs used CIA phone to call in convoy raid IAN BRUCE, Geopolitics Editor The refugees targeted by mistake in the Nato raid involving the U.S. Air Force last Wednesday died because a Central Intelligence Agency undercover operation involving the Kosovo Liberation Army went drastically wrong. More than 70 fleeing men, women and children were killed as bombs straddled their convoy of tractors and trailers on the Prizren to Djakovica road in Kosovo, producing a propaganda disaster for Nato and triggering a furious behind-the-scenes row between the Pentagon and the US intelligence community. The Herald can now reveal that the fatal strike was called in by the Serbs using a mobile phone and security identification codes supplied to a KLA "spotter" by the CIA. The man is believed to have been captured early last week and tortured into telling what he knew. He was then executed. Intelligence sources said last night that a joint CIA-U.S. special forces group operating out of the eastern Bosnian town of Tuzla is running a group of KLA agents inside Kosovo. These men are tasked with reporting the location and movements of all Serb troops and police units via mobile phones. The KLA spotters are being trained by the U.S. equivalent of Britain's SAS - Delta Force - in camps set up in Albania. They are taught to map read and transmit exact co-ordinates of mobile Serb teams responsible for the ethnic cleansing offensive inside the province. The co-ordinates are then passed to allied air operations at Aviano air base in Italy and fighter-bombers vectored in to attack with what was hoped would be pinpoint precision. The KLA fighters have individual identification codes for their CIA handlers. Armed with those codes, the Serbs are understood to have called in five different air strikes last Wednesday in the hope of luring Nato into bombing refugees. Two involved RAF Harrier teams. On those two occasions, the RAF pilots went below their "safe flight ceiling" of 15,000ft to obtain visual confirmation of their targets when they felt that something was not quite right. On both occasions, they aborted the bombing runs. However, on two other occasions, US pilots dropped bombs. One of these incidents, when an F16 pilot hit the lead tractor in a three-vehicle convoy, was admitted last week after 19 hours of frantic examination of cockpit video footage and at least two fumbled explanations of events. But the main incident, near Djakovica, remained a mystery until last night. The Pentagon and Nato headquarters, furious at what one officer described as "a typical CIA-sponsored spook screw-up", have been fielding awkward questions for four days without being able to tell the truth or clear their military reputation. Alliance politicians, including Tony Blair and Robin Cook, have tried unsuccessfully to spin the intelligence shambles into pinning the blame on Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic for provoking the conflict in the first place. Part of this cover-up stems from the fact that the UK and the United States both see a Western-trained and armed KLA as the proxy ground arm of their campaign and a means of avoiding the commitment of Nato ground troops and inevitable heavy casualties. There are 40,000 Serb troops, police and paramilitary volunteer units inside Kosovo, supported by an estimated 500 surviving armoured vehicles, including main battle tanks and artillery, in small groups and well camouflaged. The SAS is understood to have about 70 men guiding in allied jets and illuminating targets with laser designators. But they are thin on the ground and the province consists of more than 11,000 square miles of heavily-wooded hills and mountains. The KLA has perhaps 25,000 men under arms, scattered in small groups in the hills. The Serbs move in platoon-sized units of between 30 and 50 men, careful to hide their vehicles when they halt. Barns, monasteries and mosques have all been used to conceal the marauding armour from Nato pilots. An intelligence source said: "Milosevic must have laughed himself sick. Using CIA-supplied mobile phones to lure US pilots into doing a bit of final ethnic cleansing for him is a neat trick and a major intelligence coup. "We were probably lucky it only worked twice. It's a pity that 70-plus refugees who must have thought they were within touching distance of safety had to pay with their lives for a breach of security which could and should have been foreseen. Perhaps the CIA should realise this is not Nicaragua, where blunders could be buried without coming under the spotlight of the world's media." --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl ------Syndicate mailinglist-------------------- Syndicate network for media culture and media art information and archive: http://www.v2.nl/east/ to unsubscribe, write to <syndicate-request@aec.at> in the body of the msg: unsubscribe your@email.adress