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Insurgency in Kosovo (1995–1998)

The Insurgency in Kosovo began in 1995, following the Dayton Agreement that ended the Bosnian War. In 1996, the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) began attacking Serbian governmental buildings and police stations. This insurgency would lead to the more intense Kosovo War in February of 1998.[1][2][3]

Insurgency in Kosovo
Part of the Yugoslav Wars and the prelude to the Kosovo War

The Socialist Autonomous Province of Kosovo, otherwise known to the Serb population as Kosovo and Metohija, highlighted in red (1945-2008).
Date27 May 1995 – 27 February 1998
(2 years and 9 months)
Location
Result Start of the Kosovo War
Belligerents
KLA

FR Yugoslavia

  • Territorial Police
Commanders and leaders
Adem Jashari
Hamëz Jashari
Sylejman Selimi
Hashim Thaçi
Zahir Pajaziti  
Slobodan Milošević
Casualties and losses
Moderate 10 policemen killed
24 civilians killed

Background

The Albanian-Serbian conflict has its roots in the expulsion of the Albanians in 1877–1878 from areas that became incorporated into the Principality of Serbia.[4][5] Animosity between these feuding factions remains strong to this day. The 1950s and 1960s were a period marked by repression and anti Albanian policies in Kosovo under Aleksandar Ranković, a Serbian communist who later fell out and was dismissed by Tito.[6][7] During this time nationalism for Kosovar Albanians became a conduit to alleviate the conditions of the time.[6] In 1968 Yugoslav Serb officials warned about rising Albanian nationalism and by November unrest and demonstrations by thousands of Albanians followed calling for Kosovo to attain republic status, an independent Albanian language university and some for unification with Albania.[8][9] Tito rewrote the Yugoslav constitution (1974) and tried to address Albanian complaints by awarding the province of Kosovo autonomy and powers such as a veto in the federal decision making process similar to that of the republics.[6][10] Kosovo functioned as a de facto republic because Kosovar Albanians attained the ability to pursue near independent foreign relations, trade and cultural links with Albania, an independent Albanian language university and Albanology institute, an Academy of Sciences and Writers association with the ability to fly the Albanian flag.[10]

Military precursors to the KLA (Kosovo Liberation Army) began in the late 1980s with armed resistance to Serb police trying to take Albanian activists in custody.[11] Prior to the KLA, its members had been part of organizations such as the National Kosovo Movement and Popular Movement for Kosovo Liberation.[12] The founders of the later KLA were involved in the 1981 protests in Kosovo. Many ethnic Albanian dissidents were arrested or moved to European countries, where they continued subversive activities. Repression of Albanian nationalism and Albanian nationalists by authorities in Belgrade strengthened the independence movement and focused international attention toward the plight of Kosovar Albanians.[13][14]

From 1991 to 1992, Albanian nationalist Adem Jashari and about 100 other ethnic Albanians wishing to fight for the independence of Kosovo underwent military training in the municipality of Labinot-Mal in Albania.[15] Afterwards, Jashari and other ethnic Albanians committed several acts of sabotage aimed at the Serbian administrative apparatus in Kosovo. Attempting to capture or kill him, Serbian police surrounded Jashari and his older brother, Hamëz, at their home in Prekaz on 30 December 1991. In the ensuing siege, large numbers of Kosovo Albanians flocked to Prekaz, forcing the Serbs to withdraw from the village.[16]

While in Albania, Jashari was arrested in 1993 by the government of Sali Berisha and sent to jail in Tirana[17] before being released alongside other Kosovo Albanian militants at the demand of the Albanian Army.[18] Jashari launched several attacks over the next several years, targeting the Yugoslav Army (VJ) and Serbian police in Kosovo.[16] In the spring of 1993, "Homeland Calls" meetings were held in Aarau, Switzerland, organized by Xhavit Halili, Azem Syla, Jashar Salihu and others.[19]

KLA strategist Xhavit Halili said that in 1993, the KLA 'considered and then rejected the IRA, PLO and ETA models'.[20] Some journalists claim that a May 1993 attack in Glogovac that left five Serbian policemen dead and two wounded was the first one carried out by the KLA.[21]

History

1995

By the early 1990s, there were attacks on Serbian police forces, and secret-service officials in retaliation for abuse and murder of Albanian civilians.[11] A Serbian policeman was killed in 1995, allegedly by the KLA.[22] Since 1995, the KLA sought to destabilize the region, hoping the United States and NATO would intervene.[23] Serbian patrols were ambushed and policemen were killed.[23] It was only in the next year that the organization of KLA took responsibility for attacks.[22]

1996–1997

The KLA, originally composed of a few hundred Albanians, attacked several police stations and wounded many police officers in 1996–1997.[24]

In 1996 the British weekly The European carried an article by a French expert stating that "German civil and military intelligence services have been involved in training and equipping the rebels with the aim of cementing German influence in the Balkan area. (...) The birth of the KLA in 1996 coincided with the appointment of Hansjoerg Geiger as the new head of the BND (German secret Service). (...) The BND men were in charge of selecting recruits for the KLA command structure from the 500,000 Kosovars in Albania."[25] Former senior adviser to the German parliament Matthias Küntzel tried to prove later on that German secret diplomacy had been instrumental in helping the KLA since its creation.[26]

 
Cemetery of Albanians killed by Serbs during the Kosovo war in Gjakova

KLA representatives met with American, British, and Swiss intelligence agencies in 1996,[23][27] and possibly "several years earlier"[27] and according to The Sunday Times, "American intelligence agents have admitted they helped to train the Kosovo Liberation Army before NATO's bombing of Yugoslavia".[28] Intelligence agents denied, however, that they were involved in arming the KLA.

In February 1996 the KLA undertook a series of attacks against police stations and Yugoslav government employees, saying that the Yugoslav authorities had killed Albanian civilians as part of an ethnic cleansing campaign.[29] Serbian authorities denounced the KLA as a terrorist organization and increased the number of security forces in the region. This had the counter-productive effect of boosting the credibility of the embryonic KLA among the Kosovo Albanian population. On 22 April 1996, four attacks on Serbian security personnel were carried out almost simultaneously in several parts of Kosovo.

In January 1997, Serbian security forces assassinated KLA commander Zahir Pajaziti and two other leaders in a highway attack between Pristina and Mitrovica, and arrested more than 100 Albanian militants.[30]

Jashari, as one of the originators and leaders of the KLA, was convicted of terrorism in absentia by a Yugoslav court on 11 July 1997. Human Rights Watch subsequently described the trial, in which fourteen other Kosovo Albanians were also convicted, as "[failing] to conform to international standards."[31]

The 1997 civil unrest in Albania enabled the KLA to acquire large amounts of weapons looted from Albanian armories.[32] A 1997 intelligence report stated that the KLA received drug trafficking proceeds, used to purchase arms.[33] The KLA received large funds from Albanian diaspora organizations. There is a possibility that among donators to the KLA were people involved in illegal activities such as drug trafficking, however insufficient evidence exists that the KLA itself was involved in such activities.[34][35][36]

1998

Months before the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, the North Atlantic Council said that the KLA was "the main initiator of the violence" and that it had "launched what appears to be a deliberate campaign of provocation".[37][38]

James Bissett, former Canadian Ambassador to Yugoslavia, Bulgaria and Albania, wrote in 2001 that media reports indicate that "as early as 1998, the Central Intelligence Agency assisted by the British Special Air Service were arming and training Kosovo Liberation Army members in Albania to foment armed rebellion in Kosovo" with the hope that "NATO could intervene (...)".[39]

Pursuing Adem Jashari for the murder of a Serb policeman, the Serbian forces again attempted to assault the Jashari compound in Prekaz on the 22nd of January, 1998.[40] With Jashari not present, thousands of Kosovo Albanians descended on Prekaz and again succeeded in pushing the Serbian forces out of the village and its surroundings. The next month, a small unit of the KLA was ambushed by Serb policemen. Four Serbs were killed and two were injured in the ensuing clashes. At dawn on the 5th of March, 1998, the KLA launched an attack against a police patrol in Prekaz,[16] which was then answered by a police operation on the Jashari compound which left 58 Albanians dead, including Jashari and the majority of his family members.[41] Four days after this, a NATO meeting was convoked, during which Madeleine Albright pushed for an anti-Serbian response.[23] NATO now threatened Serbia with a military response.[23] The Kosovo War ensued, with subsequent NATO intervention, which started after the Racak massacre was uncovered during the course of the war.

Attacks

Between 1991 and 1997, mostly in 1996–97, 39 people were killed by the KLA.[42] Attacks between 1996 and February of 1998 led to the deaths of 10 policemen and 24 civilians.[22]

The KLA launched 31 attacks in 1996, 55 in 1997, and 66 in January and February 1998.[43] After the KLA killed four policemen in early March 1998, special Serbian police units retaliated and attacked three villages in Drenica.[43] The total number of attacks by the KLA in 1998 was 1,470, compared to 66 the year before.[43] After the attacks against the Yugoslav police intensified in 1998, security increased as did the presence of Yugoslav Army personnel,[44] which led to the Kosovo War.

See also

References

  1. ^ Independent International Commission on Kosovo (2000). The Kosovo Report (PDF). Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 2. ISBN 978-0199243099. (PDF) from the original on 2022-04-11. Retrieved 2020-08-10.
  2. ^ Quackenbush, Stephen L. (2015). International Conflict: Logic and Evidence. Los Angeles: Sage. p. 202. ISBN 9781452240985. from the original on 2023-01-11. Retrieved 2020-09-24.
  3. ^ "Roots of the Insurgency in Kosovo" (PDF). June 1999. (PDF) from the original on 2021-06-25. Retrieved 2020-08-08.
  4. ^ Frantz, Eva Anne (2009). "Violence and its Impact on Loyalty and Identity Formation in Late Ottoman Kosovo: Muslims and Christians in a Period of Reform and Transformation". Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs. 29 (4): 460–461. doi:10.1080/13602000903411366. S2CID 143499467.
  5. ^ Müller, Dietmar (2009). "Orientalism and Nation: Jews and Muslims as Alterity in Southeastern Europe in the Age of Nation-States, 1878–1941". East Central Europe. 36 (1): 70. doi:10.1163/187633009x411485.
  6. ^ a b c Henry H. Perritt. Kosovo Liberation Army: The Inside Story of an Insurgency. University of Illinois Press. pp. 21–22.
  7. ^ Dejan Jović (2009). Yugoslavia: A State that Withered Away. Purdue University Press. p. 117.
  8. ^ Jasna Dragovic-Soso (9 October 2002). Saviours of the Nation: Serbia's Intellectual Opposition and the Revival of Nationalism. MQUP. p. 40.
  9. ^ Miranda Vickers (28 January 2011). The Albanians: A Modern History. I.B.Tauris. p. 192.
  10. ^ a b Jasna Dragovic-Soso (9 October 2002). Saviours of the Nation: Serbia's Intellectual Opposition and the Revival of Nationalism. MQUP. p. 116.
  11. ^ a b Henry H. Perritt (1 October 2010). Kosovo Liberation Army: The Inside Story of an Insurgency. University of Illinois Press. p. 62.
  12. ^ Shaul Shay (12 July 2017). Islamic Terror and the Balkans. Taylor & Francis. pp. 103–. ISBN 978-1-351-51138-4. from the original on 11 January 2023. Retrieved 5 January 2018.
  13. ^ Susan Fink Yoshihara (13 May 2013). Flashpoints in the War on Terrorism. Routledge. pp. 67–69.
  14. ^ Minton F. Goldman (15 January 1997). Revolution and Change in Central and Eastern Europe: Political, Economic, and Social Challenges. M.E. Sharpe. pp. 307–308.
  15. ^ Judah 2002, p. 111.
  16. ^ a b c Bartrop 2012, p. 142.
  17. ^ Pettifer & Vickers 2007, p. 113.
  18. ^ Pettifer & Vickers 2007, pp. 98–99.
  19. ^ Perritt 2008, p. 94.
  20. ^ Perritt 2008, p. 145.
  21. ^ Moore 2013, p. 120.
  22. ^ a b c Professor Peter Radan; Dr Aleksandar Pavkovic (28 April 2013). The Ashgate Research Companion to Secession. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. pp. 178–. ISBN 978-1-4094-7652-8.
  23. ^ a b c d e Marsden 2000.
  24. ^ Kushner 2002, p. 206.
  25. ^ Fallgot, Roger (1998): "How Germany Backed KLA", in The European, 21 – 27 September. pp. 21–27
  26. ^ Küntzel, Matthias (2002): Der Weg in den Krieg. Deutschland, die Nato und das Kosovo (The Road to War. Germany, Nato and Kosovo). Elefanten Press. Berlin, Germany. pp. 59–64 ISBN 3885207710.
  27. ^ a b Judah 2002, p. 120.
  28. ^ Tom Walker; Aidan Laverty (12 March 2000). "CIA aided Kosovo guerrilla army". The Sunday Times. London.
  29. ^ "Unknown Albanian 'liberation army' claims attacks". Agence France Presse. 17 February 1996.
  30. ^ Perritt 2008, pp. 44, 56.
  31. ^ Human Rights Watch 1998, p. 27.
  32. ^ A. Pavkovic (8 January 2016). The Fragmentation of Yugoslavia: Nationalism and War in the Balkans. Springer. pp. 190–. ISBN 978-0-230-28584-2.
  33. ^ Nicholas Ridley; Nick Ridley (1 January 2012). Terrorist Financing: The Failure of Counter Measures. Edward Elgar Publishing. pp. 46–. ISBN 978-0-85793-946-3.
  34. ^ Henry H. Perritt (2010). Kosovo Liberation Army: The Inside Story of an Insurgency. University of Illinois Press. pp. 88–93.
  35. ^ "U.S. Senate Republican Policy Committee". fas.org. from the original on 2020-08-11. Retrieved 2020-08-08.
  36. ^ Policraticus (2019-01-29). ""Mafia State": Kosovo's PM Accused of Running Human Organ, Drug Trafficking Cartel". POLICRATICUS. from the original on 2020-08-02. Retrieved 2020-08-08.
  37. ^ Allan, Stuart; Zelizer, Barbie (2004). Reporting war: journalism in wartime. Routledge. p. 178. ISBN 978-0-415-33998-8.
  38. ^ Hammond, Philip (2018-07-30). Framing post-Cold War conflicts: The media and international intervention. Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-1-5261-3091-4. from the original on 2022-11-30. Retrieved 2022-11-30.
  39. ^ Bissett, James (31 July 2001) "WE CREATED A MONSTER". from the original on May 10, 2008. Retrieved 2014-08-28.. Toronto Star
  40. ^ Elsie 2011, p. 142.
  41. ^ Judah 2002, p. 140.
  42. ^ James Ron (19 April 2003). Frontiers and Ghettos: State Violence in Serbia and Israel. University of California Press. pp. 98–. ISBN 978-0-520-93690-4.
  43. ^ a b c Carrie Booth Walling (1 July 2013). All Necessary Measures: The United Nations and Humanitarian Intervention. University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 156–. ISBN 978-0-8122-0847-4.
  44. ^ Mincheva & Gurr 2013, pp. 27–28.

Sources

  • Bartrop, Paul (2012). A Biographical Encyclopedia of Contemporary Genocide. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-0-313-38679-4. from the original on 2023-01-11. Retrieved 2016-09-24.
  • Elsie, Robert (2011). Historical Dictionary of Kosovo. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-7483-1. from the original on 2023-01-11. Retrieved 2022-05-18.
  • Mikael Eriksson; Roland Kostić (15 February 2013). Mediation and Liberal Peacebuilding: Peace from the Ashes of War?. Routledge. pp. 43–. ISBN 978-1-136-18916-6. from the original on 11 January 2023. Retrieved 24 September 2016.
  • Henriksen, Dag (2007). NATO's Gamble: Combining Diplomacy and Airpower in the Kosovo Crisis, 1998–1999. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-59114-358-1.
  • Human Rights Watch (1998). Humanitarian Law Violations in Kosovo. New York: Human Rights Watch. ISBN 978-1-56432-194-7. from the original on 2023-01-11. Retrieved 2016-09-24.
  • Judah, Tim (2002). Kosovo: War and Revenge. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-09725-2. from the original on 2023-01-11. Retrieved 2016-09-24.
  • Judah, Tim (2008). Kosovo: What Everyone Needs to Know. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-974103-8. from the original on 2023-01-11. Retrieved 2016-09-24.
  • Krieger, Heike (2001). The Kosovo Conflict and International Law: An Analytical Documentation 1974-1999. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521800716. Retrieved 27 February 2013.
  • Kushner, Harvey W. (4 December 2002). Encyclopedia of Terrorism. SAGE Publications. pp. 206–. ISBN 978-1-4522-6550-6.
  • Marsden, Chris (16 March 2000). "British documentary substantiates US-KLA collusion in provoking war with Serbia". WSWS. from the original on 13 September 2022. Retrieved 22 September 2016.
  • Moore, Cerwyn (2013). "The growth of the Kosovo Liberation Army". Contemporary Violence: Postmodern War in Kosovo and Chechnya. Manchester University Press. pp. 119–. ISBN 978-1-84779-328-7. from the original on 2023-01-11. Retrieved 2018-01-05.
  • Mihailović, Kosta, ed. (2006). Kosovo and Metohija: past, present, future. SANU. ISBN 9788670254299.
  • Luci, Nita; Marković, Predrag (2009). "Events and Sites of Difference: Marking Self and Other in Kosovo". In Kolstø, Pål (ed.). Media Discourse and the Yugoslav Conflicts: Representations of Self and Other. Farnham, England: Ashgate. ISBN 978-1-4094-9164-4. from the original on 2023-01-11. Retrieved 2016-09-24.
  • Mincheva, Lyubov Grigorova; Gurr, Ted Robert (2013). Crime-Terror Alliances and the State: Ethnonationalist and Islamist Challenges to Regional Security. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-50648-9. from the original on 2023-01-11. Retrieved 2022-12-27.
  • O'Neill, William G. (2002). Kosovo: An Unfinished Peace. Boulder, Colorado: Lynne Rienner Publishers. ISBN 978-1-58826-021-5. from the original on 2023-01-11. Retrieved 2016-09-24.
  • Perritt, Henry H. (2010). The Road to Independence for Kosovo: A Chronicle of the Ahtisaari Plan. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-11624-4. from the original on 2023-01-11. Retrieved 2016-09-24.
  • Perritt, Henry H. (2008). Kosovo Liberation Army: The Inside Story of an Insurgency. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-09213-8.
  • Petersen, Roger D. (2011). Western Intervention in the Balkans: The Strategic Use of Emotion in Conflict. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-50330-3. from the original on 2023-01-11. Retrieved 2016-09-24.
  • Pettifer, James (2005). Kosova Express: A Journey in Wartime. Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0-299-20444-0.
  • Pettifer, James; Vickers, Miranda (2007). The Albanian Question: Reshaping the Balkans. New York: I.B. Tauris. ISBN 978-1-86064-974-5. from the original on 2023-01-11. Retrieved 2016-09-24.
  • Philips, David L. (2012). Liberating Kosovo: Coercive Diplomacy and U.S. Intervention. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-30512-9. from the original on 2023-01-11. Retrieved 2016-09-24.
  • Watson, Paul (2009). Where War Lives. Toronto: McCleland & Stewart. ISBN 978-1-55199-284-6. from the original on 2023-01-11. Retrieved 2016-09-24.

Further reading

  • Jana Arsovska (6 February 2015). Decoding Albanian Organized Crime: Culture, Politics, and Globalization. Univ of California Press. pp. 44–. ISBN 978-0-520-28280-3.
  • Stevanović, Obrad M. (2015). "Efekti albanskog terorizma na Kosovu i Metohiji". Zbornik Radova Filozofskog Fakulteta u Prištini. 45 (1): 143–166. doi:10.5937/zrffp45-7341.
  • Clément, Sophia. Conflict prevention in the Balkans: case studies of Kosovo and the FYR of Macedonia. Institute for Security Studies, Western European Union, 1997.
  • Kostovičová, Denisa. Parallel worlds: Response of Kosovo Albanians to loss of autonomy in Serbia, 1989–1996. Wolfson College, University of Cambridge, 1996.
  • Phillips, David L. "Comprehensive Peace in the Balkans: the Kosovo question." Human Rights Quarterly 18.4 (1996): 821–832.
  • Athanassopoulou, Ekavi. "Hoping for the best, Planning for the worst: Conflict in KOSovo." The World Today (1996): 226–229.
  • Simic, Predrag. "The Kosovo and Metohija Problem and Regional Security in the Balkans." Kosovo: Avoiding Another Balkan War (1996): 195.
  • Veremēs, Thanos, and Euangelos Kōphos, eds. Kosovo: avoiding another Balkan war. Hellenic, 1998.
  • Triantaphyllou, Dimitrios. "Kosovo today: Is there no way out of the deadlock?." European Security 5.2 (1996): 279–302.
  • Troebst, Stefan, and Alexander: Festschrift Langer. Conflict in Kosovo: failure of prevention?: an analytical documentation, 1992–1998. Vol. 1. Flensburg: European Centre for Minority Issues, 1998.
  • Heraclides, Alexis. "The Kosovo Conflict and Its Resolution: In Pursuit of Ariadne's Thread." Security Dialogue 28.3 (1997): 317–331.

External links

  • Mark Bromley (2007). (PDF) (Report). Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-04-15. Retrieved 2014-08-28.

insurgency, kosovo, 1995, 1998, insurgency, kosovo, began, 1995, following, dayton, agreement, that, ended, bosnian, 1996, kosovo, liberation, army, began, attacking, serbian, governmental, buildings, police, stations, this, insurgency, would, lead, more, inte. The Insurgency in Kosovo began in 1995 following the Dayton Agreement that ended the Bosnian War In 1996 the Kosovo Liberation Army KLA began attacking Serbian governmental buildings and police stations This insurgency would lead to the more intense Kosovo War in February of 1998 1 2 3 Insurgency in KosovoPart of the Yugoslav Wars and the prelude to the Kosovo WarThe Socialist Autonomous Province of Kosovo otherwise known to the Serb population as Kosovo and Metohija highlighted in red 1945 2008 Date27 May 1995 27 February 1998 2 years and 9 months LocationAP Kosovo and Metohija R Serbia FR YugoslaviaResultStart of the Kosovo WarBelligerentsKLAFR Yugoslavia Territorial PoliceCommanders and leadersAdem Jashari Hamez Jashari Sylejman Selimi Hashim Thaci Zahir Pajaziti Slobodan MilosevicCasualties and lossesModerate10 policemen killed24 civilians killed Contents 1 Background 2 History 2 1 1995 2 2 1996 1997 2 3 1998 3 Attacks 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Sources 6 Further reading 7 External linksBackground EditSee also 1981 protests in Kosovo and Anti bureaucratic revolution The Albanian Serbian conflict has its roots in the expulsion of the Albanians in 1877 1878 from areas that became incorporated into the Principality of Serbia 4 5 Animosity between these feuding factions remains strong to this day The 1950s and 1960s were a period marked by repression and anti Albanian policies in Kosovo under Aleksandar Rankovic a Serbian communist who later fell out and was dismissed by Tito 6 7 During this time nationalism for Kosovar Albanians became a conduit to alleviate the conditions of the time 6 In 1968 Yugoslav Serb officials warned about rising Albanian nationalism and by November unrest and demonstrations by thousands of Albanians followed calling for Kosovo to attain republic status an independent Albanian language university and some for unification with Albania 8 9 Tito rewrote the Yugoslav constitution 1974 and tried to address Albanian complaints by awarding the province of Kosovo autonomy and powers such as a veto in the federal decision making process similar to that of the republics 6 10 Kosovo functioned as a de facto republic because Kosovar Albanians attained the ability to pursue near independent foreign relations trade and cultural links with Albania an independent Albanian language university and Albanology institute an Academy of Sciences and Writers association with the ability to fly the Albanian flag 10 Military precursors to the KLA Kosovo Liberation Army began in the late 1980s with armed resistance to Serb police trying to take Albanian activists in custody 11 Prior to the KLA its members had been part of organizations such as the National Kosovo Movement and Popular Movement for Kosovo Liberation 12 The founders of the later KLA were involved in the 1981 protests in Kosovo Many ethnic Albanian dissidents were arrested or moved to European countries where they continued subversive activities Repression of Albanian nationalism and Albanian nationalists by authorities in Belgrade strengthened the independence movement and focused international attention toward the plight of Kosovar Albanians 13 14 From 1991 to 1992 Albanian nationalist Adem Jashari and about 100 other ethnic Albanians wishing to fight for the independence of Kosovo underwent military training in the municipality of Labinot Mal in Albania 15 Afterwards Jashari and other ethnic Albanians committed several acts of sabotage aimed at the Serbian administrative apparatus in Kosovo Attempting to capture or kill him Serbian police surrounded Jashari and his older brother Hamez at their home in Prekaz on 30 December 1991 In the ensuing siege large numbers of Kosovo Albanians flocked to Prekaz forcing the Serbs to withdraw from the village 16 While in Albania Jashari was arrested in 1993 by the government of Sali Berisha and sent to jail in Tirana 17 before being released alongside other Kosovo Albanian militants at the demand of the Albanian Army 18 Jashari launched several attacks over the next several years targeting the Yugoslav Army VJ and Serbian police in Kosovo 16 In the spring of 1993 Homeland Calls meetings were held in Aarau Switzerland organized by Xhavit Halili Azem Syla Jashar Salihu and others 19 KLA strategist Xhavit Halili said that in 1993 the KLA considered and then rejected the IRA PLO and ETA models 20 Some journalists claim that a May 1993 attack in Glogovac that left five Serbian policemen dead and two wounded was the first one carried out by the KLA 21 History Edit1995 Edit By the early 1990s there were attacks on Serbian police forces and secret service officials in retaliation for abuse and murder of Albanian civilians 11 A Serbian policeman was killed in 1995 allegedly by the KLA 22 Since 1995 the KLA sought to destabilize the region hoping the United States and NATO would intervene 23 Serbian patrols were ambushed and policemen were killed 23 It was only in the next year that the organization of KLA took responsibility for attacks 22 1996 1997 Edit The KLA originally composed of a few hundred Albanians attacked several police stations and wounded many police officers in 1996 1997 24 In 1996 the British weekly The European carried an article by a French expert stating that German civil and military intelligence services have been involved in training and equipping the rebels with the aim of cementing German influence in the Balkan area The birth of the KLA in 1996 coincided with the appointment of Hansjoerg Geiger as the new head of the BND German secret Service The BND men were in charge of selecting recruits for the KLA command structure from the 500 000 Kosovars in Albania 25 Former senior adviser to the German parliament Matthias Kuntzel tried to prove later on that German secret diplomacy had been instrumental in helping the KLA since its creation 26 Cemetery of Albanians killed by Serbs during the Kosovo war in Gjakova KLA representatives met with American British and Swiss intelligence agencies in 1996 23 27 and possibly several years earlier 27 and according to The Sunday Times American intelligence agents have admitted they helped to train the Kosovo Liberation Army before NATO s bombing of Yugoslavia 28 Intelligence agents denied however that they were involved in arming the KLA In February 1996 the KLA undertook a series of attacks against police stations and Yugoslav government employees saying that the Yugoslav authorities had killed Albanian civilians as part of an ethnic cleansing campaign 29 Serbian authorities denounced the KLA as a terrorist organization and increased the number of security forces in the region This had the counter productive effect of boosting the credibility of the embryonic KLA among the Kosovo Albanian population On 22 April 1996 four attacks on Serbian security personnel were carried out almost simultaneously in several parts of Kosovo In January 1997 Serbian security forces assassinated KLA commander Zahir Pajaziti and two other leaders in a highway attack between Pristina and Mitrovica and arrested more than 100 Albanian militants 30 Jashari as one of the originators and leaders of the KLA was convicted of terrorism in absentia by a Yugoslav court on 11 July 1997 Human Rights Watch subsequently described the trial in which fourteen other Kosovo Albanians were also convicted as failing to conform to international standards 31 The 1997 civil unrest in Albania enabled the KLA to acquire large amounts of weapons looted from Albanian armories 32 A 1997 intelligence report stated that the KLA received drug trafficking proceeds used to purchase arms 33 The KLA received large funds from Albanian diaspora organizations There is a possibility that among donators to the KLA were people involved in illegal activities such as drug trafficking however insufficient evidence exists that the KLA itself was involved in such activities 34 35 36 1998 Edit Months before the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia the North Atlantic Council said that the KLA was the main initiator of the violence and that it had launched what appears to be a deliberate campaign of provocation 37 38 James Bissett former Canadian Ambassador to Yugoslavia Bulgaria and Albania wrote in 2001 that media reports indicate that as early as 1998 the Central Intelligence Agency assisted by the British Special Air Service were arming and training Kosovo Liberation Army members in Albania to foment armed rebellion in Kosovo with the hope that NATO could intervene 39 Pursuing Adem Jashari for the murder of a Serb policeman the Serbian forces again attempted to assault the Jashari compound in Prekaz on the 22nd of January 1998 40 With Jashari not present thousands of Kosovo Albanians descended on Prekaz and again succeeded in pushing the Serbian forces out of the village and its surroundings The next month a small unit of the KLA was ambushed by Serb policemen Four Serbs were killed and two were injured in the ensuing clashes At dawn on the 5th of March 1998 the KLA launched an attack against a police patrol in Prekaz 16 which was then answered by a police operation on the Jashari compound which left 58 Albanians dead including Jashari and the majority of his family members 41 Four days after this a NATO meeting was convoked during which Madeleine Albright pushed for an anti Serbian response 23 NATO now threatened Serbia with a military response 23 The Kosovo War ensued with subsequent NATO intervention which started after the Racak massacre was uncovered during the course of the war Attacks EditBetween 1991 and 1997 mostly in 1996 97 39 people were killed by the KLA 42 Attacks between 1996 and February of 1998 led to the deaths of 10 policemen and 24 civilians 22 The KLA launched 31 attacks in 1996 55 in 1997 and 66 in January and February 1998 43 After the KLA killed four policemen in early March 1998 special Serbian police units retaliated and attacked three villages in Drenica 43 The total number of attacks by the KLA in 1998 was 1 470 compared to 66 the year before 43 After the attacks against the Yugoslav police intensified in 1998 security increased as did the presence of Yugoslav Army personnel 44 which led to the Kosovo War See also EditHistory of KosovoReferences Edit Independent International Commission on Kosovo 2000 The Kosovo Report PDF Oxford Oxford University Press p 2 ISBN 978 0199243099 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 04 11 Retrieved 2020 08 10 Quackenbush Stephen L 2015 International Conflict Logic and Evidence Los Angeles Sage p 202 ISBN 9781452240985 Archived from the original on 2023 01 11 Retrieved 2020 09 24 Roots of the Insurgency in Kosovo PDF June 1999 Archived PDF from the original on 2021 06 25 Retrieved 2020 08 08 Frantz Eva Anne 2009 Violence and its Impact on Loyalty and Identity Formation in Late Ottoman Kosovo Muslims and Christians in a Period of Reform and Transformation Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs 29 4 460 461 doi 10 1080 13602000903411366 S2CID 143499467 Muller Dietmar 2009 Orientalism and Nation Jews and Muslims as Alterity in Southeastern Europe in the Age of Nation States 1878 1941 East Central Europe 36 1 70 doi 10 1163 187633009x411485 a b c Henry H Perritt Kosovo Liberation Army The Inside Story of an Insurgency University of Illinois Press pp 21 22 Dejan Jovic 2009 Yugoslavia A State that Withered Away Purdue University Press p 117 Jasna Dragovic Soso 9 October 2002 Saviours of the Nation Serbia s Intellectual Opposition and the Revival of Nationalism MQUP p 40 Miranda Vickers 28 January 2011 The Albanians A Modern History I B Tauris p 192 a b Jasna Dragovic Soso 9 October 2002 Saviours of the Nation Serbia s Intellectual Opposition and the Revival of Nationalism MQUP p 116 a b Henry H Perritt 1 October 2010 Kosovo Liberation Army The Inside Story of an Insurgency University of Illinois Press p 62 Shaul Shay 12 July 2017 Islamic Terror and the Balkans Taylor amp Francis pp 103 ISBN 978 1 351 51138 4 Archived from the original on 11 January 2023 Retrieved 5 January 2018 Susan Fink Yoshihara 13 May 2013 Flashpoints in the War on Terrorism Routledge pp 67 69 Minton F Goldman 15 January 1997 Revolution and Change in Central and Eastern Europe Political Economic and Social Challenges M E Sharpe pp 307 308 Judah 2002 p 111 a b c Bartrop 2012 p 142 Pettifer amp Vickers 2007 p 113 Pettifer amp Vickers 2007 pp 98 99 Perritt 2008 p 94 Perritt 2008 p 145 Moore 2013 p 120 a b c Professor Peter Radan Dr Aleksandar Pavkovic 28 April 2013 The Ashgate Research Companion to Secession Ashgate Publishing Ltd pp 178 ISBN 978 1 4094 7652 8 a b c d e Marsden 2000 Kushner 2002 p 206 Fallgot Roger 1998 How Germany Backed KLA in The European 21 27 September pp 21 27 Kuntzel Matthias 2002 Der Weg in den Krieg Deutschland die Nato und das Kosovo The Road to War Germany Nato and Kosovo Elefanten Press Berlin Germany pp 59 64 ISBN 3885207710 a b Judah 2002 p 120 Tom Walker Aidan Laverty 12 March 2000 CIA aided Kosovo guerrilla army The Sunday Times London Unknown Albanian liberation army claims attacks Agence France Presse 17 February 1996 Perritt 2008 pp 44 56 Human Rights Watch 1998 p 27 A Pavkovic 8 January 2016 The Fragmentation of Yugoslavia Nationalism and War in the Balkans Springer pp 190 ISBN 978 0 230 28584 2 Nicholas Ridley Nick Ridley 1 January 2012 Terrorist Financing The Failure of Counter Measures Edward Elgar Publishing pp 46 ISBN 978 0 85793 946 3 Henry H Perritt 2010 Kosovo Liberation Army The Inside Story of an Insurgency University of Illinois Press pp 88 93 U S Senate Republican Policy Committee fas org Archived from the original on 2020 08 11 Retrieved 2020 08 08 Policraticus 2019 01 29 Mafia State Kosovo s PM Accused of Running Human Organ Drug Trafficking Cartel POLICRATICUS Archived from the original on 2020 08 02 Retrieved 2020 08 08 Allan Stuart Zelizer Barbie 2004 Reporting war journalism in wartime Routledge p 178 ISBN 978 0 415 33998 8 Hammond Philip 2018 07 30 Framing post Cold War conflicts The media and international intervention Manchester University Press ISBN 978 1 5261 3091 4 Archived from the original on 2022 11 30 Retrieved 2022 11 30 Bissett James 31 July 2001 WE CREATED A MONSTER Archived from the original on May 10 2008 Retrieved 2014 08 28 Toronto Star Elsie 2011 p 142 Judah 2002 p 140 James Ron 19 April 2003 Frontiers and Ghettos State Violence in Serbia and Israel University of California Press pp 98 ISBN 978 0 520 93690 4 a b c Carrie Booth Walling 1 July 2013 All Necessary Measures The United Nations and Humanitarian Intervention University of Pennsylvania Press pp 156 ISBN 978 0 8122 0847 4 Mincheva amp Gurr 2013 pp 27 28 Sources Edit Bartrop Paul 2012 A Biographical Encyclopedia of Contemporary Genocide Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 38679 4 Archived from the original on 2023 01 11 Retrieved 2016 09 24 Elsie Robert 2011 Historical Dictionary of Kosovo Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 7483 1 Archived from the original on 2023 01 11 Retrieved 2022 05 18 Mikael Eriksson Roland Kostic 15 February 2013 Mediation and Liberal Peacebuilding Peace from the Ashes of War Routledge pp 43 ISBN 978 1 136 18916 6 Archived from the original on 11 January 2023 Retrieved 24 September 2016 Henriksen Dag 2007 NATO s Gamble Combining Diplomacy and Airpower in the Kosovo Crisis 1998 1999 Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 59114 358 1 Human Rights Watch 1998 Humanitarian Law Violations in Kosovo New York Human Rights Watch ISBN 978 1 56432 194 7 Archived from the original on 2023 01 11 Retrieved 2016 09 24 Judah Tim 2002 Kosovo War and Revenge New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 09725 2 Archived from the original on 2023 01 11 Retrieved 2016 09 24 Judah Tim 2008 Kosovo What Everyone Needs to Know New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 974103 8 Archived from the original on 2023 01 11 Retrieved 2016 09 24 Krieger Heike 2001 The Kosovo Conflict and International Law An Analytical Documentation 1974 1999 Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521800716 Retrieved 27 February 2013 Kushner Harvey W 4 December 2002 Encyclopedia of Terrorism SAGE Publications pp 206 ISBN 978 1 4522 6550 6 Marsden Chris 16 March 2000 British documentary substantiates US KLA collusion in provoking war with Serbia WSWS Archived from the original on 13 September 2022 Retrieved 22 September 2016 Moore Cerwyn 2013 The growth of the Kosovo Liberation Army Contemporary Violence Postmodern War in Kosovo and Chechnya Manchester University Press pp 119 ISBN 978 1 84779 328 7 Archived from the original on 2023 01 11 Retrieved 2018 01 05 Mihailovic Kosta ed 2006 Kosovo and Metohija past present future SANU ISBN 9788670254299 Luci Nita Markovic Predrag 2009 Events and Sites of Difference Marking Self and Other in Kosovo In Kolsto Pal ed Media Discourse and the Yugoslav Conflicts Representations of Self and Other Farnham England Ashgate ISBN 978 1 4094 9164 4 Archived from the original on 2023 01 11 Retrieved 2016 09 24 Mincheva Lyubov Grigorova Gurr Ted Robert 2013 Crime Terror Alliances and the State Ethnonationalist and Islamist Challenges to Regional Security Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 50648 9 Archived from the original on 2023 01 11 Retrieved 2022 12 27 O Neill William G 2002 Kosovo An Unfinished Peace Boulder Colorado Lynne Rienner Publishers ISBN 978 1 58826 021 5 Archived from the original on 2023 01 11 Retrieved 2016 09 24 Perritt Henry H 2010 The Road to Independence for Kosovo A Chronicle of the Ahtisaari Plan New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 11624 4 Archived from the original on 2023 01 11 Retrieved 2016 09 24 Perritt Henry H 2008 Kosovo Liberation Army The Inside Story of an Insurgency University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 09213 8 Petersen Roger D 2011 Western Intervention in the Balkans The Strategic Use of Emotion in Conflict New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 50330 3 Archived from the original on 2023 01 11 Retrieved 2016 09 24 Pettifer James 2005 Kosova Express A Journey in Wartime Madison Wisconsin University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 978 0 299 20444 0 Pettifer James Vickers Miranda 2007 The Albanian Question Reshaping the Balkans New York I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 86064 974 5 Archived from the original on 2023 01 11 Retrieved 2016 09 24 Philips David L 2012 Liberating Kosovo Coercive Diplomacy and U S Intervention Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 30512 9 Archived from the original on 2023 01 11 Retrieved 2016 09 24 Watson Paul 2009 Where War Lives Toronto McCleland amp Stewart ISBN 978 1 55199 284 6 Archived from the original on 2023 01 11 Retrieved 2016 09 24 Further reading EditJana Arsovska 6 February 2015 Decoding Albanian Organized Crime Culture Politics and Globalization Univ of California Press pp 44 ISBN 978 0 520 28280 3 Stevanovic Obrad M 2015 Efekti albanskog terorizma na Kosovu i Metohiji Zbornik Radova Filozofskog Fakulteta u Pristini 45 1 143 166 doi 10 5937 zrffp45 7341 Clement Sophia Conflict prevention in the Balkans case studies of Kosovo and the FYR of Macedonia Institute for Security Studies Western European Union 1997 Kostovicova Denisa Parallel worlds Response of Kosovo Albanians to loss of autonomy in Serbia 1989 1996 Wolfson College University of Cambridge 1996 Phillips David L Comprehensive Peace in the Balkans the Kosovo question Human Rights Quarterly 18 4 1996 821 832 Athanassopoulou Ekavi Hoping for the best Planning for the worst Conflict in KOSovo The World Today 1996 226 229 Simic Predrag The Kosovo and Metohija Problem and Regional Security in the Balkans Kosovo Avoiding Another Balkan War 1996 195 Veremes Thanos and Euangelos Kōphos eds Kosovo avoiding another Balkan war Hellenic 1998 Triantaphyllou Dimitrios Kosovo today Is there no way out of the deadlock European Security 5 2 1996 279 302 Troebst Stefan and Alexander Festschrift Langer Conflict in Kosovo failure of prevention an analytical documentation 1992 1998 Vol 1 Flensburg European Centre for Minority Issues 1998 Heraclides Alexis The Kosovo Conflict and Its Resolution In Pursuit of Ariadne s Thread Security Dialogue 28 3 1997 317 331 External links EditMark Bromley 2007 Case study Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1998 2001 PDF Report Stockholm International Peace Research Institute Archived from the original PDF on 2016 04 15 Retrieved 2014 08 28 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Insurgency in Kosovo 1995 1998 amp oldid 1134643734, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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