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To: ma bell
The world have begun realizing the Serbian right to fight islam.

No, it hasn't, because the Serb version of "fighting Islam" includes rape, theft, mayhem and murder.

Talk all the trash you want, but Serbia is still in the doghouse over what it did in the 1990's, shall remain there until it starts to address that legacy.

Conjure up your grandeur fantasies.

All I've ever done on the matter of your service in the VRS is remind you of your own posts. You screwed yourself, Z-man. Nobody to blame but that dude in your mirror.

28 posted on 02/19/2006 2:09:54 PM PST by Hoplite
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To: Hoplite
Many of those mass rapes, cleansing etc...were later proven false. Mayhem is part of war, that is what we do as soldiers/Marines etc...fighting causes mayhem. Depends how you define mayhem.

Murder is another way of saying you killed a combatent. Depends how you define murder, ehh? Your pals on the other forum say it is murder, so which LFer are you on there, Rusalka? Again, you failed to answer my questions I pose to you. Whaddya know, i found this on your site:

Bosnian Police: 250 Arab Muslims Being Monitored

SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP)--Bosnian authorities have placed up to 250 Arab Muslims who fought in Bosnia's 1992-95 war under surveillance on suspicion that they may have terrorist links, a top police official said Thursday. 

Zlatko Miletic, director of police for the Muslim-Croat part of Bosnia, told reporters the suspects all lived in or around the northeastern village of Gornja Maoca, where they settled after the war. Miletic said the Muslims were among 740 who obtained Bosnian passports during or just after the war, and that the names of nine men appeared on Egypt's list of most-wanted terrorist suspects. 

He declined to identify the nine, and said Bosnian authorities couldn't be certain they were still in the country. 

Police are keeping close tabs on Gornja Maoca's Muslims, and believe some have direct or indirect links to international terrorism, Miletic said. Some of the 250 under surveillance were suspected of involvement in the illegal smuggling of explosives, he said, but would not elaborate. 

Several thousand mujahedeen, or Islamic fighters, came to Bosnia to fight on the Muslim side against Serbs and Croats after Bosnia dissolved into ethnic conflict in the early 1990s. 

Bosnian authorities have stepped up their monitoring of fundamentalist Islamic groups and individuals since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the U.S. 

In October, police in Sarajevo raided an apartment and arrested two men after seizing plastic explosives, a suicide belt and a videotape in which a masked man begged Allah's forgiveness for the sacrifice the group was about to commit. More suspects were arrested in Bosnia, the U.K. and Denmark in what authorities said was a terrorist cell plotting an attack on a European embassy. 
 
 

February 16, 2006 08:14 ET (13:14 GMT)


29 posted on 02/19/2006 2:20:33 PM PST by ma bell ("Take me to the Brig. I want to see the "real Marines". Major General Chesty Puller, USMC)
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To: Hoplite
you can find this guy went to Bosnia to fight for an islamic world...yet, it is the Serbs who were fighting islam when it was not cool
30 posted on 02/19/2006 2:24:51 PM PST by ma bell ("Take me to the Brig. I want to see the "real Marines". Major General Chesty Puller, USMC)
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To: Hoplite
hmmmm...retaliatory reasons enough, mr magoo, for the Serbian Army to retake Zepa and Srebrenica from the death camp run by the muslim terrorists holding that town? The vise grip the mujuas held on Gorazde were broken by Serbian aggressive tactics and the people of Gorazde were thankful and were allowed to finally leave by their own accord. Now, under the auspicies of Sir General Michael Rose's UNPROFOR units.

Oric Video to Remain as Evidence
(TU No 440, 17-Feb-06)

Judges presiding over the trial of Srebrenica-based Bosnian army commander Naser Oric have denied the defence’s request to appeal against a decision that a controversial video interview with the accused will not be removed from evidence.

The defence complained that the interview with Oric, which was filmed by investigators from the Office of the Prosecutor in Sarajevo in April and May 2001, is unreliable because of translation flaws and inaccuracies in the English transcript. However, trial judges ruled last week that the video would still be included in the case against the accused.

Oric is charged with leading Bosnian Muslim combatants in attacks on over 50 Serb villages in eastern Bosnia in 1992 and 1993.

31 posted on 02/19/2006 2:41:01 PM PST by ma bell ("Take me to the Brig. I want to see the "real Marines". Major General Chesty Puller, USMC)
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