Which explains all those Balkan muslim names on the lists of Gitmo prisoners or held locally by our forces in Afghanistan or Iraq.
Well, it would were there any Balkan muslims in Gitmo or showing up in Iraq or Afghanistan, but they're not, Tom, because you're simply FOS and making your "facts" up as you go along.
To wit: List of Individuals Detained by the DoD at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, through May 15, 2006
0 Bosnians, 0 Albanians, 0 Macedonians.
And in Iraq? The Balkan muslims are so underrepresented they don't even rate mention in the various analyses of foreign fighters killed or captured that appear every now and then in the news or from groups tracking the issue.
Just as an example, the CSIS report "Iraq's Evolving Insurgency and the Risk of Civil War" 4/20/06
Number and National Origin of Foreign Volunteers
No one knows where most of the foreign volunteers present in Iraq at any given time have come from. The mix seems to vary constantly, and estimates differ from source to source. For example, the US military reported 375 foreigners so far had been detained in Iraq in 2005 as of late October. The percentage of foreign detainees was only a little over 4% in early 2005, and had actually dropped by the end of 2005. Among those detained were: 78 Egyptians; 66 Syrians; 41 Sudanese; 32 Saudis; 17 Jordanians; 13 Iranians; 2 Britons; and one each from France, Israel, Ireland, and the United States. p 198
In summary, you, and your posts, are nothing but a source of inane disinformation.
NY Times, July 21, 1995, page A8 -- Bosnian government soldiers from the enclave of Srebrenica which fell to the Serbs last week, stopped for a rest Wednesday near the government held town of Kalesija. The soldiers trekked for days through Serb-held territory, carrying their wounded.