Kosovo country
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Related entities (most co-mentioned)
Bosniacountry · 4U.S. State Departmentorganization · 4Croatiacountry · 3Serbiacountry · 3Albaniacountry · 2Belgradeplace · 2Haiticountry · 2Somaliacountry · 2Yugoslaviacountry · 2Colombiacountry · 2Balkansplace · 2DynCorporganization · 1South Africacountry · 1Philippinescountry · 1U.S. Armyorganization · 1DEAintelligence service · 1Vietnamcountry · 1Italycountry · 1Montenegrocountry · 1Internews Networkorganization · 1Francecountry · 1Eastern Soviet Unionplace · 1North Atlantic Treaty Organizationorganization · 1Afghanistancountry · 1
Claims (4)
United States intervened_in
Kosovo book_quoted
“happened elsewhere. In 1998, the U.S. intervened in Kosovo on behalf of the Kosovo Liberation Army, which earlier the State Department had designated as a drug-financed terrorist force. Gosh, that sounds so familiar, like what we just did i…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner Drugs, Oil, and War Part 2 @ 49:16
Bill Clinton carried_out_attack
Kosovo host_asserted
“Thousands and thousands of Albanians are now being found in caves, and they've all been killed by these Serbs. And it's a matter of genocide. We have to go in there. We have to bomb the living SH out of them. And so that occurred, of course…”
▶ The Colonel's Corner Interview w_Paul Williams author of Operation Gladio @ 1:21:35
United States carried_out_attack
Kosovo host_asserted
“And then implicating the worse it gets, the more military people they want down there. So then we have more dead bodies of American military. This practice of outsourcing sensitive work to the same corporations was practiced earlier in Croa…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner Drugs, Oil and War Part 8 @ 37:53
Amnesty International spied_on
Kosovo guest_asserted
“Amnesty International has went in and documented much of these atrocities, but they are only used when they support the regime and they are sidelined when they don't. As a matter of fact, Amnesty International was where I went to do the res…”
▶ Operation Gladio Greece 1964-1974 @ 43:28
Mentions (19)
▶ 52:06
as vice president for programs after six years with the U.S. Agency for International Development. Yeah, that was her follow-on assignment. Yep, she worked for USAID, and now she's getting money from the U.S. Which is CIA, and then she work…
▶ 1:38:23
The second largest one we've found so far is Colombia. They have about 20,000. But knowing and understanding this program makes everything going on right now completely different. Matthew, go ahead. Yeah. Hi. How are you all doing? I've bee…
▶ 43:28
Amnesty International has went in and documented much of these atrocities, but they are only used when they support the regime and they are sidelined when they don't. As a matter of fact, Amnesty International was where I went to do the res…
▶ 21:06
Where's his name again? Barnett, Thomas Barnett, wrote called The Pentagon's New Map. It was published in 2004. I will find that and post it later if Bridget doesn't beat me to it during the course of the show. But another bullet point, the…
▶ 54:30
is a U.S. ambassador. His background includes ambassadorships in the Philippines, Bolivia, and Colombia. He also was a U.S. mission to Kosovo. He, in his Washington, D.C. State Department role,…
▶ 30:47
Laos, and Afghanistan. There, the CIA developed armed and equipped proxy armies whose chief sources of financing was unambiguously drugs. Americans appear to have played a similar role in Azerbaijan, Kosovo, and other places. But even close…
▶ 7:02
Such a study might help us determine why the CIA has repeatedly allied itself with key drug trafficking elements in Europe, Afghanistan, East, Middle East, Latin America, and elsewhere, most recently in Kosovo, Colombia, and Afghanistan. Th…
▶ 49:16
happened elsewhere. In 1998, the U.S. intervened in Kosovo on behalf of the Kosovo Liberation Army, which earlier the State Department had designated as a drug-financed terrorist force. Gosh, that sounds so familiar, like what we just did i…
▶ 37:53
And then implicating the worse it gets, the more military people they want down there. So then we have more dead bodies of American military. This practice of outsourcing sensitive work to the same corporations was practiced earlier in Croa…
▶ 41:47
Plan Colombia had been a similar bonanza for the Pentagon's outsourcing training teams with firms like DynCorp and MPRI. Both corporations have a history of airlift and training contracts for the U.S. from Korea to Croatia, Bosnia, and Koso…
▶ 1:04:14
How? Why? Why? Why? Why? And he possesses weapons of mass destruction. Another false flag. So we go in there and we destroy Iraq. Then after that, you have reports throughout the New York Times, the Washington Post, newspapers I wrote for, …
▶ 1:21:08
At that time, during the 1990s, when we were bombing the delights out of Kosovo and places like that, we were killing thousands and thousands and thousands of Christian Serbs. And under the guise that, hey, guess what? The Serbs have initia…
▶ 44:54
when he was confronted. It's a hilarious video. Amid all the angst, the CIA operations had to go on, the most important remaining in Bosnia. Agency planners discovered that they had just four officers who spoke Croatian. H.K. Roy was one of…
▶ 49:10
tail end of the predator, or the military does it for them, like with the U-2. That's just blatant bullshit. The intelligence support team worked in Bosnia for a long time. Some variant of it continued for decades. New intelligence teams be…
▶ 31:55
Photography. The issue became more than theoretical a year later when the U.S. fought a brief war in the Serb Republic of Kosovo. Tenet made progress on that front, but much of it was wiped away by the intelligence snafu of bombing the Chin…
▶ 36:56
Kellogg, Brown, and Root contractors were dispatched to Bosnia, Kosovo, Macedonia, Albania, Hungary, Croatia, Greece, Italy, Somalia, Zaire, Haiti, a large swath of Southwest Asia, all to support U.S. Army operations. The Balkans, on the wh…
▶ 1:17:01
the search and rescue teams and a whole bunch of the special operators, but they were actually in Italy. They. I'm going to have to push back on that because I actually know of a special forces group that was in there. I know someone person…
▶ 14:49
Thinking about the war now and occupations later is not an acceptable solution. Consistent with this reasoning, Army Chief of Staff General Eric Shinseki said in February 2003 that to occupy Iraq would require several hundred thousand soldi…
▶ 19:58
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, it was hard to justify American taxpayers or even Europeans focusing on independence to support NATO. For Washington and the influential U.S. military-industrial complex, such independence is taboo. T…