runaway wrote:miltiades wrote:runaway wrote:miltiades wrote:runaway wrote:6 pages already and not a single word about the killings of innocent Bosniaks from the Greek side. Shameless killers.
There is no evidence of Greek participation in the killing of innocent Bosniaks. Perhaps the reason you are not receiving your prefered answer.
Just like no evidence of TC killings by GCs? Soon you will claim Bosniaks were murdered by Albanians and Macedonians.
A contingent of Greek kontraktniki was formed in March 1995 at Serb General Ratko Mladi?'s request. The Greek Volunteer Guard (GVG) rapidly became a regular fighting unit with its own insignia - a white double-headed eagle on a black background. In September 1995, four of its members received the White Eagle medal of honour from Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karad?i?. The GVG had around 100 soldiers and was based in Vlasenica near Tuzla. The GVG unit was fully integrated into the Drina Corps of the Serb Army and was led by Serb officers. Towards the end of the war in B-H, when the Bosnian Serbs attacked the UN ?safe area? of Srebrenica in August 1995, Greek kontraktniki participated in the attack and* raised the blue and white Greek flag triumphantly when the enclave fell. Over 8,000 Bosniak men and boys were massacred in Srebrenica, and General Mladi? has been indicted by the ICTY on charges related to the killings.
http://www.militaryphotos.net/forums/ar ... 12822.html
There is no evidence of Greek involvement. What the article states clearly is this "and Greek mercenaries ".
Based on this , you a man full of hate , accuses the entire Greek world of taking part in this horrid event based on the fact that some Greek fascists joined in with more Russian fascists in this sordid affair.
non-participation in NATO operations
Your talking out of your @ss. All NATO nations have contributed troops except Iceland, which has no armed forces and sent medical personnel. In December 1995, the Department of Defense published the following estimates for NATO countries: Belgium -- 1,000, including troops in Croatia; Canada -- 1,500; Denmark -- 800; France -- 7,500, plus 2.500 in regional support; Germany -- 4,000 in Croatia; Greece -- 1,000;
http://www.fas.org/man/crs/93-056.htm
Turks in Al qaeda? Heard anything about this?
http://www.ccc.nps.navy.mil/si/2008/Jul ... gJul08.asp
In early March 2008, an organization called the Islamic Jihad Union (IJU) announced on a Turkish website, that Cüneyt Çiftçi, a Turk born and living in Germany had carried out a suicide attack on American and Afghan troops in the Afghan province of Paktika. The website showed pictures of Çiftçi while training for and preparing the attack. This announcement marked the first peak of an intensive public relations campaign that the IJU began in September 2007. In April 2008, Çiftçi's video was followed by one of a German convert training in an IJU camp in Pakistan, Eric Breininger, who called for Muslims living in Germany to join the "Jihad" against the West. In a bid to gain access to new recruits and funds the organization tries to present itself on the Internet as a transnational organization with supporters in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Central Asia and Europe. Its main recruitment target, however, seem to be young Turks and Germans. This became evident after three of its members were arrested in the Sauerland town of Oberschledorn in the German state of North-Rhine Westphalia in September 2007. They were suspected of planning bomb attacks on American and possibly Uzbek targets in Germany. The planned attack in Germany sought to support the struggle of Taliban and al-Qaeda in Afghanistan by attempting to swing the German debate on extending the parliamentary mandates for the deployment of the German Army in Afghanistan (OEF and ISAF). The IJU leadership apparently calculated that high-profile attacks just before the Bundestag votes in October and November 2007 could prevent an extension and force the withdrawal of German troops. The Taliban and al-Qaeda have long regarded Germany as the weakest link in the chain of major troop providers and wanted to exploit growing criticism of the campaign in Afghanistan in the German public sphere.
The "Sauerland cell" as they were subsequently called, was part of a larger group of about 30 young Jihadists, most of them ethnic Turks living in Germany and several converts, who had radicalized for several years and partly gone to Pakistan to receive terrorist training.
http://www.ccc.nps.navy.mil/si/2008/Jul ... gJul08.asp