The creation of an Albanian Kosovo is troubling for a few reasons;
Kosovo is the equivalent of the Alamo for Texans. The Alamo is the heart and soul of Texas and to give it to Mexico because the majority of people living in San Antonio are Mexican, wouldn't sit well with Texans, much less the rest of the U.S..
However, this is exactly what the "One World Government / UN" is attempting to do in the case of Kosovo.
Another troubling aspect is the fact that Albanian's are Muslim with close ties to Al Qaeda. In fact Osama Bin Laden and company fought in the last war for Kosovo back in 1999 with neo-con / Israeli support. An important connection prior to 911, that has been largely overlooked by most "tRUTH seekers".
The creation of another "terrorist" state at the expense of Christian Serbia, doesn't make a lot of sense unless the goal is to perpetuate unrest in the region and destroy the national identity of Serbians.
If that is the case, then we see a line of continuity with the policies that have been enacted in the West; Multiculturalism, diversity, affirmative action, open borders, gay marriage, hate speech laws, etc.
These seemingly unrelated policies that have been promoted and made law across Europe and North America have one thing in common;
They have the net effect of destroying the national sovereignty of the host country and annihilating the traditions, religion, culture and ethnic pride of the White race, culminating in the destruction of Western Civilization to make way for a one world government.
What's happening in Serbia could happen in the Southwest United States in a few years, when Mexicans become the majority race and decide it's time to become independent and take back "their" country from the "gringo".
Of course by then the U.N and the rest of the "One World Government" will give the Mexicans their blessing and send in U.N. troops to help them secure their independence.
Do you think it couldn't happen here? That's what the Serbians thought too.
Forward With Intensity,
Peter Schaenk
Peacekeepers battle Serbs in Kosovo
Serb demonstrators attacked international peacekeepers with rocks, grenades and Molotov cocktails Monday, setting off the worst violence in Kosovo since it declared independence from Serbia last month.
The Serbs traded gunfire with U.N. and NATO forces in hours of clashes that wounded at least 63 U.N. and NATO forces and 70 protesters outside a U.N. courthouse.
The clashes began when the U.N. stormed the courthouse in the divided northern town of Kosovska Mitrovica just before dawn to pull out protesters who had occupied it for three days to protest Kosovo's independence.
Hundreds of Serbs swarmed the area, blocking three red-and-white U.N. police vans as they moved through the angry crowd and ordering the officers to open the doors.
About half of the 53 arrested Serbs went free. The rest were taken out in armored vehicles and were released by the U.N. after questioning.
Danish military police said they came under fire from protesters and shot back as they evacuated wounded officers. Machine-gun bursts could be heard until midday, although it was not clear who was firing. At least one U.N. vehicle and one NATO truck were set ablaze.
The U.N. said later it was pulling out of the Serb-dominated northern half of the town because of the shooting.
NATO helicopters hovered above the city and NATO troops remained, but the U.N. withdrawal could fuel a widespread Kosovo Serb desire to split from largely ethnic Albanian Kosovo and rejoin Serbia.
Predominantly ethnic Albanian Kosovo has been under U.N. control since 1999, when NATO launched an air war to stop Slobodan Milosevic's crackdown on ethnic Albanian separatists.
Serbia, which considers the territory its historic and religious heartland, says Kosovo's declaration of independence was illegal under international law.
The Serb minority dominates about 15 percent of the territory in northern Kosovo, including about a third of Kosovska Mitrovica, Kosovo's second-largest city.
"We will protect you just like we protect the Serbs in Serbia," Slobodan Samardzic, Serbia's government minister for Kosovo, told the protesters.
He urged them to continue protesting with the goal of keeping Kosovo in Serbia. Monday's clashes came exactly one month after that Western-backed declaration.
On Tuesday, Japan joined the 25 other governments, including Britain and the United States, that have already recognized Kosovo, adding that it hoped to continue friendly ties with Serbia.
"Japan hopes that Kosovo's independence will contribute to the stability of the region in the long term," the Foreign Ministry said in a statement.
But Serbia remained committed to keeping Kosovo.
"We will reach the goal only if we are patient, smart and organized and if we believe in what we want to accomplish," Samardzic said in the clearest indication yet that Serbia's government is orchestrating the protests.
Contributors to the NATO force said 27 Polish officers, 15 Ukrainians and about 20 French soldiers were wounded, with eight French troops taken to hospital. One of the French soldiers suffered head wounds from the explosion of a Molotov cocktail, though none had serious injuries. Authorities did not say how the other peacekeepers were wounded.
Hospital officials said most of the civilians suffered injuries from stun grenades, tear gas and explosive devices. One struck in the eye by a bullet was in critical condition.
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon condemned the violence and pledged that the U.N. will continue "to take measures required to implement its mandate," to administer Kosovo, spokeswoman Michele Montas said.
The European Union and many of its members expressed concern and called for restraint. Germany urged international forces to get the situation under control, and said it would "not consider the division of Kosovo as an option."
Russia's U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin, whose country has close ties to Serbia, expressed "serious misgivings" about the decision by U.N. police and NATO troops to storm the courthouse in the wee hours of the morning.
"Even if the takeover by the Serbs of the courthouse was unfortunate ... to us there are some very serious questions involved about the wisdom of such actions and lack of restraint," Churkin said.
Serbian President Boris Tadic accused international forces in Kosovo of "using excessive force," and warned of "escalation of clashes in the entire territory."
Serbia's Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica said it was planning a joint response with Russia, Serbia's most powerful backer. Kostunica urged the U.N. Security Council to take "necessary steps" to restore security.
NATO's top commander said the alliance was not planning to send reinforcements to Kosovo.
"We are adequate for the task," Gen. John Craddock said in Afghanistan after speaking with NATO commanders in Kosovo.
In the Serbian capital, Belgrade, police deployed in front of government buildings and Western embassies, apparently fearing that rioting could erupt as it did in the days after Kosovo's declaration of independence on Feb. 17. Several thousand nationalists rallied downtown carrying Serbian flags and chanting "Kosovo is Serbia!"
Kosovo's Prime Minister Hashim Thaci said he regretted that Kosovo's minority Serbs were allowing themselves "to be manipulated by Belgrade" into engaging in violence.
"There will be no compromise with hooligans," Thaci said.
By RADUL RADOVANOVIC, Associated Press Writer
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