July 18, 1998 Albanian–Yugoslav border clashes

On July 18, 1998 a Yugoslav Army (VJ) border patrol ambushed a column of Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) insurgents and foreign mujahideen on the frontier between Albania and Yugoslavia, just west of Dečani. The ambush resulted in the deaths of four KLA fighters and 18 mujahideen (mostly citizens of Saudi Arabia). Another six KLA fighters were arrested by the Yugoslav authorities and charged with illegal entry and gunrunning. One Yugoslav border guard was seriously wounded in the clash. Following the ambush, the VJ reported seizing a significant amount of arms and ammunition that the militants had been smuggling.

Later that day, 19 KLA fighters were wounded when the VJ shelled an arms smuggling route near the site of the ambush. They were evacuated by Albanian border guards and airlifted to receive treatment in the country's capital, Tirana. Albanian officials later alleged that two of the mortar rounds fired by Yugoslav troops had landed inside Albania, sparking further tension between the two countries. That afternoon, KLA militants attacked a Yugoslav border patrol, wounding another soldier.

Background
Following World War II, Kosovo was given the status of an autonomous province within the Socialist Republic of Serbia, one of six constitutional republics of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. After the death of Yugoslavia's long-time leader (Josip Broz Tito) in 1980, Yugoslavia's political system began to unravel. In 1989, Belgrade revoked Kosovo's autonomy. Kosovo, a province inhabited predominantly by ethnic Albanians, was of great historical and cultural significance to Serbs, who had formed a majority there before the mid-19th century, but by 1990 represented only about 10 percent of the population. Alarmed by their dwindling numbers, the province's Serbs began to fear that they were being "squeezed out" by the Albanians, and ethnic tensions worsened. As soon as Kosovo's autonomy was abolished, a minority government run by Serbs and Montenegrins was appointed by Serbian President Slobodan Milošević to oversee the province, enforced by thousands of heavily armed paramilitaries from Serbia-proper. Albanian culture was systematically repressed and hundreds of thousands of Albanians working in state-owned companies lost their jobs.

In 1996, a group of Albanian nationalists calling themselves the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) began attacking the Yugoslav Army (Vojska Jugoslavije; VJ) and the Serbian Ministry of Internal Affairs (Ministarstvo unutrašnjih poslova; MUP) in Kosovo. Their goal was to separate the province from the rest of Yugoslavia, which following the secession of Slovenia, Croatia, Macedonia and Bosnia-Herzegovina in 1991–92, was just a rump federation consisting of Serbia and Montenegro. At first, the KLA carried out hit-and-run attacks (31 in 1996, 55 in 1997, and 66 in January and February 1998 alone). It quickly gained popularity among young Kosovo Albanians, many of whom rejected the non-violent resistance to Yugoslav authorities advocated by the politician Ibrahim Rugova and favoured a more aggressive approach. The organization received a significant boost in 1997, when an armed uprising in neighbouring Albania led to thousands of weapons from the Albanian Army's depots being looted. Many of these weapons ended up in the hands of the KLA, which already had substantial resources due its involvement in the trafficking of drugs, weapons and people, as well as through donations from the Albanian diaspora. Cross-border arms smuggling flourished; the unit charged with securing the Yugoslav border was the 549th Motorized Brigade, under the command of General Božidar Delić.

The KLA's popularity skyrocketed after the VJ and MUP attacked the compound of KLA leader Adem Jashari in March 1998, killing him, his closest associates and most of his family. The attack prompted thousands of young Kosovo Albanians to join the ranks of the KLA, fueling the Kosovar uprising that eventually erupted in the spring of 1998.

Prelude
In the summer of 1998, a number of senior U.S. intelligence officials met with the leaders of the KLA, and agents of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) arrived in northern Albania to monitor the fighting in Kosovo and assist in training rebel fighters. In exchange for American military, financial and intelligence support, KLA leaders promised not to carry out any actions outside Kosovo, not to continue participating in the drug trade, and not to accept help from Islamic radicals. Thus, the KLA ordered the 36 foreign mujahideen fighting in their ranks to leave Kosovo. Although few KLA fighters sympathized with the Islamists, some argued that the organization should have accepted assistance from any source, fundamentalist or otherwise. When KLA commanders demanded the mujahideen leave they refused, and disagreements arose within the KLA ranks as what was to be done with them.

Serb sources assert that the first mujahideen began arriving in Kosovo in the spring of 1998, mainly from Bosnia and Herzegovina. By that summer, about 240 mujahideen were present in Kosovo and northern Albania. Most of these were ethnic Albanians, but the group also included several dozen Arabs from the Middle East and North Africa. According to the diary of the ambushed KLA group's leader, Alia Rabiçi, the mujahideen involved in the July 18 ambush had initially gathered in Munich before taking a ferry at Bari to the Albanian port city of Durrës. Once in Albania, the mujahideen were escorted to the frontier towns of Tropojë and Bajram Curri by their KLA handlers, where they rendezvoused with Rabiçi's men.

Clashes
In the early morning of July 18, 1998, 24 mujahideen fighters and 200 KLA militants left their base in northern Albania and departed for Kosovo. They were carrying a large quantity of arms and ammunition, which significantly impeded their movement and obliged them to move slowly across the Albanian–Yugoslav frontier. One hypothesis is that they were intended to reinforce KLA fighters battling for the town of Orahovac. At 02:00, the column was ambushed by Yugoslav border guards near Mount Đeravica, about 6 km from the Albanian border, just west of Dečani. A total of 22 militants were killed in the clash (18 mujahideen and four KLA). Initial reports suggested that the ambush resulted in the deaths of anywhere between 30 and 90 militants. Rabiçi was among those killed, and documents recording the KLA and mujahideen's journey were recovered off his corpse by Yugoslav authorities. Sixteen of the mujahideen were citizens of Saudi Arabia and one was a citizen of Yemen. Six were carrying forged Macedonian passports under ethnic Albanian pseudonyms. According to Israeli historian Shaul Shay, the incident represented the first skirmish between the VJ and foreign mujahideen during the Kosovo War. It is unclear if the ambush came as a result of Yugoslav vigilance or if the Albanians deliberately led the mujahideen into a trap with the goal of having them eliminated, thus limiting the influence of Islamic radicals within the KLA's ranks. A Yugoslav lance corporal was seriously wounded in the exchange.

Most of the surviving militants either retreated to Albania or went into hiding along the border. Six militants, all citizens of Albania, were captured. They were charged with illegally crossing the border and gunrunning. Yugoslav authorities reported confiscating more than 10 tonnes of weapons and ammunition, including about 300 rifles, 60 machine guns, ten recoilless guns and a number of mortars.

Later that day, the VJ shelled a known arms trafficking route along the Albanian border, wounding 19 KLA fighters. The militants were rescued by Albanian border guards and airlifted by helicopter to receive treatment in a Tirana hospital. At 13:30, two militants opened fire on a Yugoslav border patrol within 300 m of the Albanian frontier. The border patrol returned fire, and the militants fled to Albania. A Yugoslav soldier was slightly wounded.

Aftermath
The journalist Tim Judah described the ambush as a "catastrophic disaster" for the KLA given the large amount of weapons that were confiscated. Albania's deputy Minister of Interior Affairs, Ilir Çano, claimed that two mortar rounds fired by Yugoslav troops had landed inside Albania. In response, Albania lodged a formal protest and demanded a meeting with Yugoslav authorities seeking an explanation. Yugoslav officials denied that any mortar rounds had landed inside Albania, and accused Albanian authorities of turning a blind eye to KLA arms smuggling in northern Albania. Albanian Foreign Minister Paskal Milo stated that Albania "expresses its fraternal solidarity and supports the just struggle of Albanians in Kosovo." The Albanian Government released a statement describing the ambush as a "Serb provocation" and calling on the international community to "stop, by any means, the fascist aggression Belgrade is inflicting on the Albanian population of Kosovo." In turn, Yugoslav officials accused Albania of sending 300 soldiers to fight alongside the KLA in Kosovo, citing the testimony of captured KLA personnel. Albanian officials denied having troops in the province.

Russian officials accused KLA fighters of stoking the clashes, and called for peace talks between the militants and Yugoslav authorities. On July 19, Albanian officials requested that Greece—an important trading partner for Albania and traditional ally of Serbia—mediate to end the fighting. Greek Foreign Minister Theodoros Pangalos condemned the fighting, saying "these senseless acts of violence must stop."