"Mack Bolan - Stony Man - Triple Strike" - читать интересную книгу автора (Bolan Mack)


Dragan Asdik waited impatiently for the morning
prayers to end so he could talk to the commander of
the Iranian freedom fighters who were based out of
his castle. Asdik was the lord and master of his valley
high in the mountains of Muslim Bosnia and the mil-
itary commander of the troops in the region. Now
that the war for Bosnia wasn't being fought--he
knew that it wasn't over, but had just been put on
hold--he had been ordered back to his fortress in the
mountains to prepare for the next phase of the con-
flict.
When the words of the last prayer echoed away, a
thin man with intense eyes rose and approached him.
"God calls the faithful to prayer five times a day,"
Major Ari Naslin of the Iranian Ministry of Intelli-
gence and Security reminded the Bosnian.
Asdik gritted his teeth but remained silent. He
needed the Iranian troops far more than he needed to
speak his mind. In the three-way battle for Bosnia,

I I~11 I.I.. ~,1 I I~11~1..

the Iranian Security Commandos were the unseen
trump card waiting to be played. These Islamic free-
dom fighters, as they liked to style themselves, were
a potent weapon that would be brought into full play
very soon. And they were a weapon that no one in
NATO even knew existed.
The United States-sponsored Dayton Accord,
which had been signed in 1995, had been intended
to end the war between the Serbs, Croats and Mus-
lims. One of the more prominent issues of the peace
agreement concerned the Iranian freedom fighters
who had been sent to aid their Bosnian brethren in
their fight against the Serbian and Croatian infidels.
Under the terms of the agreement, these forces were
to be immediately disarmed and returned to Iran.
In apparent compliance with the Dayton Accord,
several hundred unarmed, teenage freedom fighters
had marched through the streets of Sarajevo on their
way to the airport. They had all worn the same kind
of uniforms and had carded English and Arabic signs
proclaiming that Muslim Bosnia would always re-
main Muslim. With great media fanfare at the airport,
they had boarded chartered jetliners for the trip back
to their homeland.
Any experienced military observer watching this
carefully orchestrated charade, however, would have
immediately noted how young those men were and