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<text id=93HT0624>
<title>
1983: Carnage In Lebanon
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1983 Highlights
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
October 31, 1983
WORLD
Carnage in Lebanon
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Twin terrorist bombings decimate the U.S. and French
peace-keeping forces
</p>
<p> It was early Sunday morning in Lebanon, the beginning of an
October day that promised even in that strife-riven country to
draw crowds to the beaches and strollers to the corniches. Only
the cooks were up and about in the reinforced-concrete Aviation
Safety Building on the edge of the Beirut International Airport,
used as headquarters by the Eighth Marine Battalion of the U.S.
part of the peace-keeping force. Built around a courtyard, the
headquarters contained a gymnasium, a reading room, the
administrative offices and the communications center for the
battalion. It was also sleeping quarters for some 200 Marines;
most were still in their cots, enjoying the luxury of Sunday,
the one day of the week when they were free from reveille.
Suddenly a truck, laden with dynamite on a fanatical suicide
mission crashed into the building's lobby and exploded with such
force that the structure collapsed in seconds, killing or
wounding most of the Marines inside. But even the toll, still
incomplete as rescuers picked through the rubble, stood at 147
dead, 60 wounded.
</p>
<p> For the U.S. Armed Forces, it was the worst disaster since the
end of the Viet Nam War a decade ago. The terrorist attack
illustrated in the most grisly fashion possible just how risky
it is for the U.S. to venture, not just with its diplomats but
with its troops, into a region that has been plagued for
centuries by factionalism and hatred. The carnage in Lebanon was
virtually certain to produce a political storm as members of
Congress and ordinary Americans questioned the wisdom of a
policy they do not always understand. For the fractious little
country at the eastern end of the Mediterranean, whose
government of the American peace keepers were trying to uphold,
the event marked another terrible setback on the seemingly
endless path away from anarchy and chaos.
</p>
<p> All across the nation on Sunday night, Marine Corps officers
walked up to homes and apartments to inform Americans that their
sons or brothers or fathers or husbands had died under the
twisted, smoking debris in Beirut. It was the Marine way:
personal notification, not an anonymous telegram or faceless
phone call. Some of the bodies were already headed home; others
still lay under tons of metal and concrete as the search team
worked around the clock. It would be days before America could
fully count its dead and wounded.
</p>
<p> After hearing of the bombing in a 2:27 a.m. phone call from his
National Security Adviser, Robert McFarlane, President Reagan
broke off a weekend golfing visit to Georgia. Emerging from his
helicopter on the White House law, he clutched his wife Nancy's
hand in his own and returned the salute of a young Marine. The
President then declared, "I kno there ae no words to express
our outrage and the outrage of all Americans at the despicable
act. But I think we would all recognize that these deeds make
so evident the bestial nature of those who would assume power
if they could have their way and drive us out of that area."
The U.S. must be more determined than ever, said the President,
to ensure that such forces "cannot take over that vital and
strategic area of the earth."
</p>
<p> After a three-hour meeting of the National Security Council
Sunday afternoon, Presidential Spokesman Larry Speakes announced
that the President had decided to dispatch General Paul X.
Kelley, commandant of the Marine Corps, to Beirut to undertake
a complete review of ways in which better protection could be
provided for the Marines. Speakes said, "We also intend to
respond to this criminal act when the perpetrators are
identified.' Asked what kind of retaliation the President may
have in mind, Speakes answered, "That's for those who did it to
wonder about and worry about." Reagan, he said, would consult
with the French, Italian, British and Lebanese governments
before announcing the other decisions that were made. That
night, the President signed a proclamation ordering the lowering
of American flags to half-staff until Oct. 31.
</p>
<p> A continent away, another nation was in mourning. By no
coincidence, a building used by French paratroopers, about two
miles from the U.S. compound at the airport, was blown up
several minutes after the attack against the Marines. The
official toll by Sunday evening was 27 French dead and 12
wounded, but because so many soldiers were presumed to be
trapped under the debris, as many as 100 French troops could
have perished. Declaring the bombing "an odious and cowardly
attack," French Defense Minister Charles Hernu immediately
departed for Beirut. "What kind of insanity are we talking
about?" asked Foreign Minister Claude Cheysson. "This is
madness." For France, it was the worst military loss since the
end of the Algerian war 22 years ago.
</p>
<p> The attack began at exactly 6:20 a.m., when a red pickup truck
approached the Beirut airport, where most of the 1,600-man
Marine contingent in Lebanon is based. As the vehicle turned
left into the parking lot, a Marine guard reported with alarm
that it was gathering speed. Then, in lightening move, the
truck charged toward the entrance of the four-story building,
hit the sandbagged guard post, burst through a barrier and
vaulted another wall of sandbags into the lobby. It exploded
with a deafening roar, destroying the building. Minutes later,
the second blast rocked the French building in the Bir Hasan
seafront residential neighborhood of West Beirut. The force of
that blast was so great that it moved the entire building 30 ft.
</p>
<p> Almost immediately, as shocked U.S. and French troops undertook
the task of finding the dead and wounded, the casualty figures
began to soar. The first reports said that at least 40 Marines
had been killed, then 57; by noon Sunday the Pentagon put the
toll at 120 dead and 45 injured--and still rising. Said Lieut.
Colonel Thomas Jones, a Pentagon spokesman: "There are extensive
casualties. It changes on a minute-by-minute basis." before
Sunday, six Marines had been killed in Lebanon by sniper fire
or artillery explosions in the Beirut airport vicinity, and a
seventh had died when a mine exploded.
</p>
<p> At the airport, a cloud of acrid smoke hung over a scene of
utter desolation. The dead and dying lay in rows along the
runway, ready for evacuation. Personal photos were scattered
among official documents. Marines looked frantically for their
buddies. Said a young soldier who was standing guard at the
time of the attack: "It was unbelievable. I saw the truck
crash through the entrance, and then the explosion threw me
against the wall. My God, I must be the last person left alive
in my section. I don't know why I'm living." Standing amid the
debris, his arms and fatigues covered with blood from the
victims he had helped to carry out, a young French soldier
shouted, "What beasts? What an insane country!"
</p>
<p> The blast at the Marine barracks was so severe that it
scattered fragments for hundreds of feet in every direction.
"This is the worst carnage I have seen since Viet Nam," said the
Marine spokesman, Major Robert Jordan, as he stood in front of
the heap of twisted steel and stone that had been the
headquarters building. The commander of the Marine contingent
in Lebanon, Colonel Timothy Geraghty, 45, was not in the
building at the time of the explosion but arrived shortly
afterward to direct operations. Within an hour, a large team
of Marines, Lebanese rescue workers and Italian soldiers were
climbing over the glass and mortar trying to dig out survivors.
Occasionally they shouted at soldiers, reporters and others in
the area, asking them to be quite so that the rescuers could
hear any calls for help from people still trapped under the
site. On one side of the explosion are, 15 bodies lay on
stretchers. At the top of what was left of the building, a
search team dug frantically through the ruins. Suddenly, a head
appeared, then the arms and finally the rest of the body of a
wounded Marine clad only in red shorts. Miraculously, he had
survived. At about 1 p.m., the Marine headquarters zone came
under sniper fire from a cluster of houses near by. The rescue
work continued, but all onlookers and nonessential personnel had
to take cover. The sniper alert lasted for two hours. The
devastated building had bene known to Marines as the Beirut
Hilton. It served as the nerve center for the Marine companies
stationed around the perimeter of the airport. The lethal
pickup truck was estimated to have contained about 2,000 lbs of
high explosives. The blast left a crater 30 ft deep and 40 ft.
wide.
</p>
<p> Shortly after the two hugh explosions, ships of the U.S. Sixth
Fleet, including the assault ship Iwo Jima, moved to within a
mile offshore. The Iwo Jima is equipped with surgical operating
theaters and other emergency facilities. Helicopters carried
most of the wounded to that ship; others were taken to the
American University Hospital, an Italian field hospital, British
Royal Air Force hospitals on Cyprus, or were flown to U.S.
military hospitals in West Germany and Italy. Whatever
differences may exist between the U.S. and its allies over the
Middle East, the various contingents of the Multi-National
Force were cooperating closely during the emergency. The
Italians were providing medical assistance for the Americans,
and the British took over from the Marines the guard duty on the
airport boulevard. As the grim rescue operation continued, a
state of shock prevailed in the city. On this day, which had
followed a night of artillery duels in the hills, most people
remained indoors, anxious and apprehensive.
</p>
<p> From the President on down, the Administration reacted with
sorrow and anger to what was undoubtedly the worst tragedy of
the Reagan presidency. When he spoke on the White House lawn,
the President did not use notes, because, as he said privately,
he wanted "to do it from the heart." Reagan spent much of
Sunday morning in the White House Situation Room with Vice
President George Bush, Secretary of State George Shultz, Defense
Secretary Caspar Weinberger, McFarlane and General John W.
Vessey, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. At a morning
meeting, the National Security Council decided against any
drastic shift in U.S. policy. Weinberger said that efforts
would be made to reduce the vulnerability of the Marines in
Lebanon, perhaps by moving them to more secure positions. The
White House ruled out any increase in combat strength in Lebanon
but planned to send replacements for the dead and wounded. In
fact, by mid-afternoon, Marines at Camp Lejeune, N.C., were
receiving their orders to replace the men who had been killed
that morning. Declared Weinberger: "Our commitment to the cause
of Middle East peace still remains." A top White House aide
noted: "We're convinced that this was done by someone who wants
us out, and we're not getting out."
</p>
<p> Some administration officials expressed fears that the bombing
would stir a national debate on Middle East Policy, creating
pressures ranging from a pullout of the Marines to retaliation.
All the unanswered questions aired when Reagan first asked
Congress to approve the U.S. Marine presence in Lebanon seemed
sure to arise again. Congress gave the President the necessary
authority four weeks ago to keep the Marines in Lebanon--but
with considerable reluctance; in the Senate the resolution
passed by a vote of only 54 to 46. New York Democrat Samuel
Stratton, a hawkish veteran of the House Armed Services
Committee, immediately renewed his earlier calls for a
withdrawal of the Marines. "They're serving no useful purpose,"
he said. "If it escalates, we're deeper in the morass, and
we've got another View Nam on our hands." Though there is
little chance, at least initially, that Congress will reverse
its decision, the Administration will almost certainly come
under far more pressure to justify the peace-keeping mission.
"What it all underscores," said Maryland Republican Senator
Charles Mathias, "is, what is our Middle East policy? We need
a policy." Asked House Democrat David Obey, who had opposed the
President's request for congressional support: "What the hell
are we supposed to be doing over there? What is the role?"
</p>
<p> Senator Ernest Hollings of South Carolina, a Democratic
Presidential candidate, called on the Administration to draft
a plan to withdraw the Marines within 60 days. "If they've been
put there to fight, then there are far too few," he said. "If
they've been put there to be killed, there are far too many."
Meanwhile, Democratic Front Runner Walter Mondale cautiously
avoided the issue Sunday, after making a brief statement of
symphathy. Said he: "Today should only be a day of mourning for
those wonderful young Americans who have lost their lives
serving our country in the cause of peace."
</p>
<p> Messages of condolence were arriving from around the world. In
London, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher expressed her
sorrow to Reagan, as well as to President Francois Mitterrand,
and assured them that Britain would not withdraw its contingent
of 100 soldiers from Lebanon. Said a Thatcher aide: "By
attempting to bomb the Multi-National Force out of Lebanon, the
extremists, whoever they are, have in a perverse way confirmed
the success of the force in helping stabilize the country."
Pope John Paul II, his voice filled with emotion as he stood
before a crowd of 80,000 at St. Peter's Square, declared, "A
great sense of sorrow surges from the soul." Israeli Prime
Minister Yitzhak Shamir called the bombing a "despicable crime
that was undoubtedly perpetrated by those who want to prevent
a peaceful solution in Lebanon and to increase bloodshed." In
Moscow, the Communist Party newspaper Pravda observed: "It
appears the Viet Nam story begins to repeat itself. The U.S.
is getting drawn deeper into the fighting, while generals get
more and more freedom of action."
</p>
<p> As usual in the Lebanese political maelstrom, there was no
shortage of suspects for the bombing. Nor was there any
certainty that the question would ever be answered
satisfactorily. The primary effect of the Marines' presence in
Lebanon has been to provide backing for the fledgling government
of President Amin Gemayel. For this reason, the Maronite
Christians have generally welcomed the peace keepers and in fact
have attached an almost symbolic importance to the presence of
the U.S. battleship New Jersey in the water off Beirut.
</p>
<p> Other Lebanese factions have resented the Marines for their
backing of the Christian-dominated government. Among them are
the Druze, members of a sect that broke away from Islam in the
11th century. They are angry both because they have never had
a fair share of political power in Lebanon and because the
Christian militias moved forcibly into their mountainous region
as soon as the Israeli forces had staged a partial withdrawal
from Lebanon almost two months ago. Equally resentful of the
Marines' presence are the Shi'ite Muslims, who are also fighting
for a greater share of political power. The recent sniping
deaths of U.S. Marines are believed to have been the work of the
Shi'ites who live in the squalid neighborhoods near the
airport. Many of the Shi'ites are refugees from parts of
Southern Lebanon that Israel invaded last year and still
occupies.
</p>
<p> Others who oppose the Gemayel government, and thus the Marines,
are elements of the Palestine Liberation Organization who either
managed to remain in Lebanon following last year's evacuation
of at least 6,000 P.O.O. commandos from Beirut, or have
succeeded in insinuating their way back. The Druze and several
of the Muslim groups have been armed and aided by the Syrian
government. The Syrians are determined to assure themselves of
an important future role in Lebanese affairs, and have
repeatedly called for the resignation of Gemayel.
</p>
<p> Weinberger did not rule out that either Syria or its chief arms
supplier, the Soviet Union, bore some responsibility. The
Marines, he said Sunday, remained in Lebanon precisely because
neither the Syrians nor the P.L.O. had withdrawn their forces
from the country. The Soviets, Weinberger said on Face the
Nation, "have a huge presence in Syria, and they love to fish
in troubled waters."
</p>
<p> To American policy makers, the latest bombings were all too
reminiscent of the destruction of the U.S. embassy in West
Beirut last April that killed 63 people, including 17 Americans.
One of the groups claiming responsibility for that action was
the Islamic Jihad Organization, and obscure pro-Iranian group
made up of Shi'ite Muslims loyal to Iran's Ayatullah Ruhollah
Khomeini. On Sunday evening the State Department received an
unconfirmed report that a faction calling itself the Islamic
Revolutionary Movement had taken responsibility for the
terrorist attacks. An unidentified called had apparently
phoned the Beirut office of the French news service Agency
France-Presse to say that two of the movement's fighters had
died in the suicide attacks.
</p>
<p> Weinberger said that there was "a lot of circumstantial
evidence, and a lot of it points to Iran." Sunday's twin
attacks against the U.S. and French forces just like the U.S.
embassy bombing, carefully coordinated Kamikaze missions. But
the strongest indication that an Iran-backed radical Shi'ite
group was involved derived from the fact that the French
contingent was struck at the same time as the Marines. In recent
months France has become one of Khomeini's most hated countries,
partly because it granted asylum to former Iranian President
Bani Sadr and other Iranian dissidents, and partly because it
sold five sophisticated Super Etenard jets to Iraq. U.S.
intelligence analysts note that the Iranians have pressed the
Hizbolla, a radical Shi'ite group in Lebanon, to step up
terrorist action against French and American targets. "The
thing that clinches it for me is that the French got it too,"
says a senior intelligence official. "The Syrians would have
hit only the Americans."
</p>
<p> The Hizbolla, which means Party of God, is a rival to the Amal
faction, the largest Shi'ite group in Lebanon. It receives
guns, ammunition and money from the iranian revolutionary guards
operating in the Syrian-controlled Bekaa Valley and from the
Iranian embassy in Beirut, which sees it as a vehicle for
extending Khomeini's influence in Lebanon. The Hizbolla is
widely assumed to have been behind the U.S. embassy bombing, but
neither Lebanese nor U.S. authorities have been able to pin this
down. A measure of the difficulty of identifying terrorists in
Lebanon is that although two or three people confessed to taking
part in the embassy bombing, nobody has yet figured out for
certain what group was behind their act.
</p>
<p> The current impasse in Lebanon has its roots not only in the
country's fragmentation for also in Israel's 1948 war of
independence and its 1967 occupation of the West Bank. In time,
hundreds of thousands of Palestinians moved to Lebanon,
eventually upsetting the country's fragile political balance
between Muslims and Christians. When Lebanon erupted into civil
war in 1975, Syrian President Hafez Assad sent in troops. But
what began as the backbone of an Arab peace-keeping force
eventually became a permanent occupation. After Menachem Begin
became Prime Minister of Israel in 1977, the situation became
even more complex, first with Israel's occupation of a "security
strip" in southern Lebanon in March 1978, then with the all- out
invasion last year. The Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon
forced thousands of Lebanese Shi'ites to flee to the slums of
Beirut. The dispossessed Shi'ites, along with the Palestinians
and the increasingly radicalized Lebanese Muslims--all of them
egged on by the Syrians--have made for an explosive mixture.
</p>
<p> One lesson to be drawn from the present turmoil is that
Israel's refusal to compromise on the Palestinian issue has
created a chronic and festering crisis in the region. Says
William Zuandt, a Brookings Institution fellow who served on the
national Security Council during the Carter Administration:
"Israeli military activity over the past five years turned a
problem into a catastrophe." It is a situation in which so far
the U.S. has not found much remedy, only trouble. Notes Quandt:
"The Marines needed to be part of a political process that was
achieving some progress in order to have meaning. In the
absence of such a process, they became sitting ducks for people
who had all kinds of reasons to want to disrupt and provoke.
They became targets rather than symbols of future stability."
Another lesson, judging by the experience of the Syrians and
the Israelis, is that attempts by outsiders to dominate Lebanon
tend to end in failure, if not disaster.
</p>
<p> This need not apply to the U.S. whose aims in Lebanon are very
limited, but it raises questions about the wisdom of a policy
that is not precisely stated. The Administration has never
really given a thoroughly convincing, coherent answer to the
question of why the marines are in Lebanon. Initially they were
sent, along with the French and Italian forces, to monitor the
withdrawal of the P.O.O., and fill the vacuum that this would
create. Then they were to provide stability as Syrian and
Israeli troops pulled out of the territories they occupied. The
U.S. assumed, or at least hoped, that if it could get out Israel
out of Lebanon, the Syrians would get out too. That did not
work, although the Israelis eventually withdrew from the Beirut
area and the mountains in order to reduce their own casualties.
Gradually, the Marines' purpose was redefined as providing
backing for the Gemayel government. But the young President
proved to be slow in moving toward a reconciliation of Lebanese
Christians and Muslims, and problems mounted. As Harold H.
Saunders, a Middle East expert who is a veteran of several
previous Administrations, said recently, "You can't use the
Marines to put Lebanon together again. The worst contingency
would be for the Marines to be there without a clear-cut mandate
when the Lebanese government's own mandate is falling apart."
</p>
<p> At various times this year, that is precisely what has happened.
In the beginning, the Marines provided the American support for
Gemayel that helped him contain the extremists in his own camp.
But it can be argued that the Administration became so
preoccupied with getting the Syrians and Israelis out of Lebanon
that it neglected the task of trying to build up Lebanon's
internal stability. Still, most Americans would probably agree
with Colonel Geraghty, the Marine commander in Lebanon, who said
after Sunday's attack: "We'll continue to do what we came here
to do, and that is to provide assistance for a free and
independent Lebanon." This is clearly the Administration's
policy, and there is little the U.S. can do at the moment
except follow it. The Administration is probably right in
asserting that it has no choice but to maintain the Marine
presence until the Lebanese have had a chance to put their
country back together. There is, however, a necessary
corollary: It should set a timetable, based on reasonable
objectives on the part of the Lebanese, for withdrawal.
</p>
<p> The most important effect of the carnage in Beirut may be to
raise questions not only about U.S. policy in the Middle East
but also about the wisdom of President Reagan's willingness to
exercise U.S. military muscle around the world. Said a White
House aide: "Nobody has a fix on how badly it will hurt. It's
the long term consequences we're worried about." That is
perhaps the most persuasive argument for the Administration,
once and for all, to think through and explain its intentions
in Lebanon.
</p>
<p> As of Sunday evening, long after darkness had fallen over
Beirut, Americans were left with the stunned knowledge that
their young men, who had volunteered for duty in a faraway land
that many of them would never understand, were goner. Whatever
the details of duty and diplomacy, the Marines had been in
Lebanon to try to hold that country together, to stand for peace
and order in a place that has known neither for a decade. They
had represented an antidote to fanaticism--and fanaticism had
brought them down.
</p>
<p>-- By William E. Smith. Reported by Douglas Brew and Strobe
Talbott/Washington and William Stewart/Beirut</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>