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- <text>
- <title>
- (1982) The New Lebanon Crisis
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1982 Highlights
- </history>
- <link 00210><article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- September 27, 1982
- MIDDLE EAST
- The New Lebanon Crisis
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A refugee massacre follows Gemayel's murder and an Israeli
- occupation
- </p>
- <p> "The Israeli Defense Forces have taken positions in West Beirut
- to prevent the danger of violence, bloodshed and anarchy."
- </p>
- <p>-- Statement by the Israeli Cabinet
- </p>
- <p> That was the Israeli government's explanation for its decision
- to send its armed forces into Muslim-dominated West Beirut last
- week following the assassination of Lebanon's President-elect
- Bashir Gemayel. The Israeli action alarmed the U.S., which saw
- it as a violation of a promise the Israelis made this summer to
- U.S. Special Envoy Philip Habib while he was negotiating the
- withdrawal of Palestine Liberation Organization guerrillas from
- West Beirut. It frightened the Lebanese capital's Muslim
- population, infuriated the governments of other Arab states, and
- led to a United Nations Security Council resolution calling on
- the Israelis to withdraw from Beirut. But no one could have
- anticipated that before the week was over, the Israeli
- peacekeeping exercise in West Beirut would lead, whether by
- complicity or carelessness or outright incompetence, to the
- massacre of hundreds of men, women and children in two
- Palestinian refugee camps that the Israelis were supposedly
- guarding.
- </p>
- <p> First reports were fragmentary but horrifying. A group of armed
- men had entered the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps south of
- Beirut and opened fire on everyone they could find. They
- murdered young men in groups of ten or 20, they killed mothers,
- babies and old people. They even shot horses. And when it was
- over, they attempted, in a manner reminiscent of World War II,
- to destroy the evidence by bulldozing the bodies into makeshift
- common graves. TIME Correspondent Roberto Suro visited the Sabra
- camp late Friday afternoon and counted 50 corpses in one place.
- A Red Cross worker at a nearby hospital estimated that 450
- bodies had been removed from the two camps.
- </p>
- <p> What had happened? Practically everybody agreed that the gunmen
- were right-wing Lebanese Christian militiamen, and were either
- from the Lebanese Forces led by the vengeance-bent Gemayel clan
- or from the militia run by Major Sa'ad Haddad, which is based
- in southern Lebanon and is closely allied with the Israelis. The
- Lebanese Forces would be the more logical culprits, since they
- live in the region and were in mourning for their fallen leader.
- On the other hand, there were reports that a group of Haddad's
- men were seen in the vicinity of the camps on the day of the
- murders.
- </p>
- <p> More baffling was the role the Israelis had played. Certainly
- Israeli soldiers had not done the shooting, but the Israelis
- controlled the area, had checkpoints near the camps, and were
- within earshot of the firing. How and why had they allowed the
- militiamen to enter the camps? At the Israeli checkpoint
- outside the Sabra camp, an officer of the Lebanese Forces told
- Correspondent Suro Friday afternoon: "We have been waiting to
- get in there for years." Explaining that his troops had been
- going from house to house through the camp "clearing out the
- last fighters," he added: "We are better at this kind of
- operation than the Israelis. We have had more practice." Asked
- if his men were taking any prisoners, he replies, "The only
- people in that camp now want to fight to the end. I do not think
- there are any prisoners."
- </p>
- <p> When newsmen tried to enter the Sabra camp late Friday
- afternoon, they were stopped at the checkpoint by Israeli
- soldiers, who told them that fighting was still going on inside
- the camp. Reported Suro: "We could hear the burst of automatic
- weapons fire and the explosion of grenades. It was clearly not
- a firefight because the volleys of gunfire were not being
- returned: the guns were being fired in only one direction."
- Israeli soldiers rested at the edge of the camp even as the
- firing continued. They did not appear concerned about snipers
- or any kind of attack from inside the camp. Obviously the
- Israelis knew of the blood-hatred between the Muslims and the
- Christians. How could they have failed to realize that, under
- their very noses, a massacre of Palestinian civilians was taking
- place?
- </p>
- <p> By late Saturday, the full impact of the events in Beirut was
- being felt throughout the world. Israel was virtually shut down
- for celebrations of Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year. The
- government was also preoccupied with a new outburst of
- anti-Jewish terrorist attacks in Brussels and Paris that wounded
- more than 40 people. As a result, though the government promised
- to conduct an inquiry, official reaction was slow and confused.
- A military spokesman claimed that Phalangist forces had broken
- into the Shatila camp and started a fight, and the Israeli
- troops had intervened; shots were exchanged between Phalangists
- and Israelis, he said, and the Israelis had prevented an even
- worse massacre than took place. In Washington, Ronald Reagan
- expressed his send of horror at the murders. Radio Moscow blamed
- the Israelis and their "Lebanese Christian puppets" for the
- massacre. Zehdi Labib Terzi, P.L.O. observed at the U.N.,
- denounced what he called the "genocide" in West Beirut, and
- P.L.O. Chairman Yasser Arafat, declaring that as many as 1,400
- had been slain, appealed for help--including from the Soviet
- Union--in protecting the lives of Palestinians in Lebanon. The
- U.S., France and Italy, the three nations that had contributed
- troops to the peacekeeping force in Lebanon last month, called
- on the U.N. to dispatch observer teams to the "place of
- suffering and human loss."
- </p>
- <p> The event that precipitated the massacre at the Sabra and
- Shatila camps had occurred scarcely 72 hours earlier. At exactly
- 4:08 last Tuesday afternoon, an explosion in the heart of East
- Beirut shook buildings for blocks around. An instant later, a
- huge cloud of dust and smoke began to rise above a three-story
- structure whose ganglia lay exposed and bare. In the street
- outside, a Christian Phalangist member of the Lebanese
- parliament raised his hand to his mouth and cried, "Ya Allah!
- [My God!] That's the Kata'eb!"
- </p>
- <p> He was referring to the headquarters of Gemayel's Christian
- Phalange Party. The explosion had smashed cars and scattered
- parts of bodies through the streets. Nearby was the head,
- shoulder and arm of a person who had been blown apart. Sirens
- screaming, the cars of Gemayel's Lebanese Forces began
- screeching to a half in front of the building. Suddenly a
- Phalangist official struck himself on the face in dismay and
- frustration and shouted: "Bashir is inside!"
- </p>
- <p> A bomb, later estimated to have weighed at least 200 lbs., had
- somehow been placed on the third floor of the heavily guarded
- building. When it was detonated, probably by remote control,
- the charge shattered most of the structure, causing the upper
- stories to crash down on the first floor, where the
- President-elect and 100 members of his party were holding their
- regular weekly meeting. By 4:17, when the first ambulance
- arrived, the whole street was filled with shouts of "Bashir!
- Bashir!" A Phalangist soldier threw his rifle to the ground,
- sank to his knees and sobbed. A fire engine arrived, but there
- was no water for its hoses.
- </p>
- <p> Inside the building, TIME Correspondent David Halevy found a
- scene of death and devastation. "Someone was throwing mattresses
- and pieces of cloth over the bodies on the floor. The air was
- filled with the stench of cordite, dust and blood. Pillars of
- concrete, stone and pieces of metal were everywhere. About 20
- people were trying to dig somebody out of the rubble. They were
- screaming, `Hada Bashir! Hada Bashir! [This is Bashir!]' Half
- of his body was buried beneath stone and chunks of concrete. He
- did not move, nor did he talk. His face was visible, but to me
- he was not recognizable. He was either very badly wounded or
- already dead. I looked at my watch: it was 4:28 p.m."
- </p>
- <p> Eight hours passed before the Lebanese radio announced the news
- of the assassination of Gemayel, whose body was so badly
- disfigured that his wife had to confirm her husband's identify
- by looking at his wedding ring. At first there were reports that
- Gemayel had walked to a nearby hospital to be treated for minor
- wounds. But in mid-evening, the Lebanese radio abruptly
- switched from its normal programming and began playing somber
- music. The announcement of his death came at midnight. All told,
- 26 died in the explosion.
- </p>
- <p> The assassination of Gemayel, who was due to have taken office
- this Thursday, shattered any hopes for a firm beginning to an
- orderly resolution of Lebanon's many problems. Nobody even knew
- who would be running the country once the term of the present
- President, Elias Sarkis, expired on Sept. 23. Among the very few
- announced candidates was Gemayel's elder brother Amin, 40, who
- first declared that he was assuming command of the Lebanese
- Forces and later was nominated for the presidency by the
- Phalangist Party. Amin is neither as popular nor as strong a
- potential leader as the late Bashir. But the Maronite Christian
- community, from which the President is traditionally chosen, was
- quickly rallying behind him. Amin, who is supported by 16,000
- militiamen, was even beginning to sound a bit presidential. At
- his brother's funeral, Amin swore that "the march of Bashir
- Gemayel will continue until we bring peace to Lebanon's soil."
- </p>
- <p> Even before Bashir was buried, events in Lebanon took another
- ominous turn. At dawn on Wednesday, the Israelis, arguing that
- they needed to maintain order, moved into West Beirut, the area
- they had besieged for three months this summer. Now, with more
- than 11,000 Palestine Liberation Organization fighters out of
- the city and evacuated to other Arab countries, the Israelis
- encountered only modest resistance from Lebanese leftist
- militiamen and remnants of P.L.O. forces.
- </p>
- <p> One of the most dismaying aspects of last week's events in
- Lebanon was that, until the very moment of the explosion that
- killed Gemayel, Lebanon had appeared to be emerging at last not
- only from its summer of war but from the years of domination by
- the P.L.O. For the first time since the civil war began in 1975,
- a semblance of legal authority and security was returning to the
- city. Though he still had many enemies, Gemayel had made firm
- strides toward national reconciliation, emphasizing that he
- intended to be a President of all the Lebanese, and not just the
- Maronites.
- </p>
- <p> Once he was inaugurated, Gemayel planned to introduce a system
- of governmental reforms and to build an effective national army.
- He also intended to make peace with Israel, although he was
- resisting pressure from the Begin government to sign a treaty
- soon after his inauguration. Indeed, Prime Minister Begin,
- Defense Minister Ariel Sharon and Foreign Minister Yitzhak
- Shamir went so far as to meet secretly with Gemayel in northern
- Israel two weeks before his death to urge a treaty on him. But
- Gemayel wanted some breathing space; he knew that signing an
- agreement with Israel so quickly would anger large segments of
- Lebanon's fractious population.
- </p>
- <p> Gemayel was working on more immediate problems when disaster
- struck. He had gone to his party headquarters on Tuesday to
- discuss plans for the Christian militias in East Beirut to hand
- over their weapons to the Lebanese army. The meeting had barely
- begun when the huge bomb on the third floor was detonated.
- </p>
- <p> Who killed Gemayel? There was no shortage of suspects. He was
- hated by the leftist Muslim militias and by the Syrians. The
- P.L.O. had been his enemy for years. There was also a theory
- advanced by Arab leaders in Lebanon that Israel was behind the
- bombing because Gemayel was resisting pressure for the Begin
- government to sign a peace treaty. The U.S. dismissed such
- conjecture, pointing out that Israel's interests would best be
- served by having a strong neighbor on its northern border. But,
- as one U.S. analyst noted, "it says a great deal about current
- sentiment in Lebanon that so many suspect it."
- </p>
- <p> Gemayel also had powerful enemies within the Maronite Christian
- community. The family of former President Suleiman Franjieh had
- a score to settle with the Gemayels. In 1978, Franjieh's eldest
- son Tony was killed by men believed to be Phalangists, and the
- old man swore vengeance. The Lebanese leftists and the
- Palestinians may have hated Gemayel, but could they have managed
- to plant a bomb inside the Phalange headquarters? Presumably
- it would have been easier for one of the Christian factions,
- which might have had friends inside the Phalange who were ready
- to enter into a conspiracy.
- </p>
- <p> Whoever the killers were, they left a political void that will
- not easily be filled. A few possible candidates were mentioned.
- One was Camille Chamoun, 82, who served as President from 1952
- to 1958 and in the end had to seek the help of the U.S. Marines
- to keep the country from disintegrating. Another was Raymond
- Edde, 69, a former presidential aspirant living in Paris. But
- Bashir's brother Amin has become the front runner simply by
- announcing his candidacy.
- </p>
- <p> While Lebanon's leaders were struggling to settle the political
- crisis that followed Gemayel's death, the Israelis were busy
- taking over West Beirut, a goal long desired by Israeli Defense
- Minister Sharon but denied him by the peace talks led by U.S.
- Special Envoy Habib. The local Muslim population was alarmed at
- the Israeli advance: most of the Palestinian guerrillas were
- gone, and the French, Italian and American peace-keeping forces
- had also departed. Just before an Israeli column reached the
- U.S. embassy in West Beirut, the Israeli troops were ordered by
- radio to avoid shooting at the embassy building "at all cost."
- Later, however, an Israeli officer took a shot at a U.S. Marine
- standing guard atop the embassy. The bullet missed, but by
- merely 2 ft. The Israelis later apologized, saying the officer
- thought the Marine was a leftist militiaman.
- </p>
- <p> More serious was an Israeli intrusion into the compound of the
- Soviet embassy in West Beirut. According to a Soviet diplomat,
- several Israelis entered the compound Wednesday evening,
- demanding to know if there were any terrorists inside. Said the
- Soviet diplomat: "We told them this is an embassy; we have
- diplomats here, not terrorists." He said the Israelis left
- Friday, after Western reporters arrived to question their
- presence. "They were afraid of journalists," the Soviet official
- added. An Israeli military spokesman claimed that several
- Israeli soldiers had simply taken cover behind the wall
- surrounding the embassy compound. But independent sources said
- that for two days the Israelis had occupied the consulate, a
- school and a building used for lodging employees. The Israelis
- apparently were searching for Lebanese Communist leaders who
- they suspected might have sought refuge in the embassy.
- </p>
- <p> To justify their move into West Beirut, the Israelis said it
- was necessary, after Gemayel's death, to prevent bloodshed. The
- Israeli Cabinet also claimed that 2,000 P.L.O. fighters had
- remained in the city in "blatant violation of the departure
- agreement." Declared Begin: "The terrorists cheated us. Not
- all of them got out. They deceived Philip Habib too. They left
- behind a considerable number of terrorists, together with their
- arms."
- </p>
- <p> The Israeli takeover of West Beirut shocked and angered the
- Reagan Administration; the massacre appalled it. From the
- beginning, Washington had regarded the Israeli move as
- unnecessary and potentially dangerous. The news of the wholesale
- killing of Palestinian civilians reinforced the view that the
- Israelis must get out of Beirut, and the sooner the better.
- </p>
- <p> There were other, more troubling questions, which were not
- easily answered. Knowing of the hatred and the capacity for
- vengeance of the various communities in Lebanon, what could have
- possessed the Israelis to allow the Christian forces to enter
- the refugee camps? Had they conspired with the militiamen to
- root out the last vestiges of the P.L.O. and Muslim leftist
- military opposition in West Beirut? Had their ranks been spread
- too thin to keep the executioners away from their victims? Or
- had they simply been careless about giving the bloodthirsty
- militiamen a chance to run amuck? Whatever the answer,the
- government of Menachem Begin had a lot of explaining to do. It
- may eventually have a lot to regret too, for the Beirut
- bloodbath could very well provide powerful impetus to the
- Palestinian drive for a homeland.
- </p>
- <p> The leaders of Lebanon's feuding factions rarely come together
- voluntarily under any circumstances, but such an occasion took
- place last Wednesday when Bashir Gemayel was buried in his
- native village of Bikfaya, to the east of Beirut. Only a day or
- two before, Pierre Gemayel, 77, the family patriarch and founder
- of the Phalangist Party, had stood with his sons Bashir and Amin
- to being what was to have been a weeklong ceremony of receiving
- well-wishers awaiting the inauguration of Bashir as Lebanon's
- President. Now, as the trumpets blared and Israeli jet fighters
- screamed overhead in tribute, the family was receiving mourners
- by the thousands. Among them, observed Amin, the man who aims
- to succeed his brother, were representatives of most of the
- country's factions, adversaries and even blood enemies, bound
- together for an hour or two in a ritual of mourning. But then
- it was over, and so, it seemed, was the fleeting moment of
- unity.
- </p>
- <p>-- By William E. Smith. Reported by Marsh Clark/Jerusalem and
- Wilton Wynn/Beirut</p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-