From Deseret News archives:
1983 Beirut bomb began era of terror
In 1983, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger didn't want the Marines in Beirut.
They'd gone in the year before to calm fears that Lebanon's civil war could spark a battle engulfing the entire Middle East. The Marines' role was to evacuate Palestinian fighters and prevent an invasion from neighboring Israel.
U.S. diplomats promised the safety of Palestinian families who remained. But after the Marines finished their job and withdrew in 1982, thousands of Palestinians largely women, children and the elderly were massacred by Israeli-backed Lebanese militia.
An embarrassed State Department persuaded President Ronald Reagan to send the Marines back, hoping their mere presence in Lebanon would prevent further bloodshed and salvage the peace plan. Weinberger fought the decision.
To signal they were neutral in the civil war, the Marines were stationed between warring factions. They made their base at Beirut International Airport the tactically unwise low ground.
They carried weapons, but the rules of engagement mostly forbade them from keeping a round in the chamber. They had orders not to shoot unless they were direct targets and knew for sure who had fired first.
But by trying to keep order in Beirut, the Marines and U.S. diplomats were seen as allies of Lebanon's unpopular government and became targets of snipers, shellings and car bombings.
In April 1983, terrorists smashed a stolen GMC pickup loaded with explosives into the U.S. Embassy, killing 63 people, including 17 Americans.
Six months later, the truck bomb at the Marine barracks killed 241 U.S. troops.
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dude not cool
Anonymous | April 18, 2008 at 12:18 p.m.
It is a shame that individuals take advantage of a horrific incident...
JWhiting | March 12, 2008 at 7:10 a.m.
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