1984 US embassy bombing in Beirut explained

1984 United States embassy annex bombing
Location:Beirut, Lebanon
Time:11:44 am
Partof:the Lebanese Civil War
Type:Suicide van bomb
Weapon:1360kg (3,000lb) explosive laden van
Fatalities:23 (+1 bomber)
Injuries:90
Perps:Hezbollah, Islamic Republic of Iran

On September 20, 1984, the Shi'a Islamic militant group Hezbollah, with support and direction from the Islamic Republic of Iran, carried out a suicide car bombing targeting the U.S. embassy annex in East Beirut, Lebanon during the Lebanese Civil War. The attack killed 23 people and 1 attacker.

Hezbollah had also used suicide car or truck bombs in the April 1983 U.S. embassy bombing and the 1983 Beirut barracks bombings.

Bombing

In July 1984, the U.S. had relocated its embassy operations from West Beirut to the relative security of Aukar, a Christian suburb of East Beirut.[1] When on September 20, 1984, the attacker sped his van laden with 3,000 pounds (1360 kg) of explosives toward the six-story embassy, crucial security measures had not yet been completed at the complex, including a massive steel gate. The van was heading for the entrance of the diplomatic facility, but did not get within ten yards of the building after the driver was shot by a bodyguard of the British ambassador and Lebanese embassy guards and lost control of the vehicle. The vehicle detonated at 11:44 a.m. after striking a parked van.[2]

The explosion "ripped off the front of the embassy, shredding glass, bending steel bars and destroying cars in a nearby parking lot." The attack killed a total of 23 people (+1 suicide bomber). Only two of the dead were American: Chief Warrant Officer Kenneth V. Welch of the U.S. Army and Petty Officer 1st Class Michael Ray Wagner of the U.S. Navy, who were both assigned to the U.S. Defense Attache Office in Beirut. The majority of those killed were Lebanese, "either local employees or people seeking visas". Of the injured, the U.S. Ambassador, Reginald Bartholomew, was slightly hurt, as well as the British Ambassador, David Miers, who was meeting with Bartholomew at the time of explosion.[3]

Responsibility

The Islamic Jihad Organization (IJO) claimed responsibility for the attack in a telephone call a few hours after the explosion. The caller said, "The operation goes to prove that we will carry out our previous promise not to allow a single American to remain on Lebanese soil."[3] The U.S. government understood that Hezbollah had carried out the attack under the cover name of IJO with the support of Iran.[4] Through satellite reconnaissance, U.S. intelligence discovered that a mock-up of the annex had been created at the Iranian Revolutionary Guard-run Sheikh Abdullah barracks in Baalbek to practice for the attack.[5] [6]

Legal cases

Under the amended Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act, victims of the bombing and their families have filed cases against the Islamic Republic of Iran, holding it responsible for its role in the attack and demanding compensation.

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: 24 September 1984 . Neighbors of Embassy Say They're in Danger . The New York Times.
  2. Book: Wright, Robin . 2001 . Sacred Rage: The Wrath of Militant Islam . Simon and Schuster . registration . sacred rage. . 106–108 . 9780743233422 .
  3. News: 21 September 1984 . 23 Die, Including 2 Americans, in Terrorist Car Bomb Attack on the U.S. Embassy at Beirut . The New York Times .
  4. Book: Levitt, Matthew . 2013 . Hezbollah: The Global Footprint of Lebanon's Party of God . 23 . Georgetown University Press . 9781626160132 .
  5. Book: Crist, David . 2012 . The Twilight War: The Secret History of America's Thirty-Year Conflict with Iran . 151–152 . Penguin . 9781101572344 .
  6. Book: Willis, David . 2004 . The First War on Terrorism: Counter-terrorism Policy during the Reagan Administration . 84–85 . Rowman & Littlefield Publishers . 9781417503612 .
  7. Web site: Representative Engagements . Crowell & Moring .
  8. News: 16 October 2009 . Iran Ordered to Pay $310 Million to U.S. Embassy Bombing Victim . Bloomberg .