Islamic Jihad Organization Explained

Islamic Jihad Organization
War:Lebanese civil war (1975–1990)
Active:Early 1983–1992
Leaders:Imad Mughniyeh[1]
Headquarters:Beirut, Baalbek
Size:400 fighters
Allies:Islamic Revolutionary Guards

Amal Movement
Islamic Dawa Party[2]
Opponents:Israel Defense Forces (IDF)
South Lebanon Army (SLA)
Multinational Force in Lebanon (MNF)

The Islamic Jihad Organization (IJO; French: Organisation du Jihad Islamique (OJI); Arabic: حركة الجهاد الإسلامي|Ḥarakat al-Jihād al-'Islāmiyy|lit=Islamic Jihad Movement) was a Lebanese Shia militia known for its activities in the 1980s during the Lebanese Civil War.[3]

The organization, advocating for the withdrawal of all Americans from Lebanon, claimed responsibility for a number of kidnappings, assassinations, and bombings of embassies and peacekeeping troops which killed several hundred people. Their deadliest attacks were in 1983, when they carried out the bombing of the barracks of French and U.S. MNF peacekeeping troops, and that of the United States embassy in Beirut.

The group was closely linked with Palestinian militant group Fatah al-Islam and reportedly financed by Iran.[4] It also maintained close ties with Hezbollah. Adam Shatz described Islamic Jihad as "a precursor to Hezbollah, which did not yet officially exist" at the time of the bombing it took credit for.[5]

Origins

Possibly formed in early 1983 and reportedly led by Imad Mughniyah, a former Lebanese Shi'ite member of Palestinian Fatah's Force 17, the IJO was not a militia but rather a typical underground urban guerrilla organization.[6] Based at Baalbek in the Beqaa valley, the group aligned 200 Lebanese Shi'ite militants financed by Iran and trained by the Iranian Revolutionary Guards' contingent previously sent by Ayatollah Khomeini to fight the June 1982 Israeli invasion of Lebanon. However, senior Iranian officials denied the alleged connections. For instance, Mehdi Karroubi claimed that Iran had not been related to the group.[7]

Existence

Initially the group was described as "a mysterious group about which virtually nothing was known,"[8] one whose "only members" seemed to be the "anonymous callers" taking credit for the bombings, or one that simply didn't exist. After the MNF bombing, the New York Times reported that "Lebanese police sources, Western intelligence sources, Israeli Government sources and leading Shi'ite Muslim religious leaders in Beirut are all convinced that there is no such thing as Islamic Jihad," as an organization, no membership, no writings, etc.[9]

Lebanese journalist Hala Jaber compared it to "a phony company which rents office space for a month and then vanishes," existing "only when it was committing an atrocity against its targets ..."[10] Journalist Robin Wright has described it as "more of an information network for a variety of cells of movements", rather than a centralized organization.[11] Not all of IJ's claims of responsibility were credible, as "in some cases, the callers seemed to be exploiting the activities of groups that had no apparent ties to Islamic Jihad," while working with some success to create "an aura of a single omnipotent force in the region."[12] Wright has compared Islamic Jihad to the Black September wing of the Palestinian Fatah,[13] serving the function of providing its controlling organization, in this case Hezbollah, with some distance and plausible deniability from acts that might provoke retaliation or other problems.

Adam Shatz of The Nation magazine has described Islamic Jihad as "a precursor to Hezbollah, which did not yet officially exist" at the time of the bombings Islamic Jihad took credit for.[14] Jeffrey Goldberg states "Using various names, including the Islamic Jihad Organization and the Organization of the Oppressed on Earth, Hezbollah remained underground until 1985, when it published a manifesto condemning the West, and proclaiming, '.... Allah is behind us supporting and protecting us while instilling fear in the hearts of our enemies.'"[15]

According to investigative journalist Ronen Bergman, "Islamic Jihad" was one of many aliases used by Hezbollah.[16] A 2003 decision by an American court named Islamic Jihad as the name used by Hezbollah for its attacks in Lebanon, and parts of the Middle East, and Europe.[17] Hezbollah itself uses the name "Islamic Resistance" (al-Muqawama al-Islamiyya) in its attacks against Israel.[18]

According to Marius Deeb, by the mid-1980s Hezbollah leaders are reported to have admitted their involvement in the attacks and the nominal nature of "Islamic Jihad", that it was merely a "telephone organisation,"[19] [20] and[21] whose name was "used by those involved to disguise their true identity."[22] [23] [24] [25] [26]

Former CIA operative and author Robert Baer describes it as the cover name used by the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). Baer claims the order for 1983 US embassy bombing is widely believed to have originated high up in the Iranian leadership hierarchy.[27] According to Baer it is "a very distinct organization, which was separate from Hezbollah because you had the [Hezbollah] consultative council which only had a vague idea of what the hostage-takers were doing."[28]

Hala Jaber calls it a name "deliberately contrived by the Iranian Revolutionary Guards and their recruits to cast confusion."[10] However, Wright is more circumspect saying: "Islamic Jihad was clearly pro-Iranian in ideology, but some doubts existed among both Muslim moderates and Western diplomats about whether it was actually directed by Iran rather than home-grown."[11]

More recently authors such as researcher Robert A. Pape[29] and journalist Lawrence Wright[30] have made no mention of Islamic Jihad and simply name Hezbollah as the author of Lebanese terror attacks claimed or attributed to Islamic Jihad: "From 1982 to 1986, Hezbollah conducted 36 suicide terrorist attacks involving a total of 41 attackers against American, French, and Israeli political and military targets in Lebanon ... Altogether, these attacks killed 659 people ..."[29]

Actions

Bombings and assassinations

Unverified claims

Kidnappings

Decline and demise, 1986–1992

The IJO suffered a setback in 1986 when their temporary abduction of four Soviet diplomats carried out previously in September 1985 ended up in the assassination of one hostage. The KGB promptly retaliated with intimidation and by pressuring Syria to stop its operations in northern Lebanon in exchange for release of the remaining three hostages.[51] This fiasco, coupled by the pressure resulting from tighter security measures and joint anti-militia sweeps implemented by the Syrian Army, the Lebanese Internal Security Forces (ISF) and the Shi'ite Amal militia at the Shia quarters of West Beirut in 1987–88, brought a steady decline in the organization's activities in Lebanon for the rest of the civil war.

The last recorded attack claimed by the IJO as an independent group took place outside the Middle East in March 1992, when the Israeli Embassy in Buenos Aires, Argentina, was blown up in retaliation for Israel's assassination of Hezbollah's secretary-general Abbas al-Musawi in February that year.[52] [41] [53]

This organization is no longer active. Some reports indicate that they merged with Hezbollah afterwards, with their leader Imad Mughniyeh appointed head of that party's overseas security apparatus.[54] [55] In 2008 Mughniyeh was killed by a car bomb in Damascus, Syria as a part of a CIA and Mossad combined operation.[56] [57] [58] [59] [60]

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Hezbollah's most wanted commander killed in Syria bomb. Reuters. 13 February 2008. 14 April 2017.
  2. Web site: حزب الدعوة العراقي.. النسخة الشيعية لجماعة الإخوان المسلمين.
  3. Web site: Islamic Jihad Organization (Lebanon) / Islamic Jihad (IJO). Terrorism Research & Analysis Consortium.
  4. Book: Najem . Tom . Historical Dictionary of Lebanon . Amore . Roy C. . Abu Khalil . As'ad . 2021 . Rowman & Littlefield . 978-1-5381-2043-9 . 2nd . Historical Dictionaries of Asia, Oceania, and the Middle East . Lanham Boulder New York London . 161.
  5. In Search of Hezbollah. Adam Shatz. The New York Review of Books. 29 April 2004. 14 August 2006.
  6. Web site: Tehran's master terrorist, Imad Mughniyah and the forgotten road to 9/11 part I of II. Stephen Hughes. Jerusalem Post. 2 July 2015. 4 April 2017.
  7. News: Karrubi: Iran knows Islamic Jihad only through media. 5 August 2013. Kayhan International. 6 June 1985. 5 August 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20130805115127/http://www.dtic.mil/cgi-bin/GetTRDoc?AD=ADA338002. live.
  8. Wright, Robin, Sacred Rage, Simon & Schuster, (2001), p.73
  9. New York Times, 30 December 1983, p.A6, "The Search for Evidence."
  10. Hezbollah: Born with a vengeance by Hala Jaber, p.113
  11. Wright, Robin, Sacred Rage, Simon & Schuster, (2001), p.85
  12. Wright, Robin, Sacred Rage, Simon & Schuster, (2001), p.86
  13. Wright, Robin, Sacred Rage, Simon & Schuster, (2001), p.95
  14. In Search of Hezbollah. Adam Shatz. The New York Review of Books. 29 April 2004. 14 August 2006.
  15. http://www.jeffreygoldberg.net/articles/tny/a_reporter_at_large_in_the_par.php In The Party Of God
  16. Book: Bergman . Ronen . Rise and Kill First: The Secret History of Israel's Targeted Assassinations . 2018 . Random House Publishing Group . 9780679604686 .
  17. see also Web site: Anne Dammarell et al. v. Islamic Republic of Iran . Bates, John D. (Presiding) . September 2003 . District of Columbia, U.S. . The United States District Court for the District of Columbia . 21 September 2006 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20051231142249/http://www.dcd.uscourts.gov/01-2224.pdf . 31 December 2005 .
  18. [Magnus Ranstorp]
  19. Marius Deeb, Militant Islamic Movements in Lebanon: Origins, Social Basis, and Ideology, Occasional Paper Series (Washington, DC, Georgetown University, 1986) p.19
  20. al-Nahar, 7 September 1985
  21. LaRevue du Liban, 27 July-3 August 1985
  22. al-Nahar al-Arabi, 10 June
  23. Ma'aretz, 16 December 1983
  24. Le Point, 30 July 1987
  25. al-Shira, 28 August 1988
  26. Nouveau Magazine, 23 July 1988
  27. [Robert Baer|Baer, Robert]
  28. Web site: terror and tehran. 2 May 2002. www.pbs.org. 18 August 2017.
  29. Pape, Robert A., Dying to Win : The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism, Random House, 2005 p.129
  30. Wright, Lawrence, Looming Tower: Al Qaeda and the Road to 9/11, by Lawrence Wright, NY, Knopf, 2006
  31. New York Times, 19 April 1983, "Islamic Attacks Seen as Pro-Iranian", Hijazi, Ihsan, p. A12
  32. Wright, Robin, Sacred Rage, Simon & Schuster, 2001, p. 73, pp. 15–16
  33. Wright, Robin, Sacred Rage, Simon & Schuster, 2001, p. 73
  34. Wright, Robin, Sacred Rage, Simon & Schuster, 2001, p. 112
  35. Wright, Robin, Sacred Rage, Simon & Schuster, 2001, pp. 101–2
  36. News: Two Iranian exiles are assassinated in Paris. Lodi News Sentinel. 8 February 1984. UPI. Paris.
  37. Wright, Robin, Sacred Rage, Simon & Schuster, 2001, p. 107
  38. Walker, Jane. "Spanish bomb blast blamed on Jihad / Madrid restaurant explosion blamed on Muslim group." The Guardian, 15 April 1985.
  39. New York Times 26 May 1985
  40. "27 Injured in 3 Terrorist Explosions in Copenhagen". Los Angeles Times. Associated Press. 22 July 1985. Archived from the original on 2015-02-15.
  41. Web site: 1992 Patterns of Global Terrorism: The Year in Review. 18 August 2017.
  42. Watson, Laurie. "Errors By Crew Reportedly Cited in Gander Crash", Philadelphia Inquirer, United Press International, 6 November 1988, pp. A33.
  43. Web site: Arrow Air Flight 1285 accident record. ASN.
  44. Web site: CSB Majority Report.
  45. Web site: CASB Majority Report.
  46. Web site: Lebanon – The Hostage Crisis. www.country-data.com. 18 August 2017.
  47. Wright, Robin, Sacred Rage, Simon & Schuster, 2001, p.101,2,4
  48. News: Ap. 1987-02-01. Abductors in Beirut Demand That Israel Free 400 Prisoners. en-US. The New York Times. 2020-03-13. 0362-4331.
  49. News: 1991: Church envoy Waite freed in Beirut. 1991-11-18. 2020-03-13. en-GB.
  50. Web site: From the archive: Bells ring nationwide to welcome Terry Waite. www.churchtimes.co.uk. 2020-03-13.
  51. Web site: Interview with former Beirut KGB resident Yuri Perfilev. 18 August 2017. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20070128011810/http://svr.gov.ru/smi/2001/ogon20011022.htm. 28 January 2007.
  52. Web site: Interviews – Robert Baer – Terror And Tehran – FRONTLINE – PBS. . 2 May 2002. 18 May 2016.
  53. News: Long. William R.. Islamic Jihad Says It Bombed Embassy; Toll 21. 23 July 2012. Los Angeles Times. 19 March 1992.
  54. News: Hezbollah Again Postpones General Congress. 25 March 2013. Al Monitor. 20 March 2013.
  55. News: The Final Hours of Imad Mughniyeh . 4 April 2013 . Al Akhbar . 19 February 2013 . Damascus . https://web.archive.org/web/20130222031958/http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/exclusive-final-hours-imad-mughniyeh . 22 February 2013 . dead .
  56. News: Hezbollah's most wanted commander killed in Syria bomb. 13 February 2008. 13 February 2008. Reuters.
  57. News: Israel denies assassinating Hezbollah chief. Powell. Robyn. 13 February 2008. Daily Telegraph. https://web.archive.org/web/20080215010927/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=%2Fnews%2F2008%2F02%2F13%2Fwhizbollah213.xml. 15 February 2008. dead. Chivers, Tom. London. dmy-all.
  58. http://www.jpost.com/Features/FrontLines/Article.aspx?id=207767
  59. News: CIA and Mossad killed senior Hezbollah figure in car bombing. Goldman. Adam. 2015-01-30. Washington Post. 2018-02-16. Nakashima. Ellen. en-US. 0190-8286.
  60. News: Why the CIA Killed Imad Mughniyeh. POLITICO Magazine. 2018-02-15.