The History
of the Car Bomb
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Mike Davis
by Tom Engelhardt and
Mike Davis
In a column
on March 23 (A
Vision, Bruised and Dented), David Brooks of the New York
Times' wrote about "the rise of what Richard Lowry of the National
Review calls the ‘To Hell With Them' Hawks." In part, Brooks
characterized these hawks as being conservatives who "look at car
bombs and cartoon riots and wonder whether Islam is really a religion
of peace." One of the advantages of history is that you have to
check such thoughts at the door. If Islam can't be considered a
"religion of peace," thanks to what Mike Davis calls "the quotidian
workhorse of urban terrorism," then at least its jihadists
join a roiling crowd of less-than-peaceful car-bombers that has
included Jews, Christians, Hindus, anarchists, French colonials,
Mafiosos, members of the Irish Republican Army, and CIA operatives
among others.
Now, consider
joining Tomdispatch in one of the more original and less expectable
voyages into the recent history of our world. The car bomb seems
such a weapon of the moment that who even knew it had an 80-year-long,
tortured history. But Mike Davis, whose most recent projects include
the only significant book on the Avian flu, The
Monster at Our Door, and Planet
of Slums, a startling analysis of the way significant parts
of our planet have been rapidly urbanizing and de-industrializing
all at once, almost invariably produces the unexpected. This week,
Tomdispatch offers his two-part history of the car bomb, a series
that puts one of the more terrifying phenomena of our moment into
a new perspective and shines a dazzling light into any number of
dark corners of our recent past. It will, at some future point,
be expanded into a small book and so Davis would like to hear from
anyone with information on other car bomb campaigns of the last
half century. ~ Tom
The Poor
Man's Air Force
By Mike
Davis
Buda's
Wagon (1920)
"You have
shown no pity to us! We will do likewise. We will dynamite
you!
~
Anarchist warning (1919)
On a warm
September day in 1920, a few months after the arrest of his comrades
Sacco and Vanzetti, a vengeful Italian anarchist named Mario Buda
parked his horse-drawn wagon near the corner of Wall and Broad Streets,
directly across from J. P. Morgan Company. He nonchalantly climbed
down and disappeared, unnoticed, into the lunchtime crowd. A few
blocks away, a startled postal worker found strange leaflets warning:
"Free the Political Prisoners or it will be Sure Death for All of
You!" They were signed: "American Anarchist Fighters." The bells
of nearby Trinity Church began to toll at noon. When they stopped,
the wagon packed with dynamite and iron slugs exploded
in a fireball of shrapnel.
"The horse
and wagon were blown to bits," writes Paul Avrich, the celebrated
historian of American anarchism who uncovered the true story. "Glass
showered down from office windows, and awnings twelve stories above
the street burst into flames. People fled in terror as a great cloud
of dust enveloped the area. In Morgan's offices, Thomas Joyce of
the securities department fell dead on his desk amid a rubble of
plaster and walls. Outside scores of bodies littered the streets."
Buda was undoubtedly
disappointed when he learned that J.P. Morgan himself was not among
the 40 dead and more than 200 wounded the great robber baron
was away in Scotland at his hunting lodge. Nonetheless, a poor immigrant
with some stolen dynamite, a pile of scrap metal, and an old horse
had managed to bring unprecedented terror to the inner sanctum of
American capitalism.
His Wall Street
bomb was the culmination of a half-century of anarchist fantasies
about avenging angels made of dynamite; but it was also an invention,
like Charles Babbage's Difference Engine, far ahead of the imagination
of its time. Only after the barbarism of strategic bombing had become
commonplace, and when air forces routinely pursued insurgents into
the labyrinths of poor cities, would the truly radical potential
of Buda's "infernal machine" be fully realized.
Buda's wagon
was, in essence, the prototype car bomb: the first use of an inconspicuous
vehicle, anonymous in almost any urban setting, to transport large
quantities of high explosive into precise range of a high-value
target. It was not replicated, as far as I have been able to determine,
until January 12, 1947 when the Stern Gang drove a truckload of
explosives into a British police station in Haifa, Palestine, killing
4 and injuring 140. The Stern Gang (a pro-fascist splinter group
led by Avraham Stern that broke away from the right-wing Zionist
paramilitary Irgun) would soon use truck and car bombs to kill Palestinians
as well: a creative atrocity immediately reciprocated by British
deserters fighting on the side of Palestinian nationalists.
Vehicle bombs
thereafter were used sporadically producing notable massacres
in Saigon (1952), Algiers (1962), and Palermo (1963) but
the gates of hell were only truly opened in 1972, when the Provisional
Irish Republican Army (IRA) accidentally, so the legend goes, improvised
the first ammonium nitrate-fuel oil (ANFO) car bomb. These new-generation
bombs, requiring only ordinary industrial ingredients and synthetic
fertilizer, were cheap to fabricate and astonishingly powerful:
they elevated urban terrorism from the artisanal to the industrial
level, and made possible sustained blitzes against entire city centers
as well as the complete destruction of ferro-concrete skyscrapers
and residential blocks.
The car bomb,
in other words, suddenly became a semi-strategic weapon that, under
certain circumstances, was comparable to airpower in its ability
to knock out critical urban nodes and headquarters as well as terrorize
the populations of entire cities. Indeed, the suicide truck bombs
that devastated the U.S. embassy and Marine barracks in Beirut in
1983 prevailed at least in a geopolitical sense over
the combined firepower of the fighter-bombers and battleships of
the U.S. Sixth Fleet and forced the Reagan administration to retreat
from Lebanon.
Hezbollah's
ruthless and brilliant use of car bombs in Lebanon in the 1980s
to counter the advanced military technology of the United States,
France, and Israel soon emboldened a dozen other groups to bring
their insurgencies and jihads home to the metropolis. Some
of the new-generation car bombers were graduates of terrorism schools
set up by the CIA and Pakistani intelligence (the ISI), with Saudi
financing, in the mid-1980s to train mujahedin to terrorize
the Russians then occupying Kabul. Between 1992 and 1998, 16 major
vehicle bomb attacks in 13 different cities killed 1,050 people
and wounded nearly 12,000. More importantly from a geopolitical
standpoint, the IRA and Gama'a al-Islamiyya inflicted billions of
dollars of damage on the two leading control-centers of the world
economy the City of London (1992, 1993, and 1996) and lower
Manhattan (1993) and forced a reorganization of the global
reinsurance industry.
In the new
millennium, 85 years after that first massacre on Wall Street, car
bombs have become almost as generically global as iPods and HIV-AIDS,
cratering the streets of cities from Bogotá to Bali. Suicide truck
bombs, once the distinctive signature of Hezbollah, have been franchised
to Sri Lanka, Chechnya/Russia, Turkey, Egypt, Kuwait, and Indonesia.
On any graph of urban terrorism, the curve representing car bombs
is rising steeply, almost exponentially. U.S.-occupied Iraq, of
course, is a relentless inferno with more than 9,000 casualties
mainly civilian attributed to vehicle bombs in the
two-year period between July 2003 and June 2005. Since then, the
frequency of car-bomb attacks has dramatically increased: 140 per
month in the fall of 2005, 13 in Baghdad on New Year's Day 2006
alone. If roadside bombs or IEDs are the most effective device against
American armored vehicles, car bombs are the weapon of choice for
slaughtering Shiite civilians in front of mosques and markets and
instigating an apocalyptic sectarian war.
Under siege
from weapons indistinguishable from ordinary traffic, the apparatuses
of administration and finance are retreating inside "rings of steel"
and "green zones," but the larger challenge of the car bomb seems
intractable. Stolen nukes, Sarin gas, and anthrax may be the "sum
of our fears," but the car bomb is the quotidian workhorse of urban
terrorism. Before considering its genealogy, however, it may be
helpful to summarize those characteristics that make Buda's wagon
such a formidable and undoubtedly permanent source of urban insecurity.
First,
vehicle bombs are stealth weapons of surprising power and destructive
efficiency. Trucks, vans, or even SUVs can easily transport the
equivalent of several conventional 1,000-pound bombs to the doorstep
of a prime target. Moreover, their destructive power is still evolving,
thanks to the constant tinkering of ingenious bomb-makers. We have
yet to face the full horror of semi-trailer-sized explosions with
a lethal blast range of 200 yards or of dirty bombs sheathed in
enough nuclear waste to render mid-Manhattan radioactive for generations.
Second,
they are extraordinarily cheap: 40 or 50 people can be massacred
with a stolen car and maybe $400 of fertilizer and bootlegged electronics.
Ramzi Yousef, the mastermind of the 1993 attack on the World Trade
Center, bragged that his most expensive outlay was in long-distance
phone calls. The explosive itself (one half ton of urea) cost $3,615
plus the $59 per day rental for a ten-foot-long Ryder van. In contrast,
the cruise missiles that have become the classic American riposte
to overseas terrorist attacks cost $1.1 million each.
Third,
car bombings are operationally simple to organize. Although some
still refuse to believe that Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols didn't
have secret assistance from a government or dark entity, two men
in the proverbial phone booth a security-guard and a farmer
successfully planned and executed the horrendous Oklahoma
City bombing with instructional books and information acquired from
the gun-show circuit.
Fourth,
like even the ‘smartest' of aerial bombs, car bombs are inherently
indiscriminate: "Collateral damage" is virtually inevitable. If
the logic of an attack is to slaughter innocents and sow panic in
the widest circle, to operate a "strategy of tension," or just demoralize
a society, car bombs are ideal. But they are equally effective at
destroying the moral credibility of a cause and alienating its mass
base of support, as both the IRA and the ETA in Spain have independently
discovered. The car bomb is an inherently fascist weapon.
Fifth,
car bombs are highly anonymous and leave minimal forensic evidence.
Buda quietly went home to Italy, leaving William Burns, J. Edgar
Hoover, and the Bureau of Investigation (later, to be renamed the
FBI) to make fools of themselves as they chased one false lead after
another for a decade. Most of Buda's descendants have also escaped
identification and arrest. Anonymity, in addition, greatly recommends
car bombs to those who like to disguise their handiwork, including
the CIA, the Israeli Mossad, the Syrian GSD, the Iranian Pasdaran,
and the Pakistani ISI all of whom have caused unspeakable
carnage with such devices.
Preliminary
Detonations (1948-63)
"Reds' Time
Bombs Rip Saigon Center"
New
York Times' headline (January 10, 1952)
The members
of the Stern Gang were ardent students of violence, self-declared
Jewish admirers of Mussolini who steeped themselves in the terrorist
traditions of the pre-1917 Russian Socialist-Revolutionary Party,
the Macedonian IMRO, and the Italian Blackshirts. As the most extreme
wing of the Zionist movement in Palestine "fascists" to the
Haganah and "terrorists" to the British they were morally
and tactically unfettered by considerations of diplomacy or world
opinion. They had a fierce and well-deserved reputation for the
originality of their operations and the unexpectedness of their
attacks. On January 12, 1947, as part of their campaign to prevent
any compromise between mainstream Zionism and the British Labor
government, they exploded a powerful truck bomb in the central police
station in Haifa, resulting in 144 casualties. Three months later,
they repeated the tactic in Tel Aviv, blowing up the Sarona police
barracks (5 dead) with a stolen postal truck filled with dynamite.
In December
1947, following the UN vote to partition Palestine, full-scale fighting
broke out between Jewish and Arab communities from Haifa to Gaza.
The Stern Gang, which rejected anything less than the restoration
of a biblical Israel, now gave the truck bomb its debut as a weapon
of mass terror. On January 4, 1948, two men in Arab dress drove
a truck ostensibly loaded with oranges into the center of Jaffa
and parked it next to the New Seray Building, which housed the Palestinian
municipal government as well as a soup-kitchen for poor children.
They coolly lingered for coffee at a nearby café before leaving
a few minutes ahead of the detonation.
"A thunderous
explosion," writes Adam LeBor in his history of Jaffa, "then shook
the city. Broken glass and shattered masonry blew out across Clock
Tower Square. The New Seray's centre and side walls collapsed in
a pile of rubble and twisted beams. Only the neo-classical façade
survived. After a moment of silence, the screams began, 26 were
killed, hundreds injured. Most were civilians, including many children
eating at the charity kitchen." The bomb missed the local Palestinian
leadership who had moved to another building, but the atrocity was
highly successful in terrifying residents and setting the stage
for their eventual flight.
It also provoked
the Palestinians to cruel repayment in kind. The Arab High Committee
had its own secret weapon blond-haired British deserters,
fighting on the side of the Palestinians. Nine days after the Jaffa
bombing, some of these deserters, led by Eddie Brown, a former police
corporal whose brother had been murdered by the Irgun, commandeered
a postal delivery truck which they packed with explosives and detonated
in the center of Haifa's Jewish quarter, injuring 50 people. Two
weeks later, Brown, driving a stolen car and followed by a five-ton
truck driven by a Palestinian in a police uniform, successfully
passed through British and Haganah checkpoints and entered Jerusalem's
New City. The driver parked in front of the Palestine Post,
lit the fuse, and then escaped with Brown in his car. The newspaper
headquarters was devastated with 1 dead and 20 wounded.
According
to a chronicler of the episode, Abdel Kader el-Husseini, the military
leader of the Arab Higher Committee, was so impressed by the success
of these operations inadvertently inspired by the Stern Gang
that he authorized an ambitious sequel employing six British
deserters. "This time three trucks were used, escorted by a stolen
British armored car with a young blond man in police uniform standing
in the turret." Again, the convoy easily passed through checkpoints
and drove to the Atlantic Hotel on Ben Yehuda Street. A curious
night watchman was murdered when he confronted the gang, who then
drove off in the armored car after setting charges in the three
trucks. The explosion was huge and the toll accordingly grim: 46
dead and 130 wounded.
The window
of opportunity for such attacks the possibility of passing
from one zone to another was rapidly closing as Palestinians
and Jews braced for all-out warfare, but a final attack prefigured
the car bomb's brilliant future as a tool of assassination. On March
11, the official limousine of the American consul-general, flying
the stars and stripes and driven by the usual chauffeur, was admitted
to the courtyard of the heavily-guarded Jewish Agency compound.
The driver, a Christian Palestinian named Abu Yussef, hoped to kill
Zionist leader David Ben Gurion, but the limousine was moved just
before it exploded; nonetheless, 13 officials of the Jewish Foundation
Fund died and 40 were injured.
This brief
but furious exchange of car bombs between Arabs and Jews would enter
into the collective memory of their conflict, but would not be resumed
on a large scale until Israel and its Phalangist allies began to
terrorize West Beirut with bombings in 1981: a provocation that
would awake a Shiite sleeping dragon. Meanwhile, the real sequel
was played out in Saigon: a series of car and motorcycle bomb atrocities
in 195253 that Graham Greene incorporated into the plot of
his novel, The
Quiet American, and which he portrayed as secretly orchestrated
by his CIA operative Alden Pyle, who is conspiring to substitute
a pro-American party for both the Viet-Minh (upon whom the actual
bombings would be blamed) and the French (who are unable to guarantee
public safety).
The real-life
Quiet American was the counterinsurgency expert Colonel Edward Lansdale
(fresh from victories against peasant Communists in the Philippines),
and the real leader of the ‘Third Force' was his protégé, General
Trinh Minh The of the Cao Dai religious sect. There is no doubt,
writes The's biographer, that the general "instigated many terrorist
outrages in Saigon, using clockwork plastic charges loaded into
vehicles, or hidden inside bicycle frames with charges. Notably,
the Li An Minh [The's army] blew up cars in front of the Opera House
in Saigon in 1952. These ‘time-bombs' were reportedly made of 50-kg
ordnance, used by the French air force, unexploded and collected
by the Li An Minh."
Lansdale was
dispatched to Saigon by Allen Dulles of the CIA some months after
the Opera atrocity (hideously immortalized in a Life photographer's
image of the upright corpse of a rickshaw driver with both legs
blown off), which was officially blamed on Ho Chi Minh. Although
Lansdale was well aware of General The's authorship of these sophisticated
attacks (the explosives were hidden in false compartments next to
car gas tanks), he nonetheless championed the Cao Dai warlord as
a patriot in the mould of Washington and Jefferson. After either
French agents or Vietminh cadre assassinated The, Landsdale eulogized
him to a journalist as "a good man. He was moderate, he was a pretty
good general, he was on our side, and he cost twenty-five thousand
dollars."
Whether by
emulation or reinvention, car bombs showed up next in another war-torn
French colony Algiers during the last days of the pied
noirs or French colonial settlers. Some of the embittered French
officers in Saigon in 195253 would also become cadres of the
Organisation de l'Armé Secrete (OAS), led by General Raoul
Salan. In April 1961, after the failure of its uprising against
French President Charles de Gaulle, who was prepared to negotiate
a settlement with the Algerian rebels, the OAS turned to terrorism
a veritable festival de plastique with all
the formidable experience of its veteran paratroopers and legionnaires.
Its declared enemies included De Gaulle himself, French security
forces, communists, peace activists (including philosopher and activist
Jean-Paul Sartre), and especially Algerian civilians. The most deadly
of their car bombs killed 62 Moslem stevedores lining up for work
at the docks in Algiers in May 1962, but succeeded only in bolstering
the Algerian resolve to drive all the pied-noirs into the
sea.
The next destination
for the car bomb was Palermo, Sicily. Angelo La Barbera, the Mafia
capo of Palermo-Center, undoubtedly paid careful attention
to the Algerian bombings and may even have borrowed some OAS expertise
when he launched his devastating attack on his Mafia rival, "Little
Bird" Greco, in February 1963. Greco's bastion was the town of Ciaculli
outside Palermo where he was protected by an army of henchmen. La
Barbera surmounted this obstacle with the aid of the Alfa Romeo
Giulietta. "This dainty four-door family saloon," writes John Dickie
in his history of the Cosa Nostra, "was one of the symbols of Italy's
economic miracle ‘svelte, practical, comfortable, safe and
convenient,' as the adverts proclaimed." The first explosive-packed
Giulietta destroyed Greco's house; the second, a few weeks later,
killed one of his key allies. Greco's gunmen retaliated, wounding
La Barbera in Milan in May; in response, La Barbera's ambitious
lieutenants Pietro Torreta and Tommaso Buscetta (later to become
the most famous of all Mafia pentiti) unleashed more deadly
Giuliettas.
On June 30,
1963, "the umpteenth Giulietta stuffed with TNT" was left in one
of the tangerine groves that surround Ciaculli. A tank of butane
with a fuse was clearly visible in the back seat. A Giulietta had
already exploded that morning in a nearby town, killing two people,
so the carabinieri were cautious and summoned army engineers
for assistance. "Two hours later two bomb disposal experts arrived,
cut the fuse, and pronounced the vehicle safe to approach. But when
Lt. Mario Malausa made to inspect the contents of the boot, he detonated
the huge quantity of TNT it contained. He and six other men were
blown to pieces by an explosion that scorched and stripped the tangerine
trees for hundreds of metres around." (The site is today marked
by one of the several monuments to bomb victims in the Palermo region.)
Before this
"First Mafia War" ended in 1964, the Sicilian population had learned
to tremble at the very sight of a Giulietta and car bombings had
become a permanent part of the Mafia repertoire. They were employed
again during an even bloodier second Mafia war or Matanza
in 198183, then turned against the Italian public in the early
1990s after the conviction of Cosa Nostra leaders in a series of
sensational "maxi-trials." The most notorious of these blind-rage
car bombings presumably organized by ‘Tractor' Provenzano
and his notorious Corleonese gang was the explosion in May
1993 that damaged the world-famous Uffizi Gallery in the heart of
Florence and killed 5 pedestrians, injuring 40 others.
"The Black
Stuff"
"We could
feel the rattle where we stood. Then we knew we were onto something,
and it took off from there."
~
IRA veteran talking about the first ANFO car bomb
The first-generation
car bombs Jaffa-Jerusalem, Saigon, Algiers, and Palermo
were deadly enough (with a maximum yield usually equal to several
hundred pounds of TNT), but required access to stolen industrial
or military explosives. Journeymen bomb-makers, however, were aware
of a homemade alternative – notoriously dangerous to concoct, but
offering almost unlimited vistas of destruction at a low cost. Ammonium
nitrate is a universally available synthetic fertilizer and industrial
ingredient with extraordinary explosive properties, as witnessed
by such accidental cataclysms as an explosion at a chemical plant
in Oppau, Germany in 1921 the shock waves were felt 150 miles
away and only a vast crater remained where the plant had been
and a Texas City disaster in 1947 (600 dead and 90% of the town
structurally damaged). Ammonium nitrate is sold in half-ton quantities
affordable by even the most cash-strapped terrorist, but the process
of mixing it with fuel oil to create an ANFO explosive is more than
a little tricky as the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) found
out in late 1971.
"The car bomb
was [re]discovered entirely by accident," explains journalist Ed
Maloney in his The
Secret History of the IRA, "but its deployment by the Belfast
IRA was not. The chain of events began in late December 1971 when
the IRA's quartermaster general, Jack McCabe, was fatally injured
in an explosion caused when an experimental, fertilizer-based homemade
mix known as the ‘black stuff' exploded as he was blending it with
a shovel in his garage on the northern outskirts of Dublin. [Provisionals']
GHQ warned that the mix was too dangerous to handle, but Belfast
had already received a consignment, and someone had the idea of
disposing of it by dumping it in a car with a fuse and a timer and
leaving it somewhere in downtown Belfast." The resulting explosion
made a big impression upon the Belfast leadership.
The "black
stuff" which the IRA soon learned how to handle safely
freed the underground army from supply-side constraints: the car
bomb enhanced destructive capacity yet reduced the likelihood of
Volunteers being arrested or accidentally blown up. The ANFO-car
bomb combination, in other words, was an unexpected military revolution,
but one fraught with the potential for political and moral disaster.
"The sheer size of the devices," emphasizes Moloney, "greatly increased
the risk of civilian deaths in careless or bungled operations."
The IRA Army
Council led by Sean MacStiofain, however, found the new weapon's
awesome capabilities too seductive to worry about ways in which
its grisly consequences might backfire on them. Indeed, car bombs
reinforced the illusion, shared by most of the top leadership in
1972, that the IRA was one final military offensive away from victory
over the English government. Accordingly, in March 1972, two car
bombs were sent into Belfast city center followed by garbled phone
warnings that led police to inadvertently evacuate people in the
direction of one of the explosions: Five civilians were killed along
with two members of the security forces. Despite the public outcry
as well as the immediate traffic closure of the Royal Avenue shopping
precinct, the Belfast Brigade's enthusiasm for the new weapon remained
undiminished and the leadership plotted a huge attack designed to
bring normal commercial life in Northern Ireland to an abrupt halt.
MacStiofain boasted of an offensive of "the utmost ferocity and
ruthlessness" that would wreck the "colonial infrastructure."
On Friday,
July 21st, IRA Volunteers left 20 car bombs or concealed charges
on the periphery of the now-gated city center, with detonations
timed to follow one another at approximately five-minute intervals.
The first car bomb exploded in front of the Ulster Bank in north
Belfast and blew both legs off a Catholic passerby; successive explosions
damaged two railroad stations, the Ulster bus depot on Oxford Street,
various railway junctions, and a mixed Catholic-Protestant residential
area on Cavehill Road. "At the height of the bombing, the center
of Belfast resembled a city under artillery fire; clouds of suffocating
smoke enveloped buildings as one explosion followed another, almost
drowning out the hysterical screams of panicked shoppers." A series
of telephoned IRA warnings just created more chaos, as civilians
fled from one explosion only to be driven back by another. Seven
civilians and two soldiers were killed and more than 130 people
were seriously wounded.
Although not
an economic knockout punch, "Bloody Friday" was the beginning of
a "no business as usual" bombing campaign that quickly inflicted
significant damage on the Northern Ireland economy, particularly
its ability to attract private and foreign investment. The terror
of that day also compelled authorities to tighten their anti-car-bomb
"ring of steel" around the Belfast city center, making it the prototype
for other fortified enclaves and future "green zones." In the tradition
of their ancestors, the Fenians, who had originated dynamite terrorism
in the 1870s, Irish Republicans had again added new pages to the
textbook of urban guerrilla warfare. Foreign aficionados,
particularly in the Middle East, undoubtedly paid close attention
to the twin innovations of the ANFO car bomb and its employment
in a protracted bombing campaign against an entire urban-regional
economy.
What was less
well understood outside of Ireland, however, was the enormity of
the wound that the IRA's car bombs inflicted on the Republican movement
itself. Bloody Friday destroyed much of the IRA's heroic-underdog
popular image, produced deep revulsion amongst ordinary Catholics,
and gave the British government an unexpected reprieve from the
worldwide condemnation it had earned for the Blood Sunday massacre
in Derry and internment without trial. Moreover, it gave the Army
the perfect pretext to launch massive Operation Motorman: 13,000
troops led by Centurian tanks entered the "no-go" areas of Derry
and Belfast and reclaimed control of the streets from the Republican
movement. The same day, a bloody, bungled car bomb attack on the
village of Claudy in County Londonderry killed 8 people. (Protestant
Loyalist paramilitary groups who never bothered with warnings
and deliberately targeted civilians on the other side would
claim Bloody Friday and Claudy as sanctions for their triple car
bomb attack on Dublin during afternoon rush hour on May 17, 1974
which left 33 dead, the highest one-day toll in the course of the
"Troubles.")
The Belfast
debacle led to a major turnover in IRA leadership, but failed to
dispel their almost cargo-cult-like belief in the capacity of car
bombs to turn the tide of battle. Forced onto the defensive by Motorman
and the backlash to Bloody Friday, they decided to strike at the
very heart of British power instead. The Belfast Brigade planned
to send ten car bombs to London via the Dublin-Liverpool ferry using
fresh volunteers with clean records, including two young sisters,
Marion and Dolours Price. Snags arose and only four cars arrived
in London; one of these was detonated in front of the Old Bailey,
another in the center of Whitehall, close to the Prime Minister's
house at Number 10 Downing Street. One hundred and eighty Londoners
were injured and one was killed. Although the 8 IRA bombers were
quickly caught, they were acclaimed in the West Belfast ghettoes
and the operation became a template for future Provisional bombing
campaigns in London, culminating in the huge explosions that shattered
the City of London and unnerved the world insurance industry in
1992 and 1993.
Hell's
Kitchen (the 1980s)
"We are
soldiers of God and we crave death. We are ready to turn Lebanon
into another Vietnam."
Hezbollah communiqué
Never in history
has a single city been the battlefield for so many contesting ideologies,
sectarian allegiances, local vendettas, or foreign conspiracies
and interventions as Beirut in the early 1980s. Belfast's triangular
conflicts three armed camps (Republican, Loyalist, and British)
and their splinter groups seemed straightforward compared
to the fractal, Russian-doll-like complexity of Lebanon's civil
wars (Shiite versus Palestinian, for example) within civil wars
(Maronite versus Moslem and Druze) within regional conflicts (Israel
versus Syria) and surrogate wars (Iran versus the United States)
within, ultimately, the Cold War. In the fall of 1971, for example,
there were 58 different armed groups in West Beirut alone. With
so many people trying to kill each other for so many different reasons,
Beirut became to the technology of urban violence what a tropical
rainforest is to the evolution of plants.
Car bombs
began to regularly terrorize Moslem West Beirut in the fall of 1981,
apparently as part of an Israeli strategy to evict the Palestine
Liberation Organization (PLO) from Lebanon. The Israeli secret service,
the Mossad, had previously employed car bombs in Beirut to assassinate
Palestinian leaders (novelist Ghassan Kanfani in July 1972, for
example), so no one was especially surprised when evidence emerged
that Israel was sponsoring the carnage. According to Middle Eastern
scholar Rashid Khalidi, "A sequence of public confessions by captured
drivers made clear these [car bombings] were being utilized by the
Israelis and their Phalangist allies to increase the pressure on
the PLO to leave."
Journalist
Robert Fisk was in Beirut when an "enormous [car] bomb blew a 45-foot-crater
in the road and brought down an entire block of apartments. The
building collapsed like a concertina, crushing more than 50 of its
occupants to death, most of them Shia refugees from southern Lebanon."
Several of the car bombers were captured and confessed that the
bombs had been rigged by the Shin Bet, the Israeli equivalent of
the FBI or the British Special Branch. But if such atrocities were
designed to drive a wedge of terror between the PLO and Lebanese
Moslems, they had the inadvertent result (as did the Israeli air
force's later cluster-bombing of civilian neighborhoods) of turning
the Shias from informal Israeli allies into shrewd and resolute
enemies.
The new face
of Shiite militancy was Hezbollah, formed in mid-1982 out of an
amalgamation of Islamic Amal with other pro-Khomeini groups. Trained
and advised by the Iranian Pasdaran in the Bekaa Valley, Hezbollah
was both an indigenous resistance movement with deep roots in the
Shiite slums of southern Beirut and, at the same time, the long
arm of Iran's theocratic revolution. Although some experts espouse
alternative theories, Islamic Amal/Hezbollah is usually seen as
the author, with Iranian and Syrian assistance, of the devastating
attacks on American and French forces in Beirut during 1983. Hezbollah's
diabolic innovation was to marry the IRA's ANFO car bombs to the
kamikaze using suicide drivers to crash truckloads
of explosives into the lobbies of embassies and barracks in Beirut,
and later into Israeli checkpoints and patrols in southern Lebanon.
The United
States and France became targets of Hezbollah and its Syrian and
Iranian patrons after the Multinational Force in Beirut, which supposedly
had landed to allow for the safe evacuation of the PLO from that
city, evolved into the informal and then open ally of the Maronite
government in its civil war against the Moslem-Druze majority. The
first retaliation against President Reagan's policy occurred on
April 18, 1983, when a pickup truck carrying 2,000 pounds of ANFO
explosives suddenly swerved across traffic into the driveway of
the oceanfront U.S. embassy in Beirut. The driver gunned the truck
past a startled guard and crashed through the lobby door. "Even
by Beirut standards," writes former CIA agent Robert Baer, "it was
an enormous blast, shattering windows. The USS Guadalcanal,
anchored five miles off the coast, shuddered from the tremors. At
ground zero, the center of the seven-story embassy lifted up hundreds
of feet into the air, remained suspended for what seemed an eternity,
and then collapsed in a cloud of dust, people, splintered furniture,
and paper."
Whether as
a result of superb intelligence or sheer luck, the bombing coincided
with a visit to the embassy of Robert Ames, the CIA's national intelligence
officer for the Near East. It killed him ("his hand was found floating
a mile offshore, the wedding ring still on his finger") and all
six members of the Beirut CIA station. "Never before had the CIA
lost so many officers in a single attack. It was a tragedy from
which the agency would never recover." It also left the Americans
blind in Beirut, forcing them to scrounge for intelligence scraps
from the French embassy or the British listening station offshore
on Cyprus. (A year later, Hezbollah completed their massacre of
the CIA in Beirut when they kidnapped and executed the replacement
station chief, William Buckley.) As a result, the Agency never foresaw
the coming of the mother-of-all-vehicle-bomb attacks.
Over the protests
of Colonel Gerahty, the commander of the U.S. Marines onshore in
Beirut, Ronald Reagan's National Security Advisor, Robert McFarlane,
ordered the Sixth Fleet in September to open fire on Druze militia
who were storming Lebanese Army Forces positions in the hills above
Beirut bringing the United States into the conflict brazenly
on the side of the reactionary Amin Gemayel government. A month
later, a five-ton Mercedes dump truck hurled past sandbagged Marine
sentries and smashed through a guardhouse into the ground floor
of the "Beirut Hilton," the U.S. military barracks in a former PLO
headquarters next to the international airport. The truck's payload
was an incredible 12,000 pounds of high explosives. "It is said
to have been the largest non-nuclear blast ever [deliberately] detonated
on the face of the earth." "The force of the explosion," continues
Eric Hammel in his history of the Marine landing force, "initially
lifted the entire four-story structure, shearing the bases of the
concrete support columns, each measuring fifteen feet in circumference
and reinforced by numerous one and three quarter inch steel rods.
The airborne building then fell in upon itself. A massive shock
wave and ball of flaming gas was hurled in all directions." The
Marine (and Navy) death toll of 241 was the Corps' highest single-day
loss since Iwo Jima in 1945.
Meanwhile,
another Hezbollah kamikaze had crashed his explosive-laden
van into the French barracks in West Beirut, toppling the eight-story
structure, killing 58 soldiers. If the airport bomb repaid the Americans
for saving Gemayal, this second explosion was probably a response
to the French decision to supply Saddam Hussein with Super-Etendard
jets and Exocet missiles to attack Iran. The hazy distinction between
local Shiite grievances and the interests of Tehran was blurred
further when two members of Hezbollah joined with 18 Iraqi Shias
to truck-bomb the U.S. embassy in Kuwait in mid-December. The French
embassy, the control tower at the airport, the main oil refinery
and an expatriate residential compound were also targeted in what
was clearly a stern warning to Iran's enemies.
Following
another truck bombing against the French in Beirut as well as deadly
attacks on Marine outposts, the Multinational Force began to withdraw
from Lebanon in February 1984. It was Reagan's most stunning geopolitical
defeat. In the impolite phrase of Washington Post reporter
Bob Woodward, "Essentially we turned tail and ran and left Lebanon."
American power in Lebanon, added Thomas Friedman of the New York
Times, was neutralized by "just 12,000 pounds of dynamite and
a stolen truck."
This article
a preliminary sketch for a book-length study will
appear next year in Indefensible Space: The Architecture of
the National Insecurity State (Routledge 2007), edited by Michael
Sorkin.
April
13, 2006
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel and The
End of Victory Culture. Mike Davis is the author most recently
of The
Monster at Our Door: The Global Threat of Avian Flu (The
New Press) and Planet
of Slums (Verso). He lives in San Diego.
Copyright
© 2006 Mike Davis
Tom
Engelhardt Archives
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