Gen. Alfred M. Gray Jr.who died on March 20, 2024 at the age of 95, was seen as legend for heroism in battle.
But despite his military successes, Gray, who served as the twenty ninth Commandant of the Marine Corps from 1987 to 1991, will eternally be related to one of the darkest days in US military history: Bombing of barracks in Beirut On October 23, 1983, over 300 people died in a terrorist attack, including 241 American service members under Gray’s commandalthough he was in the United States at the time of the attack.
How a scientist currently conducting research on a project regarding this attackI am unable to help but notice that Gray’s death comes at this point wave of violence in Lebanon and at a time when U.S. troops stationed in the Middle East are once more targeted by Iran-funded Islamist groups.
Marines in Lebanon
Gray’s experience with U.S. involvement in Lebanon highlights the dangers faced by U.S. soldiers deployed to unstable areas.
On June 4, 1981he was assigned to command the 2nd Marine Division and all battalions that entered war-torn Lebanon between 1982 and 1984.
By then, the country’s civil war had been happening for six years. It began further April 13, 1975and like the current surge in violence in Lebanon, it has been fueled by events south of the country’s border.
Palestinians expelled or fleeing what became Israel in 1948 ended up as refugees in neighboring countries, including Lebanon. In 1964 Palestine Liberation Organization was founded to represent the Palestinian people and fight the Israeli occupation. By the mid-Seventies it had passed 20,000 PLO fighters They were in Lebanon and carrying out attacks on Israel.
However, their presence in Lebanon led to violence between Lebanese Christians and Lebanese and Palestinian Muslims. While some in Lebanon wanted peace with Israel, others desired to fight for the Palestinian cause.
Several gruesome massacres commemorated the first five years of the Civil War. In 1982, Israel began Operation Peace for Galileeinvaded Lebanon and occupied Beirut with the intention of destroying PLO forces.
The Lebanese authorities turned to Western powers for help. In August 1982, the governments of the United States, France, Italy and Great Britain created the so-called multinational peacekeeping force whose goal is to revive peace and stop fighting between the Lebanese, Palestinians and Israelis.
This was not the first time Lebanon turned to the United States for help. ON July 15, 19581,700 marines arrived in Beirut able to fight as hostility broke out between Christians and Muslims. However, unlike in 1958, the fighting in the Eighties was far more brutal, and trench warfare had been raging for over five years.
Although most Lebanese welcomed foreign peacekeeping forces, many opposed them and viewed them as Western colonial interference in Muslim-majority countries.
The day of the attack
Then, October 23, 1983witnesses reported seeing a yellow Mercedes truck speeding towards the barracks where American service members were staying. It was carrying 10,000 kilos of explosives, and the force of the explosion leveled the constructing, killing 220 Marines, 18 U.S. Navy sailors, and three U.S. Army soldiers.
Just a few minutes later, a similar attack took place in the French Quarter, resulting in the deaths of: 58 French paratroopers.
To at the present time, this event stays the so-called deadliest single-day attack for the United States Marine Corps since the Battle of Iwo Jima in 1945.
Islamic Jihad, a pro-Iran Shiite group, admitted responsibility for attacks.
Gray, a two-star general, was The attacks were reported just after midnight. The Beirut barracks bombing was a personal matter for Gray; his soldiers were in Lebanon and he had visited them just a few months before the attack.
After the bombing, Gray was present 100 funerals service members killed. He too he resigned over this incident – the only senior officer to achieve this. His request was denied.
Lessons from 1983
Many parallels may be drawn between the Beirut barracks bombing in 1983 and current events.
In August 1982 President Ronald Reagan expressed serious concern about Israel’s conduct in Lebanon and warned Israel against the offensive use of American weapons. In a telephone conversation with Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, Reagan described the Israeli siege of Beirut as a “holocaust”.“
A multinational peacekeeping force has been tasked to answer this human crisis evacuation of PLO fighters outside Lebanon to Tunisia. After completing this mission, American troops withdrew from Lebanon.
However, the escalation of violence caused their return. In fact, while the Palestinian fighters were evacuated, their families remained at home. Then, after assassination of Lebanese president-elect Bashir Gemayel On September 14, 1982, the Christian Falangist militia entered two refugee camps in Sabra and Shatila and killed over 2,000 Palestinian civilians. Israel was considered not directly liable for these massacres.
From this point on, American troops were not seen by Muslim militias as peacekeepers, but as allies of Israel and a partner in the crimes committed against Muslim civilians.
Forty years later, U.S. troops in the Middle East remain targeted for the same reason. As a result, US service members saw it increased hostility against them in the region.
There is one other similarity: like the group that claimed responsibility for the 1983 Beirut attack financed by Iransimilar to today there are groups liable for attacks on American bases in the Middle East.
Gray, inspired by the mistakes of the 1983 bombing sought reform Marines in the wake of tragedy, with a particular emphasis on intelligence gathering and understanding enemy groups.
And while it is right to honor a high-ranking military officer who dedicated his life to duty, it is equally vital to contemplate the causes that led to the deaths of those under his command – and the incontrovertible fact that many aspects influencing the 1983 terrorist attacks are still occurring .