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Building Antiterrorist Muscle
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10354 |
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Section : |
Current Issues
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| Issue
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12 / 1986 |
3,029 Words |
| Author
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Neil C. Livingstone Neil C. Livingstone is an author, lecturer, and frequent
media commentator. He runs a crisis-management firm in
Washington, D.C., and has authored eight books on terrorism,
including Inside the PLO (Morrow). |
A bloody reign of terror was unleashed in Paris in September, taking 10 lives and maiming at least 200 others.
The attacks apparently are linked to a demand for the release of three terrorists incarcerated by the French: a 35-year-old Lebanese Marxist by the name of Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, an Armenian convicted of the 1983 Orly airport bombing that killed eight persons, and the would-be assassin of former Iranian Prime Minister Shapour Bakhtiar.
Abdallah is a leading member of the Lebanese Armed Revolutionary Faction and has been linked with a number of terrorist crimes, including the 1982 murder of deputy U.S. military attaché, Lt. Colonel Charles Ray, and the subsequent killing of Israeli embassy counselor, Yacov Barsimentov. Italian authorities have also connected Abdallah to the 1984 assassination of General Leamon R. Hunt, the U.S. head of the multinational Sinai peacekeeping force, for which they have demanded his extradition.
Two of Abdallah's brothers, Robert and Emile, have been identified by witnesses in Paris as responsible for placing several lethal bombs, and French intelligence officials believe that most of Abdallah's confederates are members of his extended family from the Lebanese villages of Kobayat and Andakt.
Shortly after Robert and Emile were named by French authorities as their primary suspects, they held a surprise press conference in Lebanon, denying that they had been involved or had even been in France. French authorities have evidence that, in the immediate aftermath of the last bombing by members of the Armenian
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