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Fighting International Terrorism: What Does and What Does Not Work


Article # : 16304 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 3 / 1989  2,814 Words
Author : Yonah Alexander
Yonah Alexander is director of the Inter-University Center for Terrorism Studies, coordinated by the Potomac Institute for Policy Studies in Arlington, Virginia. He has published over ninety books in international affairs and terrorism, including Combating Terrorism: Strategies of Ten Countries (University of Michigan Press, 2002).

       The powerful bomb that destroyed Pan Am Flight 103 over Scotland on December 21, 1988, killing a total of 270 people on the jumbo jet and on the ground at Lockerbie, has once again demonstrated the persistent challenge of contemporary terrorism to the United States and to its friends and allies abroad. During the Reagan presidency, two other mid-air bombings occurred on U.S. air carriers. On August 11, 1982, a boy was killed and 15 passengers were injured by a bomb on a Pan Am jet bound from Tokyo to Hawaii. And four Americans, including a nine-month-old baby, were sucked out a gaping hole of TWA Flight 840 en route from Rome to Athens after a bomb exploded under a seat. Other significant terrorist incidents involving U.S. citizens and targets during the Reagan administration include the following events:
       
        1981
       
        -Presence of Libyan hit squads in the United States
       
        -Kidnapping of Brig. Gen. James Dozier by the Red Brigades in Italy
       
        1982
       
        -Assassination of Lt. Col. Charles Robert Ray, a military attaché at the U.S. Embassy in Paris, by Lebanese terrorists
       
        1983
       
        -Bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, killing 17 Americans
       
        -Bombing of U.S. Marine headquarters at the Beirut ... (1994 of 18492 Characters)
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