Chronicles of Syrian Terrorism in LebanonChronicles
of Syrian Terrorism in Lebanon : 1975-1990
August
26, 1973: As a prelude to igniting the war Syrian
President Hafez Assad announces that Lebanon and Syria
are one country and one people but with two governments.
September
10, 1975: El Saaka Syrian forces attacked the
village of Deir Ashash, in Northern Lebanon, killing
three priests and causing its residents to flee.
September
11, 1975: The Saaka forces and forces from the
Syrian Baath Party attacked the village of Beit Mallat
killing seven of its residents and kidnapping 10 others.
September
26, 1975: Egyptian newspaper El Ahram accused
Syria of meddling in Lebanon and of attempting to
impose the Syrian Baath Party on Lebanon by force.
October
9, 1975: Saaka forces traveling across the Syrian
border attacked the village of Tal Abbas in Akkar
killing 15 people and injuring many others. The local
church was set on fire with the hope of igniting religious
strife between the Lebanese.
November
2, 1975: A whole Syrian battalion of Syrian Special
Forces entered Lebanon through the Bekaa Valley.
January
7, 1976: In a statement published by a Kuwaiti
newspaper Syrian Vice President Abdel Halim Khaddam
announced that Lebanon is part of Syria and that it
will be returned to it adding that this concept should
be very clear to everyone.
January
15, 1976: A battalion from the Palestine Liberation
Army, the Yarmouck division, which is under Syrian
command, entered the Bekaa and had confrontations
with Lebanese Army in the area.
January
19, 1976: More forces from the Yarmouck division
along with some other forces from the Saaka entered
Northern Lebanon and proceeded to attack Lebanese
police and internal security forces positions; they
were helped by local armed Palestinian militias.
January
21, 1976: The Yarmouck and the Saaka forces, under
the command of Syria, attacked the Christian town
of Damour in the Shouf uprooting its residents, killing
a large number of people and reducing the town to
rubbles. Druze leader Kamal Jumblatt tried in vain
to stop the attack and prevent the massacres but all
his efforts were useless in the face of the Syrian
plan to ignite religious strife among the Lebanese.
March
5, 1976: Saaka forces encircled the towns of Kobeyat
and Anduct in Akkar in Northern Lebanon and proceeded
to bombard the area with heavy artillery and mortar
fire. Meanwhile falsified or imaginary statements
were being distributed supposedly from the residents
of the two towns asking for the Syrian forces to intervene
and help them
April 4, 1976: Druze leader Kamal
Jumblatt expressed his astonishment about the fact
that Syrian forces were deploying in areas of Lebanon
where there was absolutely no legal justification
for their presence.
April
5, 1976: Bashir Gemayel, the leader of the Lebanese
Forces announced that the different parties in Lebanon
were on the verge of reaching an agreement when Syria
intervened and disrupted all agreements.
May
31, 1976: Syrian tanks under the command of the
Syrian army entered the Akkar area in Northern Lebanon
for the first time ever.
June
1, 1976: The Syrian army advanced into the Bekaa
Valley and started taking over all strategic and vital
positions.
July
20, 1976: Syrian president Hafez Assad gave his
famous speech on the stairs of the University of Damascus
in which he stated that he did not ask anyone's permission
to send his forces into Lebanon.
November
11, 1976: The Syrian Saaka Forces attempted to
assassinate the leader of the National Bloc Party,
Mr. Raymond Edde.
December
15, 1976: Forces from the Syrian army and from
the Syrian intelligence services attacked the offices
of the El Moharrar, Beirut and El Doustour newspapers,
kicked out their editors and took over their offices
and their printing facilities.
December
17, 1976: Syrian forces attacked the offices of
the El Safir newspaper and occupied the premises.
December
19, 1976: Syrian Forces occupied the offices of
the El Nahar and L'Orient-Le Jour newspapers.
December
20, 1976: Syrian defense minister General Nagi
Jamil justified all these attacks against the press
by saying that these newspapers are being used for
Zionist propaganda.
March
16, 1977: The Syrian Secret services assassinated
Druze leader Kamal Jumblatt in the Shouf region a
few meters away from a Syrian checkpoint, then proceeded
to commit revenge killings against the Christians
of the Chouf which left 250 civilians dead.
November
5, 1977: The Saaka Syrian forces attacked the
village of Aishiyeh killing 41 of its residents and
displacing most of the others.
February
4, 1978: The Syrian army attempted to occupy the
army headquarters at Fiyadiyyeh. Resistance from the
Lebanese Army left 30 Syrian soldiers dead. Officer
Abdallah Hadchity was killed during this operation.
June
14, 1978: The Syrian forces bombarded the village
of Deir El Ahmar in the Bekaa with heavy artillery.
June
28, 1978: Armed gunmen affiliated with the Syrian
intelligence services attacked the villages of Ka'a,
Ras Baalbeck and Jdeidet El Fakaha, kidnapping a large
number of people. Many of them were found dead while
a good number of them remain missing.
June
30, 1978: The Syrian army, using ground and air
forces, attacked regions of Northern Lebanon, and
invaded Bcharre and the heights of Batroun after fierce
battles with the residents and the Lebanese Forces.
September
30, 1978: Fierce battles took place between the
Syrian army and the residents of East Beirut when
the Syrian forces tried to advance into the area.
The Syrian forces retaliated with heavy artillery,
which left hundreds of innocent civilians dead and
many more injured.
February
2, 1980: The Syrian special forces attacked the
village of Kanat. The villagers resisted for six days
but, after heavy bombardment, with tanks and canons,
the Syrian forces were able to take over the village.
February
23, 1980: Syrian agents killed Maya Gemayel, the
little daughter of Bashir Gemayel.
February
24, 1980: Lebanese journalist Selim Lowzi was
found dead in the forests of Aramoun, near a checkpoint
for the Syrian Special Forces. He has been missing
for nine days, having been kidnapped on his way to
the International airport of Beirut. Lowzi was known
for his articles opposing the Syrian regime.
March
13, 1980: Syrian agent Hussein Mostapha Tliss
tries to assassinate previous president of the republic
Kamil Chamoun.
July
22, 1980: The Syrian intelligence services killed
Riad Taha, the head of the union of editors.
August
27, 1980: Syrian agents attempt to assassinate
John Gunther Dean, the American Ambassador to Lebanon.
November
10, 1980: Syrian agents detonated two car bombs
in Achrafieh in east Beirut killing tens of people
and injuring many.
December
23, 1980: Syrian artillery bombarded the town
of Zahle in the Bekaa on Christmas Eve, killing and
injuring many.
February
20, 1981: In an attempt to reignite religious
strife in the country, the Syrians attempt to assassinate
the Greek Catholic Patriarch, Maximos the fifth Hakim
in the town of Bhamdoun a few meters away from a Syrian
checkpoint.
April
2, 1981: Syrian artillery stationed in Aramoun
suddenly and furiously bombarded East Beirut at a
time when students were leaving schools to head home.
Casualties and injuries were in the Hundreds.
April
3, 1981: The Syrian army and its agents mounted
a full-scale attack against the town of Zahle in the
Bekaa in an attempt to control it. It was reported
that thousands of Syrian soldiers participated in
the attack and that they were met with resistance
from the residents, which lasted about four months.
September
3, 1981: Syrian agents assassinated French Ambassador
Louis DeLamare. December 15, 1981: Iraq accused the
Syrian intelligence services of blowing up the Iraqi
embassy building in Beirut, a crime which left 30
people dead and 120 injured.
April
27, 1982: Syrian agents killed Sheikh Ahmad Assaf
for his patriotic stands.
May
1, 1982: Syrian agents, to create religious strife
between the various factions in Lebanon, killed Father
Phillipe Abou Sleiman, a priest in Aley.
May
24, 1982: An explosion in front of the French
embassy in Beirut lead to 9 deaths and 26 injuries.
The operation was the work of Syrian agent Hussein
Tliss.
May
25, 1982: French newspaper "Le Matin"
accused the Syrians of blowing up the French embassy
and presented a report complete with names and motives.
July
11, 1982: Heavy Syrian artillery shelled the Eastern
sections of Beirut leaving dozens of people dead and
many more injured.
September
14, 1982: Syrian agents assassinated President-elect
Bashir Gemayel. April 19, 1983: Syrian agents blew
up the American embassy in Beirut killing and injuring
many.
April
20, 1983: The media in Egypt, Jordan, Israel and
the United States revealed that the Islamic Jihad
organization, that claimed responsibility for the
bombing of the American Embassy in Beirut, is nothing
but a front for the Syrian intelligence services.
September
2, 1983: Various Palestinian organizations controlled
by Syria attacked many positions of the Lebanese Army
in Souk El Gharb with the intent of occupying the
area and reaching the presidential palace in Baabda.
September
9, 1983: The Lebanese government, then headed
by Chafic Wazzan, notified the United States and the
governments of Europe that Syrian and Palestinian
forces were the major forces participating in the
onslaught on the Lebanese mountain with the intent
of bringing down the legal government of Lebanon.
September
8, 1983: A spokesman for the Syrian regime stated
that Syria is ready to enter the war in the mountains
of Lebanon if its "allies" asked her to.
September
8, 1983: Alan Romberg, a spokesman for the US
State department, announced that Syria bears the bulk
of the responsibility for what is going on in Lebanon
and that it is the main source of weapons used by
the various militias that it controls, in addition
to the role of its 40 thousand soldiers who are in
Lebanon.
September
9, 1983: A French source noted that Damascus is
working hard to take advantage of the talks between
the various Lebanese factions, confirming that the
French embassy in Beirut was bombarded from positions
under Syrian control.
December
27, 1985: Syria tried to impose what was called
the tripartite agreement on the Lebanese but was met
with an armed rebellion in the Eastern section of
Beirut which brought down the agreement-conspiracy
which aimed to make the Syrian hegemony over Lebanon
constitutional. This was later achieved with the Taief
Accords.
September
18, 1986: French military Attaché Christian
Gauthier was shot in front of the French embassy with
a revolver equipped with a silencer by Hussein Mostapha
Tliss who now resides in Syria.
October
7, 1986: Syrian agents murdered the head of the
Islamic Shiite Higher Council, Sheikh Soubhi Saleh,
who was shot in broad daylight.
November
22, 1986: The Syrian army kidnapped hundreds of
civilians from the town of Tripoli in Northern Lebanon
in retaliation for attacks against Syrian military
and intelligence positions. The bodies of many who
were kidnapped were found in the streets of Tripoli
and its suburbs.
November
30, 1986: The Syrian Special forces liquidated
34 residents of Tripoli on charges of "opposition
to the Syrians."
August
2, 1987: Syrian agents assassinated Dr. Mohammad
Choucair, an advisor to President Amine Gemayel. He
was killed inside his home in West Beirut.
March
14, 1989: Heavy Syrian artillery, specifically
the 52nd brigade controlled by the Syrian special
Forces, equipped with 240 and 160 millimeters canons,
positioned in the hills of Aramoun, pounded both the
East and the West side of Beirut, especially targeting
the Unesco area. Tens of Lebanese were killed in the
onslaught. Following these attacks, and in complete
coordination with Israel, the Syrian forces using
various heavy weapons surrounded the areas controlled
by the constitutional regime.
May
9, 1989: The Syrian Intelligence Services assassinated
the Sunni Mufti of the republic, Sheikh Hassan Khaled
after he notified the Kuwaiti ambassador that the
Syrian artillery is the one responsible for shelling
both the Christian and the Moslem sides of the city,
and that the Syrians, from their positions in Aramoun,
are responsible for the massacres at Unesco.
November
22, 1989: The Syrians assassinated president-elect
Rene Moawad due to disputes he had with the Syrian
leaders and his refusal to obey their orders.
August
1, 1990: The Syrian forces surrounded the area
controlled by the legitimate Lebanese government to
bring down the transitional government.
November
12, 1990: Syrian agent Francois Halal makes an
attempt to assassinate Prime Minister General Michel
Aoun at the presidential palace. The head of the Syrian
Baath party proclaimed that he was responsible for
the failed attempt.
October
13, 1990: The Syrian Forces invaded the Eastern
areas which support the Lebanese Army under heavy
air strikes (the only instance where Syria was able
to fly its airforce over Lebanese space without drawing
the Israelis), artillery shelling and rocket launching.
Both the people and the army attempted to resist this
onslaught but the Syrians were able to take over the
area committing massacres in Dahr El Wahsh, Souk El
Gharb, Bsous, Hadeth and Beit Mery, massacres that
left hundreds of people dead and many more injured.
Large numbers of soldiers and officers from the Lebanese
Army were executed with a shot in the back of the
head, or were captured and taken to Syrian jails where
they are still being held to this day. An estimated
700 people were killed by the Syrian invaders that
day. For three days the Syrians proceeded to steal
what they could find inside the defense ministry,
such as archives, equipment, computers, maps, and
strategic historic information, which they transported
to Syria. The Syrian invasion was "legitimized"
by the collaboration of one Emile Lahoud, a privileged
and largely ineffectual Navy officer serving as the
"legitimate" front for the Syrians. In his
bid as a traitor and collaborator, General Lahoud
became the Général Pétain of
Lebanon who was rewarded by the Syrians with the "Presidency"
of Lebanon. As the ultimate puppet, Lahoud will never
challenge his puppeteers in Damascus, lest he loses
his career if not his life.