TOP SUSPECT IN BEIRUT BLAST EMERGES

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00552R000404030072-3
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
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1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
July 22, 2010
Sequence Number: 
72
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
November 4, 1983
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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STAT Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/22 : CIA-RDP90-00552R000404030072-3 WALL STREET JOURNAL 1983 N ' uer ovem 4. Top Suspect in Beirut Blast ~-i'lauTgus But Finding a Culprit Leaves Open Question: Should U.S. Retaliate? By DAVID IGNATIUS And GaLAI.D F. SEIB StgffReporters of THE WAU. STREET JOURNAL WASHINGTON - Pictures of Hussein Moussavi show a small, neatly dressed man with a dark beard that seems to over- whelm his face. He is a school teacher by profession and a man with a family prob- lem. Friends say that he was driven-from his village in eastern Lebanon nearly a decade ago after he killed one of his cous- ins in a quarrel. Mr. Moussavi is emerging as the-prime suspect in an unusual intelligence dragnet U.S. officials say they are nearing a firm judgment that he and his extremist Shiite Moslem sup- porters planned the bomb attacks against U.S. and French soldiers in Beirut last month- probably with help from Iran and A Reagan admin-4 bombings this way: Hussein Mou ssavi "There are intelli ence estimates that iden ' Moussavi and his gro_p as being associated with the attacks, with Iranian support and Syrian acquiescence." If the U.S. reaches a firm conclusion that Mr. Moussavi and his supporters are the culprits, it will face an agonizing deci- sion about whether to retaliate. President Reagan warned in a televised speech last week: "Those who directed this atrocity must be dealt justice, and they will be." STATPhe Reagan administration this week remains committed to retaliation. But some policy makers question such tactics, suggesting that they could open the U.S. Marines to further terrorist acts and also complicate a solution to the Lebanon crisis. The simplest retaliatory operation would be an attack against the headquar- ters of Mr. Moussavi's "Islamic Ama]" faction in Baalbek, in the Syrian-controlled Bekaa Valley. Some U.S. officials favor a commando raid against the headquarters, while others argue for an air strike. Offi- cials suggest that the U.S. could hit the liv- ing quarters of Mr. Moussavi's group, in addition to their command center. The Baalbek option has problems. A commando attack would require moving into territory controlled by Syrian troops. An air strike would risk hurting bystanders in a crowded urban area, one U.S. official . notes. Moreover, an air strike could be dangerous for the U.S., since attacking planes would probably_ be vulnerable to Syria's extensive air-defense system, which is partly manned by Soviet troops. Finally it isn't even certain that those re- sponsible for last month's terrorist attacks have remained in the Baalbek area. The Reagan administration also is con- sidering diplomatic reprisals. For exam= pie the U.S. may urge Lebanon to close France, Britain, Israel, Jordan and Saudi Arabia. In addition to these human sources, the U.S. has various forms of technical surveillance. The array of infor- mation is being analyzed now in a final "all sources" intelligence effort. The case against Air, Moussavi and his pro-Iranian supporters isn't yet conclusive, partly-because of the difficulty in gather- ing reliable information in Lebanon. U.S. officials cite three sorts of evidence. -Analysis of the method of operation. The fact that the attacks were suicide mis- sions suggests that the drivers of the bomb-laden trucks were extremist Shiite Moslems who believe that b d i , y, y ng in a the Iranian Embassy ]n Beirut, which holy . cause they will gain a place in heaven. The fact that French troops were American officials believe was a meeting hit-at a time when Iran is furious at place for the terrorists. The U.S. might France for selling sophisticated jets to consider sanctions against Syria as well. Iraq-suggests that the attackers were But even these relatively mild diplomatic - measures are blocked now by the Leba- falls on niMr Thus, suspicion immediately nese "national reconciliation" discussions pro-Iranian an falls o Shiite s t the most extreme ne leader der In Lebanon. n. in Geneva, Switzerland. The U.S. doesn't . -Surveillance. At about 6:32 on the want to disrupt those talks, which offer the morning of the attacks, roughly 10 minutes best hope for stabilizing Lebanon and get- . after the bombs exploded, a group of men Ling American troops out.. - was seen leaving the Iranian embassy in An alternative to retaliation is negotia- Beirut and driving off at high speed. Their tion of a security agreement with Syria flight indicates that the Iranian embassy that would protect American troops in Leb- may have known about. or helped coordi- anon. The U.S. adopted this approach with nate the bombings. U.S. officials also sus- the Palestine Liberation Organization in pect that the Iranian embassy may have the 1970s, and it helped stop' attacks been a contact point for Mr. Moussavi's against Americans in Beirut. The U.S. and followers in Beirut. Syria talked last week in Damascus about -Agents' reports. In recent weeks: U.S. security problems, but there isn't any sign intelligence had picked up rumors that that Syria is ready to offer any solid coop- there would be a "spectacular attack" by eration. pro-Iranian Shiites against "the godless Syria's role in the Lebanon crisis is cru- Americans and French." Last week, as the cial because it has the power to encour- U.S. and its friends pumped for informa- age-or forestall-terrorist raids. L.S. and lion, intelligence contacts in Lebanon re- Lebanese officials argue, for example, that peat y named Mr. Moussavi as the man it would have been difficult for Mr. Mous- behind the attacks. "People who are savi's Shiite group to gather and transport sources of various intelligence services are the explosives that killed at least 234 saying that Moussavi did it," says one offi- American and 56 French troops without the cial - connivance of the Syrian armed forces and intelligence network in Lebanon. "It's naive to imagine that anything happens tin Syrian-controlled parts of Leb- anon) without the Syrians," explains a Lebanese source. Adds Richard Helms, a one-time ambassador to Iran and Central Intelligence Agency director. 'You don't get trucks and 2,000 Pounds of dynamite from the local drugstore." . Syria, Iran and Mr..Moussavi have all denied responsibility for the bombings. But all three have gloated about the carnage. Gathering Clues In its investigation, the U.S. is drawing on a range of sources. The U.S. has covert contacts in some Lebanese factions; these are supplemented by the much broader network of the Lebanese Deuxieme Bu- reau, the Intelligence unit of the Lebanese army. The U.S. can also --s-t-u-2ly-intelligence reports from friendly countries, such as Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/22 : CIA-RDP90-00552R000404030072-3