Chattanooga Times Free Press

US troops again deploy east of Mediterran­ean after 40 years

- BY BASSEM MROUE

BEIRUT — Forty years after one of the deadliest attacks against U.S. troops in the Middle East, some warn that Washington could be sliding toward a new conflict in the region.

On Oct. 23, 1983, a suicide bomber hit an American military barracks at Beirut Internatio­nal Airport, killing 241 U.S. service members, most of them Marines — still the deadliest attack on Marines since the World War II Battle of Iwo Jima. A near-simultaneo­us attack on French forces killed 58 paratroope­rs.

Washington blames the bombings on the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, a claim the Iranianbac­ked Hezbollah denies. The U.S. and French forces were in Beirut as part of a multinatio­nal force deployed amid Israel’s 1982 invasion of Lebanon. The force oversaw the withdrawal of Palestinia­n fighters from Beirut and stayed afterward to help a Western-backed government at the time. The bombing prompted a U.S. withdrawal from Lebanon.

The United States is now deploying forces again in the region in connection to a war between Israel and its enemies.

The aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford has been positioned in the eastern Mediterran­ean along with other American warships — with a second carrier on the way — in what is widely seen as a message to Iran and Hezbollah not to open new fronts as Israel fights Hamas.

Longtime tensions between the U.S. and Iran have been hiked by the 2-week-old war between Israel and Hamas, in which the Palestinia­n militant group’s Oct. 7 surprise attack on southern Israeli towns brought devastatin­g Israeli bombardmen­t of the Gaza Strip.

The war risks spiraling into a wider regional conflict. The biggest worry is over the Lebanon-Israel border, where Israel and Hezbollah exchange fire on a daily basis.

But there are other spots where the U.S. could be dragged directly into the fight. There are roughly 2,500 U.S. troops in Iraq and around 900 others in eastern Syria, on missions against the Islamic State group. In both countries, Iran has militias loyal to it that already have opened fire on the Americans since the Gaza war erupted.

A Hezbollah supporter who goes by the name of Haj Mohammed posted a video on Tiktok on Oct. 13 that drew a threatenin­g parallel between the barracks bombing 40 years ago and presentday events.

“It seems that Uncle Joe did not tell the commanders of these warships and aircraft carriers about what happened on October 23, 1983,” the man said, referring to President Joe Biden. Sitting in front of a poster of Jerusalem’s Dome of the Rock, he wondered aloud whether U.S. troops will return home in coffins again.

Iran-backed groups have issued threats against the U.S. if it joins the war on the side of Israel.

Top Hezbollah official Hachem Safieddine said in a speech that there are tens of thousands of fighters around the region “whose fingers are on the trigger.”

The commander of a powerful Iranian-backed militia in Iraq posted a photo of himself on social media standing by the Lebanon-Israel border in an apparent show that his fighters are ready for war.

If the U.S. intervenes directly in the IsraelHama­s war, “then the American presence in the region becomes legitimate targets for resistance fighters whether in Iraq or elsewhere,” the commander — Abu Alaa al-Walae of Iraq’s Kataib Sayyid al-Shuhada — told Beirut-based AlMayadeen TV.

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS VIA AP ?? In 2022, the USS Gerald R. Ford arrives in Halifax.
ANDREW VAUGHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS VIA AP In 2022, the USS Gerald R. Ford arrives in Halifax.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States