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- <text id=89TT3175>
- <title>
- Dec. 04, 1989: Lebanon:A Bomb Aimed At Peace
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Dec. 04, 1989 Women Face The '90s
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 52
- LEBANON
- A Bomb Aimed at Peace
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Just 17 days in office, the new President is killed in Beirut in
- another setback for attempts to stop the endless bloodshed
- </p>
- <p> Mangled metal, crushed bodies, bloody survivors screaming
- for help amid piles of rubble. Last week terrorism showed up
- again in its favorite city, Beirut. Rene Moawad, President of
- Lebanon for only 17 days and the embodiment of a fragile new
- attempt at peace, was decapitated when a remote-controlled bomb,
- hidden in a shuttered shop, exploded as his motorcade passed
- by after ceremonies marking the 46th anniversary of Lebanon's
- independence. The estimated 550 lbs. of explosives tore trees
- out by their roots, hurled the engine block of Moawad's armored
- Mercedes 50 yards, shattered windows a mile away and raised a
- cloud of brown smoke over the city. In all, 24 people, including
- nine civilians, were killed and 36 wounded. "The whole shop was
- a bomb," said a Lebanese army intelligence officer.
- </p>
- <p> Because of the country's instability, the presidency had
- been vacant for more than 13 months before Moawad got the job.
- Unlike many other legislators, Moawad, 64, a moderate Maronite
- Catholic who enjoyed Syria's backing and had served in the
- Lebanese parliament since 1957, never fled the country to escape
- the civil war. Conciliatory and a persistent negotiator, he was
- chosen President in early November by 58 aging Deputies meeting
- in the mess hall of an abandoned air base.
- </p>
- <p> Moawad's election wa,s a crucial step in a peace attempt
- brokered last month by the Arab League. The goal was to restore
- stability by giving Lebanon's Muslim majority greater powers in
- parliament and the Cabinet while reducing those of the
- Christian President. Under a new constitution, the President
- shares power with parliament, including the selection of a
- Cabinet that carefully balances Lebanon's religious sects. The
- U.N. Security Council, the U.S. and the European Community
- endorsed Moawad's efforts to form a government of national unity
- under this revised framework, and he had been making some
- progress despite trouble finding Lebanese politicians willing
- to serve in the Cabinet.
- </p>
- <p> Though that progress was slight, the bombers were evidently
- determined to destroy it. Many Lebanese speculated that General
- Michel Aoun, the bitterest foe of the Arab League peace plan
- and the commander of fanatically loyal Christian forces in East
- Beirut, was behind the killing. Aoun has been outraged that the
- plan permits 40,000 Syrian troops to remain indefinitely in
- Lebanon. He had pronounced Moawad's election void and vowed to
- throw out the Syrians. Aoun is too weak to achieve that goal but
- was strong enough to cause havoc. Before the assassination,
- thousands of his mostly youthful supporters crowded into the
- courtyard of his bombed-out palace, offering Nazi-style salutes
- and chanting "We sacrifice our souls and blood to you, O
- General," while riots and a general strike took place in the
- territory Aoun controls. He threatened revenge against Deputies
- who helped negotiate the peace plan, and seven had their houses
- or offices bombed. "I cannot protect them from subversive
- elements," said Aoun, who, to avoid Moawad's fate, rarely leaves
- his bunker.
- </p>
- <p> Aoun denied responsibility for the assassination, branding
- it a "loathsome crime," and he is by no means the only possible
- suspect. Some Lebanese thought the professionalism of the
- bombing signaled a foreign intelligence service in action. Iran,
- Israel and Iraq were leading candidates, since each backs
- militant Lebanese factions that could suffer if the plan
- succeeds.
- </p>
- <p> After announcing Moawad's murder on television in a voice
- breaking with emotion, Prime Minister Selim Hoss, an
- American-trained economist who has survived several
- assassination attempts, worked with Hussein Husseini, the
- speaker of the parliament, to reconvene the legislature and
- select a President. "Each one of us is Rene Moawad," said
- Husseini. "We all have the absolute duty to pursue the peace
- process until the salvation of the country."
- </p>
- <p> At a hastily called session, meeting under heavy guard in
- the crossroads town of Chtaura, east of Beirut, parliament
- elected Elias Hraoui, also a Maronite Catholic, to succeed
- Moawad. Hraoui, 59, is a wealthy landowner who has good contacts
- with Lebanese Muslims. He promptly appointed a Cabinet of
- national reconciliation with representatives from the country's
- seven main sects, a major accomplishment. "Of course the
- Deputies are frightened," said Boutros Harb, a Christian Deputy.
- "But courage is the son of fear."
- </p>
- <p> Despite the courage of Lebanon's parliamentarians, the fear
- in Beirut, spawning an exodus of thousands, is that Aoun's
- soldiers might clash with Syrian troops. A Syrian-supported
- attack on Aoun's stronghold is likely if, after a face-saving
- interval, the general does not accept the new government's
- authority. By week's end he had taken no action hostile to the
- government beyond denouncing Hraoui's election as illegitimate.
- Hraoui, on the other hand, swiftly moved to assert his powers
- by dismissing the three-man interim Cabinet that has been
- serving under Aoun.
- </p>
- <p> The skill and resolve of Hraoui and his ministers in
- creating a government even before Moawad was buried is a hopeful
- sign and shows the depth of Lebanon's yearning for peace. But
- Aoun will have to put aside his dream of ejecting the Syrians
- if Lebanon is to avoid disintegrating further into the anarchy
- sought by Moawad's killers. If Aoun does not, life in the
- country will soon resemble life in Thomas Hobbes' state of
- nature: "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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