Coastal road massacre: Difference between revisions
m fix param |
|||
(479 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Short description|1978 hijacking of an Israeli bus by Palestinian militants near Tel Aviv}} |
|||
[[Image:1978-bus-attack01.jpg|thumb|250px|Charred remains of the hijacked bus, Egged museum, [[Holon]]]] |
|||
{{Pp-30-500|small=yes}} |
|||
[[Image:1978-bus-attack02.jpg|thumb|250px|Front end remains of the hijacked bus]] |
|||
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2024}} |
|||
{{Infobox civilian attack |
|||
| title = Coastal road massacre |
|||
| partof = the [[Palestinian insurgency in South Lebanon]] and the [[Israeli–Palestinian conflict]] |
|||
| image = הפיגוע בכביש החוף 1978.jpg |
|||
| caption = Remains of the hijacked bus being inspected shortly after the attack |
|||
| location = [[Highway 2 (Israel)|Coastal Highway]] near [[Tel Aviv]], Israel |
|||
| map = {{location map|Israel center ta|lat_deg=32|lat_min=08|lat_sec=53|lat_dir=N|lon_deg=34|lon_min=48|lon_sec=12|lon_dir=E|caption=The attack site}} |
|||
| coordinates = {{Coord|32|08|52.6|N|34|48|11.4|E|type:landmark|display=inline}} <!-- This is the location of the memorial monument. --> |
|||
| date = {{start date and age|df=yes|1978|3|11}} |
|||
| time = |
|||
| timezone = |
|||
| type = [[Mass murder]], [[spree killing]] |
|||
| fatalities = 48 (38 Israeli civilians including 13 children,<ref name=autogenerated1>"1978, March 11. The Coastal Road Massacre". Richard Ernest Dupuy, Trevor Nevitt Dupuy (chamel). ''The Encyclopedia of Military History from 3500 B.C. to the Present'', Harper & Row, 1986; {{ISBN|978-0-06-181235-4}}, p. 1362.</ref> 1 Israeli soldier{{cnl|date=March 2021}} + 9 Palestinian attackers) |
|||
| injuries = 76 wounded<ref name=autogenerated1/> |
|||
| perpetrators = [[Fatah]], [[Palestine Liberation Organization|PLO]] |
|||
| numparts = 11 militants |
|||
| susperp = |
|||
| weapons = Various weapons, possible grenade |
|||
}} |
|||
{{Campaignbox Palestinian insurgency in South Lebanon}} |
|||
The '''coastal road massacre''' occurred on 11 March 1978, when Palestinian militants hijacked a bus on the [[Highway 2 (Israel)|Coastal Highway]] of Israel and murdered its occupants; 38 Israeli civilians, including 13 children, were killed as a result of the attack while 76 more were wounded.<ref>Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs. [http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/Foreign%20Relations/Israels%20Foreign%20Relations%20since%201947/1977-1979/133%20Statement%20to%20the%20press%20by%20Prime%20Minister%20Begin "Statement to the press by Prime Minister Begin on the massacre of Israelis on the Haifa-Tel Aviv Road"]. {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090624033011/http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/Foreign%20Relations/Israels%20Foreign%20Relations%20since%201947/1977-1979/133%20Statement%20to%20the%20press%20by%20Prime%20Minister%20Begin |date=24 June 2009 }}. Historical Documents Archive: 12 March 1978.</ref><ref name=autogenerated1/><ref>Gregory S. Mahler. "''Operation Litani'' is launched in retaliation for that month's Coastal Road massacre", ''Politics and Government in Israel: The Maturation of a Modern State'', Rowman & Littlefield, 2004, {{ISBN|978-0-7425-1611-3}}, p. 259.</ref> The attack was planned by the influential Palestinian militant leader [[Khalil al-Wazir]] (aka Abu Jihad)<ref name=msn>{{cite web |url=http://news.msn.co.il/news/StatePoliticalMilitary/Military/200802/20080214114246.htm|title=Israel's successful assassinations|access-date=29 March 2008|publisher=[[MSN]]|language=he}}</ref> and carried out by [[Fatah]], a [[Palestinian nationalism|Palestinian nationalist]] party co-founded by al-Wazir and [[Yasser Arafat]] in 1959. The initial plan of the militants was to seize a luxury hotel in the Israeli city of [[Tel Aviv]] and take tourists and foreign ambassadors hostage to exchange them for [[Palestinian prisoners of Israel|Palestinian prisoners in Israeli custody]].<ref>Moshe Brilliant, "Israeli officials Say Gunmen Intended to Seize Hotel", ''The New York Times'', 13 March 1978.</ref> |
|||
{{see also|Avivim school bus massacre}} |
|||
According to ''[[Time (magazine)|Time magazine]]'', the timing was aimed primarily at undermining [[Egypt–Israel peace treaty|Israeli–Egyptian peace talks]] between [[Menachem Begin]] and [[Anwar Sadat]] and damaging [[tourism in Israel|Israel's tourism sector]].<ref name="tragedy"/><ref name=Sabbath>[https://web.archive.org/web/20070629225811/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,919454,00.html "A Sabbath of Terror"], ''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]'', 20 March 1978.</ref> However, due to a navigational error, the attackers ended up {{convert|64|km|mi}} north of their target, and were forced to find an alternative method of transportation to their destination.<ref name="tragedy"/> |
|||
The '''Coastal Road Massacre''' was a [[Palestinian political violence|Palestinian hijacking]] and subsequent shootout with Israeli forces involving an inter-city bus driving along [[Israel]]'s [[Highway 2 (Israel)|Coastal Highway]] that resulted in the deaths of thirty five civilians, thirteen of them children, and wounded seventy-one civilians.<ref>"1978, March 11. The Coastal Road Massacre" Richard Ernest Dupuy, Trevor Nevitt Dupuy. ''The Encyclopedia of Military History from 3500 B.C. to the Present'', Harper & Row, 1986, ISBN 0061812358, p. 1362.</ref><ref>"''Operation Litani'' is launched in retaliation for that month's Coastal Road massacre." Gregory S. Mahler. ''Politics and Government in Israel: The Maturation of a Modern State'', Rowman & Littlefield, 2004, ISBN 0742516113, p. 259.</ref> The attack was masterminded by [[Abu Jihad]]<ref>{{cite web |url=http://news.msn.co.il/news/StatePoliticalMilitary/Military/200802/20080214114246.htm |title=Israel's successful assassinations |accessdate=2008-03-29 |publisher=[[MSN]] |language=Hebrew}}</ref> and undertaken by the [[PLO]] faction [[Fatah]]. Israel said that the raiders intended to hijack the bus to Tel Aviv, seize a luxury hotel and take tourists and foreign ambassadors as hostages in order to exchange them for Palestinian prisoners held by Israel.<ref>Moshe Brilliant, "Israeli officials Say Gunmen Intended to Seize Hotel," The New York Times, 13 March 1978</ref> The timing was aimed at scuttling any peace talks between [[Menachem Begin]] and [[Anwar Sadat]].<ref name=Sabbath>[http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,919454,00.html "A Sabbath of Terror"], ''[[Time (magazine)|Time magazine]]'', March 20, 1978.</ref> Fatah called the hijacking "The Operation of the Martyr Kamal Adman," after a Palestinian leader killed in an Israeli commando raid on the center of Beirut in April 1973.<ref>Greenaway, HDS, "Arab Terrorist Raid in Israel Kills 30," Washington Post, 12 March 1978.</ref> |
|||
''Time'' characterized it as "the worst terrorist attack in Israel's history."<ref name=Sabbath/> Fatah dubbed the hijacking "Operation of the Martyr [[Kamal Adwan]]"<ref>Edgar O'Ballance (1979). ''Language of Violence: The Blood Politics of Terrorism'', p. 289, Presidio Press (original from the University of Michigan); {{ISBN|978-0-89141-020-1}}, {{ISBN|978-0-89141-020-1}}</ref> after the chief of operations of the [[Palestine Liberation Organization]] (PLO), who was killed during the [[1973 Israeli raid on Lebanon|Israeli commando raid on Lebanon in April 1973]].<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/an-eye-for-an-eye-20-11-2001/|title=An Eye for an Eye|access-date=21 November 2001|publisher=[[CBS]]|date=20 November 2001}}</ref><ref>Greenaway, HDS, "Arab Terrorist Raid in Israel Kills 30", ''The Washington Post'', 12 March 1978.</ref> In response to the massacre, Israel launched [[1978 South Lebanon conflict|Operation Litani]] against PLO bases in southern Lebanon three days later. |
|||
== Hijacking and gun battle == |
|||
On the morning of [[March 11]], [[1978]], [[Dalal Mughrabi]] and her [[Palestinian Fedayeen]] unit of eleven members (including one other woman) landed by [[Rigid-hulled inflatable boat|Zodiac boat]]s on a beach near [[Ma'agan Michael]] north of [[Tel Aviv]], having departed from [[Lebanon]]. They killed [[Gail Ruban]] (some sources spell Rubin <ref name="tragedy">{{cite web |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,916011,00.html?promoid=googlep |title=Tragedy of errors |accessdate=2008-06-01 |publisher=[[Time (magazine)]] March 27 1978|language=English}}</ref>), an American photographer who was taking nature photographs nearby, and then hijacked a bus full of [[Egged]] bus drivers and their families on a day outing, on the [[Highway 2 (Israel)|Coastal Highway]]. |
|||
==Background and perpetrators== |
|||
While driving, Mughrabi and her unit opened fire and threw grenades at passing cars, and shot at the passengers and dumped at least one body out of the bus.<ref name=Sabbath/> At one point they commandeered another bus, and forced the passengers from the first bus to crowd onto the second.<ref name=Sabbath/> The bus was finally stopped by a Police roadblock near [[Herzliya]]; the Israelis did not have time to call out anti-terrorist troops. A long shooting battle between the Palestinians and the Police ensued. The Palestinians started shooting the passengers that attempted to escape.<ref name=Sabbath/> Time magazine reported that "The police commander at the roadblock gave a blanket open-fire order to terrified traffic cops, and their wild fusillade when the bus was finally halted probably killed more hostages than did the terrorists. Worse, it may have driven some of the terrorists to commit suicide—and to take as many passengers as possible with them."<ref name="tragedy">{{cite web |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,916011,00.html?promoid=googlep |title=Tragedy of errors |accessdate=2008-06-01 |publisher=[[Time (magazine)]] March 27 1978 |language=English}}</ref> An explosion, caused either by an exploding fuel tank, or a grenade set the bus on fire.<ref>Kim Willenson, Milan J. Kubic and William E. Schmidt, "Slaughter in Israel," Newsweek, 20 March 1978</ref> In total, thirty five civilians, thirteen of them children (38 by some sources) were killed and seventy-one civilians were wounded.<ref>{{cite book |
|||
The [[PLO]] claimed responsibility for the attack, which was planned by influential [[Fatah]] leader [[Abu Jihad]].<ref name=msn/> The attack's purpose was to disrupt ongoing Israeli-Egyptian peace negotiations. [[Yasser Arafat]] and Abu Jihad feared that a truce between Israel and Egypt would be detrimental to their cause. The operation was considered to be of such importance that Abu Jihad, together with his operations commander for Lebanon Azmi Zair, personally briefed the participants.<ref name=Bergman>Bergman, Ronen: ''[[Rise and Kill First]]'', pp. 225–227</ref> |
|||
|title=Syria's Terrorist War on Lebanon and the Peace Process |
|||
|last=Deeb |
|||
|first=Marius |
|||
|pages=39 |
|||
|publisher=Palgrave McMillian |
|||
|id=ISBN 1-4039-6248-0 |
|||
|month=July |
|||
|year=2003}}</ref> |
|||
There is lack of certainty over the fates of all the Palestinian attackers. Extensive searches were undertaken in the [[Gush Dan]] area for additional attackers, but they weren't found and were likely killed.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} Some claim that 2 Palestinians were arrested by Israel.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} |
|||
Mughrabi's leadership role in the attack marked the emergence of women as full-fledged members of militant movements.{{Fact|date|date=July 2008}} |
|||
Israel received intelligence of the planned attack from a [[Shin Bet]] source codenamed Housemaid, who met with Israeli military intelligence official Amos Gilad in a safehouse in Jerusalem and briefed him about the plans. The intelligence was confirmed by wiretaps of the PLO offices in [[Cyprus]]. Israeli intelligence pinpointed the PLO squad's base to the beach of [[Damour]], learned the attackers' names, and discovered that the goal behind the planned raid was to disrupt peace negotiations with Egypt. On 5 March 1978, Israel launched a military operation to preempt the planned attack. [[Shayetet 13]] naval commandos raided the PLO base at Damour to wipe out the squad, but only killed all of those in one building, while those in a nearby building, who did not come out or open fire, survived the raid.<ref name=Bergman/> |
|||
The Israeli security forces handling of the incident, including the final gun battle at the blockade where the bus was stopped, <ref name="tragedy">{{cite web |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,916011,00.html?promoid=googlep |title=Tragedy of errors |accessdate=2008-06-01 |publisher=[[Time (magazine)]] March 27 1978 |language=English}}</ref><ref name=Sabbath/> led to widespread criticism in Israel. The security forces were also criticized for the fact that the militants were reportedly able to land undetected in broad daylight, enjoy a meal on the beach with wine, and then move inland to ambush a taxi and then the two buses. There was also criticism that the security forces did not immediately block off the highway as soon as they were aware that a bus with hostages aboard had been hijacked.<ref>HDS Greenway, "Begin Hints Israel to Retaliate for Raid," Washington Post, 14 March 1978</ref> |
|||
After intelligence was received from Housemaid that not all of the PLO squad had been killed, Gilad demanded that the commandos be sent in again to wipe out the remaining guerrillas, arguing that as Abu Jihad now knew that Israel was aware of his plans he would be spurred to launch the attack sooner, but Defense Minister [[Ezer Weizman]], not wanting headlines of an Israeli raid on Lebanon to cast a shadow over his upcoming visit to the [[The Pentagon|Pentagon]], refused to authorize another such mission. The surviving guerrillas proceeded to carry out the attack.<ref name=Bergman/> |
|||
[[Palestinian Media Watch]], an Israeli NGO that monitors antisemitism and support for terrorism in Palestinian society, cites examples of Palestinian media that regard Dalal Mughrabi as a heroine and role model.<ref> Special report # 39: Palestinian Culture and Society (Study #6 -Mar. 12,2002) "Encouraging Women Terrorists" by Itamar Marcus http://www.pmw.org.il/specrep-39.html accessed 24/7/2008</ref> A [[Hebron]] girls' school was briefly named in honor of Mughrabi but the name was changed after it emerged that USAID was funding the school. Her name has also been given to summer camps and both police and military courses.<ref>http://www.imra.org.il/story.php3?id=13227 accessed 23/7/2008</ref> |
|||
==Attack== |
|||
The attack was the immediate trigger for the Israeli [[Operation Litani]] against [[PLO]] bases in [[Lebanon]] three days later |
|||
On 9 March 1978, 13 [[Palestinian fedayeen]], including 18-year-old female [[Dalal Mughrabi]], left Lebanon on a boat headed for the Israeli coast. They were equipped with [[Kalashnikov rifle]]s, [[rocket-propelled grenade]]s, light mortars and high explosives. On 11 March, they transferred to two [[Rigid-hulled inflatable boat|Zodiac boat]]s and headed towards the shore. One of the Zodiacs capsized in the rough weather, and two of the militants drowned, but the surviving 11 carried on with their mission.<ref name=jpost>{{cite web|url=http://www.jpost.com/Features/In-Thespotlight/This-Week-in-History-Israels-deadliest-terror-attack|title=This Week in History: Israel's deadliest terror attack|work=The Jerusalem Post|date=11 March 2011 |access-date=16 December 2014}}</ref><ref name="haaretz.com">[{{cite web |url=http://haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1105308.html|title=Coastal Road terrorist refuses to apologize, says peace 'important' – Haaretz – Israel News|access-date=5 August 2009|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090808113829/http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1105308.html|archive-date=8 August 2009}} Coastal road terrorist: No apologies, [[Haaretz]]. According to Abu Absa, one of the surviving Palestinian perpetrators, Mughrabi was the only woman in the group and she was not the commander.</ref> |
|||
===Landing=== |
|||
The eleven survivors landed on a beach near the [[kibbutz]] [[Ma'agan Michael]], north of [[Tel Aviv]]. Due to stormy weather they had lost their bearings and believed they had landed in Cyprus. They met American photographer [[Gail Rubin]], who was taking nature photographs on the beach and asked her where they were, and were relieved when she told them they were in Israel. Then they killed her.<ref name=Bergman/><ref name="tragedy">{{cite news |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,916011,00.html?promoid=googlep |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090114084403/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,916011,00.html?promoid=googlep|url-status=dead|archive-date=14 January 2009 |title=Tragedy of errors|access-date=1 June 2008|publisher=[[Time (magazine)|Time]] |date=27 March 1978}}</ref> Both surviving attackers said that Mughrabi shot Rubin,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.imra.org.il/story.php3?id=40198|title=IMRA – Monday, August 4, 2008 :: MEMRITV: Fatah Terrorists Who Participated in a 1978 Attack Commanded by Dalal Al-Maghrabi Describe the Murder of U.S. Journalist Gail Rubin|access-date=16 December 2014}}</ref> who was a niece of United States Senator [[Abraham A. Ribicoff]].<ref>{{cite news|title=U.S. Born Photographer Was First Victim in the Raid|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1978/03/13/archives/us-born-photographer-was-first-victim-in-the-raid.html|access-date=21 February 2015|work=The New York Times|date=13 March 1978|page=11}}</ref> |
|||
===Bus hijacking=== |
|||
[[File:1978-bus-attack01.jpg|thumb|right|The remains of the hijacked bus on display]] |
|||
The militants then walked less than a mile up to the four-lane highway, opened fire at passing cars, and hijacked a white [[Mercedes-Benz|Mercedes]] taxi, killing its occupants.<ref name="Sabbath"/> Setting off down the highway toward Tel Aviv, they hijacked a chartered bus carrying [[Egged (company)|Egged]] bus drivers and their families on a day outing, along the Coastal Highway. Although Abu Jihad had ordered them to seize a hotel, the militants improvised and changed the nature of their attack due to the dozens of hostages in their hands. The militants drove down the coastal highway, shooting and throwing grenades at passing cars. They also shot at the passengers and threw at least one body out of the bus. At one point they commandeered Bus 901, traveling from Tel Aviv to [[Haifa]], taking its passengers hostage as well, and forced the passengers from the first bus to board it.<ref name=Sabbath/><ref name=Bergman/> |
|||
At one point, the bus stopped, and one of the perpetrators got out and fired directly into a passing car, killing a teenager, Imri Tel-Oren, and injuring his father Hanoch. Sharon Tel-Oren, Imri's mother, testified: "We were in our [[station wagon]], driving along the coastal highway. We saw something odd ahead – a bus, but it seemed to be stopped. Then we saw someone lying on the road. There was shattered glass all over, children screaming. Then we heard the gunshots. Imri was asleep in the back seat. The bullet passed through the front seat and hit his head, killing him instantly. My husband was shot in the arm, and lost the movement in his fingers."<ref>[http://www.jpost.com/Features/Article.aspx?id=6901 The dolls' journey to Israel], ''[[The Jerusalem Post]]''; accessed 10 March 2018.</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/a-flute-now-silent-1.167971|title=A flute now silent|date=24 August 2005|work=Haaretz.com|access-date=16 December 2014}}</ref> |
|||
[[Israel Police|Police]] were alerted to the attack; their cars caught up to the bus and trailed it. Although the militants fired at the pursuing police cars, policemen did not return fire, fearing they would hit the civilians inside the bus.<ref name=Black>Black, Ian (1992): ''Israel's Secret Wars: A History of Israel's Intelligence Services''<!-- publisher, ISSN/ISBN needed --></ref> Police quickly set up a [[roadblock]], but the militants plowed the bus through it and continued their journey. According to Khaled Abu Asba, one of the two surviving attackers, police set up multiple roadblocks, and there was an exchange of fire at every intersection.<ref name="haaretz.com"/> |
|||
===Standoff at the Glilot Junction=== |
|||
The bus was finally stopped by a large police roadblock set up at the Glilot Junction near [[Herzliya]], which included nails planted on the road to puncture the bus' tires.<ref name=Sabbath/><ref name=jpost/> Due to the speed at which the attack was transpiring, Israeli [[counter-terrorism]] squads had been unable to mobilize quickly enough, and the roadblock was manned by ordinary patrolmen and traffic policemen, who were lightly armed in comparison to the militants and untrained in dealing with hostage situations. A firefight erupted, and police broke the bus' windows and yelled at passengers to jump.<ref name=jpost/> |
|||
Escaping passengers were shot at by one of the militants.<ref name=Sabbath/> According to the Israeli police, [[Assaf Hefetz]], then head of the Israeli Police counter-terrorism unit, arrived at the scene before his unit, and stormed the bus, killing two militants. Hefetz sustained a shoulder injury during the battle, and was later awarded the [[Israeli Police Medal of Courage]].<ref>[http://jpress.org.il/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin_TAU.asp?From=Archive&Skin=TAUHe&BaseHref=MAR/1984/10/30&EntityId=Ar00903&ViewMode=HTML Interview with Assaf Hefetz], jpress.org.il, 30 October 1984.{{in lang|he}}</ref><ref>[http://www.gvura.org/a344456-%D7%A0%D7%A6-%D7%9E-%D7%90%D7%A1%D7%A3-%D7%97%D7%A4%D7%A5 Assaf Hefetz: Israeli Police Medal of Courage], gvura.org; accessed 10 March 2018.</ref> |
|||
The battle reached its climax when the bus exploded and burst into flames. Some of the militants and hostages escaped but most died in the fire.<ref name=Bergman/> The explosion may have been set off by a burning fuel tank, or by grenades. The Palestinians claimed that the Israelis destroyed the bus with fire from helicopter gunships.<ref>Willenson, Kim, Milan J. Kubic, and William E. Schmidt, "Slaughter in Israel", ''Newsweek'', 20 March 1978.</ref><ref>Black, Ian & Hugh McLeod, (11 March 2010). "[https://www.theguardian.com/world/2008/jul/16/lebanon.israelandthepalestinians1 Israel-Hizbullah prisoner exchange: profiles]", TheGuardian.com; accessed 10 March 2018.</ref> Israeli journalist [[Ronen Bergman]], in his book ''[[Rise and Kill First]]'', which was based on interviews with Israeli intelligence veterans, claimed that the explosion was due to a grenade blast that came as a result of a scuffle between militants and hostage Avraham Shamir. According to Bergman, during the firefight, Shamir saw one of the militants resting the hand holding his pistol on his daughter's head, after which he charged at him, seized the gun, and shot a militant standing at the front of the bus, then fired three shots at another militant. Another hostage warned Shamir of a militant aiming his gun at him from behind, after which Shamir turned and they both fired, wounding each other. Shamir then saw the militant from whom he had seized the gun lying injured on the floor holding a grenade with the safety pin pulled out. After he dropped it on the floor, Shamir tried to use the militant's body to blunt the effects of the blast. The grenade's explosion killed the militant and five hostages, seriously wounded Shamir, and set the bus on fire.<ref name=Bergman/> |
|||
A total of 38 civilians were killed in the attack, including 13 children, while 71 others were wounded.<ref>{{cite book|title=Syria's Terrorist War on Lebanon and the Peace Process|url=https://archive.org/details/syriasterroristw00deeb|url-access=limited|last=Deeb|first=Marius|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan|isbn=978-1-4039-6248-5|date=July 2003|page=[https://archive.org/details/syriasterroristw00deeb/page/n51 39]}}</ref> Of the 11 perpetrators, 9 were killed.<ref name=Black/> |
|||
[[File:Coastal Road massacre statue.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Memorial near Glilot Interchange on the [[Highway 2 (Israel)|coastal Highway]]]] |
|||
==Motives== |
|||
One motive for the attack from the PLO was to derail Egypt-Israel peace talks. In October 1976, Egypt, the PLO, and Syria were back in contact with each other, though temporarily, under Saudi auspices, at the Riyadh conference that year. In 1977 "...the United States appeared anxious to coordinate Arab approval of a Geneva peace conference, as well as the presence there of Palestinians, and most important, the cooperation of the Soviet Union."<ref>{{cite book|last=Said|first=Edward|title=The Question of Palestine|year=1992|publisher=Vintage Books|page=201}}</ref> Both the Egyptians and the Israelis were opposed to the possibility of a political settlement which would have the effect of uniting the Arabs with the Palestinians or the two superpowers against Israel. "No less than Israelis, therefore, Sadat opposed the joint US–USSR statement of October 1, 1977. Not only did the statement put the Palestinian question on a par with the return of Egyptian territory, it almost meant a clear victory for Syrian pan-Arabism."<ref>{{cite book|last=Said|first=Edward|title=The Question of Palestine|url=https://archive.org/details/questionofpalest00said_0|url-access=limited|year=1992|publisher=Vintage Books|page=[https://archive.org/details/questionofpalest00said_0/page/201 201]|isbn=978-0-679-73988-3}}</ref> |
|||
The US–USSR joint statement stated the settlement of the Arab-Israeli conflict would be based on: "an Israeli withdrawal from 'occupied territories' in 1967; the resolution of the Palestinian question, including insuring the 'legitimate rights' of the Palestinian people; the termination of the state of war; and the establishment of normal peaceful relations on the basis of mutual recognition of sovereignty, territorial integrity, and political independence."<ref>{{cite book|last=Khouri|first=Fred|title=The Arab-Israeli Dilemma|pages=397–398}}</ref> Ultimately, America opted for an Egypt-Israel Peace Treaty as Anwar Sadat made a visit to Jerusalem in November 1977. In that treaty "the first item dropped was the question of Palestine as it had evolved through the United Nations; after that the US–USSR statement, and agreed upon Palestinian representation at the Geneva conference, were also dropped.".<ref>{{cite book|last=Said|first=Edward|title=The Question of Palestine|year=1992|publisher=Vintage Books|page=202}}</ref> Anwar Sadat's main concern was the territory of Sinai to be returned to Egypt from Israel.{{Citation needed|date=September 2015}} |
|||
==Official reactions== |
|||
;Involved parties |
|||
{{Flagu|Israel}} |
|||
* [[Israeli prime minister]] [[Menachem Begin]] stated in a press conference that Israel "shall not forget the carnage" and added that "there was no need of this outrage to understand that a Palestinian state would be a mortal danger to our nation and our people."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=8-9BAAAAIBAJ&pg=6322,1750771|title=The Telegraph-Herald – Google News Archive Search|website=news.google.com}}</ref> |
|||
{{flagicon|Palestine}} [[PLO]] |
|||
* The PLO official stated that "the operation stems from the firm belief of Fatah in the necessity of carrying on the armed struggle against the Zionist enemy within the occupied land."<ref name=autogenerated2>{{cite web|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=XPUhAAAAIBAJ&pg=2881,226406|title=Reading Eagle – Google News Archive Search|website=news.google.com}}</ref> |
|||
;International |
|||
* {{Flagu|Egypt}}: [[Egyptian president]] [[Anwar Sadat]] condemned the attack as "an irresponsible action" and indirectly appealed to Israel not to strike back.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=64AqAAAAIBAJ&pg=3834,5889848|title=The Pittsburgh Press – Google News Archive Search|website=news.google.com}}</ref> |
|||
* {{Flagu|United States}}: US president [[Jimmy Carter]] released a statement saying the attack was "an outrageous act of lawlessness and senseless brutality. Criminal acts such as this advance no cause or political belief. They inspire only revulsion at the lack of respect for innocent human life."<ref name=autogenerated2 /> |
|||
==Aftermath== |
|||
===Trial=== |
|||
The two surviving perpetrators, Khaled Abu Asba and Hussein Fayyad, were arrested and tried in an Israeli military court in [[Lod]]. They were charged with 10 counts of firing at people, two counts of placing and detonating explosives, and one count of membership in a hostile organization. Their trial opened on 9 August 1979. The trial was presided over by Judge Colonel Aharon Kolperin. The chief prosecutor was [[Amnon Straschnov]], while Abu Asba and Fayyad were represented by defense lawyer [[Leah Tsemel]]. On 23 October 1979, they were convicted on all 13 charges. They were sentenced to [[life imprisonment]], and spent seven years in prison before being released in the 1985 [[Jibril Agreement]].<ref name="haaretz.com"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.jpost.com/Middle-East/Terrorist-who-killed-38-Israelis-appointed-PA-adviser-314678|title=Terrorist who killed 38 Israelis appointed PA adviser|work=The Jerusalem Post - JPost.com|date=29 May 2013 |access-date=16 December 2014}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.jta.org/1979/10/24/archive/two-terrorists-convicted-in-1978-coastal-road-rampage|title=Two Terrorists Convicted in 1978 Coastal Road Rampage|date=24 October 1979}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.jta.org/1979/08/10/archive/terrorists-trial-opens|title=Terrorists' Trial Opens|date=10 August 1979}}</ref> |
|||
===Israeli response=== |
|||
In a statement to the press the following day, Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin stated, "They came here to kill Jews. They intended to take hostages and threatened, as the leaflet they left said, to kill all of them if we did not surrender to their demands.... We shall not forget. And I can only call upon other nations not to forget that Nazi atrocity that was perpetrated upon our people yesterday."<ref name="begin">{{cite web |url=http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/Foreign%20Relations/Israels%20Foreign%20Relations%20since%201947/1977-1979/133%20Statement%20to%20the%20press%20by%20Prime%20Minister%20Begin |title=Statement to the press by Prime Minister Begin on the massacre of Israelis on the Haifa – Tel Aviv Road |date=12 March 1978 |publisher=Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs |access-date=18 April 2010}}</ref> |
|||
Speaking to the [[Knesset]] on 13 March, Begin said, "Gone forever are the days when Jewish blood could be shed with impunity. Let it be known: Those who shed innocent blood shall not go unpunished. We shall defend our citizens, our women, our children. We shall sever the arm of iniquity."<ref name="begin1">{{cite web |url=http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/Foreign%20Relations/Israels%20Foreign%20Relations%20since%201947/1977-1979/134%20Statement%20to%20the%20Knesset%20by%20Prime%20Minister%20Beg |title=Statement to the Knesset by Prime Minister Begin on the terrorist raid and the Knesset resolution |date=13 March 1978 |publisher=Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs |access-date=18 April 2010}}</ref> |
|||
On 15 March, three days after the [[massacre]], Israel launched [[Operation Litani]] against PLO bases in southern Lebanon. The IDF spokesman stated, "The objective of the operation is not retaliation for the terrorists' crimes, for there can be no retaliation for the murder of innocent men, women and children – but to protect the state of Israel and its citizens from incursions of members of the Fatah and PLO, who use Lebanese territory in order to attack citizens of Israel."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/Foreign%20Relations/Israels%20Foreign%20Relations%20since%201947/1977-1979/135%20Israel%20Defence%20Forces%20statement%20on%20the%20operati |title=Israel Defense Forces statement on the operation in Lebanon |date=15 March 1978 |publisher=Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs |access-date=18 April 2010}}</ref> [[Augustus Richard Norton]], professor of [[international relations]] at [[Boston University]], said Operation Litani resulted in approximately 1,100 people killed, most of them Palestinian and Lebanese civilians.<ref name=Norton1993>{{cite journal|author2=Jillian Schwedler|title=(In)security Zones in South Lebanon|journal=Journal of Palestine Studies|year=1993|volume=23|issue=1|pages=61–79|jstor=2537858 |author=Augustus Richard Norton|author-link=Augustus Richard Norton|publisher=University of California Press|doi=10.1525/jps.1993.23.1.00p0030t}}</ref><ref name=bt2000>{{cite book|title=Israeli Violations of Human Rights of Lebanese Civilians|year=2000|publisher=[[B'Tselem]]|pages=12–13|url=http://www.btselem.org/sites/default/files/israeli_violations_of_human_rights_of_lebanese_civilians.pdf}}</ref> |
|||
===Palestinian glorification of hijackers=== |
|||
[[Palestinian Media Watch]],<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://palwatch.org/|title=Palestinian Media Watch – A window to Palestinian society | PMW|website=palwatch.org}}</ref> an Israeli NGO that monitors antisemitism and support for terrorism in Palestinian society, has cited examples of Palestinian media that portrays Dalal Mughrabi as a heroine and role model.<ref>Special report # 39: Palestinian Culture and Society (Study No. 6–12 March 2002) "Encouraging Women Terrorists" by Itamar Marcus, http://palwatch.org/STORAGE/special%20reports/Encouraging_Women_Terrorists.pdf, accessed 24 July 2008</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=https://palwatch.org/database/27|title=Dalal Mughrabi | PMW Translations |website=palwatch.org}}</ref> A [[Hebron]] girls' school was briefly named in honor of Mughrabi but the name was changed after it emerged that [[USAID]] was funding the school. Her name has also been given to summer camps and both police and military courses.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.imra.org.il/story.php3?id=13227 |title=IMRA – Thursday, August 15, 2002 PMW: Palestinian terrorists are the Palestinian heroes |website=www.imra.org.il |access-date=23 July 2008}}</ref> In February 2011 Palestinian Media Watch exposed a pan-Arab feminist [[White Hands Campaign|media campaign]] promoting Mughrabi as a role model for women in the Arab world.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.palwatch.org/main.aspx?fi=157&doc_id=4641 |title=UN asks PMW to publicize that UN was not behind Arab media campaign presenting terrorist as role model |last1=Marcus |first1=Itamar |last2=Zilberdik |first2=Nan Jacques |date=13 February 2011 |publisher=Palestine Media Watch |access-date=15 February 2011}}</ref> |
|||
During the [[2008 Israel-Hezbollah prisoner swap]], Israel intended to transfer her body to [[Hezbollah]], however DNA testing showed that her body was not among the exhumed corpses.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/136475|title=32nd Anniversary of the Coastal Road Massacre|website=Israel National News|date=11 March 2010 }}</ref> |
|||
Several locations under Palestinian Authority control have been named after Mughrabi.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.jpost.com/opinion/op-ed-contributors/incitement-is-not-one-sided|title=Incitement is not one-sided|website=The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com|date=31 August 2010 }}</ref> |
|||
Palestinian Media Watch reported that, in January 2012, official Palestinian Authority television, which is under the control of PA chairman Mahmoud Abbas, rebroadcast a music video glorifying the attack. The words of the clip included: "We [PLO squad] set out on patrol from Lebanon; with no fear of death or the darkness of prison. On the coast [Dalal] Mughrabi's blood was shed, the color of [red] coral on [white] lemon flowers."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.palwatch.org/main.aspx?fi=157&doc_id=6090,|title=PMW Bulletins|access-date=16 December 2014}}</ref> |
|||
In 2011, a summer camp "which took place under the auspices of Prime Minister [[Salam Fayyad]]" divided the children into three groups named after militants, and one group was named for Mughrabi.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://palwatch.org/pages/news_archive.aspx?doc_id=5320|title=PA summer camp names children's group after Dalal Mughrabi – Palestinian Daily News|access-date=16 December 2014}}</ref> |
|||
==See also== |
|||
* [[2011 southern Israel cross-border attacks]] |
|||
* [[Avivim school bus massacre]] |
|||
* [[List of massacres in Israel]] |
|||
==References== |
==References== |
||
{{ |
{{Reflist}} |
||
== External links == |
|||
{{Israeli-Palestinian Conflict}} |
|||
* [http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/Terrorism-+Obstacle+to+Peace/Palestinian_incitement/32nd_anniversary_coastal_massacre_11-Mar-2010.htm 32nd anniversary of the coastal massacre] – published at the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs |
|||
* [https://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/latimes/access/648423052.html?dids=648423052:648423052&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:AI 30 Die in Rampage by Terrorists in Israel] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121107224540/http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/latimes/access/648423052.html?dids=648423052:648423052&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:AI |date=7 November 2012 }} – published on the ''[[Los Angeles Times]]'' on 12 March 1978 |
|||
* [https://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/boston/access/1995863622.html?FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:AI 30 die after terrorists attack 2 buses in Israel] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121107224553/http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/boston/access/1995863622.html?FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:AI |date=7 November 2012 }} – published on ''[[The Boston Globe]]'' on 12 March 1978 |
|||
* [https://www.nytimes.com/1978/03/12/archives/fatah-admits-raid-guerrillas-land-from-sea-battle-with-policemen.html Fatah admits raid] – published on ''[[The New York Times]]'' on 12 March 1978 |
|||
{{Terrorist attacks against Israelis in the 1970s}} |
|||
[[Category:Israeli-Palestinian conflict]] |
|||
{{Palestinian militancy attacks in the 1970s}} |
|||
[[Category:Israel-Lebanon conflict]] |
|||
{{Israeli-Palestinian conflict|Timeline}} |
|||
[[Category:Terrorist incidents in the 1970s]] |
|||
[[Category:Fatah]] |
|||
[[Category:Terrorist incidents on buses]] |
|||
[[Category:Massacres in Israel]] |
|||
[[Category:1978 in Israel]] |
|||
[[Category:1978 crimes in Israel]] |
|||
[[de:Küstenstraßen-Anschlag]] |
|||
[[Category:1970s fires in Asia]] |
|||
[[he:פיגוע כביש החוף]] |
|||
[[Category:1978 disasters in Asia]] |
|||
[[no:Massakren på Israels kysthovedvei]] |
|||
[[Category:1978 fires]] |
|||
[[Category:1978 in international relations]] |
|||
[[Category:1978 mass shootings in Asia]] |
|||
[[Category:1970s trials]] |
|||
[[Category:20th-century mass murder in Israel]] |
|||
[[Category:Attacks on buses by Palestinian militant groups]] |
|||
[[Category:Explosions in 1978]] |
|||
[[Category:Explosions in Israel]] |
|||
[[Category:Grenade attacks in Israel]] |
|||
[[Category:Hijackings in Asia]] |
|||
[[Category:Hostage taking in Israel]] |
|||
[[Category:March 1978 events in Asia]] |
|||
[[Category:Mass shootings in Israel]] |
|||
[[Category:Massacres in Israel during the Israeli–Palestinian conflict]] |
|||
[[Category:Massacres in 1978]] |
|||
[[Category:Murder trials]] |
|||
[[Category:Operations involving Israeli special forces]] |
|||
[[Category:Palestinian insurgency in South Lebanon]] |
|||
[[Category:Spree shootings in Israel]] |
|||
[[Category:Terrorist incidents in Asia in 1978]] |
|||
[[Category:Terrorist incidents in Israel in the 1970s]] |
|||
[[Category:Trials in Israel]] |
|||
[[Category:Fatah attacks]] |
|||
[[Category:Massacres committed by the Palestine Liberation Organization]] |
|||
[[Category:Hijackings in the 1970s]] |
|||
[[Category:Child murder in Israel]] |
|||
[[Category:Vehicle fires in Asia]] |
Latest revision as of 22:03, 30 November 2024
Coastal road massacre | |
---|---|
Part of the Palestinian insurgency in South Lebanon and the Israeli–Palestinian conflict | |
Location | Coastal Highway near Tel Aviv, Israel |
Coordinates | 32°08′52.6″N 34°48′11.4″E / 32.147944°N 34.803167°E |
Date | 11 March 1978 |
Attack type | Mass murder, spree killing |
Weapons | Various weapons, possible grenade |
Deaths | 48 (38 Israeli civilians including 13 children,[1] 1 Israeli soldier[not verified in body] + 9 Palestinian attackers) |
Injured | 76 wounded[1] |
Perpetrators | Fatah, PLO |
No. of participants | 11 militants |
The coastal road massacre occurred on 11 March 1978, when Palestinian militants hijacked a bus on the Coastal Highway of Israel and murdered its occupants; 38 Israeli civilians, including 13 children, were killed as a result of the attack while 76 more were wounded.[2][1][3] The attack was planned by the influential Palestinian militant leader Khalil al-Wazir (aka Abu Jihad)[4] and carried out by Fatah, a Palestinian nationalist party co-founded by al-Wazir and Yasser Arafat in 1959. The initial plan of the militants was to seize a luxury hotel in the Israeli city of Tel Aviv and take tourists and foreign ambassadors hostage to exchange them for Palestinian prisoners in Israeli custody.[5]
According to Time magazine, the timing was aimed primarily at undermining Israeli–Egyptian peace talks between Menachem Begin and Anwar Sadat and damaging Israel's tourism sector.[6][7] However, due to a navigational error, the attackers ended up 64 kilometres (40 mi) north of their target, and were forced to find an alternative method of transportation to their destination.[6]
Time characterized it as "the worst terrorist attack in Israel's history."[7] Fatah dubbed the hijacking "Operation of the Martyr Kamal Adwan"[8] after the chief of operations of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), who was killed during the Israeli commando raid on Lebanon in April 1973.[9][10] In response to the massacre, Israel launched Operation Litani against PLO bases in southern Lebanon three days later.
Background and perpetrators
The PLO claimed responsibility for the attack, which was planned by influential Fatah leader Abu Jihad.[4] The attack's purpose was to disrupt ongoing Israeli-Egyptian peace negotiations. Yasser Arafat and Abu Jihad feared that a truce between Israel and Egypt would be detrimental to their cause. The operation was considered to be of such importance that Abu Jihad, together with his operations commander for Lebanon Azmi Zair, personally briefed the participants.[11]
Israel received intelligence of the planned attack from a Shin Bet source codenamed Housemaid, who met with Israeli military intelligence official Amos Gilad in a safehouse in Jerusalem and briefed him about the plans. The intelligence was confirmed by wiretaps of the PLO offices in Cyprus. Israeli intelligence pinpointed the PLO squad's base to the beach of Damour, learned the attackers' names, and discovered that the goal behind the planned raid was to disrupt peace negotiations with Egypt. On 5 March 1978, Israel launched a military operation to preempt the planned attack. Shayetet 13 naval commandos raided the PLO base at Damour to wipe out the squad, but only killed all of those in one building, while those in a nearby building, who did not come out or open fire, survived the raid.[11]
After intelligence was received from Housemaid that not all of the PLO squad had been killed, Gilad demanded that the commandos be sent in again to wipe out the remaining guerrillas, arguing that as Abu Jihad now knew that Israel was aware of his plans he would be spurred to launch the attack sooner, but Defense Minister Ezer Weizman, not wanting headlines of an Israeli raid on Lebanon to cast a shadow over his upcoming visit to the Pentagon, refused to authorize another such mission. The surviving guerrillas proceeded to carry out the attack.[11]
Attack
On 9 March 1978, 13 Palestinian fedayeen, including 18-year-old female Dalal Mughrabi, left Lebanon on a boat headed for the Israeli coast. They were equipped with Kalashnikov rifles, rocket-propelled grenades, light mortars and high explosives. On 11 March, they transferred to two Zodiac boats and headed towards the shore. One of the Zodiacs capsized in the rough weather, and two of the militants drowned, but the surviving 11 carried on with their mission.[12][13]
Landing
The eleven survivors landed on a beach near the kibbutz Ma'agan Michael, north of Tel Aviv. Due to stormy weather they had lost their bearings and believed they had landed in Cyprus. They met American photographer Gail Rubin, who was taking nature photographs on the beach and asked her where they were, and were relieved when she told them they were in Israel. Then they killed her.[11][6] Both surviving attackers said that Mughrabi shot Rubin,[14] who was a niece of United States Senator Abraham A. Ribicoff.[15]
Bus hijacking
The militants then walked less than a mile up to the four-lane highway, opened fire at passing cars, and hijacked a white Mercedes taxi, killing its occupants.[7] Setting off down the highway toward Tel Aviv, they hijacked a chartered bus carrying Egged bus drivers and their families on a day outing, along the Coastal Highway. Although Abu Jihad had ordered them to seize a hotel, the militants improvised and changed the nature of their attack due to the dozens of hostages in their hands. The militants drove down the coastal highway, shooting and throwing grenades at passing cars. They also shot at the passengers and threw at least one body out of the bus. At one point they commandeered Bus 901, traveling from Tel Aviv to Haifa, taking its passengers hostage as well, and forced the passengers from the first bus to board it.[7][11]
At one point, the bus stopped, and one of the perpetrators got out and fired directly into a passing car, killing a teenager, Imri Tel-Oren, and injuring his father Hanoch. Sharon Tel-Oren, Imri's mother, testified: "We were in our station wagon, driving along the coastal highway. We saw something odd ahead – a bus, but it seemed to be stopped. Then we saw someone lying on the road. There was shattered glass all over, children screaming. Then we heard the gunshots. Imri was asleep in the back seat. The bullet passed through the front seat and hit his head, killing him instantly. My husband was shot in the arm, and lost the movement in his fingers."[16][17]
Police were alerted to the attack; their cars caught up to the bus and trailed it. Although the militants fired at the pursuing police cars, policemen did not return fire, fearing they would hit the civilians inside the bus.[18] Police quickly set up a roadblock, but the militants plowed the bus through it and continued their journey. According to Khaled Abu Asba, one of the two surviving attackers, police set up multiple roadblocks, and there was an exchange of fire at every intersection.[13]
Standoff at the Glilot Junction
The bus was finally stopped by a large police roadblock set up at the Glilot Junction near Herzliya, which included nails planted on the road to puncture the bus' tires.[7][12] Due to the speed at which the attack was transpiring, Israeli counter-terrorism squads had been unable to mobilize quickly enough, and the roadblock was manned by ordinary patrolmen and traffic policemen, who were lightly armed in comparison to the militants and untrained in dealing with hostage situations. A firefight erupted, and police broke the bus' windows and yelled at passengers to jump.[12]
Escaping passengers were shot at by one of the militants.[7] According to the Israeli police, Assaf Hefetz, then head of the Israeli Police counter-terrorism unit, arrived at the scene before his unit, and stormed the bus, killing two militants. Hefetz sustained a shoulder injury during the battle, and was later awarded the Israeli Police Medal of Courage.[19][20]
The battle reached its climax when the bus exploded and burst into flames. Some of the militants and hostages escaped but most died in the fire.[11] The explosion may have been set off by a burning fuel tank, or by grenades. The Palestinians claimed that the Israelis destroyed the bus with fire from helicopter gunships.[21][22] Israeli journalist Ronen Bergman, in his book Rise and Kill First, which was based on interviews with Israeli intelligence veterans, claimed that the explosion was due to a grenade blast that came as a result of a scuffle between militants and hostage Avraham Shamir. According to Bergman, during the firefight, Shamir saw one of the militants resting the hand holding his pistol on his daughter's head, after which he charged at him, seized the gun, and shot a militant standing at the front of the bus, then fired three shots at another militant. Another hostage warned Shamir of a militant aiming his gun at him from behind, after which Shamir turned and they both fired, wounding each other. Shamir then saw the militant from whom he had seized the gun lying injured on the floor holding a grenade with the safety pin pulled out. After he dropped it on the floor, Shamir tried to use the militant's body to blunt the effects of the blast. The grenade's explosion killed the militant and five hostages, seriously wounded Shamir, and set the bus on fire.[11]
A total of 38 civilians were killed in the attack, including 13 children, while 71 others were wounded.[23] Of the 11 perpetrators, 9 were killed.[18]
Motives
One motive for the attack from the PLO was to derail Egypt-Israel peace talks. In October 1976, Egypt, the PLO, and Syria were back in contact with each other, though temporarily, under Saudi auspices, at the Riyadh conference that year. In 1977 "...the United States appeared anxious to coordinate Arab approval of a Geneva peace conference, as well as the presence there of Palestinians, and most important, the cooperation of the Soviet Union."[24] Both the Egyptians and the Israelis were opposed to the possibility of a political settlement which would have the effect of uniting the Arabs with the Palestinians or the two superpowers against Israel. "No less than Israelis, therefore, Sadat opposed the joint US–USSR statement of October 1, 1977. Not only did the statement put the Palestinian question on a par with the return of Egyptian territory, it almost meant a clear victory for Syrian pan-Arabism."[25]
The US–USSR joint statement stated the settlement of the Arab-Israeli conflict would be based on: "an Israeli withdrawal from 'occupied territories' in 1967; the resolution of the Palestinian question, including insuring the 'legitimate rights' of the Palestinian people; the termination of the state of war; and the establishment of normal peaceful relations on the basis of mutual recognition of sovereignty, territorial integrity, and political independence."[26] Ultimately, America opted for an Egypt-Israel Peace Treaty as Anwar Sadat made a visit to Jerusalem in November 1977. In that treaty "the first item dropped was the question of Palestine as it had evolved through the United Nations; after that the US–USSR statement, and agreed upon Palestinian representation at the Geneva conference, were also dropped.".[27] Anwar Sadat's main concern was the territory of Sinai to be returned to Egypt from Israel.[citation needed]
Official reactions
- Involved parties
Israel
- Israeli prime minister Menachem Begin stated in a press conference that Israel "shall not forget the carnage" and added that "there was no need of this outrage to understand that a Palestinian state would be a mortal danger to our nation and our people."[28]
- The PLO official stated that "the operation stems from the firm belief of Fatah in the necessity of carrying on the armed struggle against the Zionist enemy within the occupied land."[29]
- International
- Egypt: Egyptian president Anwar Sadat condemned the attack as "an irresponsible action" and indirectly appealed to Israel not to strike back.[30]
- United States: US president Jimmy Carter released a statement saying the attack was "an outrageous act of lawlessness and senseless brutality. Criminal acts such as this advance no cause or political belief. They inspire only revulsion at the lack of respect for innocent human life."[29]
Aftermath
Trial
The two surviving perpetrators, Khaled Abu Asba and Hussein Fayyad, were arrested and tried in an Israeli military court in Lod. They were charged with 10 counts of firing at people, two counts of placing and detonating explosives, and one count of membership in a hostile organization. Their trial opened on 9 August 1979. The trial was presided over by Judge Colonel Aharon Kolperin. The chief prosecutor was Amnon Straschnov, while Abu Asba and Fayyad were represented by defense lawyer Leah Tsemel. On 23 October 1979, they were convicted on all 13 charges. They were sentenced to life imprisonment, and spent seven years in prison before being released in the 1985 Jibril Agreement.[13][31][32][33]
Israeli response
In a statement to the press the following day, Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin stated, "They came here to kill Jews. They intended to take hostages and threatened, as the leaflet they left said, to kill all of them if we did not surrender to their demands.... We shall not forget. And I can only call upon other nations not to forget that Nazi atrocity that was perpetrated upon our people yesterday."[34]
Speaking to the Knesset on 13 March, Begin said, "Gone forever are the days when Jewish blood could be shed with impunity. Let it be known: Those who shed innocent blood shall not go unpunished. We shall defend our citizens, our women, our children. We shall sever the arm of iniquity."[35]
On 15 March, three days after the massacre, Israel launched Operation Litani against PLO bases in southern Lebanon. The IDF spokesman stated, "The objective of the operation is not retaliation for the terrorists' crimes, for there can be no retaliation for the murder of innocent men, women and children – but to protect the state of Israel and its citizens from incursions of members of the Fatah and PLO, who use Lebanese territory in order to attack citizens of Israel."[36] Augustus Richard Norton, professor of international relations at Boston University, said Operation Litani resulted in approximately 1,100 people killed, most of them Palestinian and Lebanese civilians.[37][38]
Palestinian glorification of hijackers
Palestinian Media Watch,[39] an Israeli NGO that monitors antisemitism and support for terrorism in Palestinian society, has cited examples of Palestinian media that portrays Dalal Mughrabi as a heroine and role model.[40][41] A Hebron girls' school was briefly named in honor of Mughrabi but the name was changed after it emerged that USAID was funding the school. Her name has also been given to summer camps and both police and military courses.[42] In February 2011 Palestinian Media Watch exposed a pan-Arab feminist media campaign promoting Mughrabi as a role model for women in the Arab world.[43]
During the 2008 Israel-Hezbollah prisoner swap, Israel intended to transfer her body to Hezbollah, however DNA testing showed that her body was not among the exhumed corpses.[44]
Several locations under Palestinian Authority control have been named after Mughrabi.[45]
Palestinian Media Watch reported that, in January 2012, official Palestinian Authority television, which is under the control of PA chairman Mahmoud Abbas, rebroadcast a music video glorifying the attack. The words of the clip included: "We [PLO squad] set out on patrol from Lebanon; with no fear of death or the darkness of prison. On the coast [Dalal] Mughrabi's blood was shed, the color of [red] coral on [white] lemon flowers."[46]
In 2011, a summer camp "which took place under the auspices of Prime Minister Salam Fayyad" divided the children into three groups named after militants, and one group was named for Mughrabi.[47]
See also
References
- ^ a b c "1978, March 11. The Coastal Road Massacre". Richard Ernest Dupuy, Trevor Nevitt Dupuy (chamel). The Encyclopedia of Military History from 3500 B.C. to the Present, Harper & Row, 1986; ISBN 978-0-06-181235-4, p. 1362.
- ^ Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs. "Statement to the press by Prime Minister Begin on the massacre of Israelis on the Haifa-Tel Aviv Road". Archived 24 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine. Historical Documents Archive: 12 March 1978.
- ^ Gregory S. Mahler. "Operation Litani is launched in retaliation for that month's Coastal Road massacre", Politics and Government in Israel: The Maturation of a Modern State, Rowman & Littlefield, 2004, ISBN 978-0-7425-1611-3, p. 259.
- ^ a b "Israel's successful assassinations" (in Hebrew). MSN. Retrieved 29 March 2008.
- ^ Moshe Brilliant, "Israeli officials Say Gunmen Intended to Seize Hotel", The New York Times, 13 March 1978.
- ^ a b c "Tragedy of errors". Time. 27 March 1978. Archived from the original on 14 January 2009. Retrieved 1 June 2008.
- ^ a b c d e f "A Sabbath of Terror", Time, 20 March 1978.
- ^ Edgar O'Ballance (1979). Language of Violence: The Blood Politics of Terrorism, p. 289, Presidio Press (original from the University of Michigan); ISBN 978-0-89141-020-1, ISBN 978-0-89141-020-1
- ^ "An Eye for an Eye". CBS. 20 November 2001. Retrieved 21 November 2001.
- ^ Greenaway, HDS, "Arab Terrorist Raid in Israel Kills 30", The Washington Post, 12 March 1978.
- ^ a b c d e f g Bergman, Ronen: Rise and Kill First, pp. 225–227
- ^ a b c "This Week in History: Israel's deadliest terror attack". The Jerusalem Post. 11 March 2011. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
- ^ a b c ["Coastal Road terrorist refuses to apologize, says peace 'important' – Haaretz – Israel News". Archived from the original on 8 August 2009. Retrieved 5 August 2009. Coastal road terrorist: No apologies, Haaretz. According to Abu Absa, one of the surviving Palestinian perpetrators, Mughrabi was the only woman in the group and she was not the commander.
- ^ "IMRA – Monday, August 4, 2008 :: MEMRITV: Fatah Terrorists Who Participated in a 1978 Attack Commanded by Dalal Al-Maghrabi Describe the Murder of U.S. Journalist Gail Rubin". Retrieved 16 December 2014.
- ^ "U.S. Born Photographer Was First Victim in the Raid". The New York Times. 13 March 1978. p. 11. Retrieved 21 February 2015.
- ^ The dolls' journey to Israel, The Jerusalem Post; accessed 10 March 2018.
- ^ "A flute now silent". Haaretz.com. 24 August 2005. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
- ^ a b Black, Ian (1992): Israel's Secret Wars: A History of Israel's Intelligence Services
- ^ Interview with Assaf Hefetz, jpress.org.il, 30 October 1984.(in Hebrew)
- ^ Assaf Hefetz: Israeli Police Medal of Courage, gvura.org; accessed 10 March 2018.
- ^ Willenson, Kim, Milan J. Kubic, and William E. Schmidt, "Slaughter in Israel", Newsweek, 20 March 1978.
- ^ Black, Ian & Hugh McLeod, (11 March 2010). "Israel-Hizbullah prisoner exchange: profiles", TheGuardian.com; accessed 10 March 2018.
- ^ Deeb, Marius (July 2003). Syria's Terrorist War on Lebanon and the Peace Process. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 39. ISBN 978-1-4039-6248-5.
- ^ Said, Edward (1992). The Question of Palestine. Vintage Books. p. 201.
- ^ Said, Edward (1992). The Question of Palestine. Vintage Books. p. 201. ISBN 978-0-679-73988-3.
- ^ Khouri, Fred. The Arab-Israeli Dilemma. pp. 397–398.
- ^ Said, Edward (1992). The Question of Palestine. Vintage Books. p. 202.
- ^ "The Telegraph-Herald – Google News Archive Search". news.google.com.
- ^ a b "Reading Eagle – Google News Archive Search". news.google.com.
- ^ "The Pittsburgh Press – Google News Archive Search". news.google.com.
- ^ "Terrorist who killed 38 Israelis appointed PA adviser". The Jerusalem Post - JPost.com. 29 May 2013. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
- ^ "Two Terrorists Convicted in 1978 Coastal Road Rampage". 24 October 1979.
- ^ "Terrorists' Trial Opens". 10 August 1979.
- ^ "Statement to the press by Prime Minister Begin on the massacre of Israelis on the Haifa – Tel Aviv Road". Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs. 12 March 1978. Retrieved 18 April 2010.
- ^ "Statement to the Knesset by Prime Minister Begin on the terrorist raid and the Knesset resolution". Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs. 13 March 1978. Retrieved 18 April 2010.
- ^ "Israel Defense Forces statement on the operation in Lebanon". Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs. 15 March 1978. Retrieved 18 April 2010.
- ^ Augustus Richard Norton; Jillian Schwedler (1993). "(In)security Zones in South Lebanon". Journal of Palestine Studies. 23 (1). University of California Press: 61–79. doi:10.1525/jps.1993.23.1.00p0030t. JSTOR 2537858.
- ^ Israeli Violations of Human Rights of Lebanese Civilians (PDF). B'Tselem. 2000. pp. 12–13.
- ^ "Palestinian Media Watch – A window to Palestinian society | PMW". palwatch.org.
- ^ Special report # 39: Palestinian Culture and Society (Study No. 6–12 March 2002) "Encouraging Women Terrorists" by Itamar Marcus, http://palwatch.org/STORAGE/special%20reports/Encouraging_Women_Terrorists.pdf, accessed 24 July 2008
- ^ "Dalal Mughrabi | PMW Translations". palwatch.org.
- ^ "IMRA – Thursday, August 15, 2002 PMW: Palestinian terrorists are the Palestinian heroes". www.imra.org.il. Retrieved 23 July 2008.
- ^ Marcus, Itamar; Zilberdik, Nan Jacques (13 February 2011). "UN asks PMW to publicize that UN was not behind Arab media campaign presenting terrorist as role model". Palestine Media Watch. Retrieved 15 February 2011.
- ^ "32nd Anniversary of the Coastal Road Massacre". Israel National News. 11 March 2010.
- ^ "Incitement is not one-sided". The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com. 31 August 2010.
- ^ "PMW Bulletins". Retrieved 16 December 2014.
- ^ "PA summer camp names children's group after Dalal Mughrabi – Palestinian Daily News". Retrieved 16 December 2014.
External links
- 32nd anniversary of the coastal massacre – published at the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs
- 30 Die in Rampage by Terrorists in Israel Archived 7 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine – published on the Los Angeles Times on 12 March 1978
- 30 die after terrorists attack 2 buses in Israel Archived 7 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine – published on The Boston Globe on 12 March 1978
- Fatah admits raid – published on The New York Times on 12 March 1978
- 1978 crimes in Israel
- 1970s fires in Asia
- 1978 disasters in Asia
- 1978 fires
- 1978 in international relations
- 1978 mass shootings in Asia
- 1970s trials
- 20th-century mass murder in Israel
- Attacks on buses by Palestinian militant groups
- Explosions in 1978
- Explosions in Israel
- Grenade attacks in Israel
- Hijackings in Asia
- Hostage taking in Israel
- March 1978 events in Asia
- Mass shootings in Israel
- Massacres in Israel during the Israeli–Palestinian conflict
- Massacres in 1978
- Murder trials
- Operations involving Israeli special forces
- Palestinian insurgency in South Lebanon
- Spree shootings in Israel
- Terrorist incidents in Asia in 1978
- Terrorist incidents in Israel in the 1970s
- Trials in Israel
- Fatah attacks
- Massacres committed by the Palestine Liberation Organization
- Hijackings in the 1970s
- Child murder in Israel
- Vehicle fires in Asia