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CIA RDP96 00788r000100330001 5
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FOREIGN SERVICE JOURNAL
May 1984 Pg. 18
CLIPPINGS
Diplomats & Terrorism
“Letters sent top Italian news organiza-
tions purporting to come from Red Bri-
gades guerrillas today threatened the life of
another U.S. diplomat in the aftermath of
last week's killing of Leamon R.
Hunt....‘The milicarist wing of che Red
Brigades claims the assassination of the
dirty guarantor American general Leamon
R. Hunt....The militarist wing has an-
other American diplomae in its sights.’ ”
Renters, February 20
‘TU.S. Consul General Robert O.
Homme] was shot and wounded yesterday
in the city of Strasbourg, and a litcle
known group calling itself the Armed Le-
banese Revolutionary Faction claimed re-
sponsibility. [He] was described as being
in satisfactory condition. ...The group said
Mr. Homme was ‘already well known for
his activities as a member of the CIA.’ "
Baltimore Sun, March 27
“U.S. embassy officials said yesterday that
they had run into a dead end in the kidnap-
ing of diplomat William Buckley and now
are considering moving the remaining per-
sonnel to a Marine-guarded compound. A
Western diplomatic source who asked not
to be identified said, ‘Last night, several
American civilian employees did, indeed,
move into the compound. ’...In Washing-
ton, the Reagan administration said it
contacted Lebanese officials and Syria for
help in finding Buckley, who was abduct-
ed at gunpoint Friday morning while leav-
ing his West Beirut aparment. Three gun-
men forced Buckly, 55, the first secretary
of the embassy’s political section, into a car
in frone of his house, not far from the U.S.
embassy, and sped off.”
Philadelphia Inquirer, March 18
“Secretary of State Shultz called in a panel
of 23 experts and government officials yes-
terday for a private briefing on a topic that
has plagued the recent conduct of U.S.
diplomacy: international cerrorism.”
New York Daily News, March 25
“The U.S. embassy {in Beijing] has re-
ceived information indicating that Islamic
terrorists have targeted the diplomatic
SPECIAL EDITION --
mission here for a bombing attack like
those against che American embassy and
U.S. Marine billet in Beirut. The bomb-
ing of the U.S. embassy in Kuwait Decem-
ber 12 and a recent warning by che myste-
rious Islamic Jihad organization has
prompted tightened security measures at
American diplomatic missions all over the
world in che last week, including the Beij-
ing embassy, which an American diplomat
described as having ‘the worst security of
any embassy in the world.’...The informa-
tion indicated terrorists have also targeted
the U.S. embassy in Paris....Islamic Ji-
had...claimed responsibility for the Occo-
ber 23 suicide bombings in Beirut...and
for the bombing of the U.S. embassy in
Beirut last April, which left 63 people
dead...
“One embassy source, noting the Brit-
ish mission here has also taken security
measures such as parking a truck around
the clock behind the locked gates of their
compound, was puzzled why che Ameri-
cans maintain a truck blockade only at
night.”
Jonathan Broder in the Chicago Tribune
January 3
“Western embassies in East Berlin tight-
ened security yesterday after six East Ger-
mans succeeded in leaving the country by
staging a weekend sit-in at the U.S. em-
bassy....The U.S. embassy, which nor-
mally admits visitors to its library and con-
sular section without identity checks,
moved its receptionist into an outer lob-
by.”
Baltimore Sun
January 24
“Secretary of State George Shultz said:
‘The cruel fact of the matter is that terror-
ism works. We have to arrange things so
that it is a tactic that we are able to frus-
trate.’ "
Omaba World-Herald
March 13
“Senior U.S. officials agree that the new
anti-terrorism policy should have three ba-
sic components: protective measures, such
as increased embassy security; better intel-
ligence about terrorist groups and their
operations; and more aggressive military
and covert-action measures that can deter
terrorists from attacking Americans.”
David Ignatius in the Wall Street Journal
March 12
“It is time for the U.S. government to
move decisively to protect its embassy em-
ployees in the world’s areas of turmoil.
37
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TERRORISM -- 26 JUNE 1984
Security provisions should be realistically
reviewed in these regions. Embassy staffs
should be reasonably pared co those per-
sons who are absolucely necessary. They
should live under adequate protection of
U.S. armed personnel...
“Even in quiet areas U.S. diplomats and
other Americans need to be vigilant...In
areas of turmoil, such as Beirut, it is essen-
tial not to be foothardy. After the March
16 kidnaping, American diplomatic per-
sonnel living in civilian apartments were
moved to a secure area to be guarded by
American troops. They ought to have been
there all along. As pointed out by Arthur
Goldberg..., the State Department argu-
ment that protection of U.S. diplomats is
the duty of the host government breaks
down in areas where there is no effective
government.”
Christian Science Monitor, March 28
“Some embassies remain vulnerable. Only
a 10-foot high iron gate separates the steel-
and-glass U.S. embassy in Madrid from
the main street-—a mere 10 yards from the
building. Missions in London, Vienna,
and the Hague are similarly vulnerable.”
Washington Post, December 13
“In the late 1960s, with the contemporary
beginning of diplomatic kidnapping and
attempted assassinations, the United States
failed to establish a consistent policy
for dealing with terrorism. For example,
when our ambassador to Brazil, Charles
Burke Elbrick, was kidnapped in 1969,
the U.S. put pressure on the Brazilian gov-
ernment to accede to the terrorists’ de-
mand. The Brazilians complied and the
ambassador was released unharmed....In
1973, eight Palestinians of the Black Sep-
tember Organization seized the Saudi Ara~-
bian embassy in Khartoum, Sudan, and
captured five U.S. citizens including our
ambassador. Then President Richard Nix-
on, in an answer to a press conference ques-
tion, declared chat the United States ‘will
_not pay blackmail.’ The immediate result
was the slaughter of the hostages.”
The Bureaucrat, Winter 1983-84
“According to the information provided
by antiterrorist specialists, we may expect
stepped-up -atttacks on American diplo-
mats and diplomatic facilities in the fu-
ture. Even as the United States takes steps
to safeguard its embassies, installing more
sophisticated surveillance and communi-
cations and tightening perimeter security,
terrorism has made a career in the Foreign
Service riskier than ever.”
Jobn B. Wolf in Worldview
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