Islamic Jihad

Death of Marine commander scarred by 1983 Beirut bombing serves as reminder of risks US troops stationed in Middle East still face

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Gen. Alfred M. Gray Jr., who died on March 20, 2024, at the age of 95, was seen as a legend for his heroism in combat.

Key Points: 
  • Gen. Alfred M. Gray Jr., who died on March 20, 2024, at the age of 95, was seen as a legend for his heroism in combat.
  • But despite his military success, Gray, who went on to serve as the 29th commandant of the Marine Corps from 1987 to 1991, will always be associated with one of the darkest days in U.S. military history: the Beirut barracks bombing on Oct. 23, 1983.
  • The terrorist attack killed more than 300 people, including 241 U.S. service personnel under Gray’s command, although he was stateside at the time of the attack.
  • As a scholar currently doing research for a project on that attack, I can’t help but note that Gray’s death comes amid a surge of violence in Lebanon and at a time when U.S. troops stationed in the Middle East are again being targeted by Islamist groups funded by Iran.

Marines in Lebanon


Gray’s experience with U.S. involvement in Lebanon underscores the dangers American troops face when deployed to volatile areas. On June 4, 1981, he was assigned to command the 2nd Marine Division and all the battalions that went into a war-torn Lebanon from 1982 to 1984.

  • It began on April 13, 1975, and, similar to the upsurge in violence in Lebanon now, it was fueled by events south of the country’s border.
  • Palestinians expelled or fleeing from what became Israel in 1948 ended up as refugees in neighboring countries, including Lebanon.
  • By the mid-1970s, over 20,000 PLO fighters were in Lebanon and launching attacks on Israel.
  • In 1982, Israel launched Operation Peace for Galilee, invaded Lebanon and occupied Beirut with the intention of destroying PLO forces.

Day of attack

  • Minutes later, a similar attack took place in the French quarter, resulting in the deaths of 58 French paratroopers.
  • To this day, this event remains the deadliest single-day attack for the United States Marine Corps since the battle of Iwo Jima in 1945.
  • The Beirut barracks bombing was a personal affair for Gray; his troops were in Lebanon, and he had visited them just months before the attack.


After the bombing, Gray attended over 100 funerals of the service members killed. He also offered his resignation over the incident – the only senior officer to do so. His request was declined.

Lessons from 1983

  • One could draw many parallels between the Beirut barracks bombing of 1983 and current events.
  • In August 1982, President Ronald Reagan expressed his grave concern over Israel’s conduct in Lebanon and warned Israel about using American weaponry offensively.
  • Forty years on, American troops in the Middle East remain a target for much the same reason.
  • There is another parallel: Just as the group that claimed responsibility for the 1983 Beirut attack was being financed by Iran, so too today are the groups responsible for attacking U.S. bases across the Middle East.
  • Spurred by failings involved in the 1983 bombing, Gray sought to reform the Marine Corps after the tragedy, with greater focus on intelligence-gathering and understanding enemy groups.


Mireille Rebeiz does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Gaza update: the questionable precision and ethics of Israel’s AI warfare machine

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, April 18, 2024

The IDF says it has been working on information gleaned from questioning Palestinian fighters captured in the fighting.

Key Points: 
  • The IDF says it has been working on information gleaned from questioning Palestinian fighters captured in the fighting.
  • According to a report in the Jerusalem Post on April 17, the Palestinian fighters were hiding out in schools in the area.
  • The investigation, by online Israeli magazines +927 and Local Call examined the use of an AI programme called “Lavender”.
  • It’s important to note that the IDF is not the only military to be working with AI in this way.
  • But one function of the way the IDF is harnessing Lavender in this current conflict is its use alongside other systems.
  • Read more:
    Israel accused of using AI to target thousands in Gaza, as killer algorithms outpace international law

The Iranian dimension

  • Away from the charnel house that is the Gaza Strip, the focus has been on the aftermath of Israel’s strike on the Iranian embassy in Baghdad on April 1.
  • As is his wont, Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, vowed revenge, declaring: “The Zionist regime will be punished by the hands of our brave men.
  • And this was very much how it was to turn out when Iran’s drones and missiles flew last weekend.
  • Read more:
    Could Israel's strike against the Iranian embassy in Damascus escalate into a wider regional war?
  • Read more:
    Why Iran's failed attack on Israel may well turn out to be a strategic success

The nuclear option?


One of the possibilities being widely canvassed is that Israel could mount some kind of attack on Iran’s nuclear weapons programme. This has been revitalised in the years since Donald Trump pulled the US out of the deal negotiated by his predecessor Barack Obama.

  • He walks us through the history of Iran’s nuclear programme, a story littered with the bodies of Iranian nuclear scientists and the wreckage of its nuclear facilities thanks to fiendish cyberattacks such as the Stuxnet virus developed by Israel and the US that was launched against Iran in 2010.
  • Since Trump quit the nuclear deal, Iran has gone full-steam ahead in ramping up its nuclear weapons programme, while reportedly hiding its key installations in deep underground bunkers that are thought impossible to destroy from the air.

With Award-Winning Product Innovation and Strong Revenue Growth, Flashpoint Cements Status as Provider of the Industry’s Best Threat Data and Intelligence

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, February 20, 2024

We delivered award-winning innovation to help them stay ahead of evolving threats, in the form of our Ignite platform and impactful new data collection capabilities.

Key Points: 
  • We delivered award-winning innovation to help them stay ahead of evolving threats, in the form of our Ignite platform and impactful new data collection capabilities.
  • As a result, we ended the year with strong growth and profitability, solidifying our position as the top-tier threat intelligence leader,” said Josh Lefkowitz, CEO of Flashpoint.
  • In April, Flashpoint unveiled its Ignite platform , designed to equip security teams with the power of Flashpoint’s data, human expertise, and automated analysis.
  • Flashpoint Firehose : A data-as-a-service solution that delivers a near-real-time stream of enriched, contextualized data from Flashpoint’s massive collection of sources.

People dig deeper to fact-check social media posts when paired with someone who doesn't share their perspective – new research

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, November 9, 2023

Why it matters

Key Points: 
  • Why it matters
    Misinformation on social media is one of the greatest challenges of our time.
  • It contributes to political polarization, affects people’s voting, vaccination and recycling behavior, and is often believed long after it’s been corrected.
  • Bringing together people from opposing sides of a conflict to jointly fact-check social media posts isn’t likely to be easy.
  • In this study, we designed a novel research setup based on the fact that sharing and discussing social media posts with others is an everyday activity.

THE LAWFARE PROJECT FILES OFFICE OF CONGRESSIONAL ETHICS COMPLAINT AGAINST REP. RASHIDA TLAIB (D-MI)

Retrieved on: 
Monday, October 23, 2023

NEW YORK, Oct. 23, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- On Thursday, October 19, 2023, The Lawfare Project's (LP) filed an official ethics complaint against Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) with the Office of Congressional Ethics (OCE). The complaint, linked here, asserts that Tlaib directly violated Rule 1 of the U.S. House of Representatives' Code of Official Conduct by publishing a statement on her X (formerly Twitter) account that falsely and recklessly accuses the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) of being responsible for the recent deadly attack on a hospital in Gaza.

Key Points: 
  • World's Leading Pro Bono Jewish Legal Group Asserts Representative Violated U.S. House of Representatives Code of Official Conduct
    NEW YORK, Oct. 23, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- On Thursday, October 19, 2023, The Lawfare Project 's (LP) filed an official ethics complaint against Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) with the Office of Congressional Ethics (OCE).
  • LP's complaint calls upon the OCE to immediately launch an investigation into Tlaib and to refer the matter to the House Committee on Ethics.
  • "Instead, she spoke at a pro-Hamas rally where she doubled down on the lie and has refused to retract it.
  • LP is urging individuals to contact their local congressional representatives in the House and demand that Congress launch an investigation into Rep. Tlaib.

US-Israel relations the coolest for decades after 'terror' attack by settlers kills 19 year-old Palestinian

Retrieved on: 
Friday, August 11, 2023

As Time magazine put it recently: “The sources of Biden’s grievances are manifold.

Key Points: 
  • As Time magazine put it recently: “The sources of Biden’s grievances are manifold.
  • Since reclaiming power, Netanyahu has formed a hard-right coalition filled with ultraconservative and ultra-Orthodox voices.
  • They now number more than half a million across the West Bank, with many seeing it as their God-given land.

‘Terror’ on the West Bank

    • The Israeli agriculture minister, Avi Dichter, tried to dismiss this as a misinformed comment.
    • Behind all of this is a major problem for the Israelis in securing the West Bank for the Jewish settlers.
    • A subsequent IDF rescue operation required a substantial ground force backed up by AH-64 Apache helicopters using air-to-ground missiles and took nine hours to complete.

Security and settlers

    • Most analysts had come to the view that Israel had sufficient forces needed to ensure its own security – whether in southern Lebanon, Gaza or the West Bank.
    • Many settlers live close to Palestinian towns and villages and are afforded protection by the Israeli government which is controlled by ultra-right parties sympathetic to the settler movement.
    • The settlers will remain, they are well armed and utterly convinced that they are right.

Israel's assault in Jenin will only further erode the Palestinian Authority's legitimacy

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, July 6, 2023

As Israeli soldiers withdrew from the Jenin refugee camp in the occupied West Bank after two days of fighting, Israel’s generals and politicians were quick to hail the major military operation there a success.

Key Points: 
  • As Israeli soldiers withdrew from the Jenin refugee camp in the occupied West Bank after two days of fighting, Israel’s generals and politicians were quick to hail the major military operation there a success.
  • That problem is a legitimacy crisis facing the Palestinian Authority – the self-governing body that has limited rule over parts of the occupied West Bank, including Jenin, that are not directly ruled by Israel.
  • As a scholar who specializes on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and has written a book about it, I believe that this latest military operation will, in fact, only worsen that legitimacy crisis.

Failure to provide security

    • To be sure, the assault of June 3-4 was on a much greater scale than previous raids into Jenin.
    • Israeli officials and American politicians have blamed the Palestinian Authority and its octogenarian leader, Mahmoud Abbas, for this failure.
    • This criticism, however, overlooks why the Palestinian Authority has lost control over parts of the northern West Bank.

Unpopular and increasingly autocratic

    • The Palestinian Authority has become deeply unpopular with the Palestinian public.
    • Abbas himself has even less support – 80% of Palestinians in that survey expressed dissatisfaction with him and wanted him to resign.
    • Human rights groups have
      accused the Palestinian Authority of arbitrarily arresting people and even torturing detainees.
    • The Palestinian Authority has undoubtedly become increasingly autocratic and authoritarian.

Fading hopes of statehood

    • Nearly three decades later, the Palestinian Authority still exists, but Palestinian statehood looks like a distant prospect at best.
    • Meanwhile, the land on which Palestinians expected this state would be built has been steadily eaten away by relentless Israeli settlement building.
    • But this success comes at a steep price – first and foremost, to Palestinian civilians, but also to the Palestinian Authority.
    • This will, I believe, only worsen its standing in the eyes of the Palestinian public and exacerbate its legitimacy crisis.

Death in Jenin: Israel's biggest attack in the West Bank in 20 years is down to Netanyahu's political weakness – here's why

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, July 5, 2023

Israeli forces say they have completed a 48-hour military operation in the West Bank city of Jenin – the largest in two decades.

Key Points: 
  • Israeli forces say they have completed a 48-hour military operation in the West Bank city of Jenin – the largest in two decades.
  • Beginning on Monday, July 3, the Israel Defence Force (IDF) hit the city with drone strikes, sending in hundreds of troops and bulldozing through the narrow streets.

Why target Jenin?

    • A large section of the refugee camp was razed and it was reported that the Israeli military blocked humanitarian assistance to the camp.
    • The UN reported that 52 Palestinians, up to half of whom may have been civilians, and 23 Israeli soldiers were killed.
    • The Battle of Jenin was for many Palestinians a “heroic symbol of resilience and resistance against Israeli rule”.
    • According to IDF data, of the 290 attacks on Israelis emanating from the West Bank since June 2022, 106 came from Jenin.

A weakened prime minister

    • While the IDF was reluctant to risk being dragged into a lengthy and complicated ground assault, Israeli politicians had different considerations.
    • The prime minister needs their support to keep him in the premiership.
    • To regain domestic favour and quieten his critics, perhaps Netanyahu has stepped over a line even he would not have crossed previously.
    • But history tells us that the cycle of violence will continue and neither the Israeli nor Palestinian leadership have the power, or will, to stop it.

Press release - Israel and Palestine: MEPs call for a European peace initiative

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, December 14, 2022

In a resolution adopted on Wednesday, the European Parliament called for an end to the protracted Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the occupation of Palestinian territories through the resumption of genuine peace talks.

Key Points: 
  • In a resolution adopted on Wednesday, the European Parliament called for an end to the protracted Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the occupation of Palestinian territories through the resumption of genuine peace talks.
  • They stress that the recent decisions to establish new settlements further undermine prospects for a viable two-state solution.
  • They insist that the European Union and the European Parliament must be able to observe these elections, upon invitation.
  • Finally, recognising UNRWAs role in providing Palestinian refugees with vital services, MEPs reiterate the importance of education in building prospects for a two-state solution.

Agnes & Beny Steinmetz Foundation Partners With Israeli Rehab Centre to Help Muslim Refugee Families From Palestinian Authority and Arab States

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, August 30, 2022

Further afield and the ongoing war in Syria is now in its 11th year and has claimed the lives of around half a million Syrian citizens, according to United Nations estimates, and forced an estimated 6.8 million Syrians to flee the country and seek asylum elsewhere. Meanwhile, the Yemeni Civil War, which started in 2014, continues with people still fleeing war-torn Iraq, long after the U.S. invasion to topple Saddam Hussein in 2003, following the 9/11 terror attacks in the United States -- a figure that exceeds 260,000 people, according to UN 2019 data. 

Key Points: 
  • The Tel Aviv-based foundation was established by mining magnate and French-Israeli citizen Beny Steinmetz, in 2006, with the primary focus to provide continuous assistance and support to Israeli and other children in need, as well as funding education and health for at-risk children.
  • The foundation also focuses on promoting the world of culture and arts throughout Israel and is a major sponsor of the Tel Aviv Museum of Art.
  • Ongoing tensions between Israel and the Palestinian territories see occasional flare-ups of violence in one of the world's longest-running conflicts, the most recent of which erupted in early August.
  • The Agnes & Beny Steinmetz Foundation has donated several million dollars to the centre over the past number of years.