ABOUT WORLD BLOG

NBC News World Blog aims to provide a dynamic look at world events and trends -- both big and small -- from NBC News correspondents, producers, and bureaus around the world. Online entries -- from text to video -- will explore news events and how they are shaping our world.

Regular contributors include NBC News correspondents, producers and staff based in bureaus across the world and on assignment.

Click here to read more about the journalists behind NBC News World Blog.



Beirut attack: The start of Islamic terrorism

Posted: Thursday, October 23, 2008 11:07 AM
Filed Under:


Twenty-five years on and it still appears in my nightmares and daydreams: the visual equivalent of a lone, empty shoe or sandal, on top of a pile of rubble, all that remains of the child who once wore it.

Only in my mind’s eye it’s not a shoe – it’s a stepladder. The aluminum kind you’d use to change a bulb or paint the ceiling. It was lingering somewhere inside or against the 1/8 Marines’ barracks in Beirut when a suicide bomber drove his five-ton yellow Mercedes truck, laden with six tons of TNT, right through an unfortified perimeter fence and straight into the lobby of the barracks, setting off the largest non-nuclear explosion since World War II.

Image:  bomb-wrecked U.S. Marine command center near Beirut
AP file
British soldiers give a hand in rescue operations at the site of the bomb-wrecked U.S. Marine command center in Beirut on Oct. 23, 1983.

I came across the ladder hours later, and hundreds of yards from the scene. It had impaled a tree trunk like a huge dart, and was hanging, parallel to the ground, swaying in the breeze. A strange image – but one that is seared in my mind when I think about that awful day 25 years ago that marked the first of what would become many radical Islamic terror attacks against Western interests.

Peacekeepers on an unwelcomed mission
By the fourth week of October 1983, our NBC News team had spent several months, off and on, covering – the term "embedding" didn’t exist yet – the 1,600-strong contingent of U.S. Marines out of Camp Lejeune, N.C., in Lebanon. They were part of a multinational peacekeeping task force, including French and Italian troops, sent in to ease tensions between Lebanese, Palestinian and Israeli factions, following Israel’s invasion and the pull-out of Yasser Arafat’s PLO fighters from Beirut the previous September.

The beaching of U.S. Marines on the Lebanese coast was a big deal – proof, said Ronald Reagan’s White House, that the dark days of Vietnam were over and that, once again, America could engage, militarily, in the defense of freedom. But the Marines weren’t welcomed, and tensions didn’t ease.

Alpha Company, based at the Lebanese Science Faculty building, about 3 miles from the main barracks,  was quickly surrounded by nameless Muslim resistors who would eventually coalesce into groups called Amal and Hezbollah.

Capt. Paul Roy, the company commander, had that grim look of grit and frustration I would so often see in future years. His troops were supposed to be peacekeepers, so he couldn’t build an offensive firewall or serious protective barrier; his weapons were always unloaded unless his troops were fired upon; and they couldn’t fire back until the source of fire had been positively identified and it had been cleared with higher-ups.

Over time, our team – reporter Stan Bernard, cameraman Brian Prentke, soundman Thierry Meaume and myself – filed more than a dozen stories with Alpha Company, living with these brave sitting ducks, under fire, as their patrols dwindled and their area of operation shrank. Sleeping on concrete, eating the first (bad) generation of Meals Ready to Eat, taking bottled water showers.

Every day began with Roy peering through binoculars from the roof’s sniper nest, fixing the large Marine barracks to the southwest as his main landmark; and every day ended with all of us non-combatants huddled in a shallow clay trench as rocket propelled grenades and AK-47 fire snapped and boomed overhead.

VIDEO From the NBC News Archives:  Bombing in Beirut

‘The barracks will always be there’
By Oct. 22, we’d had enough. And were determined that our next story would be more comfortable. Close to showers. And real food. Why not do a "day-in-the-life" with U.S. Marines "inside the wire" – at the battalion’s barracks – where troops spent their down time cleaning weapons, doing laundry, reading mail, pumping iron and barbequing hamburgers to country western tunes? In a word, Heaven.

Our plan was to spend the night at the barracks and return to our base – at the Commodore Hotel in West Beirut – when our "slice of life" story was in the can. It was a great plan, on paper.

But early Saturday evening when our portly Lebanese driver who we called "Haj and a Half" picked us up, our car hit Beirut’s chaotic traffic and didn’t budge for an hour. Now it was dark. And we were hungry, smelly and angry. "Screw it!" I bellowed from the back seat. "The barracks will always be there. Let’s go back to the f… ing hotel. We deserve it."

"The barracks will always be there" came back,  of course, to haunt me. A little after 6 a.m. the following morning, the force of the blast, four or five miles away, knocked me from of my hotel bed.

‘It’s gone.  It’s just … gone’
The unbelievable news traveled quickly, by way of colleagues’ shouts in the corridors, and on BBC radio bulletins. Within minutes news teams dressed, loaded up and raced off to a ground zero that would, inexorably, lead to the Ground Zero, a generation later. Many of us who had to record and make sense of what we saw flipped on "auto pilot" that day.

The four-story barracks was flattened as if by a massive earthquake. The wailing beneath the rubble; the naked dead bodies pulled from a morass of concrete and cinderblocks; bruised and bloodied survivors who couldn’t grasp why they weren’t dead, too stunned to even cry…we took it all in as if in a trance.

We collected telephone numbers from survivors, like many of my colleagues in those days before cell or satellite phones, and called families back in the states with the good news. Instinctively, the following day, we returned to the Science Faculty building to visit our buddies from Alpha Company. Nothing – and everything – had changed.

 It seemed like the soul had been ripped out of their mission. These Marines had already checked out. We spent the night, mostly out of respect. There was the obligatory RPG attack during the night. And the next morning, Capt. Roy climbed up, as always, to the sniper nest, we right behind him. He looked through his binoculars, as he did every morning, across the urban sprawl of southwest Beirut.

But this time he peered much longer than usual, as if he’d lost his bearings. Then he turned to me, this war-hardened Marine’s Marine, tears streaming down his face, catching the sun’s glare. And croaked, "It’s gone. It’s just … gone.’’

First of many attacks
In all, 241 U.S. servicemen, mostly Marines, died in the blast. And 58 French peacekeepers were also killed that morning when a second suicide bomber detonated yet another truck outside the French barracks, nearby.

This was not only a new chapter in the way the West would have to deal with Islamist terror; this was the table of contents for a new, very thick book. The first suicide truck bombers, even seen to be smiling as they met their fate; the first act of Islamist jihad against the U.S. military; the first humiliating defeat at the hands of a force few Westerners even knew existed.

The loss was so big it drove President Reagan to make an about-face and pull U.S. forces out of the Middle East, allowing a young Osama bin Laden to remark how America didn’t have the stomach for real warfare. The atrocity set the bar for a whole generation of future attacks on U.S. targets, from Saudi Arabia to the World Trade Center. But none of that makes Oct. 23, 1983 any easier to handle, even 25 years later.

In 1985 a secret U.S. grand jury found Lebanese radical Imad Mughniyeh guilty of masterminding the Marine barracks bombing. But Mughniyeh went on for years after that to strike elsewhere, allegedly killing 19 U.S. soldiers and wounding dozens at the Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia in 1996. And there were other attacks – until last February, when Mughniyeh died in a car bomb in Damascus, Syria. 

VIDEO: Crowds gather in Beirut for terrorist's funeral

And, though it was no longer my beat, in yet another quirk of fate I was assigned to cover Mughniyeh’s funeral in Beirut. His coffin was laid out on a wide wooden dais, draped in flowers and Hezbollah slogans. He received full military honors, including a marching brass band and a visit and eulogy by Iran’s Foreign Minister. 

I watched from the press section, in front of the dais, one of the few obviously Western reporters in a vast room the size of a hangar, thinking how easy it would be to be kidnapped and disappear then and there. I thought about how weirdly symmetrical it was to be gazing at the coffin of the man who likely killed so many Marines, and – but for a traffic jam – could have killed me.

And then I thought of that stepladder.

** 10/23/08  Erroneous references to the 1/6 Marines were corrected thanks to attentive readers.

Jim Maceda is an NBC News Correspondent based in London, who, in October 1983, was embedded with the 1/8 Marines in Beirut. 

 

MAIN PAGE

Email this EMAIL THIS

Comments

Thank you, Mr. Maceda, for remembering.  I'll never forget the deafening sound of the super stallion helicopters breaking the silence of a quiet Sunday morning on the Camp Lejeune, NC base.  

To the innocent Marines and Sailors that were sacrificed on behalf of an ambassador that didn't want to maintain a 'military' precence, Semper Fi.  And to Lt General Geraghty, you were wrongly blamed for this tragedy!
"STOP!!! Associating Islam with Terrorism....Just report on the people who do it without identifying their religion...JUST like you wouldnt identify a murderer with his or her religion...STOP STOP STOP......."

People will stop associating Islam with terrorism, when the cowards who perform these wicked deeds do the same. Do these terrorists not terrorize in the name of Allah and claim that it was his will?
The first terrorists in our history were the Minutemen that fought for the freedom of the good old USA, so Jon was the most correct of all posters. The first of the Middle East were the Jews seeking to fulfill a dream of their own country that fought British colonizers  and the Palestinians that had owned what is now Israel for nearly two thousand years.
How sad this is to remember.  Reading the posts, I am struck by how many people want to simplistically blame one event or someone else.  This is complex, and needs a complex and nuanced solution that is likely to be more economic and social than military.  God bless these men and their families.  And yes, God forgive the men who felt driven to cause this.
I agree with Jon's comment. Its who's point of view yo look at the situation. US has killed millions in the name of freedom. When a family is killed and the only survivors are the little children, with no way to support themselfs, people like Osama and others like take advantage of the situation. in the western countries they have systems in place that take care of these orphans. It is inevtable that when ever US tries to "free" a nation that it also plan for the rehabilitation of these orphans, if not they will become terrorist or freedom fighters as they are called and fulfill other peoples profesies. No religion teaches us to kill to attain one's goals, but it is humans like osama, Bush, Blair, and all the Politicians that use religion to attain there objectives.
I think people are missing the point in this little side discussion. Anwar may be a little too sensitive that this article is directly relating Islam to terrorism, though he has a valid reason to think so, because most westerners have the that very mindset. And to those who are criticizing his comments, you're not seeing that there is a difference between people who kill in the name of Allah, and people who practice Islam. You can't say that it is correct to associate terrorism to Islam because terrorists kill in the name of that religion. These are terrosists who kill in the name of Islam. Islam does not tell them to kill any moreso than Christianity told James Kopp to kill Dr Barnett Slepian for being an abortion doctor.
I was a young college graduate working in an orphanage north of Beirut - in sight of that beautiful ship the USS New Jersey. For me, the horror still remains of that morning. Thank you for your article. None of us need to forget.
Radical Centrist, I don't disagree with you or the generals you may be referencing, what I was stating was from this point forward, our nation needs to finish what we have started (even if it was ill advised action) so we don't have additional problems down the road.  You won't get any arguments from me about how our current wars have been mismanaged.  If we hadn't left the Afghans high and dry when the Cold War ended, we wouldn't be fighting the Taliban there today.
Since when is an attack upon foreign occupying soldiers an act of terrorism?  This abuse of the term 'terrorism' and the absence of any historical perspective--e.g., the fact that the Israeli forces had just slaughter nearly 18,000 Lebanese with American blessing--is truly astounding.  
I was aboard the USS Nassau and remember going in there and taking the last group of Marines out.  
Terrorism started with this attack?  Only someone who knows nothing about Middle East history would say this.  Look back to the 1930s and 1940s when Jewish terrorists in Palestine began rolling barrel bombs into Arab marketplaces, and then you will realize that Muslims have no monopoly on terrorist violence in this part of the world.
"No greater love..." Veteran's Day is coming up. Show 'em some love.

This was not the beginning of Islamic Terrorism, but it brought it to a diabolical new level. I remember the hostages taken at the American Embassy in Iran. Now one of the terrorists is the leader of that country.

Let's get the job done in Afghanistan and irradicate Al Qaida and Hezbollah, too.  
The Marines were part of 1st Battalion 8th Marine Regiment, not 1/6.  They were asked there by the UN becasue the LEbanese were killing each other.  Beirut was the Paris of the Middle East before they started shooting each other.
Why is attacking foreign troops on one's soil terrorism?
The battalion was 1st Battalion of the 8th Marines, not 1/6.
Stop associating Islam with these acts. Forty years from now there might be a title in some news paper that forty years ago christian and right wing fundamantalist invadded and massacered thousands in Iraq fabricating the charges and lying knowing they were lying.Donot associate relegion with politics. This is not a good way to sell stories.
I would remind my Christian and Jewish friends that no religion has a monopoly on terrorism. In fact, Islam would have to continue killing for the next century to match what their Christian cousins have accomplished in the past 50 years. Islamic nations/peoples didn't start WWi or WWII, majority Christian nations did leading to the deaths of over 100 million people. Ask a Japanese civilian from Hiroshima or Nagsaki what their view of terrorism is. Ask the Palestinian refugees from Sabra and Shatilla. No, Islam has as much to do with terrorism as intelligence has to do with politics.
As much as I respect your sharing your experience, I must say that most readers will arrive to the end of this article with a very skewed and warped view of Beirut and the Lebanese people. I am an American Lebanese living in Beirut, who is Christian and who has plenty of Muslim friends. No one I know supports terrorism and most of the educated people I know actually support the US and favor a peace with Israel versus terrorism. There are terrorists in every society, but that doesn't mean that society is a terrorist.  
Did the US overreact in sending its Constitution Class Frigates against the Barbary States and the Ottoman Empire?
I was there as a young navy sailor aboard the USS Concord, Althought my part in it was small it gives me healing that some still remember. Thank You
Today is the anniversary of a very sad act, which unfortunately has repeated itself way too often!  Im tired of the world hating us just because we are Americans and because of the mistakes of our leaders! No country deserves what happened here on Sept. 11, but let us not use that as an excuse to continue commiting atrocities around the world! Do not get me wrong, I will always be proud to live in the land of the free and the home of the brave!
Chilling recount Mr. Maceda,

I was 22 then, in a shelter in East Beirut, a christian district, hiding with all my friends and neighbors, packed in the shelter without water and electricity.  We had hope then.

 We were all calculating how long it would take the "great Reagan administration" that we, as christian Lebanese loved, to retaliate and attack the perpetrators of this act.  We, naively were trying to estimate the strength of the fleet in the Mediteranean, the time difference between the US and Lebanon and eagerly waiting for the US reply.
 Nothing!!!! Emptimess!!! Sadness.
Instead an overnite withdrawal of all US troops from Labanon!!!!!!!!

Had the US retaliated then, maybe Hizbollah would have never existed.  Maybe terorism would have been weakened somehow, maybe my country would have continued to exist as the Paris of the Middle East.

Believe it or not, we cried at the sight of the US and french soldiers bodies but we also cried even more at the realization, in 1983, that the US is weak has already lost its war on terror
BLT 1/8 not 1/6.
I was stationed at Camp Lejune as a Corpsman and my batallion 2/2 was on air alert.  I was assigned to weapons patoon we we in the process of loading the bus to fly over to Lebannon when My name was called "Hey Doc go to Headquaters platoon. Within 48 hours  half of weapons platoon were Killed. I'm deeply sadden and Because Iwas suppose to be in that barracks on that date
I sat one night on a chartered bus in early November 1983, a high schooler on a class trip to DC, parked in the lot adjacent to the Iwo Jima memorial. A few of my fellow students and I watched from the slightly fogged windows the families of the fallen soldiers approach their designated American flag placed about the memorial, in honor of their fallen family member. It was as powerful as it was heart-wrenching. I was fifteen years old. It feels like only yesterday, this vision, this permanently burned memory. It will always be that way, as it is purposefuly my duty as an American, never to forget their sacrifice.
Those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it. G.S.

I was motivated by a Marine who lost his life that day to become a Marine. LCPL Timothy McNeely

The only reason a Marine is called to action is under orders, because someones FREEDOM is being challenged. So FREE WORLD, sleep well tonight knowing that there is a Marine standing guard for your FREEDOM to have a good nights sleep.
Semper Fidelis
The Marines have never forgotten and will never forget.  I can't remember the highway outside of Camp LeJeune but trees are planted in the median; one for each of those Marines..........tree after tree after tree.  God rest their souls and may the rest of us never forget either.  
Did religion play any part when Mr.Begin the deceased ex prime minister of Israel helped in Farooq hotel bombing in 1940's or IRA bombing for 30 years or Oklahoma bombing or the MUJAHIDEEN in Afghanistan against Russians? I do not recall the terms being used as Jewish terrorist-Christian terrorist.The western media uses the term "Islamic terrorist" when the crime is done against the West or its Allies'interest to stroke hate against Islam and Muslims..
Unbelievable, a war is going on in Lebanon and you refer to this bombing on military personnel as an act of terrorism?  Why?  Because it happened to American soldiers?  
 And was not the Iraqi war guided by God according to Bush?  So is this Christian terrorism?  
  There has never been concrete evidence on which of the many factions fighting in Lebanon did this bombing.  Please research the history on this war properly before stating that this bombing (during a war) is America's first islamist terrorist attack.  Inform yourself first!
We have radical Christian sects in the USA and ALL media correctly assiciated the role religion played.

Remember Waco and the Branch Davidians? This was a "faith based" group. Anyone ever heard of the KKK? Another group vailed by it's church. YES there were Klan churches! Christian Patriots Defense League or even the Jewish Defense League. All groups named have committed acts of terror in the name of God, and all were reported as such.

Facts are facts and they are usually reported fairly. This is radical Islam's war is it not? If not, someone tell Osama to stop using the term as well!!
I remember very well. A good childhood friend of mine was one of the marines killed in the explosion. It is a shame that the memories of these people are fading in the United States. Long live the memories!
1/8, was the marine unit there on that fateful day. I was in the unit that relieved them after our beach op in Grenada. W/2/8, 81'S PLT. Semper Fi to all my bros from ITS who went to 1/8.
 I was in Lebanon shortly after the bombings.  What I was hearing from Christian Lebanese (I am agnostic and am a US citizen born abroad, Lebanon) was that before the bombing, US warships were firing their guns toward the Lebanese coast using blanks. Also,the fact is that the marines, even security, on base were carrying unloaded weapons. Decisions made at the top contributed to the death of so many marines.  
 We have this idea that through "shock and awe" we can scare the Middle East into submission. People in the Middle East are accustomed to those events such as those taken place on 9/11/2001 that would shock or scare us.
 Our show of strength with the surge of troops into Iraq is not what is helping the situation. It is the millions of dollars we are paying the insurgents to sit on their hands.  Just before Obama takes office the Bush administration plans on stopping the payments.  We will quickly see a return to chaos and the Republicans will point their fingers at Obama.  
Danny from Earlier.  So you are saying people like GW and McCain is the reason we have terrorism?  So if guys like this weren't around all of these groups that commit these acts would Love America and Love what we stand for?  Very nieve and narrow minded
Scott "Ask a Japanese civilian from Hiroshima or Nagasaki what their view of terrorism is."

They might have a view you're expecting. The Japanese people terrorized much of Asia before the "sleeping giant" was rattled from it's slumber. China's population was raped and it's children murdered where they slept. In recent years, only, Japan has offered apologies for it's actions. There is still A LOT of mistrust and tension between the two.
The Final Inspection
The Marine stood and faced God,
Which must always come to pass.
He hoped his shoes were shining,
Just as brightly as his brass.

"Step forward now, Marine,
how shall I deal with you?
Have you always turned the other cheek?
To My Church have you been true?"

The soldier squared his shoulders and said,
"No, Lord, I guess I ain't.
Because those of us who carry guns,
Can't always be a saint.

Ive had to work most Sundays,
And at times my talk was tough.
And sometimes I've been violent,
Because the world is awfully rough.

But, I never took a penny,
That wasn't mine to keep...
Though I worked a lot of overtime,
When the bills got just too steep.

And I never passed a cry for help,
Though at times I shook with fear.
And sometimes, God, forgive me,
I've wept unmanly tears.

I know I don't deserve a place,
Among the people here.
The never wanted me around,
Except to calm their fears.

If you've a place for me here, Lord,
It needn't be so grand.
I never expected or had too much,
But if you don't, I'll understand.

Ther was a silence all around the throne,
Where the saints had often trod.
As the Marine waited quietly,
For the judgment of his God.

"Step forward now, you Marine,
You've borne your burdens well.
Walk peacefully on Heaven's streets,
You've done your time in Hell."
~Author Unknown~

this post is to remember all my fallen brothers!!!
if you want to argue religion/history take it elsewhere!!!  Semper Fi bros
Golf Co 2/6
What a biased title this article has. I'd love to see the comments posted if someone wrote an article and titled it: "Crusades--the start of Christian terrorism...it hasn't stopped since" Are we associating the terror and horror our country causes other nations with Christianity? I sure hope not. So we must not associate these acts with islam.
I can not believe it's been 25 years since that truck bomb hit the BLT. It was a sad day for my military life experience. I'm a former Marine that was station in Beriut Lebanon in 1983. Never and I mean never do I forget the bomb blast that rip the BLT from a 3 to 4 story up , to being flat on the ground. Never forget an Officer telling me that we are going to take every one of our Marines home...We will not leave Beruit until everyone of our dead was home safe. We worked night and day until this was completed. GOD bless my fallen Marines and their families..
OORAH Semper FI..

Cpl. Virgil Young
Stationed on USS Paul(FF-1080) Lost a classmate in the explosion. Many times we witnessed the numerous factions firing at each other. Our mission was confusing because no one could identify which of the factions who was friend or foe. The same problem exsits toady in Iraq.
i was a 21 yr old marine with 2nd battalion 8th marines 2nd marine division fox company back in 1983. we were the first to land and set up the area. this was before that day i'll never forget. i carried an m-60 machinegun and at the time was very pround to be where i was. even if it meant taking cold showers from a hose and eatting mre's. to my surpirse i was asked if i would vol. to stay with the 1/6 as i understood they were short a few gunners when they came to relieve us. i had thought i'd seen enough when a fellow marine commited sucide infront of us, all because of a girlfriend wanting someone closer to home. seeing marines buying a pepsi from a local and finding out it was boobytrapped. i declined saying i wanted to be home for christmas... guess i was thinking of just myself and not my fellow marines at the time.
anyhow...my thoughts will always be with the men and women who gave there lifes just so i could be home for a christmas 25 yrs ago...and now they wont be.
theres a memorial at camp lejune n.c. for these beruit vets... i hope anyone who gets a chance to stop by it...put your hand on it and say a prayer for them chance ...stop by there and say thank you for your sacrific... i and the rest of us that made it home would be thankful for that alone
Steven Tingley may your soul rest in peace and your memory live on!!!One of our soldiers who died in the tragic bombing of the barracks.
  Til this day, I beleive if I had stayed in the Marine Corps for my 20 years, I would have been in that barracks, because that year and month would have been my 19th year to the month.
  My God bless them all. This was not only a terrorist act, but a coward way to fight.
Islam only played the role of a sedative for the bombers. But their main objective was political and had nothing to do with religion.

The bombings never would have happened if the US had taken a nutral possition in the conflict.

I was an Active Duty Marine reservist then and remember that day vividly. I cried in my living room as I saw the horrific images and increasing death toll on TV.  I remember Reagan vowing to retaliate against the attacks, but that never happened. So much for the premise that Republicains are stronger on defence then the Democrats. I believe that indifference set the stage for future attacks against the US. Semper Fi. Peter Franzoni
If you want to see the impact of the marine barracks bombing, you should take a trip to the memorial wall. It is located  outside the main gate at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina . There was not a day that went by that my late husband (a deceased Active Duty US Marine) wouldn't go by the the wall and say hello to his friends he lost on that day October 23, 1983(he was one of the lucky ones who survived the bombing).I am glad that someone else remembers
It is always good to remember and honor those that have died to serve and protect their country. I would speculate that terrorism most likely began before recorded history.
I was in Parris Island S.C. when this happened.  My D.I. wheeled a tv into the middle of the squad bay and we sat and watched the smoldering rubble and listened to the newscast.  Bad day for our beloved Corps.  Platoon 1106
I was a senior at Calumet High School on this day and lost a friend, Cpl. Danny Estes, Gary, Indiana. I remember the sadness and anger we felt. I enlisted two weeks later. I would just want his family to know that while it has been 25 years, there is someone thinking about Danny and all the Marines killed that day. God Bless them and their families.
How can I forget that day. I lost a brother.


SEND A COMMENT

PLEASE READ: All comments must be approved before appearing in the thread; time and space constraints prevent all comments from appearing. We will only approve comments that are directly related to the blog, use appropriate language and are not attacking the comments of others.

Message (please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):

TRACKBACKS

Trackbacks are links to weblogs that reference this post. Like comments, trackbacks do not appear until approved by us. The trackback URL for this post is: http://worldblog.msnbc.msn.com/trackback.aspx?PostID=1584456

Syndicate This Site

Add World Blog to your news reader:
live.com xml
myyahoo msn
bloglines newsgator
google

Interactive

Fight for Iraq
Learn more about the ethnic, religious and political power plays in and around Iraq during a briefing of the region led by NBC’s Richard Engel.