Please find below an example of UPI's continuing coverage of U.S.
counter-terrorism policy and related issues, published earlier this
week. A shorter version appeared on A4 Of the Washington Times Thursday
edition. I hope you find it interesting. You may link to the full-length
on the Web here:

http://www.upi.com/inc/view.php?StoryID=20060517-065550-1284r

If you would like more information about UPI's Security and Terrorism
service, or to stop receiving these alerts, please get in touch.
  
Shaun Waterman
UPI Homeland and National Security Editor
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Tel: 202 898 8081

U.S. terror victims protest Libya move
By SHAUN WATERMAN
UPI Homeland and National Security Editor

WASHINGTON, May 18 (UPI) -- A group of U.S. military veterans injured in
a Libyan-backed terror bombing in 1986 are protesting the decision to
take the Arab nation off the terror list and re-open diplomatic
relations, despite the fact that it has never acknowledged
responsibility for the attack or compensated its victims. 

"Our national tradition has always been to leave no soldier behind. That
tradition has been ignored by President Bush," said the veterans in a
statement. 

On April 5, 1986, a bomb left in the La Belle Discotheque, a bar popular
with U.S. troops in West Berlin, exploded, killing a Turkish woman and
two U.S. servicemen and injuring more 200 others, including dozens of
local civilians. 

Nine days later -- Libyan complicity established, according to news
reports since, by signals intercepts -- the United States launched an
air raid against Libyan leadership targets, including the home of its
mercurial strongman Col. Moammar Gadhafi. The raids killed about 40
people, including Gadhafi's adopted daughter. 

In November 2001, after a four-year trial, a German court convicted four
people, including a Libyan diplomat, of the bombing. The judge said the
attack had been planned by Libyan intelligence officials in high-ranking
positions in the Libyan embassy in East Berlin. 

But the Libyan government has never publicly acknowledged a role in the
attack, as it has done in regard to the 1988 bombing of Pan Am flight
103 over Lockerbie, Scotland. The U.S. government publicly demanded that
Libya settle compensation claims by the families of the victims of the
Lockerbie bombing as a pre-condition to any thaw in relations, but it
made no such demand in relation to the La Belle bombing. 

"It saddens me that they are forgetting about the troops," retired U.S.
Army Spc. John Jackson told United Press International. "It sends a bad
message to people in U.S. uniform now and to people who might be
thinking about joining. 

"It says they might be forgotten one day, too." 

Jackson suffered blunt force trauma, concussion, burns over much of his
head and cuts to his hands, arms and knees. The blast perforated his
right eardrum leaving him partially deaf, and leading to tinnitus,
according to a medical evaluation provided by his lawyer. Army discharge
papers rate him 20 percent disabled. 

Jackson said he was "shocked" to learn this week that the United States
was rescinding Libya's designation as a state-sponsor of terrorism,
removing it from another list of nations not cooperating with U.S.
anti-terrorist efforts and planning to upgrade the U.S. liaison office
in the Libyan capital Tripoli to an embassy. 

"Col. Gadhafi ... has a history of saying one thing and doing something
else," he said. "I don't see how we can trust him." 

He added that the news had "brought a lot of things back. I am still
suffering. The last few days have not been good for my health." 

The State Department's press office for Near Eastern affairs did not
return calls and e-mails seeking a response. 

Thomas Fay, an attorney representing Jackson and 38 other survivors of
the bombing, as well as the family of one of the servicemen killed, told
UPI that the difference in treatment for the two groups of victims was,
at least in part, because of their economic status. 

"The people we represent are U.S. armed forces, mostly non-commissioned
personnel. The people on Pan Am 103 were businessmen ... kids coming
back from skiing vacations or ... schools abroad. 

"To be blunt about it, the people (on flight 103) were much better off
than our guys and the government stuck in there for them," he said. 

Fay said the German and Turkish governments had pursued -- and won --
compensation for their citizens who had been victims. "Our position has
always been," he said of the victims and those that represent them,
"that (Libya) should not get off the terrorist list until these issues
have been dealt with" in regard to U.S. victims, too. 

In 2001, Fay's clients launched a lawsuit against Libya, using a
specially written amendment to U.S. law designed to allow victims of
terrorist attacks to sue the state sponsors of such crimes. 

The case was stayed for about 18 months while the parties tried
unsuccessfully to reach a settlement, he said, and the court was now
pondering a motion from the Libyans to dismiss the suit.

Copyright 2006 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved


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