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Article 19840 of alt.conspiracy:
Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy,alt.activism,alt.society.civil-liberty,alt.individualism,alt.censorship,talk.politics.misc,misc.headlines,soc.culture.arabic,soc.rights.human
Subject: Part 13,  Within America's Soul, Hitler is Victorious
Message-ID: <1993Jan28.231010.4178@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU>
Followup-To: alt.conspiracy
Keywords:  Within America's Soul, Hitler is Victorious
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These passages are from:
"ISRAEL'S WAR IN LEBANON: EYEWITNESS CHRONICLES OF THE INVASION & OCCUPATION",
   compiled and edited by Franklin Lamb, 
     publisher and sole distributor: 
       Spokesman for the Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation, 
         Bertrand Russell House, Gamble St., Nottingham, England NG7 4ET.


*   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *
The nearly 70 days of the Israeli siege of West Beirut caused human
suffering on a scale not often witnessed since the end of World War II.
The Israeli blockade of West Beirut which sealed off the city from
medical supplies, added to the trauma of the half million residents
in the western sector and has been widely reported. With respect to
the bombing of August 7, U.S. Ambassador Robert Dillon cabled
Washington as follows:

  "Simply put, tonight's saturation shelling was as intense as anything
   we have seen. There was no "pinpoint accuracy" against targets in
   "open spaces". It was not a response to Palestinian fire. This was a
   blitz against West Beirut .... The magnitude of tonight's action is
   difficult to convey. The flare of exploding shells reflected against
   the cloud of smoke was an awesome sight .... a city burning."

The final calculus from the siege is still incomplete and may remain
so for a long while. It will be some time until the mass graves at
Sabra and Shatila are exhumed and the truckloads of bodies and people
carted off by the Phalange and their associates during the massacre
are accounted for. 

According to initial Lebanese government statistics, now more than a
year old, compiled by local Lebanese police districts using death
certificates and hospital records, 19,085 persons were found to have
been killed as of mid-November, 1982. Of these, 6,775 were killed 
during the 70 day period in Beirut. 12,310 were killed elsewhere in
Lebanon, and 30,302 wounded. As of March 1, 1984, the number is
estimated by the Lebanese government to have risen to 33,000 dead and
49,000 wounded. The Lebanese government found that 84 percent of the
Beirut casualties were civilians. This figure is approximately 15
percent higher than had been estimated by the Palestine Liberation
Organization, whose calculations had been dismissed by the Israeli
government as cynical exaggerations and propaganda.

According to the Lebanese police, over 2,300 of those killed or
wounded during the first four months of the invasion were under 15
years of age, and more than 1,700 were over age 50. Of the 30,302
wounded during this same four month period, more than 1,800 required
amputations because of fragmentation bomb or cluster bomb wounds, 
according to medical personnel working with the Lebanese Red Cross. 
In addition, more than 350,000 people were made homeless, 100,000 
were without shelter, and several hundred thousand made destitute.

The Lebanese government has estimated that physical damage from the
invasion amounted to more than $3 billion, while destroyed housing
alone accounted for nearly $1 billion. The cost of rebuilding Lebanon
is now estimated to be $24 billion.

Of the 25 hospitals and clinics operating in West Beirut during late
July and August, 1982, many were partially destroyed by Israeli
aerial, sea and land bombardment, despite exhibiting Red Cross and/or
Red Crescent insignias. Dr. Samir Thabit, acting president of the
American University of Beirut, stated that he considered having the
large red cross painted outside Jessup Hall and West Hall removed.
His reason was that from what he had been advised by civil defense
workers and Red Cross personnel around West Beirut, the Red Cross
insignia actually appeared to draw Israeli fire -- certain elements
of the Israeli military apparently feeling that bombing hospitals
presented an opportunity to "finish the job" against wounded
"terrorists" and their sympathizers. A partial list of damaged or
destroyed hospitals and clinics in the Beirut area, some of which 
were hit by cluster bombs, includes the following:

Haifa Hospital
Dar Al Ajazy Handicapped Center
Islamic Mental Hospital
Al Kafayat School for the Disabled
Ras Beirut Hospital
Makassed Home for the Elderly
Development Organization for Human Abilities at Aramoun (DOHA)
   (an International Year of the Handicapped project)  
Al Ramadham Orphanage in Ouzai
Islamic Psychiatric Hospital in Beirut
The Armenian Hospital at Aazzouniye, 16 miles southeast of Beirut
Al Mau Hospital
Triumph Hotel Clinic
La Hout Hospital (Near East School of Theology)
Gaza Hospital
Berbir Hospital
Makassed Hospital
Mouseitbi Medical Center
Antranic Canter
French Center (College Protestante)

The functioning clinics of West Beirut were primarily makeshift, put
together from the salvage and supplies of hospitals and clinics bombed
earlier in the invasion. La Hout Hospital, for example, was set up in
the library of the Near East School of Theology, and other clinics
were set up at the Triumph Hotel and at the French Protestant College,
Basta Center, and others. Many of the most serious cases were
transferred to the American University Hospital (AUH), a facility
partly funded by the U.S. Government.

On August 4, 1982, a day of intensive Israeli bombing and shelling,
more than 2,000 refugees sought haven in the AUH. These desperate
people correctly believed that, partly because the hospital was
American, they might be safe at AUH. They slept in the hallways and
many children were placed, with blankets, in large "Project Hope"
cardboard boxes.
                        (to be continued)
*   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   * 

  Transcribed, with published permission, by John DiNardo


