SOVIETS FACE TERRORISM, BUT HANDLE IT DIFFERENTLY

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000706160007-8
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 7, 2011
Sequence Number: 
7
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
July 3, 1985
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000706160007-8.pdf124.43 KB
Body: 
STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/07: CIA-RDP90-00965R000706160007-8 ARTICLE TPI&M ON PACE Q., rm r Ic LOS ANGELES TIMES 3 July 1985 Soviets Face Terrorism, but Handle It ...Differently By DIMITRI K. SIMES As Americans were preoccupied with the TWA hostage crisis, there were, behind the fast-paced news from Beirut, lingering questions about the Soviets: Were they involved? How would they react if an Aeroflot plane were targeted? In ence experts see no evidence of direct Soviet pa on in -either the p ng or a execution o e actual hiiackins. The last rov stances KGB murder plots back decades, and a to were Sovietlitical exiles ere. rather than Lo Yet, even Moscow did not mastermind the TWA disaster, it is hardly in a position to claim complete innocence. The Politburo has never shied away from supporting terrorist nations and groups such as Libya and the Palestine Liberation Organization. While there is no proof of Soviet links to the radical Hezbollah, whose members are thought to have initiated the hijacking, the Soviet Union's firm support of Amal and its Syrian sponsors is on the record. Without the Soviet Union's patronage of Damascus, Nabih Berri's Amal would not have become a state within the state of Lebanon. If Berri and his associates are flying high today, the Soviet Union cannot deny responsibility. The Soviet media did not condone the air piracy in Beirut, but, as in the hostage nightmare in Tehran, the principal propa- ganda fire was directed against alleged U.S. plans of massive retaliation. The Soviet Union, like the United States, is no stranger to hijacking and terrorism. There was an attempt by a disgruntled military officer to assassinate Leonid I. Brezhnev. An explosion in the Moscow subway resulted in the deaths of several passengers. And there was the celebrated airliner hijacking in Tbilisi, the capital en a Soviet Georgia, 1h years ago, group of alienated intellectuals from prom- inent families attempted to commandeer a flight in order to escape to Turkey. Outside Soviet borders, the Kremlin's expansionism generates hate, and Soviet military personnel, advisers and techni- cians are vulnerable to terrorist attacks. In Afghanistan-including the capital. Ka- bul-the Soviets are no safer than Ameri- cans are in Beirut. Dozens-military and civilians alike, including the Soviet mili- tary faetie. There was no publicity while the attache-have been assassinated. An accused no p was e Only after it was Afghan airliner, with Soviets among the all over, and was the progress. es were interrogated infee nun r of Soviet shot at. And recently a and indicted, did Georgian newspapers and number of Soviet and Afghan soldiers kept TV cover the case extensively. were POWs at a massacred g during a ring a base failed i s . Pakistan The outcome: Three crew members, two were three hijackers were dead. Afghanistan is no exception. In Masan- passengers hijackers and a priest (who bique, rebels fighting the Moscow-allied Three more them but allegedly master- Soviet government killed a number of was minded not thamong e operation) wersetenced to Soviet mining technicians and kidnaped a death. Their relatives were fired from their few dozen others. There have also been Soviet civilian casualties in jobs and expelled from the Communist Angola. UN1TA fighters have a number of times taken party. Conversely, Eduard A. Shevard- Soviet and East European prisoners. Sofrom me mdse, the Georgian party chief who was in were returned. some never heard here charge of dealing with the incident, was have been attacks on Soviet officers and Promote Monday to full membership of ruling party Politburo and was named their dependents. At one point the danger the Soviet foreign minister. reached such magnitude that all families The message from Tbilisi si was clear: had to be evacuated. The government of Escape through hijacking doomed to President Hafez Assad put the blame on failure, authorities will show no the fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood, mercy to those involved. with which he has long been at odds. The U.S. government cannot and should It is a myth that the Kremlin's heavy- not act with similar ruthlessness and handed posture serves as an insurmount- contempt for the public's right to know. able barrier against terrorism. But it is a But that right surely does not mean that fact that while individual Soviets, including everything should be known immediately high-ranking ones, become targets, the and completely. Otherwise government remains unscathed. neither fight warn nor protect privacy. The Tbilisi hijacking shows why. The And the commendable preoccupation government's priority was to stop the with the fate of innocent victims of terror escape rather than to protect innocent must not be allowed to turn into hedonistic lives. Accordingly, Soviet crews are in- neglect of the responsibilities of a great strutted not to cooperate with hijackers. state. No number of missiles and aircraft The crews are also armed. carriers can substitute for an occasional The Tbilisi hijacking started almost like display of brutal resolve. Most regretta- the TWA Athens incident. The Georgians ble-except that all the alternatives are had an airport employee as an accomplice. worse. Be" a superpower is not a piece of She helped them smuggle handguns and cake. The Soviets appreciate that. Do we? grenades aboard the plane. In the air, the hijackers made a flight attendant knock in Dmitri K. Since is a senior aaociate at the a special way at the cockpit door. The door Carnegie Endowment for International opened, and the shooting started. A crew paw in Washington. member and a hijacker were dead instant- ly. The pilot managed to lock the door and land the plane back in Tbilisi. One of the hijackers committed suicide. Others were captured hours later by a special anti- terrorist squad that stormed the airliner. More people were killed in the crossfire. No attempt was made to negotiate. The hijackers were faced with a choice of unconditional surrender or being taken by Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/07: CIA-RDP90-00965R000706160007-8