
Checkpoint 4, manned by U.S. Marines and Lebanese Army soldiers. Beirut 1982
The
Multinational Force in Lebanon (also
MNF) was an international
peacekeeping force created in 1982 and sent to
Lebanon to oversee the withdrawal of the
Palestine Liberation Organization. The participants included contingents of
United States Marines and
Navy SEALs,
French paratroopers,
Italian soldiers, and
British soldiers.
Background

Commission for Philip Habib for his trip as Special Representative of the President of the United States for the Middle East in 1982, signed by President
Ronald Reagan and Secretary of State
George P. Shultz.
Americans had
previously been involved in Lebanese affairs, during the
1958 Lebanon crisis. In that intervention, 14,000 Americans were sent to Lebanon by President
Dwight D. Eisenhower to quell the opposition to President
Camille Chamoun and neighboring countries. The operation was considered a success.
In 1975, the
Lebanese Civil War began. Further instability was caused in 1982 by the
invasion of Lebanon by
Israel, which targeted the
Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) based there.
As the capital of
Beirut was besieged by the Israelis, U.S. Ambassador
Philip Habib negotiated with the warring parties for an end to the fighting and for the establishment of a peacekeeping force in Beirut. In August 1982, he was successful in bringing about an agreement for the evacuation of Syrian troops and PLO fighters from Beirut. The agreement also provided for the deployment of a three-nation Multinational Force (MNF) during the period of the evacuation.
Initial landing

Navy Amphibian, Beirut 1982
The French troops landed in Beirut on
August 21, with the U.S. troops (
32nd Marine Amphibious Unit from
Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune) arriving on
August 24 and the Italians on
August 26. This initial force consisted of 800 Americans, 400 French, and 800 Italian troops. The PLO withdrew from Beirut to
Tunisia on
August 30; the Marines and the other foreign troops later withdrew to ships in the
Mediterranean Sea.
Increased involvement

The USS New Jersey fires a salvo from her 16"/50 guns during a deployment off the coast of Beirut
Despite the withdrawal of the PLO from Beirut, the MNF's mission was far from over. On
September 14, Lebanese President
Bachir Gemayel was assassinated. Then, from September 16-18, hundreds of
Palestinian refugees were murdered by
Phalangists in the
Sabra and Shatila massacres. This incident prompted U.S. President
Ronald Reagan to organize a new MNF with France and Italy. On
September 29, this new force entered Beirut, with about 1,200 Marines. Their mission was to help the new Lebanese government and army with stability.
This new force consisted of 1,400 Marines (later increased to 1,800) of the
2nd Battalion, 8th Marine Regiment. They were relieved in place by the
3rd Battalion 8th Marines in October 1982. The Battalion Landing Team's headquarters was based at
Beirut International Airport. France's contingent of 1,500
paratroopers of the
8th Marine Infantry Parachute Regiment (8 eme RPIMa) were based in West Beirut, and 1,400 Italian troops were based in the area between West Beirut and the airport. In February 1983,
British troops (
armored cars from
1st The Queen's Dragoon Guards) joined the MNF.
thumb|left|The USMC barracks in Beirut, 1982During the winter of 1982-1983, the MNF was successful in its mission. Though officially
neutral, the force was responsible for preventing attacks from various Lebanese factions and the
Israeli Army. However, the MNF increasingly came under fire from factions of the Lebanese Civil War.
On April 18, 1983, the U.S.
embassy in West Beirut
was bombed, killing 63 people. This blast was a clear sign of opposition to the MNF.
The Israeli Army agreed on May 17, 1983 to eventually withdraw from Beirut. In the fall of 1983 the U.S. Marines at the airport were repeatedly shelled by members of
Shiite Muslim and
Druze militias. Several Marines were killed and others wounded. In response, the U.S. warships , , , and shelled Shiite and Druze positions near Beirut.
Barracks bombing

Picture of the 1983 Beirut barracks bombing
The MNF was given a devastating blow on
October 23, when
truck bombs driven by
suicide bombers hit the U.S. Marine and French Paratrooper barracks in Beirut, killing 241 American servicemen and 58 French soldiers. With this incident, the MNF suffered its greatest number of casualties and drew calls to withdraw from Lebanon. Still, President Reagan said the Marines would stay.
Responsibility for the two barracks blasts has not been definitely determined. The U.S. blames
Hezbollah and
Iran for the blasts.
Later confrontations and withdrawal

Vought A-7E Corsair II aircraft of attack squadrons VA-15 Valions and VA-87 Golden Warriors of Carrier Air Wing Six (CVW-6) line the flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS Independence (CV-62) in December 1983
French warplanes struck the
Beqaa Valley in November, hitting
Iranian Revolutionary Guard positions. They claimed this was in response to the barracks bombing. At this time, tensions rose between
Syria and the United States as
anti-aircraft batteries were fired at U.S. planes as they patrolled Lebanese skies. Tensions culminated in the first direct U.S. military involvement in Lebanon on
December 4. After being fired upon by Syrian missiles, U.S. aircraft targeted Syrian missile batteries in the mountains east of Beirut. In the process, Syrian
surface to air missiles shot down two American planes, an
A-6 Intruder and an
A-7 Corsair. One of the A-6 pilots, Lt. Mark Lange, was killed; his Bombardier/Navigator,
Bobby Goodman, ejected and was captured by the Syrians. From the A-7, LCDR Coughlin and his B/N, Hellman, ejected and were rescued, though both suffered severe injuries.
On the same day, eight U.S. Marines were killed by shells from Syrian-backed militias at the airport observation post.
In response to more Syrian fire, the battleship
USS New Jersey fired on Lebanon on December 14 and 15. Meanwhile,
Yasir Arafat and his PLO left
Tripoli on
December 20 on five Greek ships bound for
Tunisia. The MNF was targeted again by bombs on
December 21, with a truck bomb killing a French soldier and 14 Lebanese outside a French military base and a bomb killing four at a Western bar.
The captured American crewman, Lt. Bobby Goodman, was released January 3, 1984, after negotiations with Reverend
Jesse Jackson. At the same time, U.S. President Ronald Reagan was pressured for a troop withdrawal from Lebanon by
Congress. These calls were increased after the Lebanese PM and his cabinet resigned
February 5. Shiite and Druze militiamen began fighting outside Beirut on
February 6 and threw the capital into chaos. Reagan ordered the 1,700 Marines to begin withdrawing on
February 7. The Italians pulled out on
February 20; the Marines followed on
February 26. The last French troops left on
March 31.
Casualties
The United States lost 265 soldiers in Lebanon, all but nine in hostile incidents, and all but twenty-four in the barracks bombing. 159 were wounded. France lost 89 soldiers (58 of them in the barracks bombing) and the Italians lost two.
See also