2024 Beirut US embassy shooting | |
---|---|
Location | Beirut, Lebanon |
Coordinates | 33°56′6″N35°35′53″E / 33.93500°N 35.59806°E |
Date | 5 June 2024 |
Attack type | Shooting |
Weapons | Type 56 assault rifle |
Deaths | 0 |
Injured | 2 (including the perpetrator) |
On 5 June 2024, at 8:34 am, a shooting took place at the US embassy in Beirut, Lebanon. An armed assailant opened fire on the embassy located in the Awkar area in Beirut, lightly injuring a security guard. The attacker was wounded and detained by the Lebanese Armed Forces. [1]
According to reports, a lone gunman, identified as a Syrian national, attempted to carry out an attack on the US embassy. The gunman, who wore a military-style black vest and helmet, was armed with an assault rifle. [2] He opened fire at a military vehicle approaching the embassy, leading to a shootout. [3] The embassy reported small arms fire near its entrance at around 8:34 am. [1] According to an eyewitness, 15 to 20 gunshots were fired during the attack. [4]
The Lebanese military intervened promptly, engaging the attacker in a gunfight that lasted for approximately thirty minutes. [4] The military later released a statement confirming that soldiers had shot and captured the assailant. [4] A member of the embassy's security team sustained injuries. [5] The suspect was shot on the stomach and leg, and was later treated at a military hospital in Beirut. [4]
In response to the attack, the US embassy issued a statement affirming that none of its staff members were harmed during the assault. The embassy's security personnel, in collaboration with Lebanese troops, mobilized to ensure the safety and security of the premises. [4]
Following the attempted attack, the Lebanese military implemented heightened security measures in the vicinity of the embassy and surrounding areas. Additional troops were deployed to reinforce security protocols and prevent any further security breaches. [4]
Lebanese media reported that the attacker wore a vest with the words "Islamic State" in Arabic alongside the initials "IS", however the organization did not claim responsibility for the attack. According to Reuters, the Arabic writing on the vest read "Islamic". [6] An investigation was launched by Lebanese authorities and the US State Department's Diplomatic Security Service to determine the motives and to assess any potential security vulnerabilities. [4] [7] A Lebanese judicial official said that the attacker admitted to carrying out the attack in support of Gaza in the Israel–Hamas war. [8] LBCI confirmed that the individual responsible for the attack acted independently and was not part of any organized cell. [9] On 2 July 2024, a military court charged the gunman with being affiliated with the Islamic State. Two people who sold firearms to the gunman were charged with illicitly selling unlicensed weapons. [10]
The Lebanese army raided Majdal Anjar and Suweiri and arrested five people, including three of the gunman's relatives and a citizen suspected of having a relationship with him. [4] [7] The number of arrests rose to 20 by 8 June. [11]
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the United Arab Emirates issued a statement condemning the attack on the embassy. [12] Qatar's foreign ministry and GCC Secretary-General, Jassim Mohammed Al-Badawi, condemned the attack as well. [13] [14]
Hezbollah is a Lebanese Shia Islamist political party and paramilitary group. Hezbollah's paramilitary wing is the Jihad Council, and its political wing is the Loyalty to the Resistance Bloc party in the Lebanese Parliament. Its armed strength was assessed to be equivalent to that of a medium-sized army in 2016.
The April 18, 1983, United States Embassy bombing was a suicide bombing on the Embassy of the United States in Beirut, Lebanon, that killed 32 Lebanese, 17 Americans, and 14 visitors and passers-by. The victims were mostly embassy and CIA staff members, but also included several US soldiers and one U.S. Marine Security Guard. The attack came in the wake of an intervention in the Lebanese Civil War by the United States and other Western countries. The attacks were claimed by the Islamic Jihad Organization. The United States later believed they were perpetrated by Hezbollah, but Hezbollah denied responsibility.
Fatah al-Islam is a Sunni Islamist militant group established in November 2006 in a Palestinian refugee camp, located in Lebanon. It has been described as a militant jihadist movement that draws inspiration from al-Qaeda. It became well known in 2007 after engaging in combat against the Lebanese Army in the Nahr al-Bared UNRWA Palestinian refugee camp. Following its defeat at Nahr el-Bared, the group relocated to the Ain al-Hilweh refugee camp near Sidon in 2008. As of 2014, after the death or capture of many members, most of the surviving members of Fatah al-Islam are thought to have joined other groups in Lebanon and Syria including the Free Syrian Army, Al-Nusra Front, Ahrar al-Sham, and the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.
The 2007 Lebanon conflict began when fighting broke out between Fatah al-Islam, an Islamist militant organization, and the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) on May 20, 2007 in Nahr al-Bared, a UNRWA Palestinian refugee camp near Tripoli.
This is a detailed timeline of the 2007 Lebanon conflict.
Lebanon–United States relations are the bilateral relations between Lebanon and the United States.
The Abdullah Azzam Brigades, or al-Qaeda in Lebanon, was a Sunni Islamist militant group, and al-Qaeda's branch in Lebanon. The group, which began operating in 2009, was founded by Saudi Saleh Al-Qaraawi and has networks in various countries, mainly in Egypt, Iraq, Syria, Jordan, the Gaza Strip and Lebanon.
From its inception, the Syrian Civil War has produced and inspired a great deal of strife and unrest in the nation of Lebanon. Prior to the Battle of Arsal in August 2014, the Lebanese Army has tried to keep out of it and the violence has been mostly between various factions within the country and overt Syrian involvement has been limited to airstrikes and occasional accidental incursions.
The Zürich Islamic center shooting occurred on 19 December 2016 in the Zürich Islamic Center in central Zürich. Three people were injured when a gunman opened fire in the center, though all survived. The perpetrator, who had stabbed a former friend to death the day prior to the shooting, died by suicide after fleeing the scene.
The Istanbul nightclub shooting was a mass shooting incident on 1 January 2017 around 01:15 local time, in which a terrorist shot and killed 39 people and wounded 79 others at the Reina nightclub in the Ortaköy neighbourhood of Istanbul, Turkey, where hundreds had been celebrating New Year's Day. Uzbekistan-born Abdulkadir Masharipov was arrested in Istanbul on 17 January 2017. Islamic State claimed credit for his actions. The first hearing in the trial of Masharipov and 51 accused accomplices was held on 11 December 2017, and the next hearing was held on 26 March 2018.
The 2017 Tehran attacks were a series of two simultaneous terrorist attacks that occurred on 7 June 2017 that were carried out by five terrorists belonging to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) against the Iranian Parliament building and the Mausoleum of Ruhollah Khomeini, both in Tehran, Iran, leaving 17 civilians dead and 43 wounded. The shootings were the first terrorist attacks in Tehran in more than a decade, and the first major terror attack in the country since the 2010 Zahedan bombings.
On the morning of 7 October 2018, a Palestinian gunman opened fire on several Israeli civilians in the Barkan Industrial Park, killing two and critically injuring another. The shooting incident was declared a "terrorist attack" by the IDF. It was the first attack in the park and the second fatal attack in the West Bank to occur in three weeks.
On 3 June 2019, a gunman killed four security members—two police officers and two soldiers—in Tripoli, Lebanon. The attacker was a recent member of the militant group Islamic State (ISIS), but no group claimed responsibility for the attack. The attack took place when security forces were dispatched to the city's streets to ensure citizen safety at the end of the Ramadan and Eid al-Fitr holidays. The attacker was identified by the authorities and the Lebanese army as Abdel Rahman Mabsout; he was a former ISIS member who had participated in the Syrian Civil War against the Syrian government. He was detained and tried for fighting for ISIS when he returned from Syria in 2016 but was released after a year in jail in late 2017.
The 17 October Protests, commonly referred to as the 17 October Revolution or Hirak, were a series of civil protests in Lebanon that began after the Lebanese cabinet announced financial measures on 17 October 2019. These national protests were triggered by planned taxes on gasoline, tobacco, and VoIP calls on applications such as WhatsApp, but quickly expanding into a country-wide condemnation of sectarian rule, the stagnation of the economy, unemployment, endemic corruption in the public sector, legislation that was perceived to shield the ruling class from accountability and failures of the government to provide basic services such as electricity, water, and sanitation.
On 29 March 2022, a series of shootings took place in Bnei Brak, Israel. Diaa Hamarsheh, a 26-year-old Palestinian from Ya'bad, killed five people.
The following is a list of events during the Israeli–Palestinian conflict in 2022.
Events in the year 2022 in Lebanon.
The following is a list of events during the Israeli–Palestinian conflict in 2023, including the 2023 events of the Israel–Hamas war.
Events in the year 2023 in Lebanon.
Events of the year 2024 in Israel.