Middle East: 'Suicide Bombers Are Our Nuclear Weapon' 
http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2006/8/4cc8d68e-d103-44dc-b957-3e055687
07ac.html
By Joyce Davis <mailto:>  

Lebanon -- Munir al-Makdah, head of the Fatah militia in southern Lebanon,
October 2001

Al-Makdah greeting children at the Ain Al-Hilwah refugee camp in October
2001

(RFE/RL)
PRAGUE, August 9, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- Palestinian fighters like Munir
al-Makdah, head of the Fatah militia in southern Lebanon, have been
preparing for war between Hizballah and Israel for a long time. Whatever
cease-fire finally is negotiated in the present crisis in the region, it
will be hard to impose among people like him, people who have spent years in
the teeming refugee camps of southern Lebanon preparing for just such a
fight.



As far back as October 2001, when I visited the Ain Al-Hilwah refugee camp,
about a half-hour ride through treacherous mountain roads from the capital
of Beirut, al-Makdah was looking forward to the day when his forces would
once again be unleashed on Israel. He strutted through what clearly was his
kingdom, openly celebrating the September 11, 2001, terrorist attack on the
United States, and boasting of his cooperation with Hizballah and Al-Qaeda.
In November 2005, al-Makdah warned in an interview with an Italian newspaper
that his cadres of suicide bombers were readying for battle.
"Suicide bombers are our nuclear weapon," he told "L'Espresso" in November
2005, echoing what he told me years earlier when he described his trainees
as "human bombs."
"I'm always developing my skills and practicing. There is always something
more to learn. The training goes on all the time." -- Palestinian fighter 
"Jihad and the resistance begins with the word, then with the sword, then
with the stone, then with the gun, then with planting bombs, and then with
transforming bodies into human bombs," he told me. "The last weapon is a
weapon the Israelis can never have: suicide bombers."
While much of the world bemoans the killing of Lebanese civilians and the
destruction of one of the most developed countries in the Middle East, the
fighting raging in southern Lebanon is a dream come true for al-Makdah and
his colleagues.
Preparing For War 
Al-Makdah was known as commander of Palestinian guerrillas in southern
Lebanon, where an estimated 360,000 Palestinian refugees had fled from the
previous wars with Israel. He was a wanted man, sentenced to death in
Jordan, where authorities accused him of being part of Al-Qaeda leader Osama
Bin Laden's network and of involvement in the September 1, 2001, attack
against the United States.
But inside the Ain Al-Hilwah refugee camp he was safe. Even Lebanese
soldiers were afraid to enter al-Makdah's domain. That fact makes it
difficult for many to contemplate Lebanese soldiers enforcing a cease-fire
between Israel and Hizballah.
While al-Makdah did not confirm or deny his involvement in the September 11
attack when he spoke with me, he readily acknowledged his connection with
Al-Qaeda, whose fighters were inside Ain Al-Hilwah as recently as November
2005, according to his interview with "L'Espresso."
'We Thank Whoever Contributes' 
"Our goal is the resistance against the Israeli occupation," he told me in
2001. "And we thank whoever contributes to the struggle no matter where he
is from or who he is."
Al-Makdah ran training camps for young men dedicated to jihad to liberate
what they consider Palestinian land now under Israeli control. He even ran
summer camps to train children as young as 5 years old in the techniques of
suicide bombing.
"I held my first rifle when I was 10 years old," al-Makdah told me as we
walked in the dusty camp, shooing chickens out of our path and shadowed by
two security guards brandishing heavy machine guns. We stopped at what
appeared to be a collection of hand-held rocket launchers guarded by a young
man named Ali.
"He was 8 years old when he entered the movement," al-Makdah said with
obvious pride, pointing to Ali, who smiled in confirmation.
Small Weapons 
"When I was very young, my mother put me with what is known as the
Ashvel.... It's a children's group," Ali explained. "We were trained with
weapons, small weapons."
Today, Ali would be 22 years old. Then, at 17, he was still in training.
"I'm always developing my skills and practicing," he said. "There is always
something more to learn. The training goes on all the time,"
Of course, both al-Makdah and Ali could now be dead, among those buried in
the simmering ashes of southern Lebanon. But if they are still alive, they
certainly are among the men sending rockets into Haifa and Tel Aviv or
fighting Israelis soldiers on the ground in Lebanon.
And as Israeli or international forces once again contemplate occupation of
southern Lebanon, they will surely face al-Makdah's "nuclear bombs," whether
or not he is still directing them himself from Ain Al-Hilwah.
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