this is an opinion article and represents John Gizzi opinion
By John Gizzi — newsmax.com — Forty years ago, on Sept. 14, 1982, the story of Lebanon was brutally upended. Bachir Gemayel, elected as the Middle Eastern nation’s youngest-ever president at 34, and already in take-charge mode, was killed in an explosion that also took the lives of 25 supporters gathered at the headquarters of his Kataeb (Christian) Party. “Better looking than Jesus Christ,” is how American journalist Barbara Newman gushed over the young dynamo who seemed the right person to finally end Lebanon’s turmoil with Israelis, Palestinians, and Syrians.
Like John F. Kennedy, Gemayel is remembered today as a charismatic leader who brought hope and optimism to his country only to be cut down in the prime of his life. Shortly after winning election in August 1982 and before taking office, two-fisted former militia boss Gemayel ordered the Lebanese Army to enter West Beirut and demanded Yasser Arafat’s Palestinian Liberation Organization leave Lebanon. Gemayel was seen by President Ronald Reagan and CIA Director William Casey, who called the Lebanese president-elect “a nice Catholic boy,” as a pivotal leader for eventual peace throughout the Middle East. But it was not to be. As a surely shaken Reagan wrote in his diary after receiving confirmation Gemayel was dead: “The Israelis moved into [West] Beirut following assassination of Bachir and fight between leftist Muslims and Lebanese Army. Things changed. “In Beirut, Haddad’s Christian Phalangist militia entered a Palestinian refugee camp and massacred men, women, and children. The Israelis did nothing to prevent or halt it. [Secretary of State] George [Schultz] and I met and agreed upon a blunt statement which he delivered to the Israeli ambassador.” “It is a sad day,” concluded the 40th president, “and one which may very well set our peace effort back.”