A month after the attack on Sieff, Carlos made
an aborted bomb attack on the Israeli Hapoalim Bank in London. The
attack was a straightforward one. Carlos arrived at the bank during
morning trading and opened the front doors and threw the device
inside. The device, made from a Russian hand grenade attached to 600
grams of plastic explosive failed to detonate fully and only
succeeded in blowing a small crater in the floor and breaking a
window. The only
casualty was a nineteen-year-old secretary who received minor cuts.
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Office of Minute newspaper after
the bombing. |
The next chapter in the campaign that Carlos
and Moukharbal had devised was the bombing of the offices of three
French newspapers that were deemed to be pro-Israeli. Cars full of explosives were left outside the offices of
L'Aurore, L'Arche, Minute and Maison de la Radio. The bombs were set to explode at two a.m. and Carlos
later claimed that the hour was selected to limit human casualties. In addition he advised the papers of the attack. At the appointed time, three of the four bombs exploded
causing massive damage. There
were no casualties. The
only paper to escape damage was the Maison de la Radio when
the vehicle bomb left in front of it failed to detonate. |
|
Michel Moukharbal |
While Carlos was making his presence felt in
Paris, Haddad was hatching another plot. He advised Carlos and Moukharbal to align themselves with
members of the Japanese Red Army. Prior to the planned alliance, Yutaka Furuya, a member of the
JRA, had been arrested at Orly airport in Paris. He was detained because he carried three fake passports in
various names and $10,000 in counterfeit bills. When questioned he admitted to being a member of the JRA and
a supporter of the Palestinian cause. The DST searched their files and found that Furuya had been
involved in an attack on a Shell oil refinery in Singapore organized
by the Popular Front. Other
encrypted documents in Furuya's possession revealed plans to attack
Japanese embassies and companies in seven major European cities. |
Furuya was later charged with minor offences
relating to the passports and currency and jailed for several
months. While he was serving his term of imprisonment, eight other
Japanese Red Army members were expelled to Switzerland. The Swiss, wanting no part of terrorists, expelled them to
West Germany who in turn sent them to Holland. Within days of their expulsion to Holland, the Japanese Red
Army attacked the French embassy in The Hague. The three members who took part in the attack had been
equipped and supported by Carlos and Moukharbal prior to the attack.
The plan was for the terrorists to capture the
French ambassador when he arrived at the embassy. The attack was late but the JRA commandos succeeded in
capturing the ambassador's driver and forced him to take them to the
ambassador's office. At
that point, a random police patrol encountered the terrorists and a
gunfight ensued. During
the skirmish the leader of the terrorists and two policemen were
wounded but the terrorists managed to capture the ambassador,
Jacques Senard, and ten other people and hold them hostage in
Senard's office.
They demanded that Furuya be released from jail
and that a Boeing 707 be placed at their disposal. While the demands were considered, Furuya was removed from
his cell and taken under armed guard by members of France's Brigade
Anti-Commando, to Schipol airport in Amsterdam to await the outcome
of the negotiations. The
Brigade were under strict orders to execute Furuya if any of the
hostages were harmed, an order that came directly from the French
Prime Minister, Jacques Chirac.
While the negotiations continued, Carlos
devised a plan that he hoped would force the release of the
terrorists. On a busy Sunday afternoon he entered the trendy Deux-Magots
café and made his way to the first floor balcony and threw a
fragmentation grenade down into the crowd that milled around the
boutiques on the ground floor.
Carlos left just before the blast scattered
hundreds of lethal fragments through the crowd killing two and
injuring thirty-four innocent shoppers.
Two days later, the French government agreed to
the terrorist's demands. They
not only released Furuya and supplied the jet but also paid a
$300,000 ransom. They
have since insisted that the grenade attack at Deux-Magots had no
bearing on their decision. Regardless
of the lack of importance placed on the attack, it succeeded in
attracting Haddad's attention with the result that he
"upgraded" Carlos and ordered him and Moukharbal to seize
an El Al jet at Orly airport in December 1974. Finally, Carlos had been selected to take part in
"high-profile" operations. Unfortunately for Carlos the planned attack coincided with a
strike by El Al staff, which prevented any Israeli aircraft from
landing in Paris. Carlos,
anxious to prove himself, was told to sit and wait for the strike to
end. Finally on
January 13 1975, Carlos and Johannes Weinrich, a new accomplice,
were sent into action.
|
Johannes Weinrich (POLICE) |
Shortly after midday, the terrorists were
sitting in a rented car at the side of an airport access road
waiting for an El Al flight to take off. The plan was to wait until the aircraft was in the air and
shoot it down with an RPG-7, a Russian made bazooka.
At the appointed time, Weinrich stood at the
side of the road and shouldered the weapon and took aim at the
approaching El Al 707. He
was clearly visible to a Lufthansa employee who stood at his desk
less than twenty meters away and an El Al security guard on a nearby
rooftop. When the plane
was 130 meters away, Weinrich fired but the rocket missed its target
and slammed into a parked car. The warhead did not explode. |
The recoil of the second shot, fired in haste,
pushed Weinrich and the bazooka backwards smashing their cars
windscreen. The rocket
streaked away toward the airport and passed through a Yugoslav DC9,
which was parked off the side of the tarmac, before hitting a
building that was used as a kitchen. Fortunately the building was empty at the time of the attack. Following the failed attack, Carlos and Weinrich sped away to
a nearby cemetery where they dumped the vehicle and switched to
another, leaving the bazooka behind. A later phone call to the Reuters news agency in Paris claimed
responsibility for the attack in the name of the Mohamed Boudia
Commando. The person
making the call promised that, "Next time we will hit our
target."
While the security around Orly was being
strengthened with additional gendarmes and riot police, Carlos and
Moukharbal were laying plans for their next attempt. Four days after the first attack, obviously undaunted by the
increased security, Carlos and three other Palestinian guerrillas
were at the airport "rehearsing" for the next strike. The following Sunday the terrorists returned to the airport
and after retrieving another, less powerful bazooka from it's hiding
place in a public toilet, they ran out to an observation terrace and
prepared to open fire on an El Al jumbo jet that was nearby. Before they could get into position, a security officer on an
adjoining rooftop opened fire with a submachine gun. As the crowd ran for cover, one terrorist fired his pistol
into the air and threw a grenade. The terrorist with the RPG took the weapon from under his
coat and aimed it at the jumbo which by this time was 400 meters away preparing for take off, too far for an effective shot.
To make their escape, the terrorists ran into the
passenger lounge firing their pistols and throwing grenades. Carlos was not among them as he had slipped away when the
shooting had started. Shortly
after they entered the lounge they were intercepted by a security
patrol. After a short
gunfight, eight people, including one of the security officers, lay
seriously wounded while the terrorists selected hostages and
barricaded themselves in a toilet. In all, they succeeded in taking ten hostages including a
priest, a four-year-old girl and a pregnant woman. Ten hours later, after terse negotiations, the French
government yielded and supplied a Boeing 707 to fly the Palestinians
unharmed to Baghdad in return for the hostages. Annoyed by yet another failed attack, Carlos and Moukharbal
flew to London and on to Paris to lie low and make plans for the
next phase of their campaign.
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