The extraordinary decision by German authorities to release
convicted terrorist and murderer Mohammad Ali Hammadi should be
strongly condemned by both the Bush Administration and Congress.
Hammadi's release and subsequent safe passage to Lebanon raise
major questions regarding Germany's commitment to the war on
terror, and will cast a huge shadow over the forthcoming January 11
White House meeting between President Bush and newly elected German
Chancellor Angela Merkel.
The United States must send a clear message that Hammadi's release
is unacceptable, and that immediate action will be taken to ensure
that this brutal terrorist will be brought to justice. Both the
House and the Senate should pass resolutions condemning the release
of Mohammad Ali Hammadi. Congress and the Bush Administration
should call on Lebanon to hand over Hammadi for trial in the United
States to face justice under American law. If Lebanon does not
comply with this request, the U.S. should hunt down and seize
Hammadi under its policy of 'rendition' of terror suspects.
Hammadi, a Shiite militant from Lebanon, was convicted by a German
court in 1989 of the brutal killing of U.S. Navy diver Robert Dean
Stethem in the June 1985 hijacking of TWA Flight 847 from Athens to
Rome by Hezbollah terrorists. Stethem, who was singled out because
he was an American serviceman, was savagely beaten before being
executed and dumped by the terrorists on the tarmac of Beirut
International Airport. Stethem was posthumously awarded the Bronze
Star and Purple Heart, and is buried at Arlington National
Cemetery. His killers all escaped from the scene of the
hijacking.
Hammadi was subsequently arrested at Frankfurt Airport in 1987
carrying liquid explosives in his luggage. He was sentenced to life
in prison in Germany (after German refusals to hand him over for
trial in the United States), but was released last week and flown
back to Lebanon after serving just 18 years behind bars. Hammadi
was freed in the face of strong opposition from the U.S.
Government, and returned to his home country despite a
long-standing American request for his extradition to the United
States. The decision to release Hammadi was taken without
consultation with the family of Robert Stethem, who were not even
informed in advance that their son's killer was about to be
freed.
The timing of Hammadi's release was significant. It came just a
couple of days before the release in Iraq of German hostage Susanne
Osthoff, an archaeologist who was held captive for several weeks
after being kidnapped in the north-western region of the country.
The German government is firmly rejecting any suggestion that
Hammadi's release was part of an agreement to free Osthoff.
However, Hammadi's exit from Germany raises major concerns over how
exactly the Germans secured Osthoff's freedom, especially in light
of an alleged secret deal between the Italian government and Iraqi
insurgents to gain the release of two Italian hostages in August
this year.
The release of Mohammad Ali Hammadi is a deeply insensitive as well
as dangerous move by the German government. It projects an image of
cowardice and weakness in the war on terror, and sends a powerful
signal to terrorist groups such as Al-Qeada and Hezbollah that
continental European leaders lack the stomach for the fight. It
will embolden the West's most vicious enemies, and will only
encourage more acts of terror on European soil by Islamic
terrorists. It will also sow the seeds of further division between
the United States and Europe, a stated policy goal of the wide
array of terrorist groups who threaten international
security.
It is imperative now that the United States does everything in its
power to ensure that Hammadi and his fellow hijackers, who were
never caught and are still at large, are captured. If nothing is
done, Hezbollah will claim victory, and their murderous cohorts
will be emboldened to strike again. A clear message must be sent
that the brutal murder of American servicemen or civilians will
neither be tolerated nor forgotten.
Nile Gardiner,
Ph.D., is a fellow in Anglo-American security
policy at The Heritage Foundation.
First appeared in Human Events Online