Israel's daily newsmagazine
   Israel's daily newsmagazine
| home |   security |   politics |   diplomacy |   anti-semitism |   culture |   travel |   views | today's weblog  
 
Briefs > Terrorist Attacks

   


Former PLO guerrilla behind 1972 Munich attack says he 'regrets nothing'

Report: Olmert lays down Israeli conditions for Hamas

Israeli army mobilizes to dismantle settler outposts

U.S. repeats claim of support to take Iran to Security Council

German official: Pull passports of neo-Nazis invited to Iranian Holocaust conference


view all today





 
01.29.06
  most recent  
 
 
 
Lebanese magistrate charges 13 Muslim extremists with planning terror attacks
PA negotiates with kidnappers of 3 British citizens
Poll: 65% of Palestinians Support Al-Qaeda Attacks in U.S. and Europe
Four homemade rockets fired into Israel from Gaza
Yeshiva student stabbed outside of Damascus Gate
 
Former PLO guerrilla behind 1972 Munich attack says he 'regrets nothing'
By: Israel Insider staff and partners   
Published: January 29, 2006   
 
A former Palestinian guerrilla said he "regrets nothing" and will not apologize for being one of the masterminds of the 1972 attack at the Munich Olympics in which 11 Israeli athletes were killed, according to a TV interview transcript released Saturday.

Mohammed Oudeh, better known by the code name Abu Daoud, said it was up to Palestinians to "fight as long as it takes Israel to recognize our rights."

"I regret nothing" about the Munich attacks, the former Palestinian Liberation Organization guerrilla told Germany's Spiegel TV, according to a transcript of the interview released before its broadcast. "You can only dream that I would apologize."

Spiegel TV said they spoke with the 68-year-old, who lives in Damascus, Syria, last week in Cairo.

Daoud was a member of a shadowy Palestinian terrorist group called Black September that took Israeli weightlifters hostage at the 1972 Olympic Games. Eleven Israelis, three of the Palestinian attackers and a German police officer were killed during a near two-day standoff.

Daoud told Spiegel TV he brought the weapons involved in the attack by train from Frankfurt to Munich in various suitcases, then stored them in lockers before distributing them to his team when they arrived. He had previously scouted the Olympic village, and said he had no problem reaching inner areas.

"Nobody checked us," he said.

Daoud reiterated what he said in his 1999 autobiography that the intent was never to kill the Israeli athletes.

He was also quoted as saying the members of the Black September group killed by Israeli agents through the 1970s were the wrong people.

"The people who were shot all had nothing to do with Munich," he said.

German police issued an arrest warrant for Daoud in 1999 after he revealed in his book the role he had played in the attack.

American director Steven Spielberg's film "Munich" has recently drawn attention to the Olympic attack.
 
 
 

Click on the blue headline to read a Talkback comment and respond to it. Click on the icon to send a private email to the talkback writer. The icon appears only if the writer has decided to be contacted. If no popup window appears, please make sure your popup blocker allows israelinsider.com.

 
 
 
  | about |   partners |   sponsor |   donate |   news |   subscribe |   contact |