Young Men (Lebanon)

The Young Men (Arabic: الشبان|Al-Shabab) or Les Jeunes in French, were a small Lebanese Christian militia linked to the Lebanese Forces (LF), which fought in the Lebanese Civil War between 1978 and 1986.

Origins
During the early 1975-77 phase of the Lebanese Civil War, the armed militants of the Kataeb Regulatory Forces (KRF) and Lebanese Forces (LF) operated with little discipline or restraint in a situation of escalating violence. As the fighting progressed, the leadership began to impose a higher degree of discipline on their militiamen and as a result, some of the early fighters found themselves being expelled from both the KRF and LF for insubordination, looting, and other crimes. Elie Hobeika, the head of the newly founded Lebanese Forces’ intelligence service, the Security Acency – LFSA (Arabic: Jihaz al-Amin), claimed that some of these men had fought well and should be used, even if they were not suitable for the ordinary strict environment of military service. In 1978-79, Hobeika began to recruit these same militiamen and formed them into a new unit, known officially as the ‘Special Force’– SF, intended to be used on clandestine “special operations” under its own command. Separated from the LF’s formal military structure, the new formation used different official titles over time according to Hobeika's changing role. Initially deployed in the Israeli-controlled border enclave in southern Lebanon to receive additional two weeks’ training by the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF), they were pulled out a few months later by the Israelis, who accused them of indiscipline (e.g. shooting local farm animals to relieve boredom). The Israelis cut all official ties with the militia soon after their return to east Beirut, but remained in close contact with Hobeika.

Structure and organization
Placed under the strict control of the LF intelligence services, the Young Men/SF was little more than a criminal street gang whose members tended to have disadvantaged socio-economic backgrounds, troubled social backgrounds, and limited education. The group did not use a traditional military structure. Based in east Beirut, they aligned some 100 militiamen, initially loosely organized into three groups of thirty or so men each – the main group was allocated next to the LF headquarters (HQ) in Karantina whilst the other two groups were deployed in Ashrafieh and at the old railway station, respectively.

Weapons and equipment
The Young Men/SF was equipped as a light infantry force, with uniforms, equipment and small-arms being provided by the LF and the Israelis. In addition, they also fielded a small number of gun-trucks (M38A1 MD jeeps, Land-Rover series II-III and Toyota Land Cruiser (J40) pickups) armed mostly with heavy machine guns (HMGs) and a few recoilless rifles and anti-aircraft autocannons.

Controversy
Although they had combat experience, the Young men/SF were held in contempt by most Lebanese Forces’ personnel, who disparagingly called them “the Apaches” or “the Indians” on account of their wild violent behaviour, exacerbated by the consumption of cocaine and other drugs. The group was also implicated in a wide range of violent crimes in the early 1980s, including the killing of many abductees and the September 1982 Sabra and Shatila massacre alongside LF and South Lebanon Army (SLA) units under the protection of the Israelis.

Disbandement
After the Geagea-Hobeika Conflict in January 1985, on which Hobeika and its LF supporters were ejected from east Beirut by Samir Geagea, the Young Men/SF went to provide the founding cadre of the notorious Lebanese Forces – Executive Command (LFEC) splinter faction, created in 1986 at Zahlé, Beqaa valley, under the protection of the Syrian Army.