I. THE TRIGGER: bl00d ON THE OLYMPIC TRACK

September 5, 1972. The world was watching Munich, Germany, for a celebration of sportsmanship. Instead, they witnessed a horror show. Eight members of the Palestinian group Black September infiltrated the Olympic Village. They took the Israeli team hostage. By the end of the botched rescue attempt, 11 Israeli athletes and coaches were de@d. Wrestlers, weightlifters, civilians—ᴍᴜʀᴅᴇʀed on the world stage.

In Israel, the grief turned instantly into a cold resolve. Prime Minister Golda Meir convened her security cabinet. The mandate was clear and terrifying: “Forget peace for now. We want justice.” Operation Wrath of God was born. The objective was to hunt down and eliminate everyone involved in the planning and funding of the Munich Massacre. Intelligence gathered by Mossad agents in Europe pointed to a single location: Beirut, Lebanon. The brains behind the operation were not hiding in caves; they were living in luxury apartments in the upscale Verdun District, protected by the sovereignty of Lebanon and the assumption that Israel wouldn’t dare strike so deep into an Arab capital.

II. THE TARGETS AND THE IMPOSSIBLE PLAN

Mossad identified three high-value targets living in two adjacent buildings:

    Muhammad Youssef al-Najjar (Abu Youssef): The senior PLO official who approved the budget and logistics for Black September.

    Kamal Adwan: The head of operations for the West Bank, coordinating attacks inside Israel.

    Kamal Nasser: The PLO spokesman and a renowned poet, the “voice” of the movement.

The IDF planners faced a nightmare scenario. A simple airstrike would kill too many civilians and cause an international war. A sniper attack was too slow. They needed a “surgical” strike. They proposed a Commando Raid: Insert a team into Beirut, infiltrate the buildings, confirm the identities, execute the targets, and extract—all in under 30 minutes. But how do 40 Israeli soldiers walk through a guarded, wealthy Arab neighborhood without raising an alarm? The answer was absurd, risky, and brilliant: Drag.

III. THE TRAINING: HEELS AND HOLSTERS

The mission was assigned to Sayeret Matkal, Israel’s equivalent of the SAS or Delta Force. In a secret facility in the Negev Desert, engineers built full-scale mock-ups of the Beirut apartments based on architectural plans stolen by Mossad. But combat training wasn’t enough. The lead commandos had to learn how to be women. It sounds funny, but it was a matter of life and de@th. Burly soldiers had to practice walking in high heels so their gait would look natural. They hired female consultants to teach them posture, makeup application, and mannerisms. They wore fashionable 1970s wigs to hide their military haircuts.

Crucially, they had to modify their clothing. Special pockets were sewn into the lining of the dresses and inside their handbags to hold Beretta pistols with suppressors and bricks of plastic explosives. They drilled drawing their weapons: from “elegant lady” to “lethal operator” in less than a second.

IV. THE INFILTRATION: THE ZODIAC LANDING

On the night of April 9, 1973, missile boats of the Israeli Navy arrived 30 kilometers off the coast of Beirut. The sea was calm. The commandos transferred to Zodiac rubber boats.

These low-profile boats allowed them to slip under the radar. They landed on a deserted beach north of Beirut at 10:45 PM. Mossad agents were already waiting with rented cars—Mercedes sedans and Buicks that blended into the wealthy traffic of Beirut. Inside the cars, the transformation happened. The commandos stripped off their wet gear and pulled on the wigs, the dresses, and the heels. The others dressed as their “male escorts” in sharp suits. They were no longer soldiers; they were couples returning from a night at the club.

V. THE ASSAULT: CHAOS IN VERDUN

Target 1: Al-Najjar At 11:55 PM, the cars parked near the Verdun apartment complex. The “couples” walked into the lobby, laughing and speaking in Arabic. The concierge, watching TV, barely glanced at them. They took the elevator to the first floor. As the doors closed, the laughter stopped. The handbags opened. The suppressors were attached. They picked the lock of Al-Najjar’s apartment. Al-Najjar woke up as the door opened. He sensed the danger instantly. But before he could reach for his own weapon, the “women” in his room opened fire. Suppressed shots (Pfft! Pfft!) ended his life instantly. His wife, screaming, was also killed in the crossfire. As the team retreated, Al-Najjar’s teenage son ran into the hallway, staring in shock at the armed women. The commander made a split-second moral decision: Civilians are off-limits. Instead of shooting the boy, he pistol-whipped him, knocking him unconscious to prevent him from raising the alarm.

Target 2: Kamal Adwan Nearby, the second team breached Adwan’s apartment. Adwan was awake. He was a fighter. He grabbed an AK-47 assault rifle and fired through the door. BANG! The suppressed silence was broken. A firefight erupted in the hallway. The element of surprise was gone. The team leader improvised. While two operators provided covering fire, another commando climbed over the balcony railing, dangling stories above the street.

He flanked Adwan, smashing through the window and eliminating him at close range. They grabbed stacks of intelligence documents and rigged the room with explosives to destroy what was left.

Target 3: Kamal Nasser (The Poet) The third team blew the lock off Nasser’s door with a small explosive charge. They found the poet sitting at his desk, surrounded by books. He was writing. When the armed figures in dresses burst in, Nasser didn’t run. He stood up. According to reports, he asked simply, “Are you Israeli?” Three shots silenced the voice of the PLO. He fell back onto his desk. As the commando reached over to grab papers, his elegant evening dress brushed against the poet’s fresh bl00d. It was a grotesque image: a soldier in drag, stained with the bl00d of his enemy, fleeing into the night.

VI. THE ESCAPE AND THE LEGACY

Sirens began to wail across Beirut. The Lebanese police and army were mobilizing. The commandos sprinted back to the waiting cars. The drivers, knowing the city map memorized from intelligence, took back roads to avoid the checkpoints that were already springing up. They reached the beach, ditched the cars, and boarded the Zodiacs. By the time the Lebanese military fully understood what had happened, the Israelis were vanishing into the dark Mediterranean Sea.

Back on the missile boats, the adrenaline crashed. The commandos peeled off the wigs and threw the high heels into the ocean. The mission was a tactical masterpiece. Three high-value targets eliminated. Zero Israeli casualties. Massive intelligence recovered. But for the men who pulled the trigger, the image of killing men in their homes while dressed as women would haunt them. It was the ultimate deception.

Operation Spring of Youth proved that no border, no disguise, and no sanctuary could protect those who orchestrated terror. It sent a chilling message to the world: If you harm us, we will come for you. And you won’t even know who we are until it’s too late.