The Lebanese Armed Revolutionary Factions – LARF (Arabic: الفصائل المسلحة الثورية اللبنانية | Al Fasael al-Musallaha al-Thawriyya al-Lubnaniyya) was a small Marxist-Leninisturban guerrilla group which played an active role in the Lebanese Civil War between 1979 and 1988.
Modelled after parent western militant leftist/urban guerrilla organizations, the LARF was made of left-wingMaronite Christian activists who had previously fought with the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO),[2] led by Georges Ibrahim Abdallah (noms de guerre "Salih al-Masri", "Abdul-Qadir Sa'adi"),[3] a former school teacher; after being arrested by the French authorities in 1984, he was replaced by a collective leadership trio formed by his younger brothers' Robert, Maurice, and Emile. Based at his home town of Al-Qoubaiyat in the Akkar District of northern Lebanon and financed by Syria, the LARF aligned by 1981 some 30 active members specialized in urban guerrilla warfare, organized into scattered cells of three to five militants.
Although the capture of Georges Abdallah by French authorities in late 1984 led to a temporary hiatus in LARF activities, it is believed that the group was behind a bombing campaign that rocked the French capital in September 1986, killing 15 people and wounding over 150 others. These bombings were carried out by the so-called Committee for Solidarity with Arab and Middle Eastern Political Prisoners – CSAPP or Comité de soutien avec les prisonniers politiques et arabes et du Moyen-Orient (CSPPA) in French, allegedly a covert 'working title' for an alliance that gathered the LARF, ASALA and pro-Iranian Islamic operatives. Led by the Shi'ite militant Fouad Ben Ali Saleh, it was formed in February 1986 at Paris with the aim of forcing the release of Abdallah from prison.
Decline and demise, 1988–1990
However, after Abdallah was sentenced by a French court to life imprisonment in March 1987 his group's actions in Europe sharply declined, and the subsequent disbandment of the CSAPP forced most of its members to return to Lebanon. By early 1988, the LARF had virtually ceased all external operational activity and it kept a low profile for the remainder of the Lebanese Civil War.
Military inactive since 1990, the group appears to have renounced violence and remains politically active in Lebanon, its members now campaigning for the release of Georges Abdallah (held in the Fresnes Prison since September 2002) and Fouad Ben Ali Saleh, along with other Lebanese prisoners still detained in French prisons.