My Uncle Alan, my mom's brother, was the chief security officer there at the time and he was in the blast. He heard gunfire and was going out the door when the bomb detonated. I was at Indian Head, MD at the time and went to visit him in the hospital. He was a mess, but is doing well now.
Washington Post Article....
The chief security officer for the U.S. Embassy in Beirut who was injured in the bombing there 10 days ago was in fair condition yesterday at Fairfax Hospital.
Alan O. Bigler, a Reston resident who was severely wounded in the Oct. 20 suicide bombing that claimed two American lives, arrived at Andrews Air Force Base late Friday after being flown from a U.S military hospital in West Germany. He was taken directly to Fairfax Hospital where he is still unable to speak because of facial swelling, hospital officials said.
Bigler, 35, had expresed "unease" about the move of American personnel to new quarters in an East Beirut Annex. Bigler had indicated that he considered it unwise to move into the annex until all security measures had been completed, according to sources in Lebanon.
Dr. Steven Larson said yesterday that Bigler has multiple facial lacerations and a broken nose. He is also suffering a partial hearing loss and slight paralysis of the right side of his face, Larson said.
"The doctors say he is really happy to be home and lucky to be alive, he's lucky to even have his sight," said spokesman Lon Walls. Blast Victim Is Treated In Fairfax
The chief security officer for the U.S. Embassy in Beirut who was injured in the bombing there 10 days ago was in fair condition yesterday at Fairfax Hospital.