US military personnel survey damage to Khobar Towers in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, where 19 US citizens were killed in June 1996.
Washington, United States - Trump's administration hailed the judgment, the latest over the attack against Iran, which denies involvement and refuses to pay.
Published: Sat 11 Jul 2020, 5:04 AM
Updated: Sat 11 Jul 2020, 7:09 AM
A US judge has ordered Iran to pay another $879.1 million (Dh3.2 billion) over a 1996 bombing in Saudi Arabia that killed 19 US airmen, ruling again that Tehran bore responsibility.
President Donald Trump's administration hailed the judgment, the latest over the attack against Iran, which denies involvement and refuses to pay.
Saudi Hezbollah, a militant group from the conservative Sunni kingdom's Shiite minority, allegedly carried out the attack by driving an explosives-laden truck into the eight-story Khobar Towers complex where Western and Saudi forces were staying.
Beryl Howell, the chief judge of the US federal district court in Washington, cited previous evidence as she wrote that Iran "aided Hezbollah in carrying out a horrific, violent attack that killed 19 people and injured hundreds more."
In a July 2 ruling that was made public this week, she ordered the damages for 14 US service members who were injured in the attack as well as 21 family members.
Explaining why the amount includes punitive damages, she said that the plaintiffs "suffered physical injuries and psychological trauma" and that "there is a need to deter future terrorist attacks."
Glenn Tyler Christie, who led the suit, was cleaning a nearby kitchen at the time of the blast and still suffers both physical and psychological problems including chronic headaches and depression, the ruling said.
State Department spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus hailed the decision, writing on Twitter: "Justice is overdue for the many victims of Iranian-supported terror."
Howell in 2018 had ordered Iran to pay $104.7 million (Dh384.6 million) in a similar case over the Khobar Towers bombing.
At that time, she had rejected the punitive part of the damages, saying that changes in US law precluded such penalties for incidents before 2008.
But in May, the US Supreme Court allowed for punitive damages for pre-2008 attacks in a unanimous decision involving Sudan.
A separate court decision in 2013 ordered Iran to pay $591 million (Dh2.17 billion) to the family of one of the US airmen who died.
Iran, which has no diplomatic relations with the United States, has hit back that Washington should pay for past wrongdoing including support for Saddam Hussein in the Iran-Iraq war.
The International Court of Justice last year let Iran continue with legal action seeking to unblock Iranian assets frozen by the United States, which says the money should go to pay victims under court judgments.