Reagan's 100th birthday: 10 defining moments

American's 40th president, Ronald Reagan, would have turned 100 on Sunday.

8. Libya bombing (April 14, 1986)

Dennis Cook/AP/File
President Reagan addresses a crowd in his hometown of Dixon, Ill. He traveled there for the first time since becoming president, to celebrate his 73rd birthday, on Feb. 7, 1984.

Reagan ordered a strike on Libya after two American servicemen were killed and more than 50 injured in a bombing in West Berlin planned by Libya. The strike targeted military installations as well as the home of Libyan leader Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, and killed about 60 people. Qaddafi’s 15-month-old daughter was among the victims.

Though the international community condemned the strike, Reagan insisted that the US was exercising self-defense and that he would not stand by while Americans were attacked.

“Terrorism is the preferred weapon of weak and evil men,” said Reagan. “And as Edmund Burke reminded us, in order for evil to succeed, it’s only necessary that good men do nothing.”

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