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|title=Lebanon: A Country Study |title=Lebanon: A Country Study
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Revision as of 23:18, 8 October 2006

Israel-Lebanon conflict
Part of the Arab-Israeli conflict

Israel and Lebanon (regional map)
Date1948-present
LocationIsrael and Lebanon
Result no open hostilites since 8 August 2006
Belligerents

Lebanon,
File:Flag of Hezbollah.svg Hezbollah,

File:Palestine COA.gif PLO
Israel,
File:SLA patch.png
SLA
Israeli–Lebanese conflict
Timeline

Palestinian insurgency in South Lebanon

Hezbollah–Israel conflict


Israel-Lebanon conflict describes a series of related military clashes involving Israel, Lebanon, and various non-state militias acting from within Lebanon.

Lebanon has long failed to control militancy within its borders, and Israel has had a history of using force in Lebanon in response to militant attacks. The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) recruited militants in Lebanon from among the families of Palestinian refugees who had left Israel in 1948. By 1968, the PLO and Israel were committing cross border attacks against each other in violation of Lebanese sovereignty. After the PLO leadership and its Fatah brigade were expelled from Jordan for formenting a revolt, they entered Lebanon and the cross-border violence increased. Meanwhile, demographic tensions over the Lebanese National Pact lead to the Lebanese Civil War (1975-1990). Israel's 1978 invasion of Lebanon failed to stem the Palestinian attacks, but Israel invaded Lebanon again in 1982 and forcibly expelled the PLO. Israel withdrew to a slim borderland buffer zone, held with the aid of proxy militants in the South Lebanon Army (SLA). In 1985, a Lebanese Shi'te resistance movement sponsored by Iran, calling itself Hezbollah, called for armed struggle to end the Israel occupation of Lebanese territory. When the Lebanese civil war ended and other warring factions agreed to disarm, Hezbollah and the SLA refused. Combat with Hezbollah weakened Israeli resolve and led to a collapse of the SLA and an early withdrawal in 2000 to their side of the UN designated border. Citing Israeli control of the Shebaa farms territory, Hezbollah continued cross border attacks intermittently over the next six years. Hezbollah now sought freedom for Lebanese citizens in Israeli prisons and successfully used the tactic of capturing Israeli soldiers as leverage for a prisoner exchange in 2004. The capturing of two Israeli soldiers by Hezbollah ignited the 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict. Its ceasefire called for the disarmament of Hezbollah and the remaining armed camps of the PLO, and for Lebanon to control its southern border militarily for the first time in four decades.

Hostilities were suspended as of 8 September 2006.

Background

See also: Ottoman empire See also: British Mandate of Palestine See also: French Mandate of Syria

The territory of what would become the states of Israel and Lebanon were once both part of the long-lived Ottoman empire (1299-1924). After the empire was defeated in World War I, the League of Nations divided the empire among the victors. The French took control over the Mandate of Syria, while the British ruled the Mandate of Palestine. The largely Christian enclave of the French mandate became the French controlled Lebanese Republic in 1926. Lebanon became independent in 1943 as France was under German occupation, though French troops did not completely withdraw until 1946.

The rise of anti-Semitism in Europe, culminating in the Holocaust during World War II, had meant an increase of Jewish immigrants to what had been a minority Jewish, majority Muslim Palestinian Mandate. During the Great Arab Revolt of 1936-1939, and thereafter, the British increasingly came to rely on Jewish militia forces to help maintain order. Eventually, the resultant rise in ethnic tensions and violence between the Arabs and Jews due to Jewish immigration and collaboration would force the British to withdraw in 1947. (The area of their mandate east of the Jordan river had already become the independent state of Jordan in 1946.) The United Nations General Assembly came up with a gerrymandered 1947 UN Partition Plan, to attempt to give both Arabs and Jews their own states from the remains of the mandate, which would officially expire on May 15 1948. The Declaration of the Establishment of the State of Israel would be made on May 14 1948, effectively creating the state of Israel.

These events would lead to a clash between the nations in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.

1948 Arab-Israeli war, Rise of the PLO (1948–1975)

See also: 1948 Arab-Israeli war See also: Palestinian exodus

in 1948, the Lebanese army was by far the smallest regional army, consisting of only 3,500 soldiers. Of these, a force of 1,000 was committed to invading Israel during the 1948 Arab-Israeli war. It crossed into the northern Galilee and was repulsed by Israeli forces. Israeli forces occupied South Lebanon until an armistice agreement was signed on 23 March 1949.

After the war, the United Nations estimated 711,000 Palestinians, half of the Arab population of what had been the Mandate of Palestine, fled, emigrated or were forced out of Israel and entered neighboring countries. By 1949, there were 110,000 Palestinians in Lebanon, moved into camps established by and administered by UNRWA.

With the exception of two camps in the Beirut area, the camps were mostly Muslim. Lebanese Christians feared how this Muslim influx would effect their political dominance and their assumed demographic majority. The rights of the refugees to work, travel, or engage in political activities was curtailed, and initially the refugees were too impoverished to develop a leadership capable of representing their concerns. Less democratic regimes also feared the threat the refugees posed to their own rule, but Lebanon would prove to weak too maintain a crackdown.

Despite sharing in the ongoing border tensions over water, Lebanon rejected calls by other Arab governments to partipate in the 1967 Six-Day War. Militarily weak in the south, Lebanon could not afford conflict with Israel. Nevertheless, the loss of the remains of Palestine radicalized the Palestians languishing in the camps and hoping to return home. The additional influx of refugees turned Palestians camps throughout the Middle East into centers of guerilla activity.

From 1968 onwards, the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) began conducting raids from Lebanon into Israel, and Israel began making retaliatory raids against Lebanese villages to encourage the Lebanese people to themselves deal with the interlopers. After an Israeli airline was machine-gunned at Athens Airport, Israel bombed the Beirut International Airport in retaliation, destroying 13 civilian aircraft.

The unarmed citizenry could not expel the armed foreigners, while the Lebanese army was too weak militarily and politically. The Palestinian camps came under Palestianian control after a series of clashes in 1968 and 1969 between the Lebanese military and the emerging Palestinian guerilla forces. In 1969 the Cairo Agreement guaranteed refugees the right to work, to form self-governing committees, and to engage in armed struggle. "The Palestinian resistance movement assumed daily management of the refugee camps, providing security as well as a wide variety of health, educational, and social services."

In 1970, the PLO attempted to overthrow a reigning monarch, King Hussein of Jordan, and following his quashing of the rebellion in what Arab historians call Black September, the PLO leadership and their troops fled from Jordan to Syria and finally Lebanon.

With headquarters now in Beirut, PLO factions recruited new members from the Palestinian refugee camps. South Lebanon was nicknamed "Fatahland" due to the predominance there of Yasser Arafat's Fatah organization. With its own army operating freely in Lebanon, the PLO had created a state within a state. By 1975, more than 300,000 Palestinian displaced persons lived in Lebanon.

Lebanese Civil War, Operation Litani (1975-April 1981)

See also: Lebanese Civil War See also: Operation Litani See also: South Lebanon Army

The Lebanese Civil War (19751990) was a complex conflict in the form of various factions and shifting alliances between and among Lebanese Maronite Catholics, Lebanese Muslims, Palestian Muslims, Lebanese Druze, and other non-sectarian groups. Governmental power had been allotted among the different religious groups by the National Pact based partially on the results of the 1932 census. Changes in demographics, and increased feelings of depravation by certain ethnic groups, as well as Israeli-Palestian clashes in the south of the county all contributed to the outbreak of war.

Beginning in May 1976, Israel supplied the Maronite militias, including the Lebanese Forces, led by Bachir Gemayel, with arms, tanks, and military advisors. The border between Israel and Lebanon was at this time was nicknamed the Good Fence.

Fearing loss of commercial access to the port of Beirut, in June 1976 Syria intevened in the civil war to support the Maronite dominated government, and by October had 40,000 troops stationed within Lebanon.

The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) used Lebanon as a base for many attacks on Israeli civilians throughout the 1970's, which included the Avivim school bus massacre, Ma'alot massacre and the murders by Samir Kuntar. On 11 March 1978, PLO militants made a sea landing in Haifa, Israel, where they hijacked a bus full of people, killing those on board in what is known as the Coastal Road massacre. By the end of the day, the IDF had killed the nine hijackers who in turn had murdered 37 Israeli civilians. In response, on 14 March 1978, Israel launched Operation Litani and occupied all of southern Lebanon, except the city of Tyre, with 25,000 troops in order to push the PLO away from the border and bolster a Lebanese milita allied with Israel, the South Lebanese Army (SLA). However, the PLO assessed from the name of the operation that the invasion would halt at the Litani river and moved their forces north, leaving behind a token force of a few hundred men.

File:Saad haddad.jpg
SLA leader Saad Haddad (right) in a conversation with Norwegian UNIFIL personnel in Metula, Israel, 1980.

On 19 March, 1978, the United Nations Security Council passed Resolution 425, which called for Israel's immediate withdrawal and the establishment of a United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon. When Israel forces withdrew later in 1978, they turned over its positions in Lebanon to the South Lebanon Army which would continue fighting as a proxy for Israel against the PLO until Israel drove the PLO out of Lebanon in 1982.

In April 1981, the United States brokered a cease-fire in southern Lebanon between Israel, Syria and the PLO.

1982 Lebanon war, Israeli occupation (June 6 1982–January 1985)

See also: 1982 Lebanon war See also: Siege of Beirut See also: 1982-2000 South Lebanon conflict

The 1982 Lebanon war began 6 June, when Israel invaded again for the purpose of attacking the Palestinian Liberation Organization. During the conflict, 14,000 Lebanese and Palestinians were killed, and the Israeli army seiged Beirut. Fighting also occurred between Israel and Syria. The United States, fearing a widening conflict and the prestige the siege was giving PLO leader Yasser Arafat, got all sides to agree to a peace treaty on 18 August. The Multinational Force in Lebanon arrived to keep the peace and ensure PLO withdrawal. Arafat retreated from Beirut on 30 August 1982 and settled in Tunisia.

The National Assembly of Lebanon narrowly chose Bachir Gemayel as president-elect, but when he was assassinated on 14 September 1982, Israel reoccupied West Beirut and Maronite militias carried out the Sabra and Shatila massacre.

In 1983, the United States brokered the May 17 Agreement, a peace treaty between Israel and Lebanon in all but name. The agreement called for a staged Israeli withdrawal over the next eight to twelve weeks and the establishment of a "security zone" to be patrolled by the Lebanese army in southern Lebanon, but was conditional on Syrian withdrawal as well. In August 1983, as Israel withdrew from the areas southeast of Beirut to the Awali River, Lebanese factions clashed for control of the freed territory.

In February 1984, the Lebanese Army collapsed, with many units forming their own militias. The National Assembly of Lebanon, under pressure from Syria and Muslim militias, cancelled the May 17 Agreement on 5 March 1984.

On 15 January 1985, Israel adopted a phased withdrawal plan, finally retreating to the Litani River to form the 4–12 kilometre (2.5–9 mi) deep Israeli Security Zone (map at ) while using the native South Lebanese Army militia to help control it.

Foundation of Hezbollah through Israeli withdrawal (February 1985–May 2000)

Map of southern Lebanon, featuring the Blue Line and Litani River, 2006
See also: Hezbollah See also: Operation Accountability See also: Operation Grapes of Wrath See also: 1982-2000 South Lebanon conflict See also: South Lebanon Army

On 16 February 1985, Shia Sheik Ibrahim al-Amin declared a manifesto in Lebanon, announcing a resistance movement called Hezbollah, whose goals included combating the Israeli occupation. During the 1982-2000 South Lebanon conflict the Hezbollah militia waged a guerrilla campaign against Israeli forces occupying Southern Lebanon and their South Lebanon Army allies.

By the end of 1990 the Lebanese Civil War was effectively over. In March 1991, the National Assembly of Lebanon passed an amnesty law that pardoned all political crimes prior to its enactment, and in May 1991, the militias -- with the important exceptions of Hezbollah and the SLA -- were dissolved, and the Lebanese Armed Forces began to slowly rebuild themselves as Lebanon's only major non-sectarian institution.

In 1992, Hezbollah won ten out of 128 seats in the Lebanese National Assembly.

On 25 July 1993 Israel launched Operation Accountability, known in Lebanon as the Seven-Day War, in retaliation for attacks by both Hezbollah and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine which had killed five soldiers in the security zone. Thousands of buildings were bombed, resulting in 120 dead and 300,000 displaced civilians. Israeli forces also destroyed infrastructure such as power stations and bridges. Hezbollah retaliated with rocket attacks on Israeli villages, though inflicted significantly fewer casualties.

On 11 April 1996 Israel initiated Operation Grapes of Wrath, which Hezbollah calls the April War, subsequent to Hezbollah launching missiles into Israel, which was in turn a response to the killing of two Lebanese by an IDF missile, and the killing of Lebanese boy by a road-side bomb. Israel conducted massive air raids and extensive shelling in southern Lebanon. 118 Lebanese died in the Qana Massacre, when a UN compound was shelled by Israel. The conflict ended on 26 April 1996 with the Israeli-Lebanese Ceasefire Understanding in which both Hezbollah and Israel agreed to forgo attacks on civilians.

From 1985 through 2000, Israel continued to fund the South Lebanon Army. In January 2000, Hezbollah assassinated the man responsible for day to day SLA operations, Colonel Akel Hashem. The Israeli Air Force, in apparent response, on 7 February struck Lebanon's civilian infrastructure, including power stations at Baalbek, Deir Nbouh and Jambour. Eighteen people were reported to have been injured.

Following its declaration of intent to implement UNSC Resolution 425 on 1 April 1998, and after the collapse of the South Lebanon Army in the face of a Hezbollah onslaught, Israel declared 24 May 2000 that they would withdraw to their side of the UN designated border, the Blue Line, 22 years after the resolutions had been approved. The South Lebanon Army's equipment and positions largely fell into the hands of Hezbollah. Lebanon celebrates 25 May, Liberation Day, as a national holiday.

Border clashes, Assassinations (September 2000–June 2006)

See also: Israeli MIA prisoner exchanges See also: Lebanese prisoners in Israel

In September 2000, Hezbollah forged an electoral coalition with the Amal movement. The ticket swept all 23 parliamentary seats allotted for south Lebanon in that region's first election since 1972.

On 7 October 2000 three Israeli combat engineering soldiers were captured within Shebaa Farms after Hezbollah guerrillas set off a bomb next to their jeep. The parents of the soldiers later suspected that the hostages were killed after the abduction and accused the United Nations and UNIFIL of cooperating with Hezbollah.

After Hezbollah killed an Israeli soldier in an attack on an armoured bulldozer that had crossed the border to clear bombs on 20 January 2004, Israel bombed two of the group's bases.

On 29 January 2004, in a German-mediated prisoner swap, one time Amal security head Mustafa Dirani, who had been captured by Israeli commandos in 1994, and 22 other Lebanese detainees, about 400 Palestinians, and 12 Israeli-Arabs were released from Israeli prisons in exchange for Israeli businessman Elchanan Tenenbaum, who had been kidnapped by Hezbollah in October 2000. The remains of 59 Lebanese militants and civilians and the bodies of the three Israeli soldiers captured on 7 October 2000 were also part of the exchange. Hezbollah requested that maps showing Israeli mines in South Lebanon be included as part of the exchange.

In May 2004, Hezbollah militiamen killed an Israeli soldier along the border within the Israeli held Shebaa Farms.

Between July and August 2004 there was a period of more intense border conflict. Hezbollah said the clash began when Israeli forces shelled its positions, while Israel said that Hezbollah had started the fighting with a sniper attack on a border outpost.

On 2 September 2004 Resolution 1559 was approved by the United Nations Security council, calling for the disbanding of all Lebanese militia. An armed Hezbollah is seen by the Israeli government as a contravention of the resolution. The Lebanese government differed from this interpretation.

Syrian troops withdrew from Lebanon in April 2005.

On 26 May, 2006, a car bomb killed Palestinian Islamic Jihad leader Mahmoud Majzoub in Lebanon. Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Saniora called Israel the prime suspect, but Israel denied involvement. On 28 May, 2006, rockets were fired from Lebanon into Israel. Hours later, Israel responded by bombing suspected militant sites and exchanging fire across the border. The United Nations negotiated a ceasefire the same day.

On 14 June 2006 Lebanese authorities arrested members of an alleged Israeli spy ring. Mahmoud Rafeh reportedly confessed to the Majzoub killings and admitted working for Mossad. He admitted that his cell had assassinated three Hezbollah leaders over the past seven years. Bomb-making materials and espionage equipment were seized; however, Lebanese opponents of Hezbollah suspected that the exposure of the spy ring was a Hezbollah fabrication.

2006 Israel-Lebanon Conflict (July 2006-September 2006)

Main article: 2006 Israel-Lebanon Conflict

On 12 July 2006, Hezbollah initiated diversionary rocket attacks on Israeli military positions near the coast and near the Israeli border village of Zar'it, while another Hezbollah group crossed from Lebanon into Israel and ambushed two Israeli Army vehicles, killing three Israeli soldiers and seizing two. Hezbollah demanded the release of Lebanese prisoners held by Israel in exchange for the release of the captured soldiers. Hezbollah's actions, known as Zar'it-Shtula incident, were in clear violation of the 1996 Israeli-Lebanese Ceasefire Understanding. Heavy fire between the sides was exchanged across the length of the Blue Line, with Hezbollah targeting IDF positions and Israeli towns.

Israel responded with massive airstrikes and artillery fire on targets throughout Lebanon, an air and naval blockade, and a ground invasion of southern Lebanon. Hezbollah launched rockets, including Katyushas, into northern Israel and engaged the Israeli Army in guerrilla warfare.

The conflict killed over 1,500 people, mostly Lebanese civilians, severely damaged Lebanese infrastructure, displaced about one million Lebanese and half a million Israelis, and disrupted normal life across much of Lebanon and northern Israel.

A United Nations-brokered ceasefire went into effect on 14 August 2006. The blockade was ended 8 September.

References

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  34. None (main article link name "military occupation zone"). 1992. {{cite AV media}}: Unknown parameter |distributor= ignored (|publisher= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |producer= ignored (help)
  35. Hezbollah (16 February). "An Open Letter to all the Opressed in Lebanon and the World". Institute for Counter-Terrorism. {{cite web}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Check date values in: |accessdate=, |date=, and |year= / |date= mismatch (help); Missing or empty |url= (help); Text "http://www.ict.org.il/Articles/Hiz_letter.htm" ignored (help)
  36. also spelled Aql Hashem
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  41. Stern, Yoaw (2006). "New film leaves parents in the dark on sons' fate during kidnap". Haaretz. Retrieved 13 September. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |day= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
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  44. "Israel, Hezbollah swap prisoners". CNN. 29 January. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= and |year= / |date= mismatch (help)
  45. Butcher, Tim (17 August). "Lebanese troops will not disarm Hizbollah". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 6 September. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate=, |date=, and |year= / |date= mismatch (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
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  48. "Timeline: Decades of conflict in Lebanon, Israel". CNN. 14 July. Retrieved 16 September. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate=, |date=, and |year= / |date= mismatch (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  49. Mroue, Bassem (26 May). "Islamic Jihad leader killed in Lebanon". Boston Globe. Retrieved 14 August. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate=, |date=, and |year= / |date= mismatch (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  50. Klein, Aaron (29 May). "Syria, Iran directed rocket barrage against Israel". World News Daily. Retrieved 14 August. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate=, |date=, and |year= / |date= mismatch (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  51. Blanford, Nicholas (15 June). "Lebanon exposes deadly Israeli spy ring". The Times UK. Retrieved 14 August. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate=, |date=, and |year= / |date= mismatch (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  52. Harel, Amos (July 13,2006). "Hezbollah kills 8 soldiers, kidnaps two in offensive on northern border". Haaretz. Retrieved 2006-08-13. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  53. "Hezbollah Raid Opens 2nd Front for Israel". The Washington Post. July 13,2006. Retrieved 2006-08-18. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  54. "Let's face it: Israel's refugees (in Hebrew)". Walla News. 2006-08-10. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  55. Pannell, Ian (9 September 2006). "Lebanon breathes after the blockade". BBC News. Retrieved 9 September. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
2006 Lebanon War
Arab–Israeli conflict
  • Countries
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Primary countries
and authorities
Organizations
Active
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Transnational
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Armed engagements
1947–1959
1960–1979
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Diplomacy and peace proposals
Background
1948–1983
1991–2016
2019–present
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