Hezbollah
- Hezbollah fired mortar shells in the area in effort to disrupt the rescue of the wounded. The IDF believes that several Hezbollah guerillas were killed in the close-quarter confrontation [2].
IDF
- Israel calls up several reserve army battalions and drops leaflets over southern Lebanese villages warning civilians to leave the area.[30]
- Brigadier-General Alon Friedman, who is in charge of Israeli army operations in the north, said: "It's possible that in the coming days our ground operations will increase.[31]
- The Israeli air force continues to hit targets around Lebanon. More than 300 Lebanese civilians have now been killed in the raids.[32]
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Hezbollah
- Hezbollah launch fewer rockets than on any day since the conflict began. Only 40 rockets reach Israel.[33]
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IDF
- Israeli ground troops move into the village of Maroun al-Ras in south Lebanon and take control. The Israeli army insists that incursions will be limited in scope despite the recall of thousands of reserve troops.[34]
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Hezbollah
- Hezbollah rockets again strike Haifa, wounding several Israelis.[35]
- Israel continues its offensive by hitting communications targets in Lebanon, including a relay station used by several Lebanese television stations.[36]
- Hezbollah fires at least 150 rockets hitting several cities and villages in northern Israel.[37]
- 17 people wounded Saturday as 160 Katyushas land in north; 4 people hurt in strike on Safed home. [38]
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United States
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IDF
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Hezbollah
- 80 rockets fired at northern Israel by late afternoon Sunday (Haaretz)
- Two killed in Katyusha rocket strikes on north [42]
- Carmiel, Acre, Tiberias, Kiryat Shmona also hit; 11 hurt in Haifa, 1 in Carmiel; French Foreign Minister takes cover in Haifa.[43]
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United States
- Condoleezza Rice proposed a first ambitious plan in which international military forces would help the Lebanese government stabilize southern Lebanon, Lebanese political sources said. The plan would involve putting an international force of up to 10,000 Turkish and Egyptian troops under a NATO or U.N. commander into southern Lebanon following a cease-fire, the Lebanese political sources said. Another international force of up to 30,000 troops then would help the Lebanese government regain control over the region, the sources said. Rice presented the plan to Lebanese officials, the sources said, and will show it to European foreign ministers July 26 in Rome, Italy. U.S. and diplomatic sources said Lebanese officials are leaking details of the proposal because they are opposed to many of them. The sources describe the plan as an outline or working proposal and said no one has agreed to it. They also said there are many hurdles to overcome before it could be implemented.[44]
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IDF
- Israel has used artillery-fired cluster munitions in populated areas of Lebanon, Human Rights Watch said. Researchers on the ground in Lebanon confirmed that a cluster munitions attack on the village of Blida on July 19 killed one and wounded at least 12 civilians, including seven children. Human Rights Watch researchers also photographed cluster munitions in the arsenal of Israeli artillery teams on the Israel-Lebanon border. “Cluster munitions are unacceptably inaccurate and unreliable weapons when used around civilians,” said Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch. “They should never be used in populated areas.”
Hezbollah
- Over 140 rockets fired at northern Israel within 24 hours [45]Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah threatened to take the Islamic militia's fight against Israel "beyond Haifa" -- the northern Israeli city that is a frequent target of Hezbollah.[46]In Israel, a Katyusha rocket killed a 15-year-old girl in the village of Meghar, Israeli police and medical service officials said. At least 18 people were injured in the port city of Haifa and one man died of a heart attack after a rocket struck near his home, officials said. About 100 Hezbollah rockets were fired into Israel, striking the cities of Haifa, Karmiel, Qiryat Shemona and Nahariya, according to the IDF. Huge explosions reverberated afternoon through the southern suburbs of Beirut -- a Hezbollah stronghold -- sending smoke billowing through high-rise buildings.[44]
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IDF
- Israeli Defense Forces starts it's attempt to take the southern Lebanese town of Bint Jbeil, which it regarded as a "Hezbollah stronghold." The IDF said it had taken control of the city.[47]
- See also: Battle of Bint Jbeil
- Israeli airstrike kills four UN observers in southern Lebanon.[48] Israel has said the attack was an accident.But U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan contended otherwise.[47]United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan called the strike “apparently deliberate.”[49]An overnight Israeli airstrike hit a house in the village of Nabatiye, killing seven people, Lebanese security sources said. The Israel Defense Forces also said it killed senior Hezbollah commander Abu Jaafar, who Israel says was in charge of the central area of Lebanon's border with Israel. CNN was not able to confirm the report and there has been no confirmation from Hezbollah. The IDF hopes to create a "security zone" in southern Lebanon until an international force arrives, said Israeli Defense Minister Amir Peretz. "If there is not a multinational force that will get in to control the fences, we will continue to control with our fire towards anyone that gets close to the defined security zone and they will know that they can be hurt," he said. Several Israeli strikes hit the Lebanese coastal city of Tyre. There was no official word yet on casualties.[44]
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Israel
- Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said:
"Let it be clear, we will reach everyone, no matter where they are, and we shall not hesitate to take the most severe measures against those aiming thousands of rockets and missiles against innocent civilians, with a single purpose in mind – to kill them. This is something we shall not tolerate."[50]
- At least 41 Israelis have died, including 19 civilians, and at least 388 have been wounded, Israeli officials said.[44]
- Israeli officials agreed during talks with Condoleezza Rice to make it easier to get humanitarian aid into Lebanon, a U.S. State Department official said. Lebanese officials have pleaded with the United States to pressure Israel for an immediate cease-fire, but U.S. officials said conditions are not yet ripe for such a move, and they expect Israeli military operations to continue for another week or even longer.[44]
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United States
- U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice proposed an ambitious plan in which international military forces would help the Lebanese government stabilize southern Lebanon, Lebanese political sources said. Rice pitched the plan to Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert in Jerusalem, then traveled to the West Bank city of Ramallah for talks with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. U.S. Ambassador Jeffrey D. Feltman delivered $30 million in humanitarian aid to Lebanon, which will meet the basic medical needs of 20,000 people, according to an embassy statement. The shipment was handed over to the International Committee of the Red Cross at the U.S. Embassy in Beirut at afternoon. The U.S. announcement followed a U.N. appeal for nearly $150 million in humanitarian aid earlier this week.[44]
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Hezbollah
- Nine IDF soldiers are killed "in the hardest day of fighting in southern Lebanon since the war began"; eight from the Golani Brigade, in the Battle of Bint Jbail, and one from Paratroopers Brigade, in the village of Maroun al-Ras. [51]
- Over 75 rockets fired at Israel during the day; No less than 22 hit within urban areas [52]
- Over 100 rockets hit communities across north; 13 lightly wounded [53]There were heavy casualties among Hezbollah fighters, according to Israeli soldiers. Hezbollah has not released casualty figures since fighting began. Hezbollah fighters launched 102 rockets into Israel in the morning, wounding 18 people, Israeli police said. Twenty-seven of the rockets landed in cities, the police said. CNN learned that Hezbollah isn't the only militia in Lebanon fighting Israeli troops. Officials with the Amal Party, headed by speaker of the Lebanese parliament Nabih Berri, said militias loyal to Berri have been involved in every major battle since fighting began. Amal is a Shiite political and paramilitary organization, like Hezbollah, and fought against Israel in the 1990s during the occupation of southern Lebanon. Eight Amal fighters have been killed in the past three days, during which Berri met with U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to discuss a solution to the crisis.[47]
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United Nations
- The UN Security Council proposed the condemnation of the Israeli attack on the UNIFIL outpost. However, this was prevented by the veto of the U.S..[54]After the July 25 incident, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan called the strike "apparently deliberate," a charge Israel has vehemently denied. Annan said the U.N. wanted to conduct a joint investigation into the deaths along with Israel. But the Security Council statement called only for Israel to take U.N. material into account during its investigation. U.N. officials repeatedly told Israeli commanders to direct their fire away from the post before the observers were killed, Jane Lute, assistant secretary-general for peacekeeping operations, told Security Council members.[55]A U.N. officer said the Israeli military liaison was told 10 times in six hours that aerial attacks were getting close to the bunker manned by the U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon. U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton said Israel was investigating the bombing. "The government of Israel has definitively said that they were not deliberately targeting the UNIFIL outpost," he said. "We certainly take them at their word and note that there's no evidence to the contrary." The international U.N. force in southern Lebanon comprises 2,000 troops -- including 50 military observers -- and 400 civilians. It has been there since 1978 to observe the Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon, maintain security and eventually return authority over the area to the Lebanese government." [47]"
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IDF
- The Israeli military suffered its largest loss of life in its 15-day offensive against Hezbollah guerillas as nine Israeli soldiers were killed while fighting in southern Lebanese towns. Eight soldiers were killed and 22 more were wounded in Bint Jbeil, near the Israeli border, while battling militiamen in what the Israel Defense Forces has called Hezbollah's "terror capital." More troops were being sent to Bint Jbeil. In nearby Maroun al-Ras, an Israeli army officer was killed and five soldiers were wounded in fighting, according to the IDF. On the Mediterranean coast, 10 people were injured in the Lebanese port city of Tyre when Israeli airstrikes destroyed a 10-story building, city officials said. Smoke rose over the city after two large explosions, and people near the building were covered in dust and blood as they fled through the rubble. The blast came just hours after a ship with hundreds of foreigners aboard departed the seaport in Tyre. Residents in Tyre said they were concerned that Israeli airstrikes would intensify after the Westerners left. The ship, chartered by Canada, was bound for Cyprus filled with Americans, Australians, Britons, Canadians and other nationalities. Israeli Maj. Gen. Udi Adam said the building was targeted because "there are launchers [there] that fire missiles at Haifa." Haifa, the third-largest city in Israel, has been the target of numerous air attacks. Adam also told reporters that an end to the fighting may be near. "I assume that it will go on for a few more weeks," he said. "And in a few more weeks, I believe we will be able to put an end to this operation -- a successful end."[47]
- Israeli troops have been involved in fierce ground fighting in Lebanese border towns since entering Maroun al-Ras last week. The goal, according to the IDF, is to push Hezbollah guerillas away from the border and reduce the Islamic militia's capability to launch Katyusha rockets into northern Israel.[47]
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Lebanon
- Since July 12, at least 398 people -- mostly civilians -- have been killed in Israeli strikes, Lebanese sources say. The fighting also has wounded more than 1,400 in Lebanon.[47]
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United States
- Talks in Rome, Italy, floundered after the United States disagreed with European and Arab nations over how to defuse the situation, according to sources in Washington, DC and Jerusalem. The United States has resisted demands for an immediate cease-fire, insisting that a cessation of hostilities must be part of a wider plan to permanently disarm Hezbollah. Arab and European leaders say the violence must stop first. Meanwhile, Israel, which was not invited to participate in the talks, said it hoped "the international community will act immediately to strengthen the Lebanese army" so the army can take charge of southern Lebanon after the talks.[47]
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Lebanon
- Lebanon's Prime Minister Fouad Siniora proposeses a peace-plan at the 15-nation conference in Rome on 27 July.
- See also: Siniora Plan
- Since July 12, at least 405 people -- mostly civilians -- have been killed in Israeli strikes, Lebanese security sources said. The fighting also wounded about 1,660 people the source said.[55]
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IDF
- The Security Cabinet approves the IDF's request to mobilize three reserve divisions (5,000 soldiers per division). [56]
- IDF said it killed 50 millitants in last 2 days.
- Though Haifa has about 300,000 boasts beautiful beaches -- a popular tourist draw -- the sandy expanses along the Mediterranean Sea were virtually empty as well. The city has become a battleground, as Hezbollah continued its rocket assaults on northern Israel and the Israel Defense Forces responded with heavy shelling and aerial attacks, according to a statement from the U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon. The Israeli campaign is aimed at "changing the reality on the northern border," Israeli Defense Minister Amir Peretz said. "Hezbollah must not in the future be what it has been in the past," Peretz said. "This may take time and it may take more force. We have both in plenty." "We will not agree for Hezbollah flags again to fly in our faces on the northern border," he said. On the evening, at least five rockets struck various targets in the northern Israeli town of Qiryat Shemona, causing several fires. A Katyusha rocket caused a major blaze at the warehouse of a laundry detergent factory, the IDF said. Some of the rockets landed near a shopping center. The IDF said the Israeli death toll is 50 -- 19 of them civilians. The fighting also wounded about 300 civilians in Israel, the source said.[55]
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Hezbollah
- The Israeli military and Hezbollah fighters exchanged heavy fire around three border towns in southern Lebanon as rockets rained on northern Israel, much of which appears to be nearly deserted. Aerial footage of the region showed sparsely populated highways and minimal activity. In Haifa, Israel's third-largest city, abandoned warehouses, factories and garages dotted the landscape, and there were no cargo ships in the normally bustling port. Earlier i nthe day, Hezbollah fired dozens of rockets that fell in fields near Safed, Karmiel, Maalot and Shlomi in northern Israel, the IDF said.[55]
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United Nations
- The IDF has concentrated most of its attacks around the border communities of Maroun al-Ras, Bint Jbeil and Yarun, UNIFIL said. Diplomatic sources said at least four countries had offered to participate in a possible multinational peacekeeping force in Lebanon. France, Italy, Turkey and Norway indicated a willingness to participate if a cease-fire can first be brokered, according to diplomatic sources familiar with discussions at July 26 emergency summit in Rome.[55]
- The U.N. Security Council released a statement saying it was "deeply shocked and distressed" by the Israeli airstrikes that struck a U.N. bunker earlier this week, killing four peacekeepers. Troops from Finland, Canada, China and Austria died after the strike in Khiam, U.N. officials said. All four were members of the U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon, a French-led observer mission on the Israeli-Lebanese border. Security Council members met for hours, but were initially unable to come to a consensus on the statement's wording. Diplomatic sources said the main holdout was the U.S., which had problems with the statement's harshness toward Israel. After the 15 member countries agreed to the resolution, Chinese Ambassador Wang Guangya called the statement "watered-down" and "the minimum the Security Council can do under the circumstances."[55]
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Israel
- Israel decided not to expand its military offensive in Lebanon, but will call up troops to bolster its fight against Hezbollah. Three additional reserve divisions, totaling 30,000 troops, would be called up, according to The New York Times.[55]
- Israeli Ambassador to the U.N. Dan Gillerman said, however, that the statement was "fair and balanced," and reiterated his claim that Israel has been "very cautious" in choosing its targets in Lebanon. "This is a war which is going on," he said. "War is an ugly thing, and during war, mistakes and tragedies do happen."[55]
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Al-Qaeda
- Al-Qaeda's second in command pledged that the terror group would not "stay silent" on the conflict in southern Lebanon and called for "jihad" on Israel.[55]
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Hezbollah
- Hezbollah fires a new rocket, the Khaibar-1 at Afula. [57]
- The West Galilee Hospital at Nahariya was damaged by a rocket of Hezbollah. [58]Hezbollah guerillas launched their most potentially destructive rockets yet, reaching as far into Israel as they have at any point so far in the conflict, according to Israeli police. Three missiles carrying 100 kilograms (220 pounds) each of explosives -- nearly five-times the explosives in the standard Hezbollah missile, the Katyusha rocket -- were fired toward the town of Afula, the police said.[46]Powerful maybe like a Fajr-5 rocket.[59]Afula is 44 miles southeast of Haifa and is just a few miles north of the West Bank. The rockets hit empty fields, causing no casualties, police said. On the group's television network, Al-Manar, Hezbollah said it fired a new, longer-range rocket called a Khaybar-1. It was not clear what the rocket's full capabilities are. In all, at least five Hezbollah rockets landed near Afula, police said. It was unclear if the other two were Katyushas. During the conflict, Hezbollah has relied mostly on Russian-designed, highly mobile Katyusha rockets. They pack 22 kilograms (49 pounds) of explosives and have hit Afula in the past. The Israeli military did not know what the other rockets were and said only that they were not Iranian-made Zilzals, which have a longer range than Katyushas. Hezbollah has not officially released any casualty figures, but Israeli military sources estimated about 200 Hezbollah fighters have been killed since July 12.[46]
- The Mehr news agency in Iran said Ali Larijani, secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council, was in Damascus for meetings on the crisis, but gave no other details. Furthermore, Iran‘s state news agency confirmed Hezbollah Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah’s presence in Damascus. Although Hezbollah has received significant Iranian assistance in the past, Iranian officials denied assisting Hezbollah in the current conflict.[60]
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Israel
- Israeli officials said that 51 Israelis -- 33 soldiers and 19 civilians -- have died and 1,233 Israelis -- 110 soldiers and 1,123 civilians -- have been wounded in the fighting began between Hezbollah forces and Israel. Despite the intense fighting, the Israeli government said it was not planning to send thousands of troops into Lebanon to fall into a possible militant trap. "Israel is going to do it at our own pace, at our own time, to make sure that when we go in, we go in carefully, and that we don't walk into their booby traps," Israeli government spokeswoman Miri Eisin said. "We want to stop the rocket fire, but we also want to make sure that Hezbollah will not be there afterward." Since Israel left Lebanon in 2000, Hezbollah has built up the area around Bint Jbeil in southern Lebanon, according to Eisin. "Not only [do they have] a terrorist army, but they are sort of waiting for us to come in," she said. "They have booby-trapped the entire area. They want us to walk into those booby traps."[46]
- In Israel, there was disagreement between Mossad intelligence which says Hezbollah will be able to continue fighting at the current level for a long time and military intelligence which believes Hezbollah has been severely damaged.[61] Other scholars have also questioned the Israeli reliance on air power.[62]
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United Nations
- Aid agencies say they are finding it impossible to get food and medicines safely into the region. U.N. Emergency Relief Coordinator Jan Egeland said he is pushing for a 72-hour cease-fire so humanitarian aid can be delivered safely to Israel, Lebanon and Gaza. The IDF said it is willing to allow safe passage for aid and evacuation convoys with 48 hours notice, Egeland said. Also in southern Lebanon, the United Nations is removing unarmed observers from two outposts along the Israeli-Lebanese border as a protective measure, U.N. officials said. The move comes after Israeli airstrikes struck a separate U.N. observer outpost earlier in the week, killing four peacekeepers. The Israeli government expressed regret and said it is investigating.[46]
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United States
- President Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair called for an international force to be sent to Lebanon to help ease the Mideast crisis. After talks at the White House, Bush told reporters that the two leaders "agree that a multinational force must be dispatched to Lebanon quickly." U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice will return to the region July 29 to resume her diplomatic efforts there. France, Italy and Turkey have said they will participate in the international force, and Norway and Sweden have said they are "positive" about the prospect, but have yet to commit. The United States also evacuated about 500 more Americans from Beirut on a cruise ship, the AP said. About 15,000 U.S. citizens have left the war-torn country, according to the AP.[46]
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European Union
- The European Union said it had finished evacuating most of its 20,000 citizens from Lebanon, according to the Associated Press. However, a "few hundred" people remained trapped in southern Lebanon, the EU told the AP.[46]
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IDF
- So far, only the officers of the three divisions of reserves, authorized August 27, have put on their uniforms and begun to train for possible military action, military sources said. In the airstrikes on southern Lebanon, Israeli warplanes hit rocket launchers, structures, tunnels, a gas station and a base in the Bekaa Valley where the Israel Defense Forces said Hezbollah launched long-range missiles. Israeli airstrikes near Nabatiye killed three people and wounded nine, including four children, AP reported, citing Lebanese security officials. The raid apparently targeted an apartment belonging to a Hezbollah activist, according to the AP. Near Naqoura, also in southern Lebanon, two civilians and a journalist were slightly wounded when their convoy was struck, according to a BBC cameraman who was traveling with the convoy. It was unclear whether Israeli or Hezbollah fire hit the convoy, which had been organized to help civilians escape the fighting.[46]
- The IDF reported that 26 gunmen were killed in clashes near the southern Lebanon town of Maroun Al Ras, Bint Jbeil and Eitaroun. Shelling was also conducted on Sour in addition to areas in Al Biqa plains, 14 Lebanese fatalities were reported.[63]
- Lebanese officials reported that Israel conducted over 130 air raids (killing 13) while an Israeli police spokesman said that Hezbollah fired 97 rockets into Northern Israel (wounding 3). [64]
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IDF
- IDF withdraws from the town of Bint Jbeil. [65] And were searching for pockets of resistance.[66]
- See also: Battle of Bint Jbeil
- Israel Defense Forces killed two Islamic Jihad militants in the West Bank, one of whom was the head of the group's military wing, according to Palestinian sources. The IDF did not confirm the report, but said that a gunman was killed in a gunfight near Nablus. The deaths come the day after the IDF reported that it had arrested 22 "wanted Palestinians" in the West Bank on July 27. Two Israeli airstrikes prompted the main border crossing between Lebanon and Syria to close, Lebanese army sources said. Israeli strikes have already left roads leading to the crossing badly damaged.[66]
- There were IDF missile attacks around the area of Al Safeer, in the Al Dahia Al Janoubiyya area of Beirut, and shelling of the Jarhou’ area in southern Lebanon. North of Beirut IDF shelling destroyed the Al Assy Bridge. Shelling attacks were also made against Jabal Abu Rashid, Borka, Jbour and Al Nahry in Al Biqa plains. Sahl Al Khiyam, in Marj Oyoun area, in southern Lebanon were also shelled with artillery as well as Al Tayba and Markaba villages. The area around Sour city and outlying villages was also shelled. An IDF spokeswoman said that the IDF had attacked 51 targets overnight and at dawn, destroying 37 buildings used by Hezbollah.[67]The Israeli Air Force carried out 60 airstrikes overnight on Hezbollah locations and structures as assaults between the Lebanese militant group and the Israeli military entered their 18th day, the Israel Defense Forces said. Targets struck by the IDF were located chiefly in southern Lebanon and included 37 Hezbollah warehouses and locations, roads, bridges and cars, the IDF said.[46]
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United Nations
- Diplomatic efforts to halt the violence in Lebanon continued in Jerusalem. U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice dined with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert at night, according to the U.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv. Hours earlier, Israel rejected a U.N. call for a three-day cease-fire. It has not been announced if Rice would travel to Beirut to meet with Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora, and Rice has said she doesn't plan on taking a comprehensive proposal to the region. "I don't expect to present somebody with a 'here are the five points you must accept,' " she said. "This has got to be some give and take. This is difficult." U.S. officials and diplomatic sources involved in the negotiations said Rice's goal is to merge various proposals for ending the fighting into a comprehensive package agreed to by Israel and Lebanon and enshrined in a United Nations resolution. The U.S.-endorsed plan would require Lebanon to deploy its army with the help of an international peacekeeping force and agree to call for Hezbollah to disarm, with its military wing ultimately integrating into the Lebanese army. This would all need to happen before an official cease-fire could be declared. In return, Israel would resolve the issue of the disputed Shebaa Farms territory with Lebanon.[66]
- The U.N. Security Council will begin debating a resolution this week spelling out the way ahead. Later in the week, August 3, Rice will attend a ministerial meeting of council members to finalize language on the text. Rice said she has only read news reports about the Lebanese government proposal -- to which Hezbollah had agreed in principle with some reservations -- but it appeared to have "some very good elements." She called it a "positive step." France circulated a draft U.N. Security Council resolution calling for an immediate cessation of hostilities in the Mideast and laying the foundation for the deployment of a multi-national force aimed at supporting the Lebanese army in disarming Hezbollah, according to diplomatic sources.[66]
- The United Nations' appeal for the cease-fire came from its emergency relief coordinator Jan Egeland "so that we can evacuate wounded, evacuate children, evacuate the elderly and the disabled from the crossfire in Lebanon." A third of the people killed in Lebanon have been children, he said.[66]
- Two U.N. peacekeepers from the Indian battalion were wounded at afternoon when an aerial bomb detonated near them in south Lebanon, said a spokesman for the U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon. Their observation tower was damaged, UNIFIL added. UNIFIL had earlier reported Israeli and Hezbollah fire near its positions on both sides of the border and said it "strongly protested all these incidents to the Israeli and Lebanese authorities." An Israeli attack on another U.N. observation post killed four U.N. observers July 25.[66]
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Hezbollah
- Hezbollah has said it will not disarm until Israeli troops leave the disputed region near the Syrian border, which the U.N. recognizes as Syrian territory. Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah said, in a speech aired on his group's Al-Manar TV station, that Israel had been counting on a victory to secure a political solution but has failed. "It's clear ... that the Zionist enemy has not been able to reach a military victory. I'm not saying that. They said that. The whole world is saying that," he said. Nasrallah also said Rice's return to the region was to impose the will of the United States on the Middle East. "Rice comes back to the region to try to impose its conditions again on Lebanon -- serving in its new Middle East and serving Israel," he said.[66]
- As of 3:30 p.m. (8:30 a.m. ET), 39 rockets had landed in northern Israel, six inside the cities of Acre, Tiberias, Nahariya and Safed, wounding five people.[66]
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Lebanon
- Since July 12, Lebanese Internal Security Forces said that 421 people have been killed and 1,661 have been wounded in Lebanon. A Turkish warship with dialysis equipment arrived at the Port of Beirut, as did a U.S. warship with blankets, tarpaulins and medical equipment.[66]
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Israel
- In Israel, 52 people have been killed, more than half of them soldiers, and more than 1,200 have been wounded, according to Israeli officials.[66]
- Israeli government spokesman Avi Pazner said Israel rejects a temporary cease-fire for getting civilians out of southern Lebanon. "There is no need for a 72-hour temporary cease-fire because Israel has opened a humanitarian corridor to and from Lebanon," Pazner told reporters.[66]
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United States
- The U.S. plan is similar to one proposed this week by Siniora and endorsed July 28 by his Cabinet, including the Hezbollah ministers. Siniora's proposal includes strengthening the existing United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon in south Lebanon and deploying the Lebanese army to the area. Both plans call for Israel to agree on a prisoner exchange for the release of the Israelis soldiers kidnapped by Hezbollah and to resolve the issue of the disputed Shebaa Farms territory. But two major sticking points remain. Lebanon, as well as Arab and European states say a cease-fire must take place before the rest of the deal can be implemented, while the U.S. and Israel insist the force must be in place, the Lebanese army must be deployed and efforts must be under way to disarm Hezbollah before an official cease-fire can be declared. The composition and mandate of the international force is also a thorny issue. The U.S. and Israel would prefer a European force, while Lebanon wants to expand the existing UNIFIL force. And it remains unclear whether the force would have the authority to fight against Hezbollah.[66]
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IDF
- IAF airstrike of a three-story building in Qana, Southern Lebanon, kills 28 people, including 16 children, hiding in its bombshelter. 13 people were reported missing.[68] As a result, Israel announces its intention to severely restrict further airstrikes for a 48-hour period beginning 2 am July 31, 2006. Previously, it was estimated that 56 people died, 34 of them children.[3]
- See also: 2006 Qana airstrike
- Qana, 10 miles east of the southern Lebanese coastal city of Tyre, was the location of an attack by Israeli forces 10 years ago in which more than 100 Lebanese refugees were killed.[69]
- Twenty-four rockets landed in Akko, Nahariya, Qiryat Shemona, Metula and in the upper part of the Galilee, police said. Also, the Israeli military confirmed that its troops had moved into areas of southeast Lebanon -- Kfar Kela and Odayse -- as part of an operation to control the area between the Israeli border town of Metula, in Israel's northeast, and Tyre. Also, Israeli Defense Forces said its ground troops were operating in the border village of Taiba in southeastern Lebanon, an area Israel said Hezbollah uses to launch rockets. Troops have killed at least three Hezbollah militants and found stockpiles of rocket-propelled grenades, anti-tank missiles, a cannon with shells and a machine gun, the IDF said. Four Israeli soldiers were injured when an anti-tank rocket hit their tank in southern Lebanon, an Israeli military spokesman said.[69]Under cover of artillery strikes IDF ground troops pushed towards the village of Adisa. The IDF said the village was being used as a launching site for rocket attacks. One IDF soldier was shot and wounded near Adisa and IDF jets bombed unreported targets in Khiyam.[70]Fire from Regular Lebanese Army in Yammouni was reported against IDF Choppers attempting to land in the area. The Lebanese dispersed following airstrikes by IDF.[71]
- In a separate incident, an Israeli missile hit a house between Gaza City and Jabaliya early in the day, injuring two people. The house was destroyed and nearby residences were damaged, Palestinian sources said. The house belonged to a family with a son in Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade, a militant group linked to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah Party. The IDF did not confirm the report but said it had struck a building used by Hamas in Gaza City.[66]
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Hezbollah
- A record 156 rockets hit Israel. [72]In Israel, police officials said 134 Hezbollah rockets slammed into the Jewish state. Officials reported 48 injuries, one of them serious.[69]
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United States
- Senior U.S. State Department officials said Condoleezza Rice will leave Jerusalem for Washington July 31 to negotiate a draft resolution to present to the Security Council this week aimed at bringing a halt to the crisis. George W. Bush said the United States is resolved to work with members of the Security Council to draw up "a resolution that will enable the region to have a sustainable peace," he said.[69]
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Israel
- Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's office told Rice that Israel needed 10 to 14 more days to complete its mission against Hezbollah militia.[69]
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IDF
- Israel Air Force continues airstrikes in support of ground forces in southern Lebanon, but refrains from attacks elsewhere in accordance with its stated 48-hour period of restraint.
- The Israeli military and Hezbollah forces started engagement in the town of Ayta al-Sha`b in southern Lebanon.
- See also: Battle of Ayta al-Sha`b
- Reuters, quoting Israel Radio, reported 15,000 reservists would be called up, but it is not clear whether those troops are the ones already authorized or extra troops. Clashes with Hezbollah have left 33 Israeli troops dead, IDF said. Hezbollah's casualties were not known.[73]
- The Israeli army said strikes near the Lebanese village of Tayba were meant to protect ground forces operating in the border area and were not aimed at specific targets. The Israeli military expressed regret that one of the strikes hit a Lebanese military vehicle outside Tyre, Lebanon. The Israel Defense Forces said it was unclear how many people were killed. Earlier, a senior Lebanese Interior Ministry official said the airstrike killed an aide to a Lebanese general and wounded three soldiers. The general survived the attack, the official said. The IDF said it thought the car was carrying a senior Hezbollah militant involved in directing rocket fire on Israel. Earlier, the IDF said its aircraft fired on open fields surrounding its ground forces in the Tayba area. Three Israeli soldiers in the area suffered minor injuries after Hezbollah fighters hit their tank with a missile, an Israeli army spokesman said.[73]The towns of Al-Awayda area, Kafr Shuba' and Kafr Hamam were also hit with IDF artillery strikes.[74]
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Hezbollah
- Hezbollah also holds its fire, with "the Israeli Army counting only three mortar shells landing in Israel ... and no rockets." [75] at least three in Haifa, wounding six people.
- Hezbollah's Al-Manar television station claimed Hezbollah missiles hit an Israeli warship. An Israeli security source said no Israeli vessel had been hit, according to Reuters news service. Reuters also reported that Hezbollah said the attack was retaliation for August 30 bombing of Qana, Lebanon, that killed at least 54 civilians. The airstrike -- which killed many children and sparked international outrage -- threatened to derail work toward a resolution in the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah guerrillas.[73]
- Two Hezbollah rockets hit in an open area of the northern Israeli town of Kiryat Shmona, but no casualties were reported, Israeli police officials said. The firings marked the first Hezbollah rocket attacks into northern Israel from southern Lebanon in a day. Hezbollah has responded by firing scores of rockets a day into northern Israel, killing at least 18 Israeli civilians, according to IDF.[73]
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United Nations
- At the United Nations, a Security Council meeting on planning for a new peacekeeping force had been delayed "until there is more political clarity" on the path ahead in the Middle East conflict, Reuters news agency reported. U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan had called the meeting July 28, but the world's major powers have said no force can be put in place until fighting stops and Israel, Lebanon and Hezbollah agree to its deployment, Reuters reported.[73]
- Teams from the Red Cross and United Nations arrived in the southern Lebanese town of Bint Jbeil to survey the damage and evacuate residents, a day after heavy fighting reduced much of the area to rubble.[73]
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United States
- President Bush said there could be no cease-fire until Hezbollah was reined in and international borders respected, reiterating the U.S. stance on the conflict. Bush, speaking in Florida, said Israel had the right to defend itself and called on Iran and Syria to stop aiding Hezbollah. "Iran must end its financial support and supply of weapons to terrorist groups like Hezbollah," Bush said. "Syria must end its support for terror and respect the sovereignty of Lebanon." U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, speaking earlier, said she believed a resolution to the crisis could be reached this week.[73]
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Israel
- Israel has called the Qana airstrike a tragic mistake, and Ehud Olmert apologized for the pain the Lebanese people have endured. But he added, "We are fighting terrorists who know no bounds." In his speech today, he said Hezbollah has suffered a "heavy blow" in the fighting. Israeli troops and airstrikes have inflicted serious damage to Hezbollah's capacity to launch rockets into Israel, and its supply routes from Syria have been hampered, he said. "We will stop the war when the [rocket] threat is removed ..., our captive soldiers return home in peace, and you are able to live in safety and security." "We are paying a very precious and almost unbearable price in terms of loss of life, major damage to public and private property and tranquility -- and we're not prepared to give up our right to live perfectly ordinary lives, which are not subject to terrorism and hate and fanaticism," Olmert said.[73]
- Dan Gillerman, the Israeli ambassador to the United Nations, said he was "not really worried" by todays Syrian declaration.[73]
- In New York, Olmert's deputy, Shimon Peres, said Israel's problem is with Hezbollah's Syrian and Iranian backers, not Lebanon. "Though Hezbollah is a Lebanese body, they don't serve any Lebanese purpose," he said. Their purpose, he said, is to "make Lebanon part of the sphere of influence of Iran."[73]
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Syria
- Syrian President Bashar al-Assad directed his country's military to heighten its readiness, vowing to back Lebanese resistance against Israel, the state news agency SANA reported.[73]
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Lebanon
- Israeli airstrikes and artillery have pounded Lebanon since then, leaving nearly 500 people dead, Lebanese Internal Security Forces said.[73]
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[edit] References
- ^ "Report of the Secretary-General on the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (For the period from 21 January 2006 to 18 July 2006)", United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon, July 21, 2006.
- ^ a b "Day-by-day: Lebanon crisis - week one", BBC, 2006-07-19. Retrieved on 2006-07-23.
- ^ a b "IDF retrieves bodies of four tank soldiers killed in south Lebanon", Haaretz, 2006-07-14. Retrieved on 2006-07-16.
- ^ "Lebanon - UNIFIL - Background", United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon. Retrieved on September 22, 2006.
- ^ "Israel battles militants on two fronts", Reuters, July 12, 2006.
- ^ "Beirut power station bombed", Herald Sun, 2006-07-14. Retrieved on 2006-07-16.
- ^ "Woman killed in Hizbullah attack in Nahariya", Jerusalem Post, 2006-07-13.
- ^ "Olmert orders new Lebanon strikes", BBC, 2006-07-14.
- ^ "Ahmadinejad: Israel would not dare to move against Iran", Haaretz, 2006-07-14.
- ^ "Syria says fully backs Hizbollah against Israel", Reuters, 2006-07-15. Retrieved on 2006-07-15.
- ^ "Israel continues bombing", Reuters, 2006-07-15. Retrieved on 2006-07-16.
- ^ "Israel kills 35 civilians in strikes on Lebanon", Reuters, 2006-07-15. Retrieved on 2006-07-16.
- ^ "Hezbollah Rockets Reach Deeper Into Israel".
- ^ "Canadian Family Dies in Attack".
- ^ "Israel pummels Lebanon after Haifa strike".
- ^ "Israeli Forces Kill 17 in Lebanon Attacks".
- ^ "Israel Briefly Sends Troops Into Lebanon", WRAL, 2006-07-17. Retrieved on 2006-07-17.
- ^ "Annan, Blair call for Mideast 'stabilization force'".
- ^ "Swiss join exodus from Lebanon".
- ^ "2 wounded in Hezbollah strike on Haifa", The News-Sentinel, 2006-07-17.
- ^ "Israel hammers at Lebanese infrastructure", The Associated Press.
- ^ "The peculiar story of a shrinking speech", YNetNews.com.
- ^ "Montreal's Lebanese reacts", The Globe and Mail, 2006-07-14. Retrieved on 2006-07-17.
- ^ "Israel supporters, protesters rally at U.N.", The Journal News, 2006-07-18.
- ^ "Timeline: Crisis in Lebanon", Aljazeera, 2006-07-26. Retrieved on 2006-07-26. (in English)
- ^ "Timeline: Crisis in Lebanon", Aljazeera, 2006-07-26. Retrieved on 2006-07-26. (in English)
- ^ "UN seeks international force for Lebanon", Aljazeera, 2006-07-18. Retrieved on 2006-07-26. (in English)
- ^ "Hezbollah leader apologizes for attack's child victims", CNN, 2006-07-21. Retrieved on 2006-07-27. (in English)
- ^ "Israeli troops mass on Lebanon border", Cable News Network LP, LLLP.. Retrieved on 2006-07-26. (in English)
- ^ "Israel calls up thousands of reservists", Aljazeera, 2006-07-22. Retrieved on 2006-07-22. (in English)
- ^ "Israel calls up thousands of reservists", Aljazeera, 2006-07-22. Retrieved on 2006-07-26. (in English)
- ^ Nasser, Cilina. "A drive through the rubble", Aljazeera, 2006-07-21. Retrieved on 2006-07-26. (in English)
- ^ Brandon, James. "Israelis in the mood for war", Aljazeera, 2996-07-11. Retrieved on 2006-07-27. (in English)
- ^ "Israeli troops seize Labanese village", Aljazeera, 2006-07-23. Retrieved on 2006-07-26. (in English)
- ^ "Israeli troops seize Labanese village", Aljazeera, 2006-07-23. Retrieved on 2006-07-26. (in English)
- ^ "Israeli troops seize Labanese village", Aljazeera, 2006-07-23. Retrieved on 2006-07-26. (in English)
- ^ "Israeli troops seize Labanese village", Aljazeera, 2006-07-23. Retrieved on 2006-07-26. (in English)
- ^ "Two killed in Katyusha rocket strikes on Haifa", Haaretz, 2006-07-23. Retrieved on 2006-07-26. (in English)
- ^ "Bush 'rushes bombs to Israel'", Aljazeera, 2006-07-23. Retrieved on 2006-07-26. (in English)
- ^ "U.S. Speeds Up Bomb Delivery for the Israelis", The New York Times Company, 2005-07-22. Retrieved on 2006-07-27. (in English)
- ^ "Rice sees bombs as birth pangs", Aljazeera, 2006-07-23. Retrieved on 2006-07-26. (in English)
- ^ "Two killed in rocket strikes on Haifa; city comes under repeated fire", Haaretz, 2006-07-24. Retrieved on 2006-07-27. (in English)
- ^ "Two killed in rocket strikes on Haifa; city comes under repeated fire", Haaretz, 2006-07-24. Retrieved on 2006-07-27. (in English)
- ^ a b c d e f "U.N.: Israeli airstrike hits U.N. observer post", CNN, 2006-07-25.
- ^ "За сутки "Хизбалла" выпустила по Израилю около 150 ракет", Newsru.co.il, 2006-07. Retrieved on 2006-07-27. (in Russian)
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "Israel: Hezbollah has new, powerful missile", CNN, 2006-07-28.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "Israeli troops suffer largest one-day loss", CNN, 2006-07-26.
- ^ "Israeli airstrike kills four UN observers in southern Lebanon", Euskal Irrati Telebista (EiTB), 2006-07-26. Retrieved on 2006-07-26.,
- ^ "Bomb flattens U.N. post", Star News Services, Kansas City Star, 2006-07-26. Retrieved on 2006-07-26. (in English)
- See also: Attacks on United Nations personnel in the 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict
- ^ "The peculiar story of a shrinking speech", YNetNews.com.
- ^ "3 reserve divisions to start training after call-up okayed", Haaretz.com, 2006-07. Retrieved on 2006-07-27. (in English)
- ^ "В течение дня по Израилю были выпущены 75 ракет из Ливана", Newsru.co.il, 2006-07. Retrieved on 2006-07-27. (in Russian)
- ^ "Katyushas hit communities across north; 13 lightly wounded", Haaretz.com, 2006-07. Retrieved on 2006-07-27. (in English)
- ^ "US veto condemnation of Israeli attack on UNIFIL outpost", arabmonitor.info, 2006-07-27. Retrieved on 2006-07-28. (in English)
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "Border battles flare amid rocket attacks", CNN, 2006-07-27.
- ^ "3 reserve divisions to start training after call-up okayed", Haaretz.com, 2006-07. Retrieved on 2006-07-27. (in English)
- ^ "Israel, Hezbollah Continue to Trade Attacks", Fox News, July 28, 2006
- ^ "As patients stay safe underground, a doctor takes stock of rocket's toll", Boston Globe, August 3, 2006
- ^ "Army shells several areas in southern Lebanon", IMEMC & Agencies, 2006-07-29.
- ^ "Iran denies giving aid to Hizbullah", Jerusalem POst, 2006-07-28. Retrieved on 006-07-28.
- ^ "IAF takes out launcher used to fire missiles at Afula area", Haaretz, 2006-07-28. Retrieved on 006-07-28.
- ^ "Israel against Hezbollah: Air Power Won't Do It", Brookings Institution, 2006-07-25. Retrieved on 006-07-25.
- ^ "Army shells several areas in southern Lebanon", IMEMC & Agencies, 2006-07-29.
- ^ "Hezbollah strikes deep into Israel", Al Jazeera, 2006-07-28. Retrieved on 006-07-28.
- ^ "Israelis pull back from Hezbollah target", Associated Press, 2006-07-14. Retrieved on 2006-07-29.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Source: Islamic Jihad leader killed", CNN, 2006-07-29.
- ^ "Army shells several areas in southern Lebanon", IMEMC & Agencies, 2006-07-29.
- ^ "Israel/Lebanon: Qana Death Toll at 28 August 2, 2006 Human Rights Watch", 2006-08-02. Retrieved on 2006-08-02.
- ^ a b c d e "Israel halts airstrikes for 48 hours", CNN, 2006-07-30.
- ^ "Fresh ground assault on Hizbullah villages", The Guardian, 2006-07-31.
- ^ "Lebanese army stops Israeli helicopters landing", Reuters, 2006-07-30.
- ^ "WRAPUP 16-Israel raid kills more than 60, Lebanon shuns Rice=Reuters news", 2006-07-30. Retrieved on 2006-07-30.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Israel OKs expansion of Lebanon campaign", CNN, 2006-07-31.
- ^ "Israeli strikes resume after brief lull", Houston Chronicle, 2006-07-31.
- ^ "Israel Pushes On Despite Agreeing to Airstrike Lull", New York Times, August 1, 2006
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