Hizbollah seizes two Israeli soldiers, kills 7
Posted on: Wednesday, 12 July 2006, 14:13 CDT
By Alaa Shahine
QASMIYEH, Lebanon (Reuters) - Hizbollah guerrillas captured two Israeli soldiers and killed at least seven on Wednesday, drawing a wave of Israeli air strikes deep into Lebanon that hit 10 bridges and killed two civilians.
Israel described the cross-border attack as an act of war by Lebanon that would draw a "very painful" response.
Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora said his government had not known of the Hizbollah attack and did not endorse it or accept responsibility.
Hizbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah said the soldiers had been seized to force Israel to release prisoners.
"What we did today ... is the only feasible path to free detainees from Israeli jails," he told a news conference in Beirut, proposing indirect negotiations, not confrontation.
He said the operation had been in the works for five months. Hizbollah has made two previous failed attempts to catch Israeli soldiers for a prisoner swap in less than a year.
Two Lebanese civilians were killed in an Israeli air raid on a coastal bridge at Qasmiyeh. Bombs hit nine other bridges and at least 16 Lebanese were wounded, security sources said.
One bridge, at Damour village some 16 km (10 miles) south of Beirut, was hit 12 hours after the first shots were fired. Several suspected Hizbollah posts in south Lebanon also came under Israeli bombardment from the air and land.
Hizbollah's bold attack returned it to the frontline of the Middle East conflict. It inflicted the heaviest losses Israel has suffered on its northern border since it withdrew from south Lebanon in 2000, and drew Prime Minister Ehud Olmert into a second crisis over captured soldiers.
Israel is already engaged in a military offensive in the Gaza Strip after Palestinian militants captured a soldier on June 25.
Israel on Wednesday killed at least 23 Palestinians, including nine members of one family in an air strike that destroyed a house where the army said senior Hamas commanders were meeting.
The White House condemned the Hizbollah attack and blamed Syria and Iran, which both back the Lebanese Shi'ite group.
"We call for immediate and unconditional release of the two soldiers," said spokesman Frederick Jones.
Hamas political bureau member Mohammad Nazzal told Reuters the capture of the two Israeli soldiers was a "heroic operation" and would help a campaign to free 1,000 Palestinians.
Lebanese civilians braced for Israeli bombs, but many Shi'ites in the south expressed defiance. "Israel will pay the price for any retaliation," said Hussein Mohammed, 55.
SWEETS AND FIREWORKS
The sources said the Israeli soldiers had been seized at around 9 a.m. (0600 GMT) across the border from Aita al-Shaab, some 15 km (nine miles) from the Mediterranean coast.
The Israeli army confirmed that two soldiers were captured and at least seven killed on the Lebanese frontier.
Hizbollah supporters set off fire crackers and distributed sweets in the streets of Beirut in celebration.
Israeli troops went into Lebanon to hunt for the missing soldiers, Israeli Army Radio said. Nasrallah said Hizbollah had repelled them, adding that one of its fighters was killed.
Footage on Hizbollah's al-Manar television showed a smouldering Israeli jeep, with a soldier's kit lying beside it. It showed smoke rising from an Israeli border post.
Israeli troops have not struck deep into Lebanon since they left six years ago after an 18-year struggle with Hizbollah.
"It is an act of war by the state of Lebanon," Olmert said of Hizbollah's action.
In 2004, Hizbollah swapped a kidnapped Israeli businessman and the bodies of three soldiers for more than 420 Arab prisoners after German mediation.
Germany said on Wednesday it was contacting Middle Eastern capitals about Hizbollah's Israeli prisoners, but declined to say if it was ready to mediate again.
Olmert called a special cabinet session to discuss further military action.
Hizbollah, the only Lebanese faction to retain its weapons after the 1975-90 civil war, is also a political party with 14 members in the Beirut parliament.
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan led widespread international calls for Hizbollah to free the two Israelis.
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice urged Damascus "to use its influence to support a positive outcome." But Syria said Israeli actions were to blame for guerrilla attacks.
(Additional reporting by Karamallah Daher in Marjayoun, Nidal al-Mughrabi in Gaza, Dan Williams at Kissufim, and by Jerusalem, Paris, Rome and Berlin)
Source: REUTERS
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