Israel bombards Lebanon, dismisses planned force
Posted on: Monday, 17 July 2006, 09:21 CDT
By Lin Noueihed
BEIRUT (Reuters) - Israel bombarded Lebanon for a sixth day on Monday and dismissed as premature a U.N. proposal for an international peacekeeping force to help end the worst fighting across the Israeli-Lebanese border in more than 20 years.
Israeli warplanes hit coastal targets in the north and south, struck Beirut and damaged homes in the east belonging to members of the Hizbollah guerrilla group, which fired more rockets deep into the Jewish state.
An Israeli army spokesman said some soldiers crossed the border overnight to destroy Hizbollah positions and returned to Israel. "There was a very small incursion overnight to destroy a few Hizbollah positions... That has been done," he said.
Lebanese televisions stations showed burning debris falling over Beirut and said an Israeli plane had been shot down. Israel's Defense Minister Amir Peretz said no jet or helicopter had been lost but an unmanned drone may have been downed.
The fighting, the worst since Israel invaded Lebanon in 1982, was triggered when Hizbollah, which is backed by Syria and Iran and is part of the Lebanese government, seized two Israeli soldiers in a cross-border raid on northern Israel last week.
"I can't believe they are doing all this for two captives. This is just an excuse," said 21-year-old Ali Sharara who fled his home in south Beirut and has been sleeping out in the open with his brother in a city park for the last two nights.
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said Security Council members would start hammering out a detailed agreement on deploying a multilateral security force to south Lebanon.
But the United States gave only a guarded welcome to the proposal and Israel said it was too soon to talk of sending the force. "We're at the stage where we want to be sure that Hizbollah is not deployed at our northern border," government spokeswoman Miri Eisin said.
Army Radio quoted Israel's chief of staff as saying Israel planned to enforce a 1 km (0.5 mile) "security zone" to keep Hizbollah away from the border.
Israel's campaign has killed 181 people, all but 13 of them civilians, and wounded more than 500. It has also destroyed much of Lebanon's civilian infrastructure.
Twenty-four Israelis have been killed in the fighting, including 12 civilians hit in rocket attacks.
ISRAELI STRIKES
Israeli raids on Monday destroyed two army posts on the northern Lebanese coast, killing at least six Lebanese soldiers, and damaged the homes of Hizbollah officials in eastern Lebanon, killing 11 people in more than 60 strikes.
Seven more people died in strikes south of Beirut, including one on a coastal road linking it to the port city of Sidon.
Several thunderous blasts echoed over the capital and black smoke rose from a blazing fuel storage depot. Civilian installations, petrol stations and factories elsewhere were also hit, security sources said.
Beirut's stock market remained closed after falling 14 percent last week on the violence, which has also impacted world currency markets and pushed oil prices to record levels.
The commander-in-chief of Iran's Revolutionary Guards, among Hizbollah's closest allies, said Israel could end the conflict with Lebanon by agreeing to a prisoner swap proposed by the Lebanese guerrilla group.
Israel is demanding the disarming of Hizbollah in line with U.N. Security Council resolutions -- a task that is beyond the fragile Lebanese government.
Lebanon, just emerging from three decades of Syrian tutelage, fears that any attempt to tackle Hizbollah directly would re-ignite civil war and split its army.
Hizbollah launched rocket attacks on Haifa on Sunday, killing eight people in its deadliest strike on Israel.
The group said it fired dozens more rockets at Haifa on Monday. A three-storey building in the city collapsed, wounding two people, medics said. Israel decided to close the port in Haifa after the attacks, the transport ministry said.
France, the United States, Britain and a host of other nations scrambled to evacuate their citizens from Lebanon.
Israel's campaign in Lebanon followed the launch of its offensive in the Gaza Strip on June 28 to try to retrieve another captured soldier and halt Palestinian rocket fire.
Israeli air strikes on Monday flattened the eight-storey Palestinian Foreign Ministry building in Gaza City and gutted the offices of a Hamas-led force in the northern Gaza Strip.
In the occupied West Bank, Palestinian gunmen ambushed a group of Israeli troops, killing one and wounding six others in the old city of Nablus, witnesses and military sources said.
(Additional reporting by Jerusalem bureau, Nadim Ladki, Alaa Shahine and Laila Bassam)
Source: REUTERS
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