Lebanon Invades Lebanon

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<font size="5"><center>New fight rips at a fragile Lebanon</font size>
<font size="4">In the worst internal violence since the 1975-90 civil war,
at least 71 people have been killed in a Lebanese Army
battle with Islamic militants. </font size></center>


By Nicholas Blanford,Correspondent
The Christian Science Monitor
May 21, 2007

NEAR NAHR AL-BARED PALESTINIAN REFUGEE CAMP, Lebanon - The Lebanese Army continued to shell this refugee camp just north of Tripoli on Monday in the second day of its fight against a shadowy Islamic faction known as Fatah al-Islam.

The violence, the worst internal strife since the 1975-90 civil war, began early Sunday when Palestinian militants stormed the entrance of the seaside camp, home to 40,000 refugees, and overran Army positions. At least 71 people have been killed.

Lebanon may be confronting a prolonged siege with the group, which some say is linked to Al Qaeda. But it is also facing a larger battle as its fragile government struggles to maintain power in the wake of last summer's war and battles an opposition movement led by Syrian-backed Hizbullah.

In divided Lebanon, many have contradictory views of the true identity of Fatah al-Islam, which declared its existence late last year when it split from Fatah al-Intifada, a pro-Damascus Palestinian faction, and seized two of its bases in the seaside Nahr al-Bared camp. Is it an affiliate of Al Qaeda or a tool of Syrian military intelligence – or both?

The Lebanese government has vowed to crush the group once and for all, but says it will continue to abide by a longstanding agreement that prevents the state from entering Lebanon's 12 established Palestinian refugee camps.

"We have hermetically sealed them inside Nahr al-Bared, and we will use political and popular means and the Army to get rid of Fatah al-Islam," says Marwan Hamade, minister of telecommunications and leading anti-Syrian politician.

Palestinian factions have offered their support for the government's moves and have undertaken precautions to prevent any fighting in other refugee camps.

Fatah al-Islam is viewed with deep suspicion by other more moderate Palestinian groups, which should help ensure that the violence in Nahr al-Bared remains localized, analysts say.

After members of the group stormed the Army posts on Sunday, other militants deployed in central Tripoli to assist allies, some wanted by the Lebanese authorities on suspicion of carrying out a bank robbery a day earlier in the coastal town of Amioun, south of Tripoli.

Hundreds of Army reinforcements converged on Tripoli as a series of street battles broke out with the heavily armed militants.

Further fraying the nerves of the Lebanese, a large bomb exploded in a car park in eastern Beirut, killing one woman and wounding 12 on Sunday.

The government and its supporters in the anti-Syrian March 14 alliance accuse Syria of triggering the upsurge of violence. They say it's a Syrian reaction to the imminent adoption by the United Nations Security Council of an international tribunal to judge the killers of Rafik Hariri, a former Lebanese prime minister whose murder in February 2005 is widely blamed on Damascus.

Syria has denied any involvement in Mr. Hariri's death.

The tribunal lies at the heart of the six-month political crisis in Lebanon that has left the country politically and economically deadlocked.

The creation of the tribunal, the result of an agreement between the UN and the Lebanese government, depended on the formal approval of the Lebanese parliament. But Nabih Berri, Lebanon's parliamentary speaker, has refused to have a parliamentary session to allow a vote to proceed. Last week, Prime Minister Fouad Siniora asked the UN Security Council to push the tribunal through. The UN Security Council can bypass Lebanese parliamentary approval by adopting the tribunal under Chapter 7 of the UN charter.

The government says it believes that once the tribunal is a fait accompli, the pro-Syrian Lebanese opposition will agree to resolve other outstanding issues.

"Some are worried that if the tribunal comes in then bad things will happen to the country," says Mohammed Chatah, senior adviser to Siniora. "But we take the view that decoupling the international tribunal from other strategic issues in Lebanon will allow for progress in resolving these other issues."

But that may be wishful thinking, analysts say, pointing to the violence in north Lebanon and the bomb attack in Beirut.

Anti-Syrian politicians maintain that Fatah al-Islam is composed of Al Qaeda-linked militants and is controlled by Syrian military intelligence to carry out destabilizing acts in Lebanon.

"Palestinian Islamist groups in Lebanon have always had ties to Syrian intelligence. Many of them were trained in Syria and fought in Iraq before coming to Lebanon," says Radwan al-Sayyed, a professor of Islamic law and an adviser to Mr. Siniora.

The group has been accused of a double bus bombing in the Christian town of Ain Alaq in February that left three people dead. It has also been accused of several bank robberies, including Saturday's robbery in Amioun.

The group's leader, Shaker al-Absi, told the New York Times in March he wanted to spread Al Qaeda's message and was training fighters in the camp. He was in custody in Syria until last fall but had been released.

Fatah al-Islam declared itself last year when it split from Fatah al-Intifada, a pro-Damascus Palestinian faction, and seized two of its bases in the Nahr al-Bared camp.

Mr. Absi, a veteran Palestinian fighter who fought in Iraq alongside Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, says the group has nothing to do with Syrian intelligence and is devoted to the Palestinian cause.

According to Islamist sources in Tripoli, the group is receiving funds from supporters in the city who belong to the austere Salafi branch of Sunni Islam. Fatah al-Islam has been using the funds to build a base of popular support in Nahr al-Bared by offering services, say sources.

"They marry widows or very poor women to give them a home. They are good people who follow an Islamic way of life," says Suleiman Abdullah, a sympathizer.

As for the claim that the group is linked to Al Qaeda, Sheikh Ibrahim Salih, a prominent Salafist cleric in Tripoli was dismissive.

"Al Qaeda is an ideology only. It is an ideology of opposition to America and Israel and to live an Islamic life," he says. "We all believe in that, therefore we are all Al Qaeda."

http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0522/p01s02-wome.html?page=1
 
I hope they do also.

Hezbollah backs Lebanon army in standoff

By SALLY BUZBEE, Associated Press Writer1 hour, 13 minutes ago

The Shiite Muslim militant group Hezbollah has so far backed Lebanon's army in its confrontation with a Sunni militant group — despite the fact that Hezbollah has been pushing to topple the Lebanese government.

The Sunni group Fatah Islam has set up in a Palestinian refugee camp on the outskirts of the northern Lebanese city of Tripoli. Fighting between the Lebanese army and the militants around the camp has been raging for three days with dozens of combatants killed.

The Hezbollah stance highlights the complex tensions among Lebanon's various factional and militant groups. Hezbollah — as a Shiite group — is a sworn ideological and religious enemy to Sunni militant groups such as Fatah Islam, whose leader had ties to former al-Qaida in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.

Such enmity is often bitter — al-Zarqawi pushed for the killings of Shiites in Iraq and elsewhere before his death last year, calling them infidels.

The tensions are long-standing across the Mideast, even though countries such as Syria have been accused of sometimes backing both Sunni and Shiite militants. The strains have intensified, however, because of the war in Iraq that pits the two sects against each other.

Lebanon's own civil war from 1975-1990 stemmed from rivalries among Shiite, Sunni and Christian factions. Shiite-Sunni tensions exploded in violence in recent months inside Lebanon, killing 11 people, as Sunnis backed the Lebanese government and the Shiites of Hezbollah and their allies backed the pro-Syrian opposition.

The complex nature of Hezbollah's position on the fighting also reflects the fact that the group has something of a dual nature. It belongs to Lebanon's democratic system and is the country's strongest political opposition group, while also being a militant group that has attacked Israel and has backing from Syria and Iran.

Hezbollah has been calling for the formation of a new government in Lebanon and is strongly opposed to the current anti-Syrian one. So far, however, its protests against the government have been peaceful.

Political analysts have said Hezbollah, while supporting the army, does not want to back the government publicly and give it credit for fighting the Sunni militant group. Also, any wholehearted backing by Hezbollah for Lebanese authorities could inflame animosity by Sunni militants against the Shiite group.

In a statement from the group that shows its complex stance, Hezbollah denounced the attacks against the Lebanese army — stressing the role of the army in safeguarding peace, but also tacitly criticized Lebanon's current government.

"We feel that there is someone out there who wants to drag the army to this confrontation and bloody struggle ... to serve well-known projects and aims. We are hearing calls for more escalation and fighting, which will ultimately lead to more chaos and confrontation in Lebanon," the Hezbollah statement said. It called for a political solution to the crisis.

Hezbollah has good relations with the army, which covertly helped support the group in its war with Israel last summer.

Other Lebanese factions also have so far backed the Lebanese government, despite internal divisions — as have most Arab countries. Some Palestinians in Lebanese refugee camps have, however, begun to protest the Lebanese army's shelling of the camp.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070522...2&printer=1;_ylt=Ai4EV62lBXMJ8bHuh92aCbYUewgF
 
actinanass said:
I figured they will get tired of that bullshit sooner, or later. I hope the good guys win....

Who are the "good guys" you watch way to much TV.........
 
<font size="5"><center>U.S., Arabs Rush Military Aid To Lebanon</font size>
<font size="4">Military Planes Bring U.S. And Arab Aid
To Lebanese Army Locked In War With Militants</font size></center>

CBS News
TRIPOLI, Lebanon, May. 25, 2007

(AP) The United States and Arab allies rushed military aid to Lebanon Friday, boosting its strength ahead of a possible army assault to crush Islamic militants barricaded in a Palestinian refugee camp.

Palestinian factions were scrambling to find a negotiated solution to end the siege and avert what many fear would be a bloody battle over the Nahr el-Bared camp, where thousands of civilians remain in the line of fire.

Defense Minister Elias Murr said he was "leaving room for political negotiations," which he said must lead to the surrender of the fighters from the Fatah Islam militant group inside the camp.

"If the political negotiations fail, I leave it to the military command to do what is necessary," he told reporters.

The military was gearing up for a fight, rolling more troops into place around the camp in northern Lebanon, already ringed by hundreds of soldiers backed by artillery and tanks. Fatah Islam has claimed to have over 500 fighters, armed with automatic weapons, mortars and rocket-propelled grenades.

At least a dozen more armored carriers and a battle tank were seen headed for the area Friday.

Sporadic gunfire at Nahr el-Bared camp kept tensions high, but a truce that has halted three days of heavy artillery and rocket bombardment since Tuesday held.

An all-out assault on the camp would risk sparking unrest and violence elsewhere in the country, where some 400,000 Palestinian refugees live, most in camps that are rife with armed groups.

A deputy Fatah Islam leader, Abu Hureira, told the pan-Arab Al Hayat daily by telephone from Nahr el-Bared that "sleeper cells" in other Palestinian camps and elsewhere in Lebanon were awaiting word for a "violent response" if the army struck.

The U.S. military aid could also attract other militants into what they see as a battle against the West and its allies. Extremist groups were already using the battle at the camp as propaganda.

A group billing itself as al-Qaida's branch in Syria and Lebanon vowed "seas of blood" if the Lebanese army resumes its attack. In a video posted on the Web Friday, a spokesman for the group threatened bomb attacks on Lebanon's vital tourist industry. Earlier, a Palestinian group called the Army of Islam also threatened attacks. The capabilities of the two groups are not known.

The airlift from the United States and Arab countries boosts the military in what could be a tough urban battle inside the camp, a densely built town of narrow streets.

But the U.S. aid is sensitive in a nation deeply divided between supporters of a pro-Western government and an opposition backed by America's Mideast foes, Iran and Syria. The opposition accuses the government of Prime Minister Fuad Saniora of being too closely allied to Washington.

Between late Thursday and early afternoon Friday, five military transport planes landed at Beirut airport, including one from the U.S. Air Force, two from the United Arab Emirates and two from Jordan.

The military refused to comment on the shipments, but media reports said they included ammunition, body armor, helmets and night-vision equipment.

U.S. military officials said Washington would send eight planes of supplies, part of a package that had been agreed on but that the Lebanese government asked to be expedited.

About half of Nahr el-Bared's population of 31,000 fled the camp during the truce, flooding into the nearby Beddawi camp. At least 20 civilians and 30 soldiers were killed in the fighting earlier this week. The Lebanese military says 60 Fatah Islam fighters were killed, though the group put the toll at 10.

The truce also gave Palestinian mediators a chance to maneuver. But prospects for a peaceful settlement appeared dim, with the government determined to finish off the militants, Fatah Islam vowing to fight to the death and major Palestinian factions unable to agree on how to take charge of camp security.br>
"We want a solution that pleases both sides. We don't want dead people on both sides," said Ghassan Ahmed, 35, a camp resident who was hospitalized with shrapnel in the leg and arm. "They should send Fatah Islam to another country. Maybe there they can find another life."

___

Associated Press writers Lolita Baldor in Washington and Sam F. Ghattas in Beirut contributed to this report.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/05/25/ap/world/main2852768.shtml
 
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