IDF leaves Bint Jbail; 6 soldiers hurt in clashes with Hezbollah

IDF leaves Bint Jbail; 6 soldiers hurt in clashes with Hezbollah By [EMAIL=“[email protected]”]Ze’ev Schiff and [EMAIL=“[email protected]”]Amos Harel, Haaretz Correspondents, and Agencies

Israel Defense Forces troops pulled out of the southern Lebanon town of Bint Jbail on Saturday afternoon, after clashes with Hezbollah left six soldiers wounded and some 26 guerillas dead.

Armored Corps soldiers were still operating around the town, and were in control of certain areas.

One of the soldiers sustained moderate-to-serious wounds when a rocket misfired. The others were lightly hurt during clashes. All of the wounded were transferred to Rambam Medical Center in Haifa.

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/743736.html


Interesting. t’was the other day they claimed to have taken control over the town, not more than two days later they pull out. :halo:

Re: IDF leaves Bint Jbail; 6 soldiers hurt in clashes with Hezbollah

Israel is being defeated militarily - it has failed to stop the Hezbollah firing the same amount of (if not more) rockets into it's territory as when this fighitng began.

Israel is now conceding that it will not be seeking Hezbollah's disarmamaent, which it's key demand from day one.

Israeli is being asked to withdraw from the Shebaa farms as Hezbollah/Lebanon have demanded.

Now the forced withdrawal from Bint Jbail.

Total humiliation for these zionist butchers!

Re: IDF leaves Bint Jbail; 6 soldiers hurt in clashes with Hezbollah

Hezbollah Attack On Israeli Tank Wounds 3 Soldiers

JERUSALEM (AP)–Hezbollah guerrillas attacked an Israeli tank in southern Lebanon Monday, wounding three soldiers, the military said. The attack, with an antitank missile, occurred near the villages of Kila and Taibe near the Israel-Lebanon border, where Israeli ground forces have been fighting Hezbollah guerrillas for nearly two weeks. The three soldiers were lightly wounded.

http://www.nasdaq.com/aspxcontent/NewsStory.aspx?cpath=20060731\ACQDJON200607310642DOWJONESDJONLINE000229.htm&selected=9999&selecteddisplaysymbol=9999&StoryTargetFrame=_top&mkt=WORLD&chk=unchecked&lang=&link=&headlinereturnpage=http://www.international.na

Re: IDF leaves Bint Jbail; 6 soldiers hurt in clashes with Hezbollah

More potential humiliation for Israel.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060801/ap_on_re_mi_ea/lebanon_israel_655;_ylt=Aod3bw5TyRrXKcrQbW_WDXMUvioA;_ylu=X3oDMTBiMW04NW9mBHNlYwMlJVRPUCUl

Fighting rages in Lebanese border village

Heavy fighting raged Tuesday in the Lebanese border village of Aita al-Shaab, and Hezbollah television said 35 Israeli soldiers had been killed or wounded in the fighting. Israeli warplanes pounded Shiite Lebanese villages in many areas along the border and struck Hezbollah strongholds deep inside the country. Arab satellite channels carried live pictures as Israeli forces poured in a relentless bombardment of artillery shells on Aita al-Shaab, the town from which Hezbollah guerrillas crossed the border on July 12 and captured two Israeli soldiers and killed three others, igniting the conflict. Al-Manar TV, the Hezbollah-run channel, reported that guerrilla fighters had Israeli forces pinned down and unable to evacuate their wounded. That apparently prompted the heavy renewed fighting. Huge clouds of smoke rose above the village and artillery concussions echoed across the valleys. The Hezbollah television said fighters had ambushed Israeli soldiers near the town’s main school building. Israeli authorities have not publicly commented on the Al-Manar claim of casualties. Earlier Tuesday Israeli jets struck Hezbollah strongholds deep inside the country and civilian areas along the Mediterranean coast. Not far to the east of Aita al-Shaab, an Associated Press reporter on a hilltop overlooking the village of Kfar Kila saw columns of black smoke rising from the cluster of homes and surrounding hills about 1.2 miles from the Israeli border. At least three airstrikes hit the area, and the thud of artillery shells from Israeli ground troops was constant. About 20 shells landed in the hills around Kfar Kila in the course of 45 minutes. A Hezbollah fighter near the hilltop village, Bourse al-Mulouk, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was involved in the fighting, said the battle for Kfar Kila began Monday, when several Israeli tanks crossed the border into Lebanon. Fighting lasted all day Monday, and Israeli ground troops withdrew into Israel Tuesday morning, he said. Parts of Kfar Kila are within view of Israel, and Israeli troops were able to continue shelling the town from their own territory. Airstrikes continued on the town as well. Artillery rained down on the nearby village of Deir Mimas as well, about 1.2 miles from Kfar Kila. The two villages sit next to one another on the side of a rocky hill. Intense shelling had ended by early afternoon, though sporadic attacks continued.

The guerrilla group said it battled Israeli ground troops Adaisse and Taibeh, near the Christian town of Marjayoun. It released a statement saying four of its fighters died in the battles. Hezbollah said its militants repulsed an Israeli incursion into Adaisse and Kfar Kila, forcing them behind the border after inflicting casualties. The statement said the troops crossed the border Monday night. Israeli warplanes launched three air raids on targets along the Litani River, Lebanon’s official news agency reported. They were accompanied by artillery shelling against villages in the central region of south Lebanon. Israel’s Cabinet late Monday approved a major expansion of its ground offensive, deciding to send troops up to the Litani, some 18 miles from the Israeli border. A Lebanese government official on Tuesday denounced that decision, saying Israel was repeating the same mistakes it made in the past 30 years by invading the area. “This will not help (Israel) achieve the security that it is looking for,” the official told The Associated Press. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media. **“Security and stability can only be achieved by an Israeli withdrawal from occupied Lebanese territories, not by expanding the occupation,” **he said. Israeli jet fighters also struck deep inside Lebanese territory, hitting Hermel, some 73 miles north of the Israeli border in the Bekaa Valley in eastern Lebanon. Warplanes fired at least five air-to-surface missiles on the edge of the town, targeting a road linking eastern Lebanon to western regions and the coastline.

About six hours later, warplanes returned to attack Hermel again, hitting a pickup truck loaded with cooking gas tanks, security officials said. The canisters exploded, sending flames shooting up from the vehicle for nearly an hour. The driver had pulled over and exited the vehicle before the attack, and was not hurt, they said. In the west, Israeli warships offshore in the Mediterranean sent artillery into the villages of Mansouri, Shamaa and Teir Harfan around the port city of Tyre. No casualties were reported. Another strike at an area near the Syrian border, about 6 miles north of Hermel, targeted the Qaa-Homs road, one of four official crossing points between Lebanon and Syria. Lebanon’s official news agency reported Israeli jets also hit early Tuesday near the Masnaa crossing into Syria, which was attacked several times in the last three days. Tuesday’s airstrikes mean that two of the four border crossings are now closed because of damage. Repeated airstrikes have made the main Beirut-Damascus highway impassable. The remaining crossings are Lebanon’s main transport links to the outside world. Israel has hit the Beirut international airport, forcing its closure, and has imposed a naval blockade. Late last week the airport began receiving aid relief flights on a repaired runway. The latest bombings came despite a supposed 48-hour Israeli suspension of air aids in Lebanon, prompted by worldwide outcry over an airstrike Sunday that killed 56 people, more than half of them children, on the southern Lebanese village of Qana. The pause, which ends early Wednesday, was to give time for an investigation into the Qana attack, but Israel said its warplanes would still hit targets that presented an imminent threat, and at least three strikes were launched Monday. Many of those living in the northeast are Shiite Muslims, the country’s largest sect from which Hezbollah draws its support.

Re: IDF leaves Bint Jbail; 6 soldiers hurt in clashes with Hezbollah

yep, time to go and bomb some civilians and vent frustration…

Re: IDF leaves Bint Jbail; 6 soldiers hurt in clashes with Hezbollah

Yet another Israeli soldier killed.

*Israeli Soldier Killed, 4 Wounded In South Lebanon *

An Israeli soldier was killed and four others wounded in a battle with Hezbollah guerrillas in south Lebanon, the military said early Thursday. The battle was in Ayt a-Shab, just across the Israeli border, the military said. Israeli ground forces moved into the Hezbollah-controlled village on Tuesday, and there have been fierce exchanges between the two sides. Army Radio said the battle was still in progress early Thursday. The name of the dead soldier wasn't immediately released. *Since Israel began its offensive in Lebanon on July 12, 37 soldiers have been killed, and 19 civilians have died in Hezbollah rocket attacks on Israeli cities, towns and villages. *

Re: IDF leaves Bint Jbail; 6 soldiers hurt in clashes with Hezbollah

Look out for the spin… bet ya in the end the main objective will be to run run run south south south…

http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/08/02/news/mideast.php
Hezbollah guerrillas on Wednesday fired more than 200 rockets into Israel - a record - even as Israel poured thousands of troops, backed by tanks and armored bulldozers, into fierce fighting along the border
Some of the rockets struck deeper than ever into Israel

Re: IDF leaves Bint Jbail; 6 soldiers hurt in clashes with Hezbollah

And all this with out any real support from muslims(minus iran).

May ALLAH give them more strength and back them with HIS Nusrat

Re: IDF leaves Bint Jbail; 6 soldiers hurt in clashes with Hezbollah

Another bloody day for Israeli troops in Bint Jbail.

IDF soldier killed, 4 wounded in Bint Jbail

One IDF paratrooper was killed and four others were lightly wounded in clashes in the south Lebanese village of Bint Jbail Monday morning. At least five Hizbullah gunmen were killed in the battle. The wounded were evacuated under heavy gunfire.

Then more killed later.
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**Israel Army:Anti-Tank Missile Kills 2 Troops In S Lebanon **

Hezbollah guerrillas killed two Israeli soldiers with an anti- tank missile in south Lebanon Monday, a few hours after a third soldier died by sniper fire in the same area, the Israeli army said. The soldiers were killed in the area of Bint Jbail, a Hezbollah stronghold about three kilometers from the border which has seen some of the heaviest combat in the 27-day war. The deaths brought to 61 the number of Israeli soldiers killed since July 12.

Re: IDF leaves Bint Jbail; 6 soldiers hurt in clashes with Hezbollah

106 111 127 162 171 228 237 248 250 251 252 256 259 262 265 267 270 271 279 280 285 298 313 316 317 332 337 347 425 427 444 446 450 452 465 467 468 469 471 476 478 484 487 497 498 501 509 515 517 518 520 573 587 592 605 607 608 636 641 672 673 681 694 726 & 799

These are the UN Resolutions largely or completly rejected by Israel.

Now then, people from Israel, you say Lebanon should follow 1559. Where should I start from??!!

Re: IDF leaves Bint Jbail; 6 soldiers hurt in clashes with Hezbollah

http://www.aljazeera.com/cgi-bin/review/article_full_story.asp?service_ID=12372

Hezbollah surprised its enemy

8/7/2006 3:30:00 PM GMT
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(AFP Photo) Israeli soldier holds Hezbollah flag seized during a battle at Israeli-Lebanese border

Yesterday Hezbollah’s rockets killed 15 Israelis, mostly soldiers, the deadliest barrage of the Lebanese resistance’s attacks in nearly a month of fighting against the Israeli occupying army.

Three years ago, when a powerful quake hit the Iranian city of Bam, killing 35,000 people, transport planes carrying aid poured in from everywhere, including Syria. Those planes, the Israeli military intelligence alleges, returned to Damascus carrying sophisticated weapons, including long-range Zelzal missiles, which Israel claims Syrians passed on to the Lebanese resistance movement in southern Lebanon, stated a New York Times editorial.

Israel’s claims that those weaponry shipments were passed on to Hezbollah, bitter foe of Israel, “are just one indication of how — with the help of its main sponsors, Iran and Syria”, the Lebanese resistance’s military might and arsenal have majorly improved over the past six years, since Hezbollah forced the Israelis out of southern Lebanon.

Hezbollah, a Lebanese umbrella organization of groups and organizations rejecting the Israeli presence in Lebanon and the Middle East, is a significant force in Lebanon’s politics and a major provider of social services, operating schools, hospitals, and agricultural services, for thousands of Lebanese.

The group’s fighters are well trained like an army.

“They are nothing like Hamas or the Palestinians,” admitted a soldier who just returned from Lebanon.

“They are trained and highly qualified”, with flak jackets, night-vision goggles, good communications and sometimes Israeli uniforms and ammunition. “All of us were kind of surprised.”

Hezbollah, known for its close links to Iran and Syria, was founded in 1982 to confront the Israeli army and end its illegitimate presence and occupation of Lebanon.

Hezbollah’s stockpile of what some experts describe as Syrian- and Iranian-made missiles, 3,000 of which have hit Israeli towns, received much attention from the media recently, specially with the great losses inflicted upon the Israelis since the conflict broke last month.

The New York Times put the number of Israelis killed since Lebanon’s offensive began at 48, but officials say they’re over 70.

Also during the past six years, both Tehran and Damascus provided satellite communications and some of the world’s best infantry weapons, including Russian-made antitank weapons and Semtex plastic explosives.

They also provided training on how to use such weapons against the Israelis.

But the credit should be given to Hezbollah’s fighters’ talent and skillful use of such weapons, specially the wire-guided and laser-guided antitank missiles, with double, phased explosive warheads and a range of about two miles.

With Russian-made antitank missiles, capable of penetrating armor, Hezbollah fighters managed to destroy many Israeli vehicles, including its most modern tank, the Merkava, on about 20 percent of their hits, according to Israeli tank commanders at the front.

“They use them like artillery to hit houses,” said Brig. Gen. Yossi Kuperwasser, until recently the Israeli Army’s director of intelligence analysis.

“They can use them accurately up to even three kilometers, and they go through a wall like through the armor of a tank.”

Hezbollah fighters also use tunnels so as to quickly emerge from the ground, fire a shoulder-held antitank missile, and vanish immediately.

“We know what they have and how they work,” General Kuperwasser said.

“But we don’t know where all the tunnels are. So they can achieve tactical surprise.”

They also use antitank missiles, which Israelis consider their “main fear”, said David Ben-Nun, 24, an enlisted man in the Nahal brigade who just returned from a week in Lebanon.

Although the Israelis admit that Hezbollah’s fighters are few, between 2,000 and 4,000, Timur Goksel, who was the senior political adviser to Unifil, the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon, which monitors the border until 2003, describes Hezbollah as much as the Israelis do: “careful, patient, attuned to gathering intelligence, scholars of guerrilla warfare from the American Revolution to Mao and the Vietcong”.

“Hezbollah has studied asymmetrical warfare,” Mr. Goksel said.

“They have staff work and they do long-term planning, something the Palestinians never do,”

“They watch for two months to note every detail of their enemy. They review their operations — what they did wrong, how the enemy responded. And they have flexible tactics, without a large hierarchical command structure.”

“Hezbollah has much better weapons than before,” he said, noting that military confrontation with the Israeli army for 18 years, made Hezbollah fighters “not afraid of the Israeli Army anymore”.

Goskel, speaking during a telephone interview from Beirut, further stated that Hezbollah’s ability to attack Israelis and study their flaws, gave its fighters confidence that the Israeli Army “is a normal human army, with normal vulnerabilities and follies.”

Hezbollah’s tactics focus on trying to draw Israeli ground forces farther into Lebanon, according to Mr. Goksel.

“They want to draw them in to well-prepared battlefields,” like Aita al Shaab.

“They know the Israelis depend too much on armor, which is a prime target for them. And they want Israeli supply lines to lengthen, so they’re easier to hit.”

The Hezbollah fighters “are not just farmers who have been given weapons to fire,” he said. “They are persistent and well trained.”

Hezbollah, or the Party of God, emerged in Lebanon in the early 1980s and soon became the region’s leading resistance and anti Israeli movement, determined to drive Israeli occupiers out from Lebanon and the Middle East region.

** In 2000 the group witnessed one of its main aims being achieved. Hezbollah fighters defeated the well equipped Israeli army, forcing it end its two-decade occupation of south Lebanon. **

The movement now serves as an inspiration to Palestinian resistance groups fighting to liberate their occupied lands.

Re: IDF leaves Bint Jbail; 6 soldiers hurt in clashes with Hezbollah

Very

Re: IDF leaves Bint Jbail; 6 soldiers hurt in clashes with Hezbollah

Very informative article mo293 :)

Re: IDF leaves Bint Jbail; 6 soldiers hurt in clashes with Hezbollah

More Israeli soldiers killed/injured in Bint Jbail.

IDF soldier killed, 4 wounded in Bint Jbail

One IDF paratrooper was killed and four others were lightly wounded in clashes in the south Lebanese village of Bint Jbail Monday morning. At least five Hizbullah gunmen were killed in the battle. The wounded were evacuated under heavy gunfire.

Re: IDF leaves Bint Jbail; 6 soldiers hurt in clashes with Hezbollah

If Hizb had 1/10th of the weapons Israel would be begging Europeans for return of the Jews.

http://www.asiantribune.com/index.php?q=node/1465

Israel’s Military Invincibility Dented by Hezbollah
Wed, 2006-08-09 04:28
By Thalif Deen - Inter Press Service

United Nations, 09 August, (IPS): - Israel’s phenomenal victories against collective Arab armies in 1967 and later against Egypt in 1973 firmly established the Jewish state’s legendary military superiority in the Middle East.

The 1967 war – called the Six Day War – was so swift it ended in less than a week, with Egypt losing 264 aircraft and 700 battle tanks; Jordan 22 aircraft and 125 tanks, and Syria 58 aircraft and 105 tanks.

The only equipment losses suffered by Israel in the 1967 war were 40 aircraft and 100 battle tanks, according to Dilip Hiro, a Middle East analyst based in London.

The war ended with Israel capturing East Jerusalem, the Gaza Strip, Bethlehem, Hebron, Jenin, Nablus, the Golan Heights and Sharm al-Shaikh – some of which are still under occupation despite U.N. Security Council resolutions seeking Israeli withdrawal.

** But as the relentless military attacks against Hezbollah and Lebanon continue into the second month, the duration of the current conflict and the resistance by the Islamic militia have dented Israel’s reputation of military invincibility in the Middle East.

“Hezbollah has succeeded in preventing Israel from achieving any of its strategic objectives, and most of its tactical objectives as well,” says Mouin Rabbani, contributing editor to the Washington-based Middle East Report.

“Arguably, Israel is fighting the war Hezbollah prepared for, rather than the war Israel intended to conduct,” Rabbani told IPS.

He believes that Israel’s strategy was to deliver a rapid and devastating military blow against Hezbollah.

“And it wanted to reinforce this by generating official and popular Lebanese pressure against the movement by devastating Lebanon’s infrastructure, creating a mass exodus from southern Lebanon, and making the civilian population pay, in life and limb, for Hezbollah’s actions and its support for the movement.”

One month later, Rabbani said, “the shock and awe in this campaign appears to have mainly been inflicted upon, rather than by, Israel.” **

It is often said that in confrontations between conventional military forces and guerilla movements, “the latter win by not losing and the former lose by not winning”, Rabbani noted. This certainly appears to be the case here.

** Nadia Hijab, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Institute for Palestine Studies, says in one sense, Hezbollah has already won, if anyone can be considered a winner when there has been such enormous death and destruction.

“They have stood their ground against Israel longer than any combination of Arab armies in 1967 or 1973, and inflicted heavy casualties,” Hijab told IPS.

Their fighters are very well trained, disciplined, battle-hardened through fighting against Israel during its 18-year occupation of southern Lebanon, and well-armed. **

A crop of newspaper headlines in the U.S. mainstream media spell out of the dramatic new development in the Middle East: “Israel Facing a Well-Trained and Supplied Army”; “A Disciplined Hezbollah Surprises Israel with its Training, Tactics and Weapons”; “Hezbollah Unleashes Fiery Barrage”; “Among Militia’s Patient Loyalists, Confidence and Belief in Victory.”

** A piece in Saturday’s New York Times not only singled out Hezbollah’s military prowess but also its charitable and social services which have helped the movement to win strong support from the average Lebanese.

“Hezbollah fighters move like shadows across the mountains of southern Lebanon; its workers in towns and villages, equally as ghostly, have settled deeply into people’s lives. They cover medical bills, offer health insurance, pay school fees and make seed money available for small businesses,” said the Times.

Still, even though Hezbollah is a recognised political party with two of its members in the Lebanese cabinet, the United States continues to treat it as “a terrorist organisation.”

Last week, the 25-member European Union (EU) rejected a request by Washington, and refused to include Hezbollah on its list of terrorist organisations. ** “Given the sensitive situation where we are, I don’t think this is something we will be acting on now,” said Finnish Foreign Minister Erkki Tuomioja, whose country is the current president of the EU.


** Robert A. Pape, a professor of political science at the University of Chicago, says that Israel has finally conceded that air power alone will not defeat Hezbollah.

"Over the coming weeks, it will learn that ground power won’t work either. **


The problem is not that the Israelis have insufficient military might, but that they misunderstand the nature of the enemy," he said in an op-ed piece last week.
Contrary to conventional wisdom, Hezbollah is principally neither a political party nor an Islamist militia. It is a broad movement that evolved in reaction to Israel’s invasion of Lebanon in June 1982, said Pape, author of “Dying to Win: The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism”.


** Hijab of the Institute for Palestine Studies said that Israel and the United States have made much of the fact that Hezbollah is supplied by Iran – but it is in fact Israel that had to receive rushed deliveries of additional bombs and fuel to supplement the three billion dollars plus it already gets each year from the United States, the bulk of it in outright military grants financed by U.S. taxpayers. **


Most importantly, Hezbollah believes its cause is just, and a majority of people in Lebanon and throughout the Arab and Muslim worlds agree, she said.

Hezbollah’s immediate objectives were the release of Lebanese and other Arab prisoners held in Israeli jails, return of the occupied Shebaa Farms, and the release by Israel, as previously agreed, of maps showing the location of some 300,000 landmines (now doubtless many more) Israel had left behind in Lebanon, Hijab said.

“But the extent of Hezbollah’s preparedness underscores the extent to which they see Israel as an implacable enemy that is determined to extinguish the last flames of Arab nationalist resistance,” she said.

Though they may not have expected Israel’s massive response on this occasion, Hezbollah knew the fight would come one day, and they were ready, she added.


** Rabbani of the Middle East Report pointed out that the Israeli government has in fact continually adjusted its objectives downwards – from the eradication of Hezbollah, to its disarmament, to the elimination of its missile capabilities, to the removal of its long-range missile capabilities, to pushing the movement north of the Litani river, to creating a free-fire zone south of the Litani pending the arrival of foreign forces.

If things continue as they are it is quite likely the latter will need to be revised as well, Rabbani predicted. **


He also said that Hezbollah appears to have had good intelligence about Israel while Israel had weak intelligence about Hezbollah. For example, Hezbollah understood that the core of Israel’s military doctrine is to ensure that any military confrontation be transferred as rapidly as possible to enemy territory. “It therefore undertook measures to undermine this fundamental principle, both by heavily defending territory immediately inside Lebanon, and conducting persistent rocket attacks on Israeli territory.”

“It is often said that one of the Israeli military’s strongest features is its capacity to learn from its mistakes and to do so quickly enough to make a difference. This quality has not been much in evidence in the current war,” he added.

  • Inter Press Service (IPS) News Agency -

Re: IDF leaves Bint Jbail; 6 soldiers hurt in clashes with Hezbollah

More Israeli soldiers dying in Bint Jbail fighting.

http://jta.org/page_view_breaking_story.asp?intid=4101

**2 Soldiers killed at Bint Jbeil **

Hezbollah killed two Israeli soldiers at a flashpoint Lebanese village. Guerrillas fired on a paratrooper unit during ongoing battles near Bint Jbeil on Tuesday night, fatally wounding a soldier. Another soldier was killed during efforts to rescue the mortally wounded soldier. Israeli troops and Hezbollah also clashed Wednesday at Aita Shab, another southern Lebanon village where guerrillas are heavily dug in.