Israeli ground troops enter southern Lebanon
Offensive may last weeks, officials say; Hezbollah continues rocket barrage
![]() Pierre Bou Karam / AP A Lebanese woman reacts after inspecting her truck that was destroyed when it was targeted as part of a convoy by Israeli warplanes, in Hadath, Lebanon, on Wednesday. |
|
IN DEPTH: MIDEAST IN CRISIS |
NBC Video: Violence in Middle East |
Undetonated bombs litter Lebanon Aug. 25: NBC's Jim Maceda reports on efforts to find and remove unexploded bombs from the Southern Lebanon countryside. |
Mideast/North Africa video |
Israeli troops evict Jewish settlers Dec. 4: Israeli troops storm a disputed West Bank encampment, forcibly evicting at least 250 Jewish settlers. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports. |
JERUSALEM - Israel declared Tuesday it was ready to fight Hezbollah guerrillas for several more weeks and early Wednesday underscored its commitment by sending some Israeli ground troops into southern Lebanon to attack Hezbollah guerrilla outposts.
An army spokesman said they were “restricted, pinpoint attacks,” but the move raised doubts about international efforts to broker an immediate cease-fire in the fighting that has killed more than 250 people and displaced 500,000 more.
“What is going on at the moment is a number of Israeli ground troops very near to the border on the Lebanese side, trying to destroy some Hezbollah outposts,” Israel’s U.N. Ambassador Dan Gillerman told CNN.
“This is an operation which is very measured, very local,” he said. “This is no way an invasion of Lebanon. This is no way the beginning of any kind of occupation of Lebanon.”
Israel is in no hurry to end its offensive, which it sees as a unique opportunity to crush Hezbollah. The Islamic militants appear to have steadily built up their military strength after Israel pulled its troops out of southern Lebanon in 2000.
With fighting in its seventh day, Israeli warplanes struck an army base outside Beirut and other areas in south Lebanon, killing 27 people, and Hezbollah rockets battered Israeli towns, killing one Israeli.
Five big explosions reverberated over Beirut early Wednesday, and missiles hit towns to the east and south of the capital.
Families in southern Lebanon, the site of most Israeli airstrikes, drove north on side roads, winding among orange and banana groves and waving improvised white flags from their car windows.
In an interview with the BBC, Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Saniora said Israel is “opening the gates of hell and madness” on his country. He urged Hezbollah, which is backed by Syria and Iran, to release two captured Israeli soldiers but said Israel’s response had been disproportionate.
Bush blames Syria
President Bush said he suspects Syria is trying to reassert influence in Lebanon more than a year after Damascus ended what had effectively been a long-term military occupation of its smaller, weaker neighbor.
“We have made it very clear that Israel should be allowed to defend herself,” Bush said in Washington. “We’ve asked that as she does so that she be mindful of the Saniora government. It’s very important that this government in Lebanon succeed and survive.”
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert blamed Iran for sparking the clashes between Israel and Hezbollah, saying the country was trying to distract the world from the controversy over its nuclear program.
The offensive was sparked by the soldiers’ capture July 12 but has now broadened into a campaign to neutralize Hezbollah.
“I think that we should assume that it will take a few more weeks,” Maj. Gen. Udi Adam, head of the army’s northern command, told Army Radio.
Israeli ground force attack?
The army’s deputy chief of staff, Maj. Gen. Moshe Kaplinski, said Israel has not ruled out deploying “massive ground forces into Lebanon.”
But in an interview with MSNBC-TV’s Chris Matthews on “Hardball,” Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Shimon Peres said “nothing whatsoever” would lead Israel to send ground troops on a sustained basis into Lebanon.
CLICK FOR RELATED CONTENT |
“We don't intend to enter Lebanon from the ground. The danger today is not an exchange of power on the ground but really the missiles and the rockets we should try to stop," he said.
Israel, which has mainly limited itself to attacks from the air and sea, had been reluctant to send in ground troops because Hezbollah is far more familiar with the terrain and because of memories of Israel’s ill-fated 18-year occupation of south Lebanon that ended in 2000.
Kaplinski said Israel had no intention of getting bogged down for a second time.
“We certainly won’t reach months, and I hope it also won’t be many more weeks. But we still need time to complete the operation’s very clear objectives,” he told Israel Radio.
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
- Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM MIDEAST & N. AFRICA |
| Add Mideast & N. Africa headlines to your news reader: |




