Israel's war on Lebanon, 2006

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The Lebanese Shiite Hezbollah movement announced on Wednesday that its guerrillas have captured two Israeli soldiers in southern Lebanon. "Implementing our promise to free Arab prisoners in Israeli jails, our strugglers have captured two Israeli soldiers in southern Lebanon," a statement by Hezbollah said. "The two soldiers have already been moved to a safe place," it added. The Lebanese police said that the two soldiers were captured as they "infiltrated" into the town of Aitaa al-Chaab inside the Lebanese border. [Hindustan Times 7/12/06]

The Lebanese Hezbollah movement announced Wednesday the arrest of two Israeli soldiers in southern Lebanon. Lebanese police said that the two soldiers were arrested as they entered the town of Aitaa al-Chaab inside the Lebanese border. Israeli aircraft were active in the air over southern Lebanon, police said, with jets bombing roads leading to the market town of Nabatiyeh, 60 kilometers south of Beirut. [Bahrain News Agency 7/12/06]

TRANSLATION: According to the Lebanese police force, the two soldiers were captured in Lebanese territory, in the area of A
 
Good job of documenting it. It might be good to make backup copies of the links, as they might disappear as it has happened with many 911 links.
 
http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/paperchase/2006/07/lebanon-claims-israel-using-banned.php


[JURIST] Israel is using "internationally prohibited weapons against civilians" in Lebanon as the country faces "real annihilation," according to a statement from Lebanon Information Minister Ghazi Aridi Sunday after an emergency cabinet meeting. Lebanese media reports state that Israel used phosphorus incendiary bombs and vacuum bombs that suck up air and facilitate building collapses. The use of incendiary weapons against civilians has been banned by Protocol III to the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons since 1980. Lebanon's accusations come amid increasing violence between Israel over the weekend and Hezbollah militants based in Lebanon.

Meanwhile, Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora said in a separate address to the Lebanese people Sunday that Israel's actions "violated Lebanon's sovereignty and its citizens' rights and dignity." Siniora also said that "Israel is imposing a collective punishment that does not have any moral or legal legitimacy."
 
you're welcome. i'm surprised that it actually posted. i kept on getting some error whenever i clicked the submit button.
 
someone noticed that people have burned skin but not their hair. it is a genocide against people and not a political war!
 
Hello, I'm from Lebanon.

They're also using bombs that release poisonous gases to evacuate villages. Villagers started to faint and were transported to hospitals. Bodies having extremely burnt skin had unscathed clothes. Some bodies were sent for labs but we didn't hear of any results.
 
Hi Moka,

Please know that we care deeply about what is happeing in Lebanon. Keep us updated if possible.
 
Israeli Warplanes target Red Cross and UN in southern Lebanon

I first saw this on the UK channel 4 news, and to say I was apalled and sickened to my stomach is an understatement.

There was a brief exert from an interview with one of the Red Cross workers who was hit in one of the two vehicles targeted by Israeli IDF. He said to the cameras that there was no way the bombing of the red Crosss vehicles was accidental. With the various apparatus used by the Red Cross trucks including a huge Red Cross on the top of the trucks, there was no way the Israeli IDF mis-hit the vehicles by accident.

This was a deliberate attempt I believe to send a message to any aid agencies seeking to bring aid of any kind to the Lebanese, that Israel would target any agencies seeking to bring aid to the Lebanese people regardless of International law.

Just another example of the pyschopathic Israeli "defense force" at work.

The article is carried by the Globalresearch site from an article posted on the Malaysian Sun. Here is a link

Israeli warplanes hit UN troop positions in Lebanon
Malaysia Sun
Wednesday 19th July, 2006


UN troops in Lebanon have come under heavy fire in the past 24 hours, while plans are afoot for their families to be evacuated.

In another incident Israeli aircraft attacked a convoy of 26 Red Cross ambulances which the UAE was sending by road into Lebanon.

Israeli warplanes fired close to UNIFIL, or the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon, positions on at least fifteen occasions, scoring a direct hit on one position near the village of Marwahin. UN officials said there was material damage, but no casualties.

French army Maj. Eric Minoli, who is commanding a UNIFIL contingent, said he is sickened by what he has seen.

"The people are clearly terrorized. Many Lebanese are fleeing north," he said. "As a Frenchman and a United Nations soldier, I hope the diplomats work out a cease-fire."

A spokesman said the UN force was facing serious restrictions in movements due to the ongoing hostilities, and the destruction of roads and bridges.

The spokesman also revealed Israeli ground troops had entered Lebanese territory twice on Tuesday. It was previously thought ground troops had only entered Lebanon on Wednesday.

Meantime the families of UNIFIL members are preparing to be evacuated.

UNIFIL was deployed to the country in 1978 following the invasion by Israel. It remained through a second Israeli invasion in 1982, and the subsequent occupation. When Israel finally withdrew in May 2000, UNIFIL remained in place to patrol the Blue Line, the border between Lebanon and Israel.

The 2,000 soldiers-strong force is supported by 50 military observers of UNTSO, 95 international civilian personnel, and 304 local civilian staff.

It draws personnel from China, France, Ghana, India, Ireland, Italy, Poland and Ukraine.

Separately 26 Red Cross ambulances sent by the UAE government to assist the humanitarian crisis in Lebanon came under fire from Israeli warplanes, while being driven from the Syrian border to Beirut. Some of the ambulances had to return to Syria, while others made it through to Beirut.

The UAE Foreign Minister, Shaikh Abdullah Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, said, "We condemn and reject this kind of conduct which completely disregards humanitarian values. It shows Israel's insensitivity to the acute humanitarian crisis facing Lebanon."
I'll try to find other articles that describe what happened to add further insight through the day.

This may be difficult as Ive just tried to visit 3 news sites which I have already visited 1 of this morning only to find my browser is redirecting me to a site named utarget.co.uk -&nbspThis website is for sale! -&nbsputarget Resources and Information. instead of the BBC news site...is this an expample of the cencorship of news I heard rumour of over the weekend by Israeli intelligence? Is anyone else having this trouble, or know why this might be happening? (this has never happened before and I have never before seen this site?!?) Ive now tried a dozen news sites but keep being redirected to the internewt site above...I'm a little worried now that I've been targeted for censorship due directly to this posting...is anyone else having this difficulty in reaching news sites like in the UK, US, Russia and the Middle East? I also cannot get to the Whois sites to find out who own this web address posted above, could anyone look into it for me?

I also cannot access the most important page now (which I could 15minutes ago) the Signs main page. Although strangeley enough I can get to some sites holding (Bad) news such as Prisonplanet. I also managed to get to the DailyMail online and found article below, however there is still an issue with many of the sites Im trying ot visit such as the Signs main page rwhere Im being redirected to another page instead. I have never experienced this before, and Im worried what it may mean.

Notice that the Israeli Precision guided munitions were targeting and falling all around the Red Cross vehicles (not one lone misstargeted hit, but several strikes). Kinda makes me wonder how Precision guided munitions could possibly miss target a target witha huge Red Cross on the roof, obviously visible to any IDF attack aircraft circling above.

Red Cross volunteers tell horrific tale of Israeli bombs
By RICHARD PENDLEBURY, Daily Mail

22:01pm 24th July 2006

If it was not the most crass of accidents then there is no way of describing what happened in Kana other than a cold blooded war crime.

Yesterday they were sluicing out the blood from the surviving ambulances at Tyre's Red Cross headquarters, a daily ritual in this war stricken town.

But this morning was different. Beside the vehicles a stretcher with a shrapnel hole through its canvas lay in the gutter and on a nearby table sat a white helmet, bearing the Red Cross symbol. It had been hit by at least a dozen missile splinters.

Somewhere, out in the bomb ravaged countryside, were the mangled remains of two of the organisation's ambulance fleet. For the time being at least the survivors would not be venturing outside Tyre.

Over the past 13 days the roads of southern Lebanon have been a free fire zone for the Israeli air force, whose indiscriminate air strikes have killed and wounded hundreds of civilians fleeing the fighting.

Now it seems the Israelis are targeting the emergency services who are sent out to rescue the victims. The Red Cross and purely humanitarian aims are no protection any more here.

Late on Sunday night in a small town near Tyre Israeli warplanes attacked and destroyed two ambulances as wounded were being transferred between them.

Yesterday I saw the tragic aftermath; three generations of one family horrifically injured and six volunteer Red Cross paramedics and drivers - the bravest of the brave in this war - put out of action with shrapnel wounds.

In the Jabal Amel hospital 14 year old Mohammed Fawaz was lying in a shallow coma, attached to a monitor, a catheter and a drip with a tube protruding from one nostril.

He had a serious head injury and a broken shoulder. One could see that two of the toes on his left foot were missing.

In a ward on the floor above, his father Ahmed Fawaz was feebly moving his right arm, though apparently unconcious. His right leg was missing above the knee, his left severely fractured and he had a wound in his right side. "He has lost a lot of blood and is in a critical condition," explained nurse Ismail Said.

A few yards down the same corridor Mr Fawaz's 80 year old mother was less seriously injured and concious but weeping in her bed. "The Israelis hit our house,' she kept repeating.

And yet their serious injuries were not sustained when their home in the town of Tibnin was destroyed by the first of the missiles that night.

"We got the call from our operations room at about 10pm," explained Red Cross volunteer Kassem Shaalan, 28, who in 'peacetime' works for a mine clearance charity as a medical co-ordinator. He was lying in another ward, next to colleague Hamed Hassan, his cut and burned face swathed in bandage.

"We were told to drive to Kana, where we would meet an ambulance arriving from Tibnin, transfer the three casualties it was carrying and return them to Tyre."

He said it was dark but the ambulance, clearly marked with large red crosses, was using its blue flashing lights and the Red Cross symbol on its roof was illuminated. "There is no way they could not see what we were," he claimed.

They sped through the night and made the rendevous in the centre of Kana, next to a memorial to the victims of a previous Israeli war. "We always stop in an open area so the Israelis can see what we are," said Mr Shaalan.

It seemed quite straightforward, although they could hear planes overhead. "None of the casualties were seriously hurt," said Mr Shaalan. "They had minor shrapnel wounds and were easy to move."

Mohammed and Mr Fawaz were transferred from the Tibnin ambulance to the Tyre vehicle and Mrs Fawaz was being secured in a chair in the back by 25 year old volunteer paramedic Nader Joudi who normally runs a record shop and likes heavy metal music.

"I was standing outside the ambulance," said Mr Shaalan. "We had been stopped two or three minutes when the first missile hit."

It tore through the roof and exploded in the back, blowing off Mr Fawaz's leg and inflicting the other serious injuries I saw in the hospital.

Mr Hassan was wearing the helmet which was peppered with shrapnel. It probably saved his life.

"A big fire came out of the ambulance," said Mr Shaalan. The crew of the Tibnin ambulance tried to call for help over their radio and almost immediately their vehicle was hit as well.

Missiles began to fall around them. The wounded Red Cross crews managed to pull the boy and his grandmother out of the wreckage, but Mr Fawaz had to be abandoned because of the continuing airstrikes.

"We took cover in the cellar of a nearby house," said Mr Shaalan. "There was no light, it was totally dark and we had to treat ourselves by touch alone, feeling for wounds.

"We tried to treat the boy, who was crying and calling for his mother. But we had no equipment. I took off my shirt and used it as a bandage. We could hear the man screaming in the ambulance still."

They used a mobile phone to summon help but had to remain for 90 minutes in that cellar, wounded and terrified, until, they said, the International Red Cross managed to arrange a ceasefire so that they could be taken back to Tyre.

"I do not think it was a mistake,' said Mr Shaalan. "We do not understand. Why the Red Cross?

"You know the rules which cover the Red Cross. It was a war crime."

Tyre's four remaining ambulances are now limiting their work to the town itself; the roads are just too unsafe, even though people are being wounded every day and need their help.

"I will get out of my bed later today and go back to work," said Mr Shalaan. "If I don't do it, who will?"

In the great scheme of Lebanon's bloodshed this was a footnote. But yet another line has been crossed by the Israelis in their desire for retribution. Sometimes such incidents can be the tipping point for international action.

Maybe what has happened to the ambulances of Tyre will convince Condoleezza Rice of the need for an immediate ceasefire, not just rhetoric.
 
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This situation is disgusting! Incindiary and poisonous weapons! How low. But what's worse is the media's coverage. The use of phosphorous bombs and other banned weapons received minimal coverage.
To add insult to sane individuals, i just heard on Fox news that they are going to have a report on whether the war coverage by the American media is balanced and fair.......laughable.

Moka, i also share tina's sentiments, and please do keep us updated.
 
Secret 2001 Pentagon Plan to Attack Lebanon


Bush's Plan for "Serial War" revealed by General Wesley Clark

July 23, 2006
GlobalResearch.ca

"[The] Five-year campaign plan [includes]... a total of seven countries, beginning with Iraq, then Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Iran, Somalia and Sudan" (Pentagon official quoted by General Wesley Clark)


According to General Wesley Clark--the Pentagon, by late 2001, was Planning to Attack Lebanon

"Winning Modern Wars" (page 130) General Clark states the following:


"As I went back through the Pentagon in November 2001, one of the senior military staff officers had time for a chat. Yes, we were still on track for going against Iraq, he said. But there was more. This was being discussed as part of a five-year campaign plan, he said, and there were a total of seven countries, beginning with Iraq, then Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Iran, Somalia and Sudan.

...He said it with reproach--with disbelief, almost--at the breadth of the vision. I moved the conversation away, for this was not something I wanted to hear. And it was not something I wanted to see moving forward, either. ...I left the Pentagon that afternoon deeply concerned."
Of course, this is fully consistent with the US Neocons' master plan, "Rebuilding America's Defenses," published in August 2000 by the Project for the New American Century (PNAC)

And, as PNAC's website ( New American Century A Magazine To Explore The World ) notes, that the lead author of that plan, Thomas Donnelly, was a top official of Lockheed Martin--a company well acquainted with war and its profit potential.

It's no surprise that Republicans are starting to talk about withdrawing troops from Iraq; the troops will be needed in Lebanon. And maybe Sudan and Syria?

Note:

More on General Clark--and his failure to mention all this in his pre-Iraq war commentary on CNN--is in Sydney Schanberg's 9/29/03 article "The Secrets Clark Kept: What the General Never Told Us About the Bush Plan for Serial War" at http://www.villagevoice.com/news/0340,schanberg,47436,1.html
 
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They talked about it on Euronews, the European tv channel.
That's the only TV report I saw concerning this but I might have missed one on the other major tv channel.

If I am correct a Doctor at one of the hospital was trying to figure out what was used exactly.
 
Yet more atrocities from the IDF. The use of cluster bombs in modern warfare has outlawed for use in populated areas due to the massive casualty rates, and yet here we see reports of the IDF using cluster bombs and phosphorus against civlians!!! The horrors of this war never cease to shock and amaze me.

Notice the evidence presented in this article of the use of Phosphorous bombs by the IDF. Now this weapon is banned under international law, how will the pathocrats in Israel squirm out of this one? They are using this on civilians and they must be stoppped before they use anything nastier such as biological material and ethnic specific weapons.

From the BBC here
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/5213026.stm

US-based Human Rights Watch says Israel has used cluster bombs in civilian areas during its assault on Lebanon.
The group says an attack using the munitions on the village of Blida last week killed one person and injured 12.

It says the explosives - which disperse after impact - are "unacceptably inaccurate and unreliable", and should not be used in populated areas.

The Israeli military says their use is legal under international law, and that it is investigating the Blida incident.

'Outdated'

Critics say cluster bombs leave behind a large number of unexploded bomblets, which often kill long after they are fired.

"Our research in Iraq and Kosovo shows that cluster munitions cannot be used in populated areas without huge loss of civilian life," said Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch (HRW).

The group believes that the use of cluster munitions in populated areas may violate the prohibition on indiscriminate attacks contained in international humanitarian law.

"They're not illegal per se, but certain attacks may be illegal," Washington representative Bonnie Docherty says.

"The law of war requires you to distinguish between soldiers and civilians, so when you are using an outdated, unreliable weapon in a populated area, it is likely that the attack violates international humanitarian law," she told the BBC.

"We have researchers on the ground who are investigating them and will investigate other claims related to cluster munitions, as well as other incidents in the ongoing conflict."

Phosphorous bombs claims

Separately, there have been reports in Lebanon that Israel is using phosphorous bombs in its offensive.

Doctors in hospitals in southern Lebanon say they suspect some of the burns they are seeing are being caused by phosphorous bombs.

Jawad Najem, a surgeon at the hospital in Tyre, told the Associated Press news agency that patients admitted on Sunday were burn cases that resulted from Israeli phosphorous incendiary weapons.

Lebanese President Emile Lahoud made an oblique reference to their use in an interview with French radio.

"According to the Geneva Convention, when they use phosphorous bombs and laser bombs, is that allowed against civilians and children?" he said on Monday.

The Geneva Conventions ban the use of white phosphorous as an incendiary weapon against civilian populations and in air attacks against military forces in civilian areas.

An Israeli military spokeswoman said arms used in Lebanon did not contravene international norms.

"Everything the Israeli Defence Forces are using is legitimate," the spokeswoman was quoted as saying by Reuters news agency.

The Israeli military says it is investigating the claims.
Also note at the end of the Article here, the pathocrats are "investigating claims". Do we really think that the IDF are such blundering fools that they use these kind of weapons without foreknowledge about it and most likely get the "OK" to do so from Olmert himself?

Pull the other one, it has bells on it.

My apologies to the mods if this has already been covered by Laura's post on the subject. I was in a rush to share the info before I left work, and my regular net access.
 
More evidence here to support the editorials and opinions of many on site who have thought that this war is nothing more than a land grab by the Israeli pathocracy.

In this article there are many points for discussion and dissection. For example, does Israels dream of creating a new "Security Strip" in souther Lebanon include plans to maybe build another walled exclusion zone as we have seen in the Gaza Stip and Plaestianian Territories?

Also notice that Condlalizzard has tyold Israel it is allowed as much time as it need to dimsantle hezzbollah and continue the ethnic cleansing of the Palestinians and Lebanese people...if only I could get my hands on that lizzard-woman.

Again from the BBC here
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/5214046.stm

Israel says it will keep control over an area in southern Lebanon until an international force can be deployed.
Defence Minister Amir Peretz said: "We have no other option. We have to build a new security strip that will be a cover for our forces."

His comments came as US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice ended a regional tour and headed for a meeting in Rome.

Hostilities are continuing, with fresh explosions reported in Beirut and Hezbollah rocket attacks on Haifa.

Some 380 Lebanese and up to 40 Israelis have died in nearly two weeks of conflict in Lebanon, which began after Hezbollah captured two Israeli soldiers in a cross-border raid on 12 July.

Another soldier was seized by Palestinian militants earlier.

Truce call

Mr Peretz said a zone in southern Lebanon would be maintained "under the control of our forces if there is not a multinational force".

He did not specify whether Israeli troops would remain there but insisted they would "continue to control [Hezbollah]" in their operations.

Israeli government sources have estimated the width of the zone at anything from three to 10km (1.9-6.2 miles).

An unnamed Israeli official quoted by Reuters news agency said between 10,000 and 20,000 international peacekeepers would be needed.

The idea of the multinational force is sure to be high on the agenda of key international ministerial talks on the crisis in Rome on Wednesday.

Earlier, Ms Rice had expressed concern for the suffering of "innocent people" in the fighting during her tour of the Middle East.

She met Israeli PM Ehud Olmert and later Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

Ms Rice said: "I assured the president that we have great concerns about the suffering of innocent peoples throughout the region."

Mr Abbas called for an immediate end to "aggression against the Gaza Strip and the West Bank" and for an "immediate ceasefire" in Lebanon.

Ms Rice said the only solution was a sustainable peace - "one that can deal with the causes of extremism and lead to the establishment of sovereignty for the Lebanese government throughout its territory".

Beirut attacks

As Ms Rice continued her diplomatic shuffle, Israel maintained its operations in Lebanon, sealing off Bint Jbeil, a Hezbollah stronghold which has been the scene of a fierce battle since the Israelis took the nearby village of Maroun al-Ras on Saturday.

A number of Hezbollah militants are believed to be holding out in the town.


Israel has also resumed air raids on Beirut, with explosions heard in southern suburbs - a Hezbollah stronghold.

Hezbollah guerrillas are maintaining fire of Katyusha rockets into Israel.

A 15-year-old Arab-Israeli girl was killed when a rocket hit her house in the northern Israeli village of Maghar.

Haifa, Israel's third largest city, has been hit by at least a dozen rockets fired from inside Lebanon. An elderly man died of a heart attack as he tried to take shelter.

The Lebanese coastal city of Tyre is seeing heavy Israeli bombardment of the hills south of the city both from Israel and from the sea.

Further north, seven members of one family, including two children, were killed in an overnight air strike in the town of Nabatiyeh.

Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah has appealed to the world to stop the Israeli offensive saying that if not it could engulf the entire Middle East in war.

'New' Middle East

In his meeting with Ms Rice, Mr Olmert said he was "very conscious" of the humanitarian needs of Lebanon's civilians, but insisted Israel was defending itself against terrorism.

He said Israel was not at war with the Lebanese people, but with Hezbollah, which he described as a terrorist organisation, insisting that Israel would take the "most severe measures" against it.

Correspondents say that Ms Rice was unlikely to have called for an end to Israel's military offensive during her talks with the Israeli leader.

The BBC's World Affairs Editor John Simpson, in Jerusalem, says it was understood that Ms Rice would tell Israel that the US will allow it more time to continue its military operations.

Ms Rice has, however, also been highlighting the need for Israel to consider the humanitarian needs of both Lebanon and the Palestinian people and the need for a durable peace.

She said: "It is time for a new Middle East, it is time to say to those who do not want a different kind of Middle East that we will prevail; they will not."

Ms Rice arrived in Israel from Beirut, where she met Lebanon's Prime Minister Fouad Siniora.
 
To be honest I think the IDF will turn around and say "We don't care. No Israeli will appear in a court of law. It won't happen. Period."

(Shades of Star Wars The Phantom Menace as Darth Sidious tells the trade federation "I'll make it legal")
 

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