ISRAEL ATTACKS LEBANON
AFTER TROOPS SEIZED
By SAM F. GHATTAS, Associated Press Writer
July 12, 2006
BEIRUT, Lebanon - Israel widened its offensive against Hezbollah guerrillas
on Thursday, targeting Beirut's international airport and blasting southern Lebanon for a second day, police and airport officials
said. At least 22 civilians were reported killed in the south, local media said.
Warplanes struck the runways
of the country's only international airport early Thursday during Israel's
ongoing air and sea assault against Lebanon,
which began a day earlier after Hezbollah guerrillas captured two Israeli soldiers in a cross-border raid. The airport was
later closed, forcing flights to be diverted to nearby Cyprus,
officials said.
In Israel, the military confirmed it had targeted the airport, saying in a statement
it "is a central hub for the transfer of weapons and supplies to the Hezbollah terrorist organization."
It was the first time since
Israel's 1982 invasion of Lebanon
and occupation of Beirut that the airport in the capital's Hezbollah-controlled southern suburbs
was hit by Israel.
Meanwhile, Israeli aircraft
and artillery continued attacking targets in southern Lebanon
overnight, police reported. Leading TV station LBC said at least 22 civilians were killed in the attacks, including a family
of 12 in the village of Dweir.
Other television stations,
including Hezbollah's al-Manar, said 27 people were killed, including 10 children. Police had no immediate confirmation of
the casualties.
Lebanese guerrillas also
fired volleys of rockets at northern Israel,
killing an Israeli woman and wounding five, the army and medics said. The woman was killed when a rocket hit her home in the
northern border town of Nahariya.
Israel bombed and shelled southern Lebanon and sent ground troops over the border for the first time in six years
Wednesday after the two soldiers were captured. The fighting killed eight Israeli soldiers and three Lebanese.
Hezbollah's brazen cross-border
raid opened a second front for the Israeli army. The army is now fighting Islamic militants in both Lebanon and theGaza
Strip, where it is looking for another soldier who was captured more than two weeks ago by Hamas-linked militants.
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud
Olmert called the Hezbollah raid an "act of war" by Lebanon
and threatened "very, very, very painful" retaliation. The Cabinet, meeting in the wake of the military's highest daily death
toll in four years, decided to continue the army operation and call on the international community to disarm Hezbollah, according
to participants.
Residents of northern Israeli
towns were ordered to seek cover in underground bomb shelters as Hezbollah, an anti-Israel guerrilla group that essentially
runs southern Lebanon, launched rockets
across the border throughout the day.
Overnight, Hezbollah fired
rockets and shells at Israeli military bases along the border, the military said. Also, an Israeli civilian was wounded by
a rocket explosion in the border village of Zarit.
His condition was not known.
Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan
Nasrallah said he would free the Israeli soldiers only in a prisoner swap, adding that he was open to a package deal that
would include the release of the soldier held in Gaza.
"The capture of the two
soldiers could provide a solution to the Gaza crisis," he told reporters in Beirut.
At least 23 Palestinians
were killed in Gaza on Wednesday. And an Israeli airstrike
early Thursday destroyed the building housing the Hamas-controlled Palestinian Foreign Ministry. Palestinian medics said 13
people in the neighborhood, including six children, were injured, mainly from flying glass and debris.
The Gaza
crisis began June 25 when Palestinian militants dug a tunnel out of the coastal strip and attacked an army position inside
Israel, seizing Cpl. Gilad Shalit and demanding the release of 1,500 prisoners
held by Israel. Although Israel has made prisoner exchanges in the past, Olmert ruled
out any negotiations for Shalit's return, saying that would only encourage more kidnappings.
Instead, Israel unleashed an offensive against Gaza,
sending in troops, firing artillery and carrying out airstrikes on militant targets in an effort to force the Palestinians
to free Shalit.
In an attempt to assassinate
top Hamas fugitives Wednesday, Israel dropped a quarter-ton bomb on a home
in Gaza City,
killing a couple and seven of their children, ages 4-18. Hamas said its leaders escaped harm, but militants took over the
intensive care unit of a hospital, barring reporters.
Palestinian security officials
said Mohammed Deif, leader of Hamas' military wing and No. 1 on Israel's
wanted list for more than a decade, was among the wounded — suffering severe back injuries that could paralyze him.
Palestinians in Gaza welcomed the attack in Lebanon, hoping it would
force Israel to shift its focus away from
them.
"People are cheering this
attack ... because they view it as a kind of revenge and reprisal against what Israel
has been doing in Gaza," said Salah Bardawil, a spokesman
for Hamas in the Palestinian parliament. "Militarily, by opening a new front against Israel, it would ease the pressure on us. Israel
is using a huge force in Gaza now. It will have to use part
of its military capacity in Lebanon."
However, an Israeli military
official said the army had no intention of moving any forces from the Gaza
theater. The troops already on the northern border would deal with the conflict with Lebanon, backed by reinforcements if needed, the official said, speaking on condition
of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss troop movements.
Israel and Lebanon
have a history of conflict, punctuated by a full-scale Israeli invasion in 1982, and its 18-year occupation of a buffer zone
in southern Lebanon that was intended to prevent attacks on Israel. The last major Israeli air, ground and sea offensive
against Lebanon was in 1996 when about
150 Lebanese civilians were killed.
The United Nations certified that Israel's 2000 withdrawal from Lebanon was complete,
but Lebanon laid claim to a sliver of border territory, still held by Israel, that the U.N. said was actually part of Syria.
Hezbollah, backed by Iran
and Syria and branded a terror group by the U.S.
and Israel, used the dispute to justify
cross-border attacks. But the fighting Wednesday was by far the worst since Israel
withdrew six years ago, and it threatened to escalate.
"This is a terrorist attack
and it is clearly timed to exacerbate already high tensions in the region and sow further violence," U.S. National Security
Council spokesman Frederick Jones said. "We also hold Syria and Iran — which directly support Hezbollah — responsible
for this attack and for the ensuing violence."
Syrian Vice President Farouk
al-Sharaa denied his country had a role in either of the abductions and instead blamed Israel. "For sure, the occupation (of the Palestinian territories) is the cause
provoking both the Lebanese and Palestinian people, and that's why there is Lebanese and Palestinian resistance," he said.
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan called for restraint. "We would not want to
see an expansion, an escalation, of conflict in the region," he said. He also condemned "without reservations the attack"
by Hezbollah fighters.
Hezbollah fighters began
their attack Wednesday by firing a barrage of rockets at communities in northwestern Israel. The guerrillas then crossed the border and launched a surprise attack on
two Israeli Humvees, killing three soldiers, wounding two and capturing the two others, the Israeli army said.
Israel quickly sent armored vehicles over the border on a rescue mission, but one of the tanks rolled over a large mine,
killing the four soldiers inside and sparking a battle that killed another soldier, the army said.