Saturday, January 31, 2015

Israel, Hezbollah on edge of wider conflict


Burning vehicles are seen near the village of Ghajar on Israel's border with Lebanon. A Hezbollah missile strike killed two and wounded seven Israeli soldiers on Wednesday. 
LEBANON : In the most significant escalation of tensions since the 2006 Israel-Hezbollah war, cross-border missile attacks have left a United Nations peacekeeper dead in Lebanon and killed two Israeli soldiers in the country's north.
The Shiite militant group Hezbollah claimed responsibility for the anti-tank missile attack on the Israeli military convoy in the contested Shebaa Farms area along the border with Lebanon that killed the two soldiers and wounded seven others on Wednesday.
Hezbollah said the attack was carried out by the "al-Quneitra Martyr's Brigade" - a reference to the area in the Syrian Golan Heights where an Israeli air strike on January 18 killed five Hezbollah fighters and a general from Iran's Revolutionary Guard. Since that attack, those on all sides of the sensitive border area - already under pressure as fighting from the four-year-long Syrian civil war draws ever closer - have been bracing for the moment Hezbollah decided to strike back.
Spain says Israeli fire killed a Spanish UN peacekeeper serving in south Lebanon and called on the United Nations to fully investigate the violence. "It is clear that this was because of the escalation of the violence and it came from the Israeli side," Spanish UN ambassador Roman Oyarzun said.
UN Secretary-General Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called on all to exercise maximum calm and restraint. Israel told the UN Security Council on Wednesday it will take all necessary measures to defend itself after the exchange of fire between Hezbollah militants and Israel.
Israel responded immediately, launching a two-hour long barrage of shelling into Lebanon near the border villages of Majidiyeh, Abbasiyeh and Kfar Chouba, close to the Shebaa Farms area - a thin sliver of land that borders Lebanon, Syria and Israel that has been in dispute since 1967. By the time the Israeli attack was over, a Spanish peacekeeper from the United Nations Interim Forces in South Lebanon stationed at a UN position near Ghajar was dead. The cause of his death has yet to be determined and remains the subject of investigation, UNIFIL said in a statement.
UNIFIL Head of Mission and Force Commander Major-General Luciano Portolano said he was in contact with both parties to help prevent further escalation and urge restraint, condemning what he described as a "serious violation of UN Security Council resolution 1701".
The peacekeeping force, made up of around 10,000 soldiers from 36 countries, reinforced its presence in the area and intensified patrols in coordination with the Lebanese Armed Forces. "At this time the situation along the Blue Line is quiet," the UNIFIL statement read.
UN Security Council resolution 1701 marked the end of the bloody 2006 war Israel fought against Hezbollah that killed more than 1000 Lebanese, mostly civilians, and at least 160 Israelis, mostly soldiers. Since then the 80-kilometre border area has been mostly quiet. And although the hostilities that flared on Wednesday morning had subsided by nightfall, both sides warned there may be more violence to come. Israeli politicians - deep in campaign mode for their upcoming election on March 17 - called for a harsh response to the Hezbollah actions.
"The Israeli army is replying to events in the north - all those who want to attack us in the north should look to what happen in the south ... in the Gaza Strip," the Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said. "The Israel army is prepared to launch powerful actions."
He was referring to Israel's 50-day war in Gaza last July and August in which 2200 Palestinians - mostly civilians - were killed and hundreds of thousands had their homes destroyed.
The country's foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman, urged the IDF to respond in a "harsh and disproportionate manner".
Mr Netanyahu was holding overnight consultations with senior military and political colleagues, including Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon and IDF Chief-of-Staff Lieutenant General Benny Gantz.

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