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  • Israel attacks Beirut airport, forcing it to close, civilians killed

    Israel attacks Beirut airport, forcing it to close, civilians killed in south Lebanon

    AP Worldstream; Jul 13, 2006 SAM F. GHATTAS

    Israeli forces intensified their attacks in Lebanon on Thursday,
    imposing a naval blockade on the country and pounding its only
    international airport and the Hezbollah TV station in Israel's heaviest
    air campaign against Lebanon for 24 years.

    After warplanes punched holes in the airport's runways just south
    of Beirut, Israel's army chief Brig. Gen. Dan Halutz warned that
    "nothing is safe" in Lebanon. He said the Lebanese capital itself _
    particularly offices and residences of Hezbollah officials in the
    southern suburbs _ would be a target.

    Hezbollah countered that it would rocket the key Israeli port city of
    Haifa if Israel hit Beirut. A strike on Haifa, Israel's third largest
    city, would be the deepest ever into Israel by the guerrillas _ some
    30 kilometers (18 miles) _ and would sharply escalate the violence.

    The shockwaves from the fighting began to be felt as tensions
    sharpened, with both sides playing a high stakes game after Hezbollah
    snatched two Israeli soldiers: Israel seeking to end once and for all
    Hezbollah's presence on the border while the guerrillas insisting to
    trade the captured soldiers with Arab prisoners.

    Trapped between them was Lebanon, which Israel said it held responsible
    for Hezbollah's snatching of the soldiers. The Lebanese government
    insisted it had no prior knowledge of the move and did not condone it.

    Hezbollah fighters operate with almost total autonomy in southern
    Lebanon, and the government has no control over their actions. But
    the government has long resisted international pressure to disarm
    the group _ and two Hezbollah ministers are members of the Lebanese
    Cabinet, even though the majority are anti-Syrian politicians, some
    of whom are critics of the group. Any attempt to disarm the group by
    force could lead to sectarian conflict.

    Two days of Israeli bombing have killed 47 Lebanese and wounded 103,
    Health Minister Mohammed Jawad Khalife said.

    The Israeli warnings of more to come caused panic in Beirut, with
    traffic in the streets thin as people stuck their homes and stayed
    away from their jobs. Others packed supermarkets to stock up on goods
    and long lines formed on gas stations, with many quickly running out
    of gas.

    U.S. President George W. Bush pledged Thursday to work with Israel,
    criticizing Hezbollah for thwarting efforts for peace in the Middle
    East.

    "My attitude is this: there are a group of terrorists who want to
    stop the advance of peace," he said at a press conference in Germany.
    "Those of us who are peace living must work together to help the
    agents of peace."

    Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas warned that Israel's Lebanon
    offensive "is raising our fears of a new regional war" and urged
    world powers to intervene "to stop this serious deterioration." The
    Arab League called an emergency meeting of foreign ministers in Cairo
    on Saturday.

    The escalation of violence in the Middle East pushed crude oil prices
    to a new intraday record of US$75.88 a barrel. Western countries,
    Russia and the United Nations called for restraint and demanded
    the soldiers. Arab and Lebanese satellite TV stations ran urgents
    and beamed pictures across the Arab world. One station showed a man
    holding the head and torso of a baby killed in the Israeli bombing.

    Eight Israeli soldiers have been killed in the violence so far,
    including three who died in Hezbollah's initial raid Wedneday to
    snatch the two soldiers.

    In northern Israel, thousands of civilians spent Wednesday night
    in underground shelters as Hezbollah fired rockets at two cities
    in northern Israel. A 40-year-old Israeli woman was killed and five
    people were wounded in the rocket attacks, the Israeli army reported.

    After hitting roads and bridges in the south all day Wednesday,
    Israel was dramatically expanding its campaign Thursday with their
    biggest offensive in Lebanon since Israel's 1982 invasion.

    Israeli warships imposed a naval blockade of Lebanese ports _ which
    Lebanese officials confirmed. Besides threatening to hit Beirut,
    the Israeli military said it could also target the Beirut to Damascus
    highway, the main land link between Lebanon and the outside world..

    Israeli Defense Minister Amir Peretz said his forces would not allow
    Hezbollah guerrillas to occupy positions along the southern Lebanese
    border.

    "If the government of Lebanon fails to deploy its forces, as is
    expected of a sovereign government, we shall not allow Hezbollah
    forces to remain any further on the borders of the state of Israel,"
    Peretz said.

    Air force Maj. Gen. Amir Eshel said the campaign was likely Israel's
    largest ever in Lebanon "if you measure it in number of targets hit
    in one night, the complexity of the strikes." The last major air,
    ground and sea offensive against Lebanon was in 1996 when about 150
    Lebanese civilians were killed.

    Travelers to and from Beirut were stranded all over the region and
    beyond after Israel hit Beirut airport after dawn Thursday. Among
    them was Foreign Minister Fawzi Salloukh, who was returning from a
    visit to Armenia and _ like many _ was forced to make his way home
    through Syria.

    Israeli warplanes blasted craters into all three runways at the
    Beirut airport, located by the seaside in the Lebanese capital's
    Hezbollah-controlled southern suburbs, forcing its closure and the
    diversion of incoming flights to Cyprus. The main terminal building
    of the US$500 million airport, which was built in the late 1990s,
    remained intact.

    The Israeli military said it struck the airport because 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 south Beirut was hit
    by Israel. The Israelis in 1968 sent commandos to Beirut airport,
    blowing up 13 passenger planes on the runway in retaliation for Arab
    militants firing on an Israeli airliner in Athens.

    Later Thursday, an Israeli missile hit the building housing the
    main studios of Hezbollah's Al-Manar TV in the south Beirut suburb
    of Haret Hreik, the channel's press officer Ibrahim Farhat told The
    Associated Press.

    The station continued to broadcast, reporting that an Israeli rocket
    had hit a "minor transmission unit." One person was hurt in the strike,
    station manager Abdullah Kassir told Voice of Lebanon radio.

    Other strikes hit bridges and roads in the south and deep into
    eastern Lebanon, striking a civic center attached to a Shiite Muslim
    mosque near the town of Baalbek, as well as a transmission antenna
    for Al-Manar, witnesses reported. The group's broadcasts stopped in
    the area.

    Among the Lebanese dead in the strikes were a family of 10 and another
    family of seven, killed in their homes in the village of Dweir near
    Nabatiyeh, Lebanese officials said. A Lebanese soldier and a Hezbollah
    fighter have also been killed.

    Meanwhile, helicopter gunships and jet fighters scoured southern
    Lebanon for guerrillas launching rockets into northern Israel.

    Hezbollah fired volleys of rockets at the Israelis town of Nahariya
    and Kiryat Shmona,saying it was using a rocket called "Thunder 1"
    for the first time. The missile appeared to be more advanced than
    the inaccurate Katyusha which has been the standard Hezbollah rocket
    for years.

    The Israeli army said several rockets had landed more than 20
    kilometers (12 miles) south of the border, showing that Hezbollah
    has managed to extend its missiles' range.

    Hezbollah has declared it has over 10,000 rockets and has in the
    past struck northern Israeli communities in retaliation for attacks
    against Lebanese civilians.
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