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  • Italian Marines Land In Southern Lebanon

    ITALIAN MARINES LAND IN SOUTHERN LEBANON
    By John Kifner The New York Times

    International Herald Tribune, France
    Sept 4 2006

    BEIRUT Hundreds of Italian marines and their armored vehicles landed
    in southern Lebanon on Sunday, the first large foreign contingent
    of what is to become a reinforced United Nations buffer force on the
    border with Israel.

    A spokesman for the UN peacekeeping force said that about 1,000
    Italian troops were expected to be ashore by nightfall, including
    a small vanguard that arrived in choppy seas on rubber dinghies and
    helicopters Saturday.

    With the 250-man French contingent that arrived last week - mainly
    engineering troops who set to work repairing bombed-out bridges
    and roads - and the 2,000 troops already in place from the previous
    peacekeeping contingent, the Italians raise the number of troops on
    the ground to roughly 3,250 out of a projected goal of 15,000.

    The international force, officially known as the United Nations Interim
    Force in Lebanon, or Unifil, is supposed to help the similar-sized
    deployment of the Lebanese Army as the only legitimate armed group in
    the area, securing an uneasy cease-fire after a monthlong war between
    Israel and Hezbollah guerrillas.

    But under a kind of "don't flaunt, don't search" arrangement between
    Hezbollah and the Lebanese government, the army does not intend to
    attempt to disarm Hezbollah.

    Neither will the UN forces, officials have said, although they will
    have a somewhat tougher mandate - enabling them to use force if
    threatened - than the generally ineffective previous Unifil force,
    in place since a previous Israeli invasion in 1978.

    On armored personnel carriers newly painted with white UN initials,
    Italian soldiers wearing blue berets drove through wrecked villages
    bedecked with yellow Hezbollah flags, prompting locals to wave and
    make victory signs.

    Eventually, Italy intends to deploy 2,450 ground troops - the largest
    single contingent - in four phases spread over two months and assume
    command early next year.

    The current French commander of Unifil, Major General Alain Pellegrini,
    told reporters in Tyre that the new version of Unifil "is strengthened
    with stronger rules of engagement."

    "We have more people, more equipment, and we will have more possibility
    to use force to implement our mission," he said.

    But the efforts to fill out the full 15,000-troop deployment is still
    hampered by the reluctance of many countries to join in what could
    be a dangerous mission.

    Indonesia, a predominantly Muslim country, announced that it
    would send 1,000 troops after Israel withdrew objections to its
    participation. Turkey is also weighing participation, although
    Lebanon's tiny Armenian minority has issued objections because of
    massacres of Armenians by Turks in 1915.

    Israel has announced that its troops, still on the fringes of
    Lebanese territory, had located and blown up several Hezbollah weapons
    caches. The United Nations has said that the Israeli forces should
    fully withdraw over the border as soon as the international force
    reaches 5,000 troops.

    "The cease-fire is holding for the moment," Pellegrini said. "But
    it's fragile. Any incident can escalate."

    Berlin delays deployment

    Germany put on hold its planned naval deployment for the UN
    peacekeeping mission in Lebanon on Sunday, saying it had yet to
    receive a formal request from Beirut to take part, Reuters reported
    from Berlin.

    Chancellor Angela Merkel said the cabinet could not give approval for
    the deployment on Monday, as had been expected, since it had not yet
    received the request from Lebanon.

    She said Germany remained willing to take part in the UN operation,
    but wanted its role to be clear.

    Germany has said it was prepared to patrol the Lebanese coast to
    prevent weapons being delivered to Hezbollah guerrillas, but ruled
    out sending ground troops.

    "There is still discussion in Lebanon and between Lebanon and the UN
    on the request for naval security," Merkel said on ZDF television.

    "We can only decide when we have such a request at the UN and the UN
    then asks us," she said. "And so, out of responsibility toward our
    servicemen, we have said we cannot take a cabinet decision tomorrow."

    In addition to supplying naval ships to patrol the coast, Germany
    has said it was considering providing support for the Lebanese police
    and border guards.

    "The German offer remains, but prudence must come before speed here,
    and therefore we will consult further with the UN on how a deployment
    can be achieved, but only when the conditions are really fulfilled."

    Earlier Sunday, a government spokesman, Ulrich Wilhelm, said Germany
    would deploy troops only under "orderly conditions and with Lebanon's
    clear readiness."

    BEIRUT Hundreds of Italian marines and their armored vehicles landed
    in southern Lebanon on Sunday, the first large foreign contingent
    of what is to become a reinforced United Nations buffer force on the
    border with Israel.

    A spokesman for the UN peacekeeping force said that about 1,000
    Italian troops were expected to be ashore by nightfall, including
    a small vanguard that arrived in choppy seas on rubber dinghies and
    helicopters Saturday.

    With the 250-man French contingent that arrived last week - mainly
    engineering troops who set to work repairing bombed-out bridges
    and roads - and the 2,000 troops already in place from the previous
    peacekeeping contingent, the Italians raise the number of troops on
    the ground to roughly 3,250 out of a projected goal of 15,000.

    The international force, officially known as the United Nations Interim
    Force in Lebanon, or Unifil, is supposed to help the similar-sized
    deployment of the Lebanese Army as the only legitimate armed group in
    the area, securing an uneasy cease-fire after a monthlong war between
    Israel and Hezbollah guerrillas.

    But under a kind of "don't flaunt, don't search" arrangement between
    Hezbollah and the Lebanese government, the army does not intend to
    attempt to disarm Hezbollah.

    Neither will the UN forces, officials have said, although they will
    have a somewhat tougher mandate - enabling them to use force if
    threatened - than the generally ineffective previous Unifil force,
    in place since a previous Israeli invasion in 1978.

    On armored personnel carriers newly painted with white UN initials,
    Italian soldiers wearing blue berets drove through wrecked villages
    bedecked with yellow Hezbollah flags, prompting locals to wave and
    make victory signs.

    Eventually, Italy intends to deploy 2,450 ground troops - the largest
    single contingent - in four phases spread over two months and assume
    command early next year.

    The current French commander of Unifil, Major General Alain Pellegrini,
    told reporters in Tyre that the new version of Unifil "is strengthened
    with stronger rules of engagement."

    "We have more people, more equipment, and we will have more possibility
    to use force to implement our mission," he said.

    But the efforts to fill out the full 15,000-troop deployment is still
    hampered by the reluctance of many countries to join in what could
    be a dangerous mission.

    Indonesia, a predominantly Muslim country, announced that it
    would send 1,000 troops after Israel withdrew objections to its
    participation. Turkey is also weighing participation, although
    Lebanon's tiny Armenian minority has issued objections because of
    massacres of Armenians by Turks in 1915.

    Israel has announced that its troops, still on the fringes of
    Lebanese territory, had located and blown up several Hezbollah weapons
    caches. The United Nations has said that the Israeli forces should
    fully withdraw over the border as soon as the international force
    reaches 5,000 troops.

    "The cease-fire is holding for the moment," Pellegrini said. "But
    it's fragile. Any incident can escalate."

    Berlin delays deployment

    Germany put on hold its planned naval deployment for the UN
    peacekeeping mission in Lebanon on Sunday, saying it had yet to
    receive a formal request from Beirut to take part, Reuters reported
    from Berlin.

    Chancellor Angela Merkel said the cabinet could not give approval for
    the deployment on Monday, as had been expected, since it had not yet
    received the request from Lebanon.

    She said Germany remained willing to take part in the UN operation,
    but wanted its role to be clear.

    Germany has said it was prepared to patrol the Lebanese coast to
    prevent weapons being delivered to Hezbollah guerrillas, but ruled
    out sending ground troops.

    "There is still discussion in Lebanon and between Lebanon and the UN
    on the request for naval security," Merkel said on ZDF television.

    "We can only decide when we have such a request at the UN and the UN
    then asks us," she said. "And so, out of responsibility toward our
    servicemen, we have said we cannot take a cabinet decision tomorrow."

    In addition to supplying naval ships to patrol the coast, Germany
    has said it was considering providing support for the Lebanese police
    and border guards.

    "The German offer remains, but prudence must come before speed here,
    and therefore we will consult further with the UN on how a deployment
    can be achieved, but only when the conditions are really fulfilled."

    Earlier Sunday, a government spokesman, Ulrich Wilhelm, said Germany
    would deploy troops only under "orderly conditions and with Lebanon's
    clear readiness."
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