Israel puts ground offensive on hold (AP) Updated: 2006-08-10 15:33
JERUSALEM - Israel has put its massive new ground offensive into southern
Lebanon on hold to give the U.N. Security Council more time to come to an
agreement on a cease-fire, an Israeli Cabinet minister and senior officials said
Thursday.
 An Israeli reservist
walks inside Lebanon, not far from the Israeli border, as more ground
troops cross into the war zone. Israel's security cabinet agreed to expand
the ground war in Lebanon to try to deliver a knockout blow to Hezbollah,
amid warnings that the conflict could last another month or
more.[AFP] |
Israel's Security Cabinet on Wednesday approved an expanded ground offensive
in Lebanon, but Prime Minister Ehud Olmert decided to put the campaign on hold
for two or three days to see whether diplomatic efforts will produce results, a
senior Israeli government official said on condition of anonymity because he was
not authorized to speak to the media.
Asked by Israel Radio about the plans for such a delay, Cabinet minister Rafi
Eitan said: "There are diplomatic considerations. There is still a chance that
an international force will arrive in he area. We have no interest in being in
south Lebanon. We have an interest in peace on our borders."
The United Nations has been under tremendous pressure to agree quickly on a
cease-fire to end the fighting that has caused widespread destruction across
southern Lebanon and forced hundreds of thousands of Israelis into bomb
shelters. Israeli officials implied they would halt the new offensive if a
cease-fire agreement removes Hezbollah from the border.
Diplomatic efforts to reach a quick U.N. resolution have faltered over
differences between Washington and Paris on an Israeli withdrawal from southern
Lebanon. France backed Lebanon's call for Israeli troops to pull out once
hostilities end, while the United States supported Israel's insistence on
staying until a robust international force is deployed. Lebanon has offered to
send troops to patrol the border region.
Despite the delay in the offensive, Israeli troops, backed by tanks and
armored vehicles, entered several southern Lebanese towns early Thursday and
took up positions, witnesses said.
Hezbollah said that its guerrillas were engaged in "a violent confrontation"
with Israeli forces whose tanks tried to advance toward the border town of
Khiam, the group's Al-Manar television reported. Israel Army Radio reported that
heavy battles were in progress in south Lebanese villages across from Israel's
Galilee panhandle, hard hit by rockets.
No further information was available.
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