WORLD / Middle East

Israeli troops surge into south Lebanon
(AFP)
Updated: 2006-08-13 14:50

Early Sunday, jets destroyed a bridge near in the remote Akkar region bordering Syria, wounding two people, television and security officials reported. In the western Bekaa Valley, an Israeli drone fired a missile on a Lebanese army vehicle, wounding two of its occupants, witnesses and security officials said. Lebanese television LBC said a woman and her three children were killed when a raid destroyed a building near the southern city of Tyre, but the report could not be immediately confirmed.

The big expansion of Israel troop strength prompted Hezbollah's leader, Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, to declare the fight far from finished and likely to get worse.

"We must not make a mistake, not in the resistance, the government or the people, and believe that the war has ended. The war has not ended," he said.

"Today nothing has changed and it appears tomorrow nothing will change," Nasrallah added in his trademark measured tones.

Speaking a few hours before Lebanon's Cabinet voted unanimously to accept the U.N. plan, Nasrallah said Hezbollah would abide by the cease-fire resolution but continue fighting as long as Israeli troops remained in Lebanon, calling it "our natural right."

Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Saniora said his Cabinet endorsed the cease-fire plan despite having reservations. "We will deal with the requirements of the resolution with realism in a way that serves the national interest," he said.

The Cabinet harshly condemned Israel's military push Saturday, saying it presented a "flagrant challenge" to the international community after the U.N. resolution was issued.

A senior Israeli official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss sensitive issues publicly, said Israel wanted to seize control of the south so more Hezbollah fighters do not enter the zone before it is handed over to the Lebanese army and U.N. troops.

Defense Minister Amir Peretz said Israeli troops would remain until the international force arrived, and would defend themselves if attacked.

"If anyone dares to use force against Israeli defense forces, we will see this as a violation of the cease-fire agreement," he said on Israel television.

Israel's army chief, Lt. Gen. Dan Halutz, said ground forces had tripled in size in a bid to chase Hezbollah fighters and rocket crews north of the Litani, 18 miles north of the border. He did not give a specific figure, but a threefold increase would mean Israel had 30,000 soldiers inside Lebanon.

Lebanese security officials said Israel troops reached the Litani by helicopter at a point about six miles west of the northern tip of the Israeli panhandle that juts northward alongside southeastern Lebanon. The officials said the troops were near the village of Aalmane, which sits on high ground on the south side of the river.

The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to reporters, said the commandos cleared the area ahead of the arrival of a column of Israeli armored vehicles.
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