-News for Tue. 9 April & Wed. 10
April 2002 Islamic Guerillas in Lebanon Attack Israeli
Positions
Ross
Dunn Jerusalem 10
Apr 2002 15:23 UTC

Islamic guerrilla
fighters fired rockets and mortars from Lebanon into northern Israel Wednesday.
Israel struck back against targets in Lebanon, prompting fears that the
fighting with the Palestinians could broaden into a regional
conflict.
Islamic guerrilla
fighters in southern Lebanon attacked three Israeli military positions along
the northern frontier of the Jewish State.
The attack Wednesday
by the Hezbollah, or Party of God, marked the 11th straight day that the
Iranian backed group has bombarded Israeli positions.
Israeli warplanes
struck back, pounding suspected Hezbollah positions inside Lebanon, but there
was no immediate report of any casualties.
The United States has
expressed "grave concern" over the escalating violence and the United Nations
has called on Lebanon to prevent more attacks against
Israel.
The appeals from the
international community come amid mounting speculation that Hezbollah is
attempting to open up a "second front," while Israel continues its military
campaign inside Palestinian areas in an effort to halt
terrorism.
Hezbollah, which has
vowed to help Palestinians fighting Israeli forces in the West Bank, has been
concentrating its attacks in the Shebaa Farms region on the northern frontier
over the past week.
Israel seized the
area from Syria during the 1967 Middle East War, but Hezbollah insists that the
land is sovereign Lebanese territory.
The Israeli Defense
Minister, Binyamin Ben-Eliezer said he blames Syria, the main power broker in
Lebanon, for allowing Hezbollah to freely launch attacks against the Jewish
state.
He warned Syrian
President Basher Assad that he is "playing with fire" and that Israel could not
show restraint indefinitely in the face of continuing attacks along its
northern border.
Mr. Ben-Eliezer's
statement was being seen as an indication that Israel might fire at Syrian
targets inside Lebanon, if the hostilities are not halted.
Syria has some 30,000
troops stationed inside Lebanon, and recently re-deployed them further away
from the border of Israel.
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