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(回答先: 「ほんとうの戦争はいま始まった」 イスラエル軍敗北の公算 ロバート・フィスク記者が予測 投稿者 どさんこ 日時 2006 年 8 月 14 日 10:53:53)
□イスラエルのラジオ局 イスラエル軍がリタニ川に到達する
・ハーレツがイスラエル軍の情報筋の話として,
シリアは現在もヒズボラに対して大量のロケット弾やミサイルなどの供給を続けていると
報じている。
http://www.iraq-war.ru/article/98548
Israeli Troops Reach Lebanon's Litani River - Israel Radio
By: AP on: 13.08.2006 [16:56 ] (568 reads)
Relief convoys head south
Syria still transferring supply of rockets, missiles to Hezbollah
Israeli Troops Reach Lebanon's Litani River -Israel Radio
Copyright 2006, Dow Jones Newswires
JERUSALEM (AP)--Israeli army units reached the Litani River on Saturday, less than 24 hours after the government ordered an operation to march toward the river in a final push against entrenched Hezbollah guerrillas, Israel Radio reported.
The units were part of a massive force that flooded into Lebanon in an effort to seize as much territory as possible before a U.N. cease-fire comes into effect. The objective was to control southern Lebanon up to the Litani River, about 18 miles from the Israeli border, before handing over the area to the Lebanese army and U.N. troops.
http://framehosting.dowjonesnews.com/sample/samplestory.asp?StoryID=2006081216530005&Take=1
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Relief convoys head south
Sun Aug 13, 2006 11:56am ET
BEIRUT (Reuters) - Relief agencies sent convoys toward southern Lebanon on Sunday, hoping a planned truce between Israel and Hizbollah guerrillas would mean rapid improvement in the humanitarian crisis there.
Frustrated by heavy fighting and a ban on movement imposed by Israel's army, aid workers say they have been unable to bring food, water and medicine to an estimated 100,000 people trapped south of Lebanon's Litani River.
But they said they could reach the area on short notice if a truce resulting from last week's U.N. Security Council resolution to end the war takes place on Monday as planned.
"We expected better access immediately after the resolution, so we are a bit frustrated, but we expect the access to be much better after the ceasefire," said U.N. spokesman Khaled Mansour.
"I would expect we would be able to run convoys south of the Litani as of tomorrow (if it takes hold)."
The U.N.'s World Food Programme said it sent two convoys to the southern city of Sidon and one should proceed on Monday to Tyre, a port south of the Litani cut off from the north when Israel bombed the last main crossing a week ago.
Spokesman Robin Lodge said U.N. peacekeepers were to rebuild the crossing over the river, a rocky cut a few meters wide and as many deep crossing Lebanon about 20 km north of the Israeli border.
"We're hoping that by the time our trucks reach the Litani, a crossing will be secured," he said.
The WFP said another convoy was halted on the Syrian border due to Israeli air strikes, but said it had received clearance for two ships to dock in Beirut with fuel, food, and other supplies for the estimated 900,000 people displaced by the war.
At least 1,076 people in Lebanon, mostly civilians, and 144 Israelis, including 104 soldiers, have died in the month-long war, triggered when Hizbollah seized two soldiers in a raid into the Jewish state on July 12.
FUEL CRISIS EASING
A senior source at Beirut's airport said one of three destroyed runways could be fixed within a week once work could begin. The strips can now accommodate only planes needing short landing distances.
Tyre and Sidon were still without electricity after Israel bombed power stations there on Friday, but a fuel crisis that had threatened to shut down water pumping stations and hospitals was easing.
A senior source in the fuel industry said five million liters of petrol had arrived last week from Syria and another similar shipment was expected next week. A ship carrying 30,000 tonnes of fuel could also arrive in Beirut as early as Monday.
"If the naval blockade is lifted tomorrow morning and there is a cessation of hostilities, it will come in," he said. "If that happens, we would have immediate relief and things should quickly return to normal."
The UNHCR refugee agency said as many as a third of the displaced could return within days of a truce, although aid groups said refugees would remain very cautious.
"When the people feel secure, they'll go back," said Cassandra Nelson, senior communications officer for aid group Mercy Corps.
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Syria still transferring supply of rockets, missiles to Hezbollah
By Amos Harel, Haaretz Correspondent
Syria continues its efforts to transfer large quantities of war materiel, including rockets, to Lebanon, in an effort to assist Hezbollah in its war against Israel, a senior Israel Defense Forces source told Haaretz on Saturday.
According to the IDF source, the air force has succeeded in partially stemming the arms transfers, but intelligence shows that supply convoys have managed to cross into Lebanon from Syria.
Senior Syrian army and intelligence officers are involved in the arms smuggling, according to the senior IDF source, who says it is unlikely this continues without the explicit support of the regime in Damascus.
Two specific types of weapons - anti-tank missiles and rockets used to target Israeli civilians - are of concern.
The alert levels of the Syrian army, especially on the Golan Heights, is at its highest levels since the Lebanon War in 1982. The Syrian preparedness is mostly defensive, but the IDF is not excluding the possibility that Damascus will initiate a limited ground operation during the closing stages of the war.
Such an act, from a Syrian point of view, would aim at improving its position toward the end of the current confrontation and force Israel to begin negotiations on a broader diplomatic initiative that would include the return of the Golan Heights.
Part of the IDF's defensive deployment is meant to counter such a threat, including the deployment of anti-aircraft missiles in Haifa and the Sharon to intercept possible launches of Syrian Scud surface-to-surface ballistic missiles targetting Israeli cities.
In another development, in recent fighting, IDF forces uncovered the bodies of a number of fighters who appear to belong to Iran's Revolutionary Guard. No identifying documents were discovered on the bodies but tattoos suggest they belong to the Iranian force.
According to IDF sources, Iran sent several dozen Revolutionary Guard fighters to bolster the ranks of Hezbollah
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/749692.html