http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/08/15/AR2006081500322.html?referrer=email


Hezbollah Balks At Withdrawal From the South
Lebanese Officials Work on Compromise

By Edward Cody and Doug Struck
Washington Post Foreign Service
Wednesday, August 16, 2006; Page A01 


BEIRUT, Aug. 15 -- Hezbollah refused to disarm and withdraw its fighters from 
the battle-scarred hills along the border with Israel on Tuesday, threatening 
to delay deployment of the Lebanese army and endangering a fragile cease-fire.

The makings of a compromise emerged from all-day meetings in Beirut, according 
to senior officials involved in the negotiations, and Prime Minister Fouad 
Siniora scheduled a cabinet session Wednesday for what he hoped would be formal 
approval of the deal. Hezbollah indicated it would be willing to pull back its 
fighters and weapons in exchange for a promise from the army not to probe too 
carefully for underground bunkers and weapons caches, the officials said.

Hasan Nasrallah, the Hezbollah leader, had insisted that any disarmament of his 
militia -- even in the border area -- should be handled in longer-term 
discussions within the Lebanese government, according to government ministers. 
But the Lebanese army, backed by key political leaders, refused to send troops 
into the just-becalmed battle zone until Hezbollah's missiles, rockets and 
other weapons were taken north of the Litani River, the ministers said.

At stake in the standoff was implementation of a crucial provision of the U.N. 
Security Council cease-fire that went into effect Monday. The accord called for 
quick deployment of 15,000 Lebanese army troops south of the Litani River along 
the border with Israel. They were to take up positions under the aegis of a 
reinforced contingent of the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon, or 
UNIFIL, to form a peacekeeping corps with a total strength of about 30,000.

Hezbollah's reluctance to get its men and arms out of the border zone reflected 
nervousness over the continuing presence of Israeli soldiers on Lebanese soil. 
But it also demonstrated the militant Shiite Muslim movement's increased 
assertiveness here after a war of more than a month during which it stood off 
the Israeli army while Lebanon's national army stood aside.

In a televised speech Monday evening, Nasrallah accused those who are pushing 
Hezbollah for immediate disarmament of "insensitivity and immorality." He 
recalled that Lebanon's Shiite-inhabited areas took the worst battering and 
suffered the highest number of casualties during 33 days of warfare in which at 
least 800 Lebanese civilians were killed and 750,000 were driven from their 
homes, with some estimates substantially higher.

"Those people have performed veritable miracles," he said, referring to the 
Shiite Muslims who are the largest sect among Lebanon's 4 million inhabitants.

"And at this emotionally difficult and fateful time, some individuals speaking 
with wooden tongues sit behind desks in their air-conditioned offices and talk 
about these issues," he added. "This is inappropriate and wrong. I advise that 
no one exert pressure, bearing in mind that the most ferocious battle in the 
history of Lebanon has just been waged south of the river."

The Israeli military said it would begin handing over its positions in Lebanon 
to UNIFIL officers before the end of the week. A UNIFIL spokesman, Milos 
Strugar, said U.N. observers reported no significant Israeli withdrawals along 
the border on the second day of the cease-fire.

Israel television, however, showed troops walking and riding military vehicles 
back into Israel and dozens of tanks taking up positions on the Israeli side of 
the border.

"We are hoping the last IDF soldiers will cross the border in a matter of 
days," Maj. Jonathan Davis of the Israel Defense Forces said in an interview 
near the border. "We want to do it as quickly and swiftly as possible. As soon 
as UNIFIL and the Lebanese army are ready to assume responsibility in the area, 
which we hope is as soon as possible, we will leave."

Israeli officials have declined to say how many of their soldiers are inside 
Lebanon. Strugar said that whatever the number, their withdrawal has to be 
coordinated with UNIFIL and Lebanese army officers in the coming days. "This is 
a complicated issue," he said.

Israeli soldiers killed three armed men who approached their positions in 
southern Lebanon, the military announced. But there were no reports of rockets 
being fired or sustained clashes, despite the existence of Hezbollah and 
Israeli positions at relatively close distances.

[The army said early Wednesday that Israeli forces killed the head of 
Hezbollah's special forces, identified as Sajed Dawayer, just before the U.N. 
cease-fire took effect, but a Hezbollah official dismissed the announcement as 
"baseless," the Associated Press reported from Jerusalem.]

The political repercussions of the war continued with the disclosure by Maariv 
newspaper that the Israeli military's chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Dan Halutz, sold 
his stock portfolio, worth about $27,600, just hours after learning that two 
Israeli soldiers were seized July 12. The newspaper reported that he phoned his 
stockbroker as the Israeli cabinet was meeting to decide to go to war.

The number of Hezbollah fighters in the border zone also was unclear, largely 
because the movement keeps its presence secret and many militia members are 
local residents who take up arms only when called on by their leaders. Their 
departure has not been envisaged, Lebanese officials said, and only the 
militia's officers and their weapons must be pulled back north of the Litani as 
part of the U.N. cease-fire.

Thousands of Lebanese families again filled the roads leading south, heeding a 
call from Hezbollah that they return immediately to their often-shattered 
villages. Leaflets dropped by Israeli aircraft warned them to stay away, but 
cars loaded with children and household belongings streamed down the coastal 
road.

Hezbollah activists provided money for the trip to many refugees leaving 
centers around the country. In his televised talk, Nasrallah promised they also 
would receive money on the spot to help them rebuild their homes, starting an 
immediate aid program for displaced people while the government was still 
holding meetings and appealing for funds.

The Lebanese army would like UNIFIL troops to deploy first in southern Lebanon 
and for the Israelis to pull out, which would then remove Hezbollah's reason 
for remaining there under arms, according to a government minister who spoke on 
condition that he not be named. Once Hezbollah's militia pulls back from the 
border zone, he suggested, the question of its full disarmament or 
incorporation into the army can be debated.

"As the defense minister said, where there are Lebanese army troops, there can 
be no other armed presence," he added. "The position of Hezbollah, at best, is 
ambiguous. They seem to have a fundamental problem with surrendering their arms 
and moving out of the south. That is very disappointing. The best spin you can 
put on it is that Nasrallah wants it sorted out in private."

Nasrallah, in his television address, suggested that for the time being the 
Hezbollah militia in southern Lebanon is the only way to defend Lebanon's 
sovereignty against Israel. Although the long-term solution is state authority 
over the entire territory, he said, that has to be worked out carefully and 
cannot happen overnight given the war that has just been fought.

On the ground, Hezbollah's militia and social welfare infrastructure were the 
only things still functioning in dozens of devastated villages across the 
border zone. Army troops in the village of Srifa, for example, were seen 
working under the orders of Hezbollah militia officers during a search for 
bodies buried under the rubble of buildings destroyed by Israeli bombing.

"What are the alternatives you have come up with?" Nasrallah asked. "Can the 
Lebanese army and the United Nations troops step up to the plate to defend the 
nation? Haste and simplification are out of the question. We were ready and 
will always be ready for dialogue to extend the authority of the state. We are 
part of the government and a basic part of it."

Struck reported from Jerusalem. Correspondent Nora Boustany in Beirut and 
special correspondent Tal Zipper in Kiryat Shemona contributed to this report.




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