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Timeline:
Decades of conflict in Lebanon, Israel |
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The 1967 Arab-Israeli War and Jordan's 1970 crackdown on
the Palestine Liberation Organization, following a coup
attempt against King Hussein, drove large numbers of
Palestinian refugees into Lebanon -- Yasser Arafat and
the PLO among them.
Below is a timeline of significant events in the
relationship among Israel, Lebanon and the Palestinians
since then:
December 1968: Israeli commandos attack Beirut
International Airport on December 28, 1968, damaging or
destroying more than a dozen airplanes in retaliation
for an attack on an Israeli civilian airplane at the
airport in Athens, Greece. Two Palestinians were charged
in the Athens attack that left an Israeli passenger
dead.
November 1969: Lebanese army commander in chief Emile
Bustani and Arafat sign an agreement in Cairo that
recognizes the "Palestinian revolution" and allows
Palestinians in Lebanon "to join in the armed struggle
without undermining Lebanon's sovereignty and welfare."
This agreement will stay in effect for nearly 20 years,
until Lebanon rescinds it in May 1987.
1970-1971: Faced with fighting in Jordan that left
thousands dead, the PLO moves its base to Lebanon, where
it carries out raids on Israel. A Palestinian terrorist
group linked to the PLO is formed. Its name is "Black
September" -- a reference to the Jordanian crackdown on
Palestinians in September 1970.
1972: Black September attacks the Israeli Olympic team
during the games in Munich, Germany. After a struggle
that left a coach and an athlete dead, the terrorists
take nine Israeli athletes hostage, demanding the
release of Palestinian prisoners in return for the
hostages' release. Israel refuses, and a shootout
between the attackers and West German authorities leaves
all nine hostages, four terrorists and a policeman dead.
April 1973: Israeli elite commandos -- dressed as women
and led by future Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak --
kill three PLO leaders in Beirut.
1975: Civil war breaks out in Lebanon, pitting
Palestinians and pro-Palestinian Lebanese militias
against Lebanon's Christian militias. The war would last
nearly 15 years, officially ending in 1990.
1976: Syria sends military peacekeepers during the early
months of the civil war to help end it. The troops would
remain there nearly 30 years, until April 2005.
March 1978: A PLO attack on a bus in northern Israel
prompts Israeli military forces to move into Lebanon to
push the PLO back from the border. Israel withdraws
after the U.N. Security Council passes a resolution for
the immediate withdrawal of Israeli forces. Under the
leadership of Lebanese army Maj. Saad Haddad, an Israeli
ally, a 12-mile wide "security zone" is established to
protect Israeli territory from cross-border attacks.
September 1978: The Camp David Accords, brokered by U.S.
President Jimmy Carter, lead to a peace treaty between
Israel and Egypt. The accords lay the groundwork for a
similar treaty between Israel and Lebanon, as well as
its other Arab neighbors.
July 17, 1981: Israeli forces bomb PLO headquarters in
West Beirut, killing more than 300 civilians. The attack
leads to a U.S.-brokered cease-fire between Israel, the
PLO and Syria, whose troops were in Lebanon.
1982: The cease-fire lasts until June 6, 1982, when
Israel invades Lebanon with about 60,000 troops in a
push to destroy the PLO, after an assassination attempt
on Israel's ambassador to Britain. Arafat and the PLO
flee Lebanon in August and settle in Tunis, Tunisia,
where they remain until moving to Gaza in 1994.
The Israel-backed Lebanese president-elect, Bashir
Gemayel, is assassinated September 14, shortly before
his inauguration. Israeli troops enter West Beirut a day
later, and the following day, nearly 800 Palestinian
refugees are massacred at the hands of Lebanese
Christian militias in the Sabra and Shatila camps.
Israel is accused of doing nothing to prevent or stop
the massacre.
Hezbollah, a fundamentalist Shiite Muslim militant
group, emerges as a force in Beirut, the Bekaa Valley
and southern Lebanon. Sponsored by Iran, modeled after
Iran's Revolutionary Guards and supported by Syria,
Hezbollah aims to establish a Shiite Islamic state in
Lebanon and force Western interests like Israel and the
United States out of the region.
April 18, 1983: A suicide attack by Hezbollah on the
U.S. Embassy in West Beirut kills 63 people, a harbinger
of future attacks against U.S. and Western interests.
May 17, 1983: Lebanon and Israel sign a U.S.-brokered
peace agreement, spelling out terms of Israeli
withdrawal from Lebanon, conditional on the withdrawal
of Syrian forces. Syria opposes the agreement.
October 23, 1983: A Hezbollah suicide bomber blows up
the headquarters of U.S. Marine and French forces in
Beirut, killing 298 people -- 241 of them U.S. Marines
and other military personnel. U.S. troops are withdrawn
from Lebanon a few months later.
January 18, 1984: American University of Beirut
President Malcolm Kerr is assassinated.
March 1984: With pressure mounting from Syria, Lebanon
cancels the May 17, 1983, peace agreement.
September 20, 1984: The U.S. Embassy annex in East
Beirut is bombed, and 23 people are killed.
June 1985: Israel withdraws from most of Lebanon but
keeps control of the 12-mile-wide security zone in the
south. Israel remains there until May 2000.
1990: Lebanon's 15-year civil war officially ends.
July 1993: Israel attacks southern Lebanon in a weeklong
operation aimed at ending Hezbollah attacks on Israeli
towns.
April 1996: Israel and Hezbollah militants engage in a
16-day battle, in which at least 137 people, mostly
Lebanese civilians, are killed.
May 2000: Israeli troops withdraw from southern Lebanon,
and the United Nations establishes the "Blue Line" as a
border between the two countries.
September 2003: Israeli warplanes hit southern Lebanon
in response to Hezbollah's firing antiaircraft missiles
at Israeli planes in the area.
October 2003: Israel and Lebanon exchange gunfire in the
disputed area known as Shebaa Farms.
February 14, 2005: Former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik
Hariri is assassinated. Pressure builds on Syria to
withdraw its remaining troops from Lebanon, which it
does in April.
July 2006: Hezbollah militants cross into Israel, kill
three Israeli soldiers and kidnap two others in a bid to
negotiate a prisoner exchange, a demand rebuffed by
Israel. Another five Israeli soldiers are killed after
the ambush. Israel responds with a naval blockade and by
bombing hundreds of targets in Lebanon, including
Beirut's airport and Hezbollah's headquarters in
southern Beirut. Hezbollah responds with rocket attacks
targeting northern Israeli cities. Fighting leaves
dozens of Lebanese civilians dead and coincides with a
two-week-old Israeli military campaign in Gaza in
response to the kidnapping of an Israeli soldier by
Palestinian militants.
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