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Israeli map shows nearly 1,000
Hezbollah sites
Children's at hezbollah militar
parade. Archive photo
Published March 31, 2011 | Associated Press. The Israeli military on
Thursday released a map detailing what it says are nearly 1,000
underground bunkers, weapons storage facilities and monitoring sites
built by the militant Hezbollah guerrillas in southern Lebanon.
Many of the sites on the map are located south of the Litani River in
Lebanon, the zone where Hezbollah is banned from keeping weapons under
the U.N.-sponsored truce that ended Israel's summer 2006 war with the
guerrilla group.
An article on the military spokesman's website says Hezbollah has set up
some 550 bunkers, 300 monitoring sites and 100 weapons storage
facilities. The facilities are located in 270 villages, and many are
located near hospitals, private homes and schools, the military said in
a statement published on its website.
Israel and Hezbollah went to war after the Lebanese guerrilla group
killed three Israeli soldiers and captured two others in a cross-border
raid. Although Israel inflicted heavy damage on the group, it was unable
to prevent it from firing some 4,000 rockets into Israel during the
monthlong conflict.
Since then, Israel has accused Hezbollah of repeatedly violating the
U.N.-brokered cease-fire by restocking its arsenal and covertly moving
forces into south Lebanon, near the Israeli border. The map released
Thursday was meant to provide new evidence against Hezbollah.
Israel believes Hezbollah now has more than 40,000 rockets, nearly three
time the pre-war level, including more powerful weapons capable of
reaching Israel's Tel Aviv heartland.
The militant group, which controls the strongest armed force in Lebanon,
did not acknowledge or deny that the Israeli map was accurate and
accused Israel of employing scare tactics.
"They are trying to tell us that they will destroy Lebanon. Let them do
it if they can and I tell them they cannot," said Khodr Noureddine, a
member of Hezbollah's political bureau.
He speculated that Israel might have released the map because
Hezbollah's leader, Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, told the group last month
to be prepared to invade northern Israel if a new war between the two
sides breaks out.
Israel has for years accused Hezbollah of rearming with the help of Iran
and Syria, setting up "rocket villages" in southern Lebanon. The
Israel-Lebanon border has been tense but largely quiet since the war,
which killed around 1,200 Lebanese and 160 Israelis, according to
official counts from each side.
Source AP.
Bassem Mroue contributed to this report from Beirut.
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