History of Lebanon
War in Lebanon ( 1970 AD - 1982 AD)
War in Lebanon
In 1970, Jordan expelled the PLO from its territories
sending many civilian refugees and armed guerillas into Lebanon. Meanwhile,
the communist countries were having economic problems.
Syria was a typical communist
country allied with the Soviet Union adapting its economical and political systems.
The flourished free-market in its neighboring small country of Lebanon was the
capture for Syria.
The dictator of Syria, Hafez Asad, clearly declared his intentions
of annexing Lebanon on August 8, 1973 by announcing that ‘Lebanon and
Syria are one country and one people yet are run by two governments’.
Arms and
funding were flowing to Lebanon and many political parties were turned into
armed forces while the Lebanese army was getting weaker and unable to take control.
In April 13, 1975, Palestinian gunmen killed four Christian Lebanese in front
of a church east of Beirut, while Christian militiamen ambushed a busload of
Palestinians later of the same day.
A brutal fight broke up the war in Lebanon
then. In 1976, the Syrian army invaded the Lebanese northern region of Akkar,
and advanced into the Bekaa valley east of Lebanon.
A month later, the Syrian
dictator delivered his famous speech in the Syrian capital stating that he sent
the Syrian army to Lebanon without a permission from any authorities.
The League
of Arab Countries tried to sent peace-keeping troops to Lebanon, but they were
forced to leave the country for the Syrian army later. The Syrian troops in
Lebanon meanwhile worked on silencing the Lebanese voices that were criticizing
its martial interference by assassinating several Lebanese national and religious
figures.
Palestinian militiamen kept launching attacks from the areas they controlled
in South Lebanon against Northern Israel. The Israeli response was more severe
and often impacted Lebanese civilians.
The attacks developed into an Israeli
invasion of Southern Lebanon in March 1978.
The United Nation Interim Forces were deployed in South Lebanon to reduce the
tension and the Israeli forces pulled back later.
The Syrian army continued
gradually occupying more regions in Lebanon including parts of the capital ‘Beirut’.
The regions in which were not under Syrian occupation were punished by contenious
bombing while pro-Syrian guerillas were committing massacres against civilians.
In the early eighties, Lebanon was being destroyed with contenious fighting,
while PLO militias occupied most of Beirut and kept launching attacks against
Northern Israel.
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