Kuwait Times

Lebanon army in uncharted territory near Syria border

Evacuation deal leads to the Militants’ withdrawal

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The dust-covered soldiers, armored vehicles and tents may not look very official, but they mark the first time Lebanese troops have deployed in this sliver of land along the Syrian border. After a week-long campaign against the Islamic State group, Lebanese troops have establishe­d an unpreceden­ted presence in the northeaste­rn area of Jurud Ras Baalbek, a belt of territory that has been a longstandi­ng source of contention with Syria.

An evacuation deal led to the jihadists’ withdrawal into eastern Syria on Monday, as the Lebanese army organized a press tour of the area. Dozens of Lebanese troops are manning newly erected outposts on a string of barren hilltops near Syrian territory. “Before Daesh was here, there was no Lebanese army presence,” a member of the special forces’ airborne division said, using the Arabic acronym for IS.

“When we advanced, we pulled out the Daesh flag and stuck in a Lebanese flag for the first time,” the soldier said, speaking on condition of anonymity. Lebanon and Syria share a 330 kilometer border, with no official demarcatio­n at several points, including in the northeast. For years, the mountainou­s territory now held by the army was expertly navigated by smugglers bringing state-subsidized diesel from Syria into Lebanon. Syrian troops had also maintained a presence on Lebanese land there, according to Beirut-based geographer Issam Khalifeh, sometimes preventing farmers in the area from tending to their crops.

Closest to real border

Damascus and Beirut signed an agreement in 2008 to more clearly demarcate the border, but progress has been slow and the northeaste­rn frontier remained largely uncontroll­ed-until now. “This is the closest that the Lebanese army and state have gotten to completely controllin­g the border with Syria,” said Aram Nerguizian of the US-based Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies. He said many of the new army positions lay inside territory historical­ly contested by the two countries, closer to where Lebanon says the real border lies.

Many of the soldiers who spoke to AFP on Monday described it as the closest they had ever been to this sector of the border. “These roads weren’t here before. We opened them so that our vehicles could come through,” said the special forces member, gesturing to white gravel roads criss-crossing the hilly terrain. “This is the first time the Lebanese army has an establishe­d presence in this area,” one heavyset fighter from the 6th Brigades said.

The positions did not appear reinforced yet. Most soldiers relaxed near armored cars or in the shade of tents, but some manned vehicle-mounted heavy machinegun­s pointed at arid valleys below. After Syria’s conflict erupted in 2011, the northeaste­rn border areas were regularly hit by stray shells.

Battle over narrative

In 2014, jihadist militants overran both sides of the frontier, including Jurud Ras Baalbek and the Lebanese border town of Arsal further south. The army launched its operation against jihadists in the area on August 19, coinciding with a simultaneo­us assault waged from the Syrian side by Lebanese militant movement Hezbollah and the Syrian army. Lebanese troops had cornered IS into 20 square kilometers of territory in the border region when a ceasefire deal was announced on Sunday morning.

The agreement was reportedly negotiated between Hezbollah and IS and has seen hundreds of fighters leave the border area for eastern Syria. Lebanon’s army has insisted that there was no coordinati­on with Hezbollah on the offensive. Hezbollah, which has intervened in Syria’s conflict on behalf of the Damascus regime, is the only faction that did not hand over its weapons after the 1975-1990 Lebanese civil war. Its arsenal is a highly controvers­ial issue in Lebanon.

 ??  ?? LEBANON: A picture taken on an army-organized press tour shows Lebanese army commandos standing on a hill they recently took from the Islamic State (IS) group in Jurud Ras Baalbek on the Lebanese-Syrian border.
LEBANON: A picture taken on an army-organized press tour shows Lebanese army commandos standing on a hill they recently took from the Islamic State (IS) group in Jurud Ras Baalbek on the Lebanese-Syrian border.

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