Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Lebanon puts on a tour of alleged Hezbollah missile sites to prove Israel wrong

- 2018, The Washington post · (C) OCT 02, 2018 -

BEIRUT - Lebanon’s foreign minister escorted dozens of foreign ambassador­s and diplomats to visit a soccer field, a warehouse and a golf course adjoining Beirut’s airport on Monday to counter allegation­s by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that Hezbollah has stored precision guided missiles at the sites.

No evidence of missiles or their production was seen.

The allegation­s and the Lebanese response have come, however, as a reminder of the real risk of another Israel-lebanon war as the conflict in Syria winds down. This has left Lebanon’s Shiite militia Hezbollah, which is closely allied to Iran and has fought on behalf of Syrian President Bashar Assad, in a more powerful position than ever.

Netanyahu made the allegation­s at the United Nations last week, unveiling a satellite map showing three sites near Beirut’s airport where Hezbollah purportedl­y has hidden advanced missiles that could be used to target Israel. The presentati­on raised concerns across Lebanon that Israel is planning an attack on the sites.

The tour was organized to demonstrat­e that Netanyahu is an “internatio­nal liar,” said Lebanon’s foreign minister, Gebran Bassil, who accompanie­d the dignitarie­s and whose political party is allied with Hezbollah.

The attendees included the ambassador­s of Russia, Iran and numerous African and Asian nations, as well as representa­tives of all the major European embassies. Absent was any diplomat from the United States. The U.S. Embassy did not respond to a request for comment.

The sites visited were those identified as Site 2 and Site 3 on Netanyahu’s map, foreign ministry officials said. Site 2 was apparently the clubhouse of one of Lebanon’s biggest soccer teams, Al-ahed, which includes a soccer field, a swimming pool and a gym.

“As you can see, there are no missiles here,” Bassil told the diplomats as they stood in the middle of the soccer field.

Site 3 was a seemingly abandoned warehouse that didn’t look like it had been used for anything in a long time.

The golf course was included on the tour by mistake, Lebanese foreign ministry officials said.

The third location, identified as Site 1 on the Israeli map, was not part of the itinerary, but the officials said they were sure there weren’t any missiles there either.

All three sites are in the densely populated, mostly Shiite neighbourh­ood of Ouzai, where support for Hezbollah runs strong.

Photograph­s of the faces of young men from the area who died fighting for Hezbollah on behalf of Assad hang on the streets.

The diplomats, speaking on condition they not be identified, observed that the tour seemed inconclusi­ve given that one of the sites was excluded. Moreover, the diplomats said, the map displayed by Netanyahu was too indistinct to ascertain the exact locations of the purported missile sites.

Netanyahu accused Hezbollah of “blatantly lying,” saying that the group had removed evidence of the presence of missiles before the ambassador­s visited.

“The Lebanese foreign minister . . . took ambassador­s to the football field, but refrained from taking them to the undergroun­d missile production plant that is right next to it,” he said in a statement issued by his office. “The ambassador­s asked themselves why it took three days to organize the tour. As usual, Hezbollah was careful to clean up the area at the sites that we uncovered.”

Left unaddresse­d by the tour was Hezbollah’s routine boast that it possesses a huge arsenal of missiles, which are presumably hidden somewhere in Lebanon. Israeli estimates put the number of Hezbollah missiles and rockets aimed at Israel at over 100,000, a figure not disputed by Hezbollah.

Asked where the missiles are being stored, the foreign minister said it was not his ministry’s job to establish that. Although Hezbollah acknowledg­es that it possesses precision guided missiles, “this does not mean that they are stored in the vicinity of Beirut airport,” Bassil said.

Israel has repeatedly vowed to prevent Hezbollah from acquiring such missiles, which have the potential to inflict large-scale casualties in Israel and recalibrat­e a balance of power that has seen Israeli airstrikes kill many Lebanese during past wars. Most of the scores of airstrikes conducted by Israel in Syria in recent years were intended to prevent Iranian transfers to Lebanon of sophistica­ted weaponry intended for Hezbollah, according to Israeli officials.

In a speech last month, the Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah said Israel was too late, because Hezbollah already possesses “highly accurate” missiles. “No matter what you do to cut the route, the matter is over,” he said.

Israel has waged two major wars in Lebanon in the past four decades, and its troops occupied southern Lebanon for 24 years until 2000, when they were forced to withdraw under pressure from Hezbollah guerrilla attacks. Their last big confrontat­ion, in 2006, ended inconclusi­vely, and Hezbollah has since establishe­d itself as a major political and military player in Lebanon.

The group’s fighters are returning from Syria with significan­t combat experience and have been assembling a formidable supply of weaponry. Its politician­s won enough seats in parliament in elections in May to play a decisive role in forming the next government.

 ??  ?? Israel has claimed that the Lebanese militia Hezbollah has been storing missiles throughout Beirut, shown here in 2016. (Patrick Baz/afp/getty Images)
Israel has claimed that the Lebanese militia Hezbollah has been storing missiles throughout Beirut, shown here in 2016. (Patrick Baz/afp/getty Images)

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