The Hindu - International

Israel’s former Lebanese military allies grapple with renewed Hezbollah threat

Members of the South Lebanon Army, a mostly Christian militia recruited by Israel during its occupation of south Lebanon, had taken shelter in the Jewish nation, fearing reprisal from Hezbollah, following its withdrawal in 2000; now the threat of war rais

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he looming threat of a war between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon is reviving painful memories for former Lebanese militiamen and their families who ed to Israel, their erstwhile ally, more than 20 years ago.

The South Lebanon Army (SLA) was a mostly Christian militia recruited by Israel when it occupied south Lebanon in the 1980s and 1990s.

The Zadalnikim, as the SLA’s former members are known in Israel from the group’s Hebrew acronym, sought shelter south of the border in the aftermath of Israel’s sudden withdrawal from Lebanon in May 2000, fearing reprisals from Hezbollah, whom they had fought for years in a brutal and uncompromi­sing conict.

Iran-backed Hezbollah — a Hamas ally with a large arsenal of rockets and missiles — has exchanged Œre with Israeli forces almost daily since Hamas attacked Israel on October 7 triggering war in Gaza.

In response, Israel has carried out strikes deeper and deeper into Lebanese territory, targeting several Hezbollah commanders.

A strip several kilometres wide on either side

Tof the border has become a de facto war zone, emptied of its tens of thousands of civilian residents.

“They told us to prepare for two weeks in a hotel in Tiberias” in northern Israel, said Claude Ibrahim, one of Israel’s more prominent Lebanese collaborat­ors.

“It’s already been six months. I hope it won’t last 24 years,” he said, referring to his exile from Lebanon.

Mr. Ibrahim, a former right-hand man of the late

SLA commander Antoine Lahad, was evacuated from the northern Israeli town of Kiryat Shmona, near the Lebanese border, in October when the entire city was emptied.

‘History repeating’

“It’s as if history repeated itself... generation after generation,” he said, referring to how the Zadalnikim had to ee their homeland after years spent moving from village to village during the Lebanese civil war of the 1970s and 1980s.

Of the 6,000 to 7,000 Lebanese who ed to Israel in May 2000, around 3,500 still live in Israel, according to the authoritie­s. They are registered with the Interior Ministry as “Lebanese of Israel” and were granted citizenshi­p in 2004.

Shortly after their arrival in Israel — where authoritie­s only partly took responsibi­lity for them — many moved on to Sweden, Germany or Canada. Others returned to Lebanon, where they were tried for collaborat­ion

All former SLA members in Israel have relatives in Lebanon, mostly in villages in the south, a few kilometres from the Israeli border. Few agreed to be interviewe­d out of fear of reprisals against their families in Lebanon, whom they stay in touch with via third parties for the same reason.

Maryam Younnes, a 28year-old communicat­ions student at Bar-Ilan University near Tel Aviv, was Œve when she arrived in Israel with her parents. When her father, a former SLA ofŒcer, died a decade ago, they were able to bury him in their ancestral village of Debel, roughly 10 kilometre from Ma’alot-Tarshiha, the northern Israeli town they moved to. The rest of their family remained in Lebanon, in Debel and the capital Beirut.

With fears growing that the near-daily exchanges of Œre across the border might escalate into a fullscale war, Ms. Younnes was worried about her relatives.

“I’m very concerned for my family, for my village (in Lebanon),” said Ms. Younnes, who sees herself as “half Lebanese, half Israeli”.

“I hope that there will be a way to protect them”, with

Israel. she said, if there is an allout war with Hezbollah.

Mr. Ibrahim was equally worried, although he voiced hope that a new conict with Israel would “Œnish o™” his old enemy Hezbollah.

‘Tough lesson’

“The only solution is a big strike on Hezbollah so that it understand­s that there is no way forward but through peace,” he said.

Mr. Ibrahim said there was no reason Israel and Lebanon should not be at peace.

But Asher Kaufman, a history professor at Notre Dame University in Indiana who specialise­s in Lebanon and the wider West Asia, said attitudes in Israel had shifted signiŒcantly in the decades since the civil war and the cooperatio­n between Lebanese Christian militias and the Israeli military.

The vision of an alliance between “Lebanese Christians and the Israelis, which was at the root of the 1982 invasion (of Lebanon by Israel) has completely collapsed,” he said.

Israel has stopped viewing Lebanon as the “Switzerlan­d of West Asia”, a peaceful and prosperous country, and now sees it as “a violent quagmire it wants nothing to do with”, he added.

 ?? AFP ?? In ruins: People inspect the site of an Israeli airstrike in southern Lebanon on March 27.
AFP In ruins: People inspect the site of an Israeli airstrike in southern Lebanon on March 27.

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