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Waiting for the hammer to fall
Barak vows ‘painful response’ after resistance kills another Israeli soldier

Nicholas Blanford
Daily Star staff
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak vowed to inflict “very painful strikes” on
Lebanon in retaliation for the killing of another soldier in the occupation
zone on Friday .
The latest Israeli fatality led to a walkout by the Israeli delegation to the
Monitoring Group, which had convened in Naqoura in a bid to end some of the
worst violence since last June.
The United States laid the blame for the continued violence squarely on
Hizbullah and stressed that Damascus was not doing enough to restrain
the resistance.
Just as tensions in the south appeared to be easing, Hizbullah struck again,
killing an Israeli soldier and critically wounding another. The attack raised
to seven the number of Israeli soldiers killed this year, all within three
weeks. Another 16 have been wounded.
The attack came 85 minutes after the delegates to the Monitoring Group were
scheduled to begin their meeting. The session, however, was in trouble from
the start.
The Israeli delegation refused to enter the room where the meeting was due to
be held, said a source close to the group.
“They gave no reason for refusing to attend. The American and French
delegates tried to start the meeting for an hour and a half,” the source
said. “Then the news came through of the latest casualty and the Israelis
left immediately.”
In a statement, the US and French delegates, who co-chair the group, said
that they “were informed by the Israeli delegate that due to military actions
on the ground earlier today, their delegation has been instructed to return
to Israel.”
“The co-chairs will keep in touch with all the parties regarding the next
steps,” the statement said.
Premier Salim Hoss slammed the walkout. “If Israel has something to complain
about,” he said, “the normal place to express it would be the committee
itself.” He said that Lebanon would not seek the intervention of the UN
Security Council for fear that it would issue a decision “that treats the
victim as the aggressor.”
Hoss met ambassadors of the nations with permanent seats on the Security
Council and asked for their support. US Ambassador David Satterfield said
that his country wanted “to put a lasting end to violence and not simply
manage it.”
“We regret profoundly the damage to Lebanon and the harm to the Lebanese as a
result of these recent attacks,” he said.
A diplomatic source in Beirut said that the Israeli decision to walk out of
the meeting was not spontaneous but had been decided beforehand in the event
of further casualties in the south while the delegates met.
Barak promised “harsh and painful responses” but then suggested that he would
not seek to escalate the situation with further air strikes against Lebanon’s
infrastructure. “We have no interest in bringing about a situation,” he said,
“whose end product will be Katyusha rockets falling on the Galilee merely to
show how strong we are.”
If Barak launches another air strike on infrastructure he will have to order
the residents of northern Galilee back into the shelters in case Hizbullah
responds with a Katyusha barrage. However, the residents of the area have
only just emerged from three days of hiding and are unlikely to relish the
prospect of another night in bunkers, especially on the Sabbath.
On the other hand, Barak risks losing credibility if he stays his hand,
particularly after a flurry of colorful threats from various Israeli Cabinet
ministers.
“I really think they’ve run out of ideas for the time being,” said a senior
security source. “The rules have changed in the past few days but no one
knows yet what the new rules are.”
In Washington, US State Department spokesman James Rubin blamed Hizbullah for
ending the Monitoring Group session.
“We … can only interpret this action as a deliberate attempt by Hizbullah to
wreck the prospects for peace,” he said. “Hizbullah’s action is particularly
egregious in the context of Israel’s repeated commitment to withdraw from
southern Lebanon by the middle of this year.”
Rubin argued that Syria was not helping by failing to restrain Hizbullah.
“Syria has influence with Hizbullah,” he said. “We’ve told them they need to
exercise that influence and at this point the evidence is clear. They need to
exercise that influence more effectively.” ­ with agencies

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