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Hezbollah kills up to 14 Israeli troops

By SAM F. GHATTAS, Associated Press Writer 59 minutes ago

Hezbollah inflicted heavy casualties on Israeli troops as they battled
for a key hilltop town in southern Lebanon for a fourth day Wednesday,
with as many as 14 soldiers reported killed.

Lebanese officials, meanwhile, confirmed that four U.N. observers were
killed in an Israeli airstrike on their post Tuesday night.

With Israel facing fiercer resistance than expected in its campaign
against the Islamic militants, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said
Israel wants to establish a 1.2 mile-wide strip in south Lebanon that
will be free of Hezbollah guerrillas — ruling out a larger occupation.

In Rome, U.S., European and Arab officials holding crisis talks on
Lebanon failed to agree on details for a cease-fire to end 15 days of
fighting between Israel and Hezbollah guerrillas. Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice faced intense pressure for Washington to change its
stance and call for an immediate halt to the violence.

Rice insisted any cease-fire must be "sustainable" and that there
could be "no return to the status quo" — a reference to the U.S. and
Israeli stance that Hezbollah must first be pushed back from the
border and the Lebanese army backed by international forces deployed
in the south.

Olmert outlined for the first time the dimensions of Israel's new
"security zone" in a closed-door meeting of parliament's Defense and
Foreign Affairs Committee, according to participants.

Defense Minister Amir Peretz first raised the idea of such a buffer
zone Tuesday, but left somewhat unclear whether Israeli troops would
patrol such a no-go area or try to keep out Hezbollah fighters from a
distance, by artillery fire and airstrikes.

Israeli soldiers patrolled a much larger "security zone" during
Israel's 18-year occupation of south Lebanon, but Olmert indicated the
new buffer zone would be different. "We do not have any intention of
returning to the security zone but want to create an area where there
will be no Hezbollah," he was quoted as saying.

Olmert also reiterated Israel's call for an international force with
muscle to be deployed along the border, as opposed to the U.N. force
already there that has failed to prevent the violence. The current
crisis began July 12 when guerrilla forces crossed the border. The
fighting left eight Israeli troops dead and two captured.

Despite two weeks of Israeli bombardment of Hezbollah rocket launchers
and positions, the guerrillas fired one of their largest barrages in
days into northern Israel — 119 rockets that wounded at least 31
people and damaged property.

Since the fighting began, at least 422 people, mostly civilians, have
been killed in Lebanon, according to the Health Ministry. Up to
750,000 Lebanese have been driven from their homes. At least 42
Israelis have been killed, including 24 troops, according to
authorities.

There were conflicting reports about Israeli casualties in the heavy
fighting at Bint Jbail, which Israeli forces have been trying to take
for four days.

Hezbollah said its guerrillas ambushed an Israeli unit from three
sides as it tried to advance from a ridge on the outskirts of the
town. "The bodies of the soldiers remained on the ground amid the
destroyed and burning vehicles," an announcer on Hezbollah's Al-Manar
TV said.

The pan-Arab satellite station Al-Arabiya said at least 14 Israeli
soldiers had been killed, while Al-Jazeera said 13 were killed and 12
wounded in the fighting. Hezbollah's chief spokesman Hussein Rahhal
said 13 Israelis were killed.

The Israeli military said there were 20 Israeli casualties, but it
would not say if any soldiers had been killed. If confirmed, it would
be the largest death toll suffered by the Israeli military in a single
attack since the offensive began two weeks ago.

Hezbollah said Israeli forces were trying to advance toward a hospital
in Bint Jbail. Israeli forces had managed to seize a few points inside
the town, but not yet its center, a senior Hezbollah official, Mahmoud
Komati, told The Associated Press.

The Israeli army said several Hezbollah fighters took cover in a town
mosque. Komati denied the allegation and suggested those in the mosque
were civilians, while Rahhal said they could be fighters who were
praying.

Bint Jbail, a town of at least 30,000 — though most are believed to
have fled — has great symbolic importance for the Shiite Muslim
Hezbollah guerrillas. It holds the largest Shiite community in the
border area and was known as the "capital of the resistance" during
Israel's 1982-90 occupation because of its support for Hezbollah.

An Israeli seizure of the town, about 2 1/2 miles from the border,
would rob Hezbollah of a significant refuge overlooking northern
Israel and force its fighters to operate from smaller, more vulnerable
villages in the south.

The town is in a tiny pocket of about six square miles where
significant Israeli ground forces have entered southern Lebanon —
including the village of Maroun al-Ras seized over the weekend and the
outskirts of the villages of Yaroun and Aitaroun.

About 100 foreigners — mostly Americans — who had been visiting
relatives in Yaroun fled to the port city of Tyre, and described a
village ravaged by bombardment.

"It was worse than a nightmare. I saw dogs and cats on bodies that
couldn't be taken from bombed-out houses. We ran from one building to
another trying to escape the bombing," said Ali Abbas Tehfi, of Los
Angeles.

"It didn't stop. It didn't stop even for a day. Everything is
finished," he said. He said an unknown number of Americans were still
trapped in the town.

The Israeli bombardment of a U.N. observation post in the southern
Lebanese town of Khiam provoked a sharp exchange between the world
body and Israel.

Olmert expressed "deep regret" over the deaths and said they were
"mistaken." But he rejected a charge by U.N. Secretary-General Kofi
Annan that the direct hit on the position was apparently deliberate.

"It's inconceivable for the U.N. to define an error as an apparently
deliberate action," Olmert said, adding that he ordered an
investigation.

Three bodies were pulled from the ruins, but workers were still trying
to reach the fourth, the U.N. observer force said.

One was identified as Chinese U.N. observer Du Zhaoyu, China's
official Xinhua News Agency reported. China demanded that Israel
apologize. The other three U.N. observers were from Austria, Canada
and Finland.

The bodies of a Nigerian civilian worker for the U.N. observers and
his wife were finally dug out of building outside Tyre where they were
killed in fighting last week.

In the past two weeks, there have been several dozen incidents of
firing close to U.N. peacekeepers and observers, including direct hits
on nine positions, some of them repeatedly. As a result of these
attacks, 12 U.N. personnel have been killed or injured, U.N. officials
said.

Proposals for disarming the Shiite Islamic militant group and
assembling an international peacekeeping force to be deployed along
the border were discussed at the Rome meeting.

Annan called for the formation of a multinational force to help
Lebanon assert its authority and implement U.N. resolutions that would
disarm Hezbollah.

After listening to an appeal from Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Saniora
for them to stop the killing, the officials said they had agreed on
the need to deploy an international force under the aegis of the
United Nations in southern Lebanon.

But there was no agreement on when a cease-fire could take place.

"Participants expressed their determination to work immediately to
reach, with utmost urgency, a cease-fire that puts an end to the
current violence and hostilities. The cease-fire must be lasting,
permanent and sustainable," said Italian Foreign Minister Massimo
D'Alema at the close of the meeting.

Israel, meanwhile, pressed ahead with its nearly month-old offensive
against Palestinian militants in Gaza. At least 13 Palestinians,
including a young girl, were killed in airstrikes and artillery
bombardment that also wounded more than three dozen.

About 50 Israeli tanks and bulldozers drove into northern Gaza,
flattening orchards and greenhouses to deprive militants firing
rockets of cover. Aircraft also blasted several houses of Hamas and
Islamic Jihad activists after warning people to leave.

___

AP correspondents Kathy Gannon in Tyre, Hamza Hendawi in Sidon,
Sheherezade Faramarzi in Beirut and Katherine Shrader and Victor L.
Simpson in Rome contributed to this story.

Copyright © 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The
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