PANORAMA: Rubble is all that remains of much of Beirut's southern suburbs after a week of relentless Israeli airstrikes. Hezbollah, which still controls the area, allowed journalists to enter one neighborhood to take pictures. (Travis Fox/washingtonpost.com) »More Panoramas

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Israel, Hezbollah Intensify Ground Conflict in Lebanon

The fighting near the Lebanese village of Maroun al-Ras, just across the border from the Israeli farming community of Avivim, pointed up Hezbollah's skill at fighting in terrain it has spent years preparing against another Israeli invasion. Sixteen Israeli soldiers have been killed so far in fighting on the northern front, and 61 have been wounded.

Heavy fighting broke out several times throughout the day after Israeli tanks and bulldozers pushed a few hundred yards inside Lebanon in search of tunnels, bunkers and posts used by Hezbollah gunmen.


Reporters inspect rubble of Beirut buildings hit by Israeli missiles. Meanwhile, Hezbollah guerrillas fought Israeli troops in southern Lebanon for a second day.
Reporters inspect rubble of Beirut buildings hit by Israeli missiles. Meanwhile, Hezbollah guerrillas fought Israeli troops in southern Lebanon for a second day. (Associated Press)
VIDEO | The latest video about the ongoing conflict in the Middle East.

The clashes involved small-arms fire and antitank missiles. Israeli attack helicopters provided support as soldiers removed the wounded. Hezbollah's television station, al-Manar, said two Israeli tanks were destroyed in the clashes.

Lebanese officials say more than 300 Lebanese have died in the fighting, nearly all of them civilians, while more than 1,000 others have been wounded. It is unclear how many Hezbollah gunmen have died in the airstrikes or ground fighting.

In a statement, Hezbollah officials said bombing by Israel on Wednesday night that was described as an attack on a bunker in fact hit a mosque under construction and caused no injuries to senior Hezbollah leaders.

Hezbollah members of parliament, who number a dozen among the legislature's 128 members, appeared on Lebanese television to vow steadfastness and declare that the group's arsenal still has plenty of weapons for retaliatory strikes against Israeli towns. Hezbollah officials escorted journalists around their southern Beirut stronghold to show the damage to what they said were civilian residences.

The group's leader, Hasan Nasrallah, vowed never to release the two Israeli soldiers, the Associated Press reported. He spoke in an interview with the al-Jazeera news network, taped Thursday to show he had survived a heavy airstrike on a bunker in south Beirut.

Israeli aircraft roamed the southern Lebanese skies looking for targets, continuing their campaign to blast Hezbollah infrastructure and prevent vehicles from resupplying the militia's forces. But missile attacks seemed to diminish in the area around Beirut as foreign governments, including that of the United States, continued evacuation operations.

In the Gaza Strip, where Israeli tanks and troops clashed with gunmen from the governing Hamas movement's military wing, the death toll rose on Israel's second front. Palestinian hospital officials said four Palestinians were killed, including two children, as Israeli forces attacked Palestinian positions in the Mughazi refugee camp in central Gaza for a second day.

[On Friday, Israeli tanks and troops withdrew from the Mughazi camp, Reuters reported, citing witnesses and an Israeli army spokeswoman.

"Yes, our forces are out, but it is important to emphasize that operations in Gaza continue," Reuters quoted the spokeswoman as saying.

Also Friday, four Palestinians including a Hamas militant were killed in an explosion in a house in Gaza City, hospital officials said, and Palestinians said the house was hit by an Israeli tank shell, according to the AP. The Israeli military had no immediate comment, AP reported.]


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