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BigBadBrian
08-11-2006, 02:24 PM
Israel orders wider offensive despite signs of deal

By Evelyn Leopold and Irwin Arieff

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - World powers said on Friday a deal on a U.N. resolution to end Israel's war with Hizbollah guerrillas was in sight, but Israel ordered its month-old offensive to be expanded in case diplomacy fails.

"We said two days ago that we would stop the fire, either militarily or diplomatically," an Israeli political source said. "We see that the ceasefire deal ... is not making the required progress, and therefore we have authorized the military action."

Israeli tanks forces were preparing for orders to sweep into Lebanon after the wider offensive was approved, Israeli TV said. But Israel said the move did not exclude a diplomatic solution.


"The Americans are aware of what we can accept and cannot accept," said Israeli U.N. ambassador Dan Gillerman. "And I very much hope that in the end of the day there will not be submitted a draft that is unacceptable to us."

Israel's view of progress with diplomacy was at odds with statements from other powers, including its ally Washington.

"We are now very, very close to agreement and our aspiration to have a vote at the end of the afternoon remains," Washington's U.N. envoy John Bolton told reporters.

Britain's ambassador Emyr Jones Parry backed Bolton's view.

U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice flew to New York in anticipation of a vote on ending the war, in which at least 1,030 people in Lebanon and 123 Israelis have been killed.

She was set to meet U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, the United Nations said. Rice also met British Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett. French officials said Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy was en route to the United Nations.

A senior Lebanese political source said Lebanese leaders had made progress in talks with a U.S. official in Beirut.

"There is serious and major progress that could lead to an understanding in the next few hours. There are no more basic sticking points," the source said, without giving details.

Israel's security cabinet had authorized expanding the ground war on Wednesday, with some talking of a 30-day push deeper into Lebanon. But ministers had later said the expansion was put on hold to allow more time for diplomacy.


U.S., FRENCH OPTIMISM

France's U.N. ambassador, Jean-Marc de la Sabliere, said it was likely that a draft resolution would be ready on Friday.

Bolton, who negotiated the text with his French counterpart, said it still had to be discussed by a number of parties.

"But our feeling is, because of the importance of bringing this to closure, that if once again France and the United States and others can come together on a text, we can move forward expeditiously," he told reporters.

There was no immediate let-up in the violence in Lebanon and Israel. Air raids killed another 19 people in Lebanon. An Israeli soldier was reported killed in fighting and Hizbollah rockets wounded seven people in northern Israel

Israeli raids on a bridge near the border with Syria killed 12 people and wounded 18, hospital staff said. Witnesses said a second strike hit the bridge 15 minutes after the first had brought rescuers rushing to the scene.

Israeli strikes killed two people in the eastern Bekaa Valley and five in south Lebanon, security sources said.

An Israeli soldier was killed and one was badly wounded in fighting with Hizbollah guerrillas, Al Arabiya television reported. The Israeli army had no immediate comment.

More bombs hit Beirut's battered Shi'ite Muslim suburbs, hours after dawn raids on the capital. Many people fled the suburbs on Thursday after Israel dropped warning leaflets.


Hizbollah, whose seizure of two Israeli soldiers sparked the war on July 12, fired more than 55 rockets into Israel, wounding seven people, police and ambulance staff said.

100,000 TRAPPED

Humanitarian agencies sought ways to get aid to an estimated 100,000 people trapped in southern Lebanon and the mayor of Tyre said the city could run out of food in two days.

Aid convoys have been unable to deliver supplies since an Israeli air strike hit a bridge on the Litani River on Monday.

The U.S.-French draft resolution calls for a "cessation of hostilities". Lebanon wants a quick Israeli pullout, but Israel says a strong multinational force must be deployed first.
The latest compromise calls for a phased Israeli withdrawal as the Lebanese army moves into the south. At the same time, the U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon would be reinforced by up to 15,000 French and other troops.

As part of the deal, Hizbollah would pull out from south of the Litani River, 20 km (13 miles) from the Israeli border.

A second resolution on a permanent ceasefire would follow within a month, tackling a range of outstanding issues, including the release of the two soldiers held by Hizbollah.

Israel will reserve the right to re-enter Lebanon in future if the proposed U.N. force fails to stop Hizbollah fighters from returning to the border, a top military official said.


Link (http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2006-08-11T170005Z_01_L07726695_RTRUKOC_0_US-MIDEAST.xml&pageNumber=3&imageid=&cap=&sz=13&WTModLoc=NewsArt-C1-ArticlePage3)

ELVIS
08-11-2006, 03:48 PM
U.N. resolution, my ass...:rolleyes: