Originally published Tuesday, August 3, 2010 at 4:05 AM
Comments (0)
E-mail article
Print
Share
UN: Tree in Lebanon-Israel clash was in Israel
The Israeli military said it would cut more trees Wednesday in the tense border area where Israel and Lebanon fought the most serious battle between the countries in four years, touched off by a dispute over a cypress tree.
Associated Press Writer
The Israeli military said it would cut more trees Wednesday in the tense border area where Israel and Lebanon fought the most serious battle between the countries in four years, touched off by a dispute over a cypress tree.
Israel has pruned trees along the border in the past to improve its sight lines to Lebanon, but the move turned violent Tuesday after both sides claimed the cypress was in their territory and Lebanon opened fire. Subsequent fighting killed a senior Israeli officer, two Lebanese soldiers and a Lebanese journalist.
The U.N. peacekeeping force in south Lebanon, UNIFIL, confirmed Wednesday that Israel was cutting down trees only on the Israeli side, the force's spokesman Lt. Naresh Bhatt said.
Earlier in the day, an Israeli military spokesman, who spoke on condition of anonymity in line with military regulations, said the army was "continuing operations as usual" in the area and pruning trees.
"The U.N. announcement today clearly corroborates the Israeli version of events. Our routine activity yesterday was conducted entirely south of the frontier on the Israeli side and that the Lebanese Army opened fire without any provocation or justification whatsoever," Israeli government spokesman Mark Regev said.
Tuesday's clash highlighted the volatility of the frontier, where Israel and Lebanese Hezbollah militants fought a war four years ago.
Hezbollah did not take part in the latest violence, but the group's leader, Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, said Tuesday night that his forces would not stand by idly if Israeli troops ever attack Lebanese forces again.
A fence that Israel erected is likely behind the confusion about which territory the tree is in. An Associated Press photo shows an Israeli standing on a crane reaching over the fence and into a wooded area, angering people on the Lebanese side. But the fence does not match the official, U.N.-drawn Blue Line boundary in all places.
Both Israel and Lebanon appeared to be trying to restore calm to the area.
Officers from the Lebanese and Israeli armies and UNIFIL were planning to meet later Wednesday along the border, the U.N. force's spokesman Andrea Tenenti said. The gathering had been planned before Tuesday's fighting, but it has taken a new urgency now.
Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak told Israel Radio: "I hope we will have a quiet summer and things will return to their normal course."
Also Wednesday, funerals were being held for those killed Tuesday. In the Lebanese village of Darb el-Sim, near the southern port city of Sidon, the coffin of Lebanese Sgt. Robert Ashi was moved through the streets as people threw roses and rice on it in an Arab farewell gesture.
![]()
As the coffin was brought into the Notre Dam church and was later opened, Ashi's mother Nada, and wife Terez fainted. Relatives carried the women outside the church and poured water on their faces.
---
Associated Press Writers Hussein Malla in Darb el-Sim, Lebanon, and Amy Teibel in Jerusalem contributed to this report.
UPDATE - 10:01 AM
Rebels tighten hold on Libya oil port
UPDATE - 09:29 AM
Reality leads US to temper its tough talk on Libya
UPDATE - 09:38 AM
2 Ark. injection wells may be closed amid quakes
Armed guards save Dutch couple from Somali pirates
Navy to release lewd video investigation findings
More Nation & World headlines...

Entertainment | Top Video | World | Offbeat Video | Sci-Tech
general classifieds
Garage & estate salesFurniture & home furnishings
Electronics
just listed
More listings
POST A FREE LISTING
- Records give rare look at how feds probed one reporter
- Kemper Freeman plans $1.2 billion expansion in Bellevue
- Pete Carroll on Seahawks' off-field problems: "It's real serious"
- Earthquake scenarios show potential for huge damage, loss of life
- Huge tornado hits Oklahoma City suburb, kills 51
- NBA player Terrence Williams arrested in Kent for gun threats
- Poverty hits home in local suburbs like S. King County
- Records: Slain intruder showed signs of mental breakdown
- Police: Brother-in-law ‘heavily involved’ in disposal of Susan Powell’s body
- Seattle’s NBA hopes still high as league warms to expansion
- IRS office was perplexed, inundated with tax-exempt applications
372 - Guest: Stop using the term ‘illegal immigrants’
173 - UW Medicine, Catholic health system to have ‘strategic affiliation’
147 - Mariners can't close Indians out, lose it 10-8 in 10th
143 - A few things to take away from this heartbreaking Mariners series
136 - Tornadoes slam Plains, Midwest; 1 dead in Okla.
88 - More Obama aides knew of IRS audit; Obama not told
77 - Don't worry Husky football fans, we'll have you covered
74 - Leading Senate Democrat: IRS behavior intolerable
61 - Kemper Freeman plans $1.2 billion expansion in Bellevue
57
- Kemper Freeman plans $1.2 billion expansion in Bellevue
- UW Medicine, Catholic health system to have ‘strategic affiliation’
- Earthquake scenarios show potential for huge damage, loss of life
- Community Dinners church nourishes bodies, souls
- China’s wealthy paying cash for Eastside luxury homes
- Poverty hits home in local suburbs like S. King County
- UW expands online courses, this time from Harvard, MIT
- deafReview gives a voice to deaf consumers
- Amazon proposing glass-and-steel biodomes on new campus
- 129 concerts to see this summer
