- Title: Lebanese army faces jihadist threat on Syrian border
- Date: 28th September 2016
- Summary: ARSAL, LEBANON (RECENT) (REUTERS) LEBANESE ARMY SOLDIER IN POSITION OVERLOOKING VALLEY VALLEY SOLDIER STANDING GUARD VARIOUS OF SOLDIERS IN OBSERVATION POST VARIOUS OF GENERAL LOOKING THROUGH BINOCULARS MOUNTAINS IN DISTANCE (SOUNDBITE) (Arabic) LEBANESE ARMY GENERAL YOUSSEF AL-DIK SAYING: ''The clashes are ongoing day and night. We target any gathering, activity or anything we sense day or night with all kinds of weapons, day and night, at anytime, any movement, we target our fire at.'' VARIOUS OF SOLDIERS IN POSITION OVERLOOKING VALLEY/ REFUGEE SHELTERS IN VALLEY (SOUNDBITE) (Arabic) LEBANESE ARMY GENERAL YOUSSEF AL-DIK SAYING: ''The nature of the terrain is very difficult, it takes time dig the roads and equip them and in the winter, visibility is difficult and snow levels can reach up to 1.5 meters which hinders us but we have good and strong equipment and we are content, we have no problems at all.'' REFUGEE SHELTERS IN VALLEY (SOUNDBITE) (Arabic) LEBANESE ARMY GENERAL YOUSSEF AL-DIK SAYING: ''The more they are surrounded, the less they receive logistical support and this is what is happening now... there are some smuggling operations from Syria to Lebanon but they are decreasing day by day and the stress on them is increasing. So their movement is weakening day by day.'' OIL CANS AND BRICKS/ VARIOUS OF LEBANESE ARMOURED VEHICLE MACHINE GUN MOUNTED ON ARMOURED CARRIER VARIOUS OF VALLEY AREA (SOUNDBITE) (Arabic) LEBANESE ARMY GENERAL YOUSSEF AL-DIK SAYING: ''Their tactics depend on element of surprise. They send fighters to blow themselves up or they send car bombs and if they were able to detect any movement by us they target it with long range missiles from about 2 kilometers far or more. Any movement for them we immediately target, we do not leave them any chance to move a lot. There is another danger, which is that they might infiltrate through the mountains and valleys at night in order to reach the heart of Arsal and carry out attacks there and this we are being more and more able to overcome every day by observing day and night their movements. They have lost many of their fighters during infiltration attempts.''
- Embargoed: 13th October 2016 16:17
- Keywords: army jihadist Islamic State militants border soldiers Arsal
- Location: ARSAL, LEBANON
- City: ARSAL, LEBANON
- Country: Lebanon
- Reuters ID: LVA00151HDYDJ
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: From a sandbagged army post near the border with Syria, Lebanese soldiers gaze through tripod-mounted binoculars into hills where jihadist militants are entrenched, a forgotten front in Syria's civil war that has led to bombings inside Lebanon.
There is frequent fighting between the army and around 1,000-1,200 militants dug into the hills around Arsal in a large pocket of territory straddling the border, Lebanese General Youssef al-Dik said. Around 30 soldiers have been killed.
The Sunni militants are members of Islamic State and the former Nusra Front, groups fighting Syria's President Bashar al-Assad. They regard the mountains along the Lebanese border as a strategic base and also consider Lebanon to be under the thumb of Assad's ally, Shi'ite Hezbollah.
"The clashes are ongoing day and night. We target any gathering, activity or anything we sense day or night with all kinds of weapons," he told Reuters during a visit last week.
For Lebanon's army, seen as a rare neutral institution in a state riven by sectarian divisions, fighting that jihadist presence in a staunchly Sunni Muslim area also means treading delicately to avoid prompting a new domestic political crisis.
On the road from Beirut to Arsal stand abandoned houses where weeds grow from old shell holes. Nearby is a former Syrian army post, evidence of Syria's 30-year military presence in Lebanon.
That presence ended in 2005, but Damascus retained extensive influence in its smaller neighbour, partly through its close alliance with the Lebanese Shi'ite movement Hezbollah, so the outbreak of its civil war had an immediate impact in Lebanon.
Whether to support Assad or oppose him is a question that splits Lebanese parties, partly along sectarian lines, and has accentuated the country's political deadlock.
Many Lebanese Sunnis resent the dominance of Shi'ite Hezbollah, saying it has cut them off from power and perpetuated Syrian influence. Some of them accuse it of instigating the political crisis and compromising the neutrality of the army.
In recent years that anger has caused protests and even some attacks on army patrols in traditionally Sunni cities. Diplomats say such sensitivities mean the army has learnt to tread carefully in policing mostly Sunni Arsal.
Supporters of Hezbollah have said such concerns have tied the army's hands and stopped it rooting out militants more actively. But the diplomats said a campaign to crush them would be difficult because they occupy well defended positions.
In the army post above Arsal a ceaseless wind swirled fine dust, stinging the eyes and catching at the back of the nose.
''The nature of the terrain is very difficult, it takes time dig the roads and equip them and in the winter, visibility is difficult and snow levels can reach up to 1.5 meters which hinders us but we have good and strong equipment and we are content, we have no problems at all,'' said General al-Dik.
The soldiers here face real danger. Militants in the hills opposite carry assault rifles but also medium-sized weapons like mortars and anti-tank missiles. They attack hilltop posts and target patrols inside Arsal with car bombs, said General al-Dik.
The army is widely regarded in Lebanon as occupying a position above the country's fractured politics but its senior officers are powerful figures.
Posters along the road to Arsal showed the current army chief, Jean Kahwaji, with the slogan "the right man in the right place".
The army is backed by Western countries, including the United States, which this year gave it $220 million in equipment, including heavy guns like those visible below the position above Arsal. Britain has given over 60 million pounds worth of equipment since 2012, including old border watchtowers once used in Northern Ireland.
In August 2014, when Islamic State was rapidly expanding across Iraq and Syria, insurgents loyal to it and the Nusra Front, then an official al Qaeda branch, crossed the Lebanese border and overran Arsal, regarding its refugee camps as a base for cross-border attacks.
After heavy fighting, the Lebanese army, and in some places Hezbollah, restored control over the town and strategic points around it, but militants remained in the hills nearby. Islamic State still holds nine Lebanese soldiers hostage.
Across the frontier, advances by the Syrian army, backed by Hezbollah, last year cut off the militants from the east, leaving them surrounded in an area straddling the border.
Both Islamic State and the Nusra Front, which in July cut its al Qaeda links and changed its name to Jabhat Fateh al-Sham, are still there, General al-Dik said.
They live in caves, ramshackle houses and other makeshift dwellings, he added, standing in a sandbagged emplacement surrounded by a coil of barbed wire, and saying that in winter a metre or more of snow covers the hills.
Those harsh conditions are also endured by the 70,000 war refugees who live in camps in and around Arsal, some of the more than 1 million Syrians who have fled to Lebanon.
Although no bomb attacks in Lebanon have been directly linked to refugees, the army chief Kahwaji said last year that the camps posed a security risk as potential hideouts. General al-Dik said the army had staged raids in the Arsal refugee camps in recent months, arresting "terrorist leaders" there.
"The more they are surrounded, the less they receive logistical support and this is what is happening now... there are some smuggling operations from Syria to Lebanon but they are decreasing day by day and the stress on them is increasing," said General al-Dik.
Roads towards the town are studded with army checkpoints where soldiers check drivers' documents.
''We target any movement by them, we do not leave them any chance to move a lot. There is another danger, which is that they might infiltrate through the mountains and valleys at night in order to reach the heart of Arsal and carry out attacks there and this we are being more and more able to overcome every day by observing day and night their movements. They have lost many of their fighters during infiltration attempts,'' said General al-Dik.
The army believes such precautions, along with its military operations and a change in the situation in Syria, are gradually smothering the militant threat. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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