Maybe we should send a couple hundred thousand American troops and $75 billion a year to establish a free and working democracy in Lebanon? We could fight against those Iranian sponsored Hezbollah terrorists that hate Democracy.....
Nah. We don't want to step in unwelcome. I say let them tear out each others throats. But, anyways, I bet somehow we will get blamed for the start of the conflict.
lol...Hezbollah will destroy the Lebanese army quite easily! Maybe destroy isn't the right word...actually what they'll prolly do is absorb the Lebanese army into their organization, after assassinating all the mossad operatives and puppet politicians that is.
During the day, Hizballah blocked the roads leading to the airport and vowed to keep it under siege until the Siniora government goes back on the decision announced Tuesday, May 6, to shut down the private telecommunications network Iran installed for the group and reinstate the pro-Hizballah airport director Gen. Wafiq Shuqeir. To pile up anti-government pressure, Hizballah called labor unions out on strike.
General Shuqeir was removed after Druze Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblatt accused Hizballah of installing spy cameras at the airport to monitor the movements of Lebanese and foreign leaders. Jumblatt said incoming flights were bringing the Shiite militia supplies of weapons from Iran.
On August 9, 2007, first revealed that Iranian military engineers were installing a secret underground telecommunications system to support Hizballah’s missile unit. The network runs through south Beirut, the Beqaa Valley’s Yohmor region near the Syrian border – where Hizballah and the Palestinian Popular Front-GC keep their training facilities – and connect the southern towns of Tyre on the Mediterranean with Abassieh, seat of Hizballah’s southern headquarters.
For the ten months during which this military telecommunications network was being installed, the Beirut government did not dare touch it.
Prime minister Fouad Siniora finally decided enough was enough when satellite images provided by Western agencies showed work on connecting Hizballah’s network with the communications and eavesdropping systems set up by the Syrian army along the Lebanese border.
military sources report that the two networks and their linkage are part of military preparations by Iran, Syria and Hizballah for a possible new flareu-up of hostilities with Israel.
Trade in material assumptions for spiritual facts and make permanent progress.
Here is what started the fight. May 7, 2008, 10:50 PM (GMT+02:00) During the day, Hizballah blocked the roads leading to the airport and vowed to keep it under siege until the Siniora government goes back on the decision announced Tuesday, May 6, to shut down the private telecommunications network Iran installed for the group and reinstate the pro-Hizballah airport director Gen. Wafiq Shuqeir. To pile up anti-government pressure, Hizballah called labor unions out on strike. General Shuqeir was removed after Druze Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblatt accused Hizballah of installing spy cameras at the airport to monitor the movements of Lebanese and foreign leaders. Jumblatt said incoming flights were bringing the Shiite militia supplies of weapons from Iran. On August 9, 2007, first revealed that Iranian military engineers were installing a secret underground telecommunications system to support Hizballah’s missile unit. The network runs through south Beirut, the Beqaa Valley’s Yohmor region near the Syrian border – where Hizballah and the Palestinian Popular Front-GC keep their training facilities – and connect the southern towns of Tyre on the Mediterranean with Abassieh, seat of Hizballah’s southern headquarters. For the ten months during which this military telecommunications network was being installed, the Beirut government did not dare touch it. Prime minister Fouad Siniora finally decided enough was enough when satellite images provided by Western agencies showed work on connecting Hizballah’s network with the communications and eavesdropping systems set up by the Syrian army along the Lebanese border. military sources report that the two networks and their linkage are part of military preparations by Iran, Syria and Hizballah for a possible new flareu-up of hostilities with Israel.
Here is what started the fight. May 7, 2008, 10:50 PM (GMT+02:00) During the day, Hizballah blocked the roads leading to the airport and vowed to keep it under siege until the Siniora government goes back on the decision announced Tuesday, May 6, to shut down the private telecommunications network Iran installed for the group and reinstate the pro-Hizballah airport director Gen. Wafiq Shuqeir. To pile up anti-government pressure, Hizballah called labor unions out on strike. General Shuqeir was removed after Druze Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblatt accused Hizballah of installing spy cameras at the airport to monitor the movements of Lebanese and foreign leaders. Jumblatt said incoming flights were bringing the Shiite militia supplies of weapons from Iran. On August 9, 2007, first revealed that Iranian military engineers were installing a secret underground telecommunications system to support Hizballah’s missile unit. The network runs through south Beirut, the Beqaa Valley’s Yohmor region near the Syrian border – where Hizballah and the Palestinian Popular Front-GC keep their training facilities – and connect the southern towns of Tyre on the Mediterranean with Abassieh, seat of Hizballah’s southern headquarters. For the ten months during which this military telecommunications network was being installed, the Beirut government did not dare touch it. Prime minister Fouad Siniora finally decided enough was enough when satellite images provided by Western agencies showed work on connecting Hizballah’s network with the communications and eavesdropping systems set up by the Syrian army along the Lebanese border. military sources report that the two networks and their linkage are part of military preparations by Iran, Syria and Hizballah for a possible new flareu-up of hostilities with Israel.
DEBKAfile. frodus?
Yes...indeed, do u read it much,they have close ties to us the US that is.My buddy got a scrip.Sweet read.
Trade in material assumptions for spiritual facts and make permanent progress.
Wonder what the Guardians of the Cedars are up to.
Interview with the leader of
the Guardians of the Cedars Party,
Mr. Etienne Sacre,
also known by his nom-de-guerre
of Abu-Arz.
LCCC: How do you see the future of Lebanon? What Lebanon would you envision?
ABU-ARZ: Lebanon is a holy land from ancient times, with no less than the Bible testifying to that by praising it dozens of times. Lebanon is the land of saints since they started appearing on its soil alongside the existing political scum – which by itself is a unique phenomenon in these dark days – and the Church has been beautifying them one after the other. Moreover, the forces of good remain abundant in Lebanon in spite of all the surrounding political prostitution. There is an enormous reservoir of effective vital forces that remain mobile inside Lebanon and in the Disapora and they believe in the cause and its sanctity. The blood of those who gave their lives and whose voices cry out from the graves, and the sacrifices of the handicapped and the honorable fighters that were offered on the altar of Lebanon, all of them will not be in vain. Lebanon has resisted death for the past three decades, it did not die, and it won't die as its enemies wished. Truth and rights never die so long as there is someone defending them. From all these standpoints we say that Lebanon will come out alive from its ashes exactly like the Phoenix, and will fly high again bearing the standard of its historic mission as a disseminator of peace, love, and knowledge to the far-flung corners of the world. It is only a matter of time, and not only will we bide our time and refuse to acquiesce to evil, but we will continue to carry the cross until the very end. For the road to Gogotha has to come to an end and the hour of resurrection has to be near.
Trade in material assumptions for spiritual facts and make permanent progress.
Maybe we should send a couple hundred thousand American troops and $75 billion a year to establish a free and working democracy in Lebanon? We could fight against those Iranian sponsored Hezbollah terrorists that hate Democracy.....
Nah. We don't want to step in unwelcome. I say let them tear out each others throats. But, anyways, I bet somehow we will get blamed for the start of the conflict.
Yep like that has ever stopped you in the past, I'm sure Iraq came with open arms. US has military bases in Afghanistan and Iraq, I wonder which middle eastern country is next?
Comments
now that's interesting!
People who have to create conspiracy and hate threads to further a cause lacks in intellectual comprehension of diversity.
I'm sure Hassan Nasrallah, Hezbollah leader, will find a way to blame Israel for it.
"If we don't attack them, they will attack us first. So we'd better retaliate before they have a chance to strike"
Haven't they always been at war? This isn't really breaking news.
Maybe we should send a couple hundred thousand American troops and $75 billion a year to establish a free and working democracy in Lebanon?
We could fight against those Iranian sponsored Hezbollah terrorists that hate Democracy.....
Nah. We don't want to step in unwelcome. I say let them tear out each others throats. But, anyways, I bet somehow we will get blamed for the start of the conflict.
lol...Hezbollah will destroy the Lebanese army quite easily! Maybe destroy isn't the right word...actually what they'll prolly do is absorb the Lebanese army into their organization, after assassinating all the mossad operatives and puppet politicians that is.
Here is what started the fight.
May 7, 2008, 10:50 PM (GMT+02:00)
During the day, Hizballah blocked the roads leading to the airport and vowed to keep it under siege until the Siniora government goes back on the decision announced Tuesday, May 6, to shut down the private telecommunications network Iran installed for the group and reinstate the pro-Hizballah airport director Gen. Wafiq Shuqeir. To pile up anti-government pressure, Hizballah called labor unions out on strike.
General Shuqeir was removed after Druze Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblatt accused Hizballah of installing spy cameras at the airport to monitor the movements of Lebanese and foreign leaders. Jumblatt said incoming flights were bringing the Shiite militia supplies of weapons from Iran.
On August 9, 2007, first revealed that Iranian military engineers were installing a secret underground telecommunications system to support Hizballah’s missile unit. The network runs through south Beirut, the Beqaa Valley’s Yohmor region near the Syrian border – where Hizballah and the Palestinian Popular Front-GC keep their training facilities – and connect the southern towns of Tyre on the Mediterranean with Abassieh, seat of Hizballah’s southern headquarters.
For the ten months during which this military telecommunications network was being installed, the Beirut government did not dare touch it.
Prime minister Fouad Siniora finally decided enough was enough when satellite images provided by Western agencies showed work on connecting Hizballah’s network with the communications and eavesdropping systems set up by the Syrian army along the Lebanese border.
military sources report that the two networks and their linkage are part of military preparations by Iran, Syria and Hizballah for a possible new flareu-up of hostilities with Israel.
Trade in material assumptions for spiritual facts and make permanent progress.
my father in law always said regarding iraq: why would you want to shake the hornets nest?
why not now? i reply.
i hope this shit gets real serious because you cant have peace without victory. better now than later...especially with nuclear options later.
chips, dips chains & whips.
DEBKAfile. frodus?
DEBKAfile. frodus?
Yes...indeed, do u read it much,they have close ties to us the US that is.My buddy got a scrip.Sweet read.
Trade in material assumptions for spiritual facts and make permanent progress.
Wonder what the Guardians of the Cedars are up to.
Interview with the leader of
the Guardians of the Cedars Party,
Mr. Etienne Sacre,
also known by his nom-de-guerre
of Abu-Arz.
LCCC: How do you see the future of Lebanon? What Lebanon would you envision?
ABU-ARZ: Lebanon is a holy land from ancient times, with no less than the Bible testifying to that by praising it dozens of times. Lebanon is the land of saints since they started appearing on its soil alongside the existing political scum – which by itself is a unique phenomenon in these dark days – and the Church has been beautifying them one after the other. Moreover, the forces of good remain abundant in Lebanon in spite of all the surrounding political prostitution. There is an enormous reservoir of effective vital forces that remain mobile inside Lebanon and in the Disapora and they believe in the cause and its sanctity. The blood of those who gave their lives and whose voices cry out from the graves, and the sacrifices of the handicapped and the honorable fighters that were offered on the altar of Lebanon, all of them will not be in vain. Lebanon has resisted death for the past three decades, it did not die, and it won't die as its enemies wished. Truth and rights never die so long as there is someone defending them. From all these standpoints we say that Lebanon will come out alive from its ashes exactly like the Phoenix, and will fly high again bearing the standard of its historic mission as a disseminator of peace, love, and knowledge to the far-flung corners of the world. It is only a matter of time, and not only will we bide our time and refuse to acquiesce to evil, but we will continue to carry the cross until the very end. For the road to Gogotha has to come to an end and the hour of resurrection has to be near.
Trade in material assumptions for spiritual facts and make permanent progress.
Nah. We don't want to step in unwelcome. I say let them tear out each others throats. But, anyways, I bet somehow we will get blamed for the start of the conflict.
Yep like that has ever stopped you in the past, I'm sure Iraq came with open arms. US has military bases in Afghanistan and Iraq, I wonder which middle eastern country is next?
O_o o_O