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Lebanese Civil War |
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Lebanese Civil War(1975–91) Civil conflict resulting from tensions among Lebanon's Christian and Muslim populations and exacerbated by the presence in Lebanon in the 1970s of fighters from the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). In 1975 Lebanon's Muslims and leftists supported the PLO and sought more political power; its Christians, seeking to maintain their political dominance, opposed the PLO. The factions fought fiercely through early 1976, and Lebanon became effectively partitioned, with the Christians in power in the north and the Muslims in the south. Fearing an expanded war, both Israel and Syria intervened on the side of the Christians, who had begun to lose ground. Fighting continued at a lower level of intensity until 1982, when Israel invaded southern Lebanon to destroy Palestinian guerrilla bases; PLO forces were driven out of Beirut, and by 1985 Israel had withdrawn from most of Lebanon, which by then was split internally over whether to accept Syria's leadership. In 1989 the Christian leader General Michel Aoun attempted to drive Syria from Lebanon but was defeated, and the Arab League mediated a peace deal; his removal from power in 1990 eliminated the largest obstacle to implementing a 1989 peace accord. In southern Lebanon, fighting between Israeli and Hezbollah forces continued even after Israel's final withdrawal from Lebanese territory in 2000. |
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Preceding the video is wall text, laden with signs of authority, explaining the piece's provenance as a "possible collaboration" between Yussef Bitar, "the Lebanese state's leading ammunitions expert and chief investigator of all car bomb detonations," and Georges Semerdjian, "a respected and fearless photojournalist and videographer who, until his violent death in 1990, tirelessly chronicled the Lebanese wars of the past three decades. With the end of the Lebanese war by 1990, transnational nationalist issues gradually receded from Lebanese community politics. Cornelio Sommaruga, President of the International Committee of the Red Cross, told the conference that whereas 95 per cent of those killed in World War I were soldiers, 90 per cent of those killed in the Lebanese War of 1982 were civilians. |
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