Rage, Rockets & Rhetoric
Israel Vows To Keep Fighting; Hezbollah Blasts Rice, Promises 'New' Mideast
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Play CBS Video Video Diplomatic Push In Mideast On a day of heavy fighting in south Lebanon, there was no shortage of high-level diplomacy. But as chief foreign correspondent Lara Logan reports, there is no sign the violence will abate.
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Video Inside Hezbollah Israel's bombing of Beirut paused for Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's visit, which gave Hezbollah enough time to declare its outrage. Richard Roth reports.
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Video Civilians In The Crossfire Lebanon faces the enormous problem of moving people out of the line of fire and getting humanitarian aid to those who need it. Lee Cowan reports.
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Smoke blows over the town of Kiryat Shmona in northern Israel after Hezbollah rockets set the surrounding forests on fire, Monday, July 24, 2006. (AP)
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"These are not Hezbollah buildings!" says this resident of southern Beirut – which is a stronghold of Hezbollah support – surveying the damage in his neighborhood following Israeli air raids, July 24, 2006. (AP Photo/Kevork Djansezian)
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A Lebanese woman prepares food in a center for displaced people at an abandoned school after fleeing her home and arriving in the port city of Sidon, southern Lebanon on July 24, 2006. (AP Photo/Kevin Frayer)
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Tears in Haifa, Israel, July 24, 2006, at the graveside of Shimon Gliklich, who was killed Sunday by one of the some 1,000 Hezbollah rockets fired into Israel since the war began 14 days ago. (AP)
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Shuttle diplomacy: Condoleezza Rice in Beirut with Lebanese Prime Minister Saniora (bottom left), Lebanese politicians opposed to Syria (top), and in Jerusalem with Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni. (AP)
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Interactive Mideast Conflict Events, key players and a history of the world's most unstable region.
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Photo Essay Crisis In Lebanon Israel and Hezbollah exchange attacks across Israel's northern border with Lebanon.
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Photo Essay Lebanon Exodus Foreigners flee the embattled nation as Israel and Hezbollah trade missile attacks and air strikes.
"Consistently, from the Hezbollah heartland, my message was that Hezbollah must stop this cowardly blending... among women and children," Egeland said. "I heard they were proud because they lost very few fighters and that it was the civilians bearing the brunt of this. I don't think anyone should be proud of having many more children and women dead than armed men."
Israel appeared to be easing bombardment in populated areas and roads in Lebanon that has killed hundreds, displaced as many as 750,000 and dismembered the transportation network. Instead, it appeared to be focusing its firepower on Hezbollah at the front. Beirut saw no strikes all Monday, in apparent deference to Rice's visit.
CBS News correspondent Richard Roth reports Hezbollah's headquarters — its offices and apartments and even its streets — are all mostly just rubble now. But the infrastructure Hezbollah relies on isn't made of concrete and steel.
Hezbollah's foundation is religious zeal and popular support, Roth reports. It is a surrogate government that runs clinics and schools and mosques — and is a part of the establishment with 14 seats in parliament.
Israel's overall death toll stands at 39, with 17 people killed by Hezbollah rockets and 22 soldiers killed in the fighting. Sixty-eight soldiers have been wounded, and 255 civilians were injured by rocket fire, officials said.
On the Lebanese side, security officials said 384 people had been killed, including 20 soldiers and 11 Hezbollah guerrillas.
Israel continued pounding the visible infrastructure of Hezbollah in Lebanon on Monday. CBS News correspondent Lee Cowan reports from Tyre that the Lebanese didn't need a reminder of the danger but the Israelis gave them one anyway: High overhead, two explosions and leaflets filled the sky. The message fluttering down was as simple as it was cold. "This is just the beginning," it said.
At the front, Israeli ground forces waged a fierce battle Monday with guerrillas dug in at the closest large town to the border, Bint Jbail, known as "the capital of the resistance" for its vehement support of Hezbollah during Israel's 1982-2000 occupation of the south.
Four Israeli soldiers were killed — two in fighting and two in a helicopter crash — and 20 were wounded, military officials said.
The army said it captured two Hezbollah guerrillas, the first time it has taken any into custody during the fighting. "When the enemy surrenders, we take them prisoner. The two prisoners are located in Israel and will be held here with the aim of interrogating them," said Brig. Gen. Alon Friedman.
Backed by an intense artillery barrage, troops seized a hilltop inside the town, but the rest of Bint Jbail remained in the hands of up to 200 Hezbollah guerrillas, military officials said.
Israeli military officials say several thousand troops are moving in and out of southern Lebanon, but there are less than that number in there at any one time.
A day earlier, a Red Cross doctor visited Bint Jbail and reported an unknown number of families hunkered down in schools and mosques for protection, though much of the population of about 30,000 had fled.
Bint Jbail holds a legendary reputation with Hezbollah, because it was one of three large towns inside Israel's buffer zone and backing for the guerrillas remained strong throughout the occupation. Signs in the town tout its nickname. When Israel withdrew from Lebanon in 2000, Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah held a large celebration in Bint Jbail, proclaiming that the guerrillas now stood on Israel's border.
The move into Bint Jbail, about 2.5 miles from the border, represents the spear point of Israel's advance, moving forward from Maroun al-Ras, a frontier village captured in more heavy fighting over the weekend.
At the same time, Israeli forces were working to destroy every Hezbollah post within a half mile of the 40-mile Israeli-Lebanese border, Israeli Maj. Gen. Gadi Eizenkot said.
The Israeli bombardment hit the southern cities of Tyre and Nabatiyeh. An Israeli shell crashed into a house near the Lebanese town of Marjayoun late Monday, wounding two children, witnesses said.
Persistent bombardment of southern Beirut has made three hospitals there unusable because staff and supply can't reach them, forcing the evacuation of more than 50 patients. Hospitals in Tyre in Nabatiyeh are forced to take only emergency cases to preserve supplies.
"Our situation is tragic. Hospitals across Lebanon are suffering medicine and fuel shortages," Lebanese Health Minister Jawad Khalife told The Associated Press.
The Red Cross sent convoys to Tyre and Marjayoun bearing blankets, generators for hospitals, hygienic supplies and other materials.
Egeland called on Israel to open the port of Tyre to let in aid ships and guarantee safe passage for relief convoys. An entry point at Tyre would get material directly into the south without a dangerous convoy drive.
Two ships docked at Beirut and convoys entered from Syria, bearing blankets, food, medicine. Two convoys of trucks took material to the worst-hit areas in the south along dangerous and broken roads.
Amer Daoudi, Emergency Coordinator for the World Food Program operations in Lebanon, said it is vital to move fast to get aid to the people who need it most. "We need to reach these people fast. It is bad enough that their lives have been shattered without them having to go hungry as well."
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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