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  1. The Blue Line covers the Lebanese-Israeli border; an extension covers the Lebanese- Golan Heights border. The South Lebanon conflict, designated by Israel as the Security Zone in Lebanon Campaign, [12] was a protracted armed conflict that took place in southern Lebanon from 1985 to 2000. It saw fighting between Israel and the Catholic Christian ...

    • 16 February 1985-25 May 2000
    • Republic of Lebanon
  2. The Israeli occupation of Southern Lebanon [a] formally began in 1985 and ended in 2000 as part of the South Lebanon conflict. In 1982, Israel invaded Lebanon in response to a spate of attacks carried out from Lebanese territory by Palestinian militants, triggering the 1982 Lebanon War. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and allied Christian ...

  3. Israeli–Lebanese conflict. The Israeli–Lebanese conflict, or the South Lebanon conflict, [4] is a series of military clashes involving Israel, Lebanon and Syria, the Palestine Liberation Organization, as well as various militias and militants acting from within Lebanon. The conflict peaked in the 1980s, during the Lebanese Civil War, and ...

    • Israel and Lebanon
  4. May 24, 2000 · Tue 23 May 2000 21.38 EDT. Lebanese snipers yesterday exacted a final humiliation on Israel's 22-year occupation of southern Lebanon, triggering a firefight above columns of refugees at the border ...

  5. Jul 14, 2006 · June 1985: Israel withdraws from most of Lebanon but keeps control of the 12-mile-wide security zone in the south. Israel remains there until May 2000. 1990: Lebanon's 15-year civil war officially ...

  6. Jun 6, 1985 · Israel today completed the final phase of its three-stage withdrawal from Lebanon on the third anniversary of its invasion, leaving only several hundred troops in a security zone, informed sources ...

  7. Israel in Lebanon (1982–1985) T he Lebanon War of 1982–85, generally recognized as the sixth Arab-Israeli conflict, was the longest and most divisive war in Israel’s history, producing “a level of polarization in Israeli soci-ety not seen since the birth of the state.” 1 Israel did not anticipate a

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