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  1. Martin van Creveld on the 1967 Six-Day War On 12 July 2006, a well-trained, highly motivated detachment of Hezbollah* fighters crossed from southern Lebanon into northern Israel killing three...

  2. Israel on 12 July 2006, Israel launched a series of air strikes on Lebanon, hitting 59 targets on the first day, while Israeli troops crossed the border into southern Lebanon. In the fighting and air strikes that followed, 500 Hezbollah fighters, 119 Israeli soldiers and 1,191 Lebanese civilians were killed July 14: Four Israeli sailors killed when

  3. 21 July - Lebanon Situation Map No. 1 (OCHA/ReliefWeb) 12-21 July - Attacks in Israel and Lebanon (USA Today) [Flash] 19 July - Mideast Conflict Map (Published July 19) (Los Angeles Times)

  4. On July 12, 2006, Israel started a devastating war against Lebanon following Hizbollah’s kidnapping of two Israeli troops. The Israeli reaction was quick and massive, and much different from the past attacks.

  5. THE 2006 LEBANON CAMPAIGN AND THE FUTURE OF WARFARE: IMPLICATIONS FOR ARMY AND DEFENSE POLICY. to resource allocation, modernization, joint doctrine, transformation, and the use of force. And these debates are power. ully influenced by interpretations of recent combat experience—b.

  6. War map, "Hezbollah Defensive System in Southern Lebanon", 2006. Hezbollah engaged in guerrilla warfare with IDF ground forces, fighting from well-fortified positions, often in urban areas, and attacking with small, well-armed units.

  7. 22 lip 2006 · After Hezbollah mounted cross-border raids and rocket attacks in 2006, Israel invaded southern Lebanon, launching airstrikes on military and civilian targets as far as Beirut. The war ended with a UN ceasefire in August, after which the Lebanese Army and an enlarged UN presence replaced Israeli and Hezbollah forces in southern Lebanon. in wikipedia