Lebanese man confesses to killings on behalf of Israel
By Reuters
06/13/06 "Haaretz"
-- -- A Lebanese man has confessed to
assassinating a series of senior Hezbollah and Palestinian
militants over a seven-year period on behalf of Israeli
intelligence, the Lebanese Army said on Tuesday.
It said Mahmoud Rafeh, arrested along with three others last
week in connection with the May 26 killing of two Islamic Jihad
officials, was a leading member of a "terrorist network" behind
at least three other major assassinations in Lebanon.
"Investigations by military intelligence showed that the
terrorist network that was discovered had links to the Israeli
Mossad for several years and that its members underwent training
both inside Israel and outside," the army statement said.
"The network was tasked by this agency with carrying out these
operations and was given secret communication and monitoring
devices for this purpose along with detailed maps of the
target... forged documents and bags with secret pockets."
Israel has dismissed accusations it was behind the car bombing
last month that killed Mahmoud Majzoub, known as Abu Hamze, and
his brother Nidal, both members of the Palestinian group Islamic
Jihad, in the southern Lebanese city of Sidon.
Several Palestinian militants and Hezbollah officials have been
killed in Lebanon in recent years in attacks their organizations
have blamed on Israel.
Two days after the last assassination, rockets fired from
southern Lebanon into northern Israel wounded an Israel Defense
Forces soldier, prompting the Israel to launch its heaviest air
raid against Syrian-backed Palestinian militants and Hezbollah
in southern Lebanon since it withdraw from the area in 2000.
Rafeh admitted to the murder of Hezbollah official Ali Hasan
Deeb in 1999 in the southern town of Arba, the killing of
another Hezbollah official in Beirut in 2003 and the killing of
Palestinian militant Jihad Jibreel in 2002, the army said.
Jibreel, killed in a bombing aimed at his car in Beirut, was the
son of Ahmed Jibril, head of the Damascus-based Popular Front
for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command.
The army said Rafeh had also confessed to planting other bombs
that were either found and defused before they were detonated or
missed their targets.
Syrian and Iranian-backed Hezbollah as well as Jibril welcomed
the arrests in interviews with Hezbollah's al-Manar TV.
Pro-Syrian President Emile Lahoud said they proved that "Israel
had not ceased its attempts to sabotage Lebanon."
Television footage released by the Lebanese Army showed
equipment it said was used in the latest attack and discovered
either at Rafeh's house in the Lebanese town of Hasbaya, on the
border with Israel, or in a chalet that he used.
The find included what the army said was an Israeli camera that
can be used to take detailed photographs of streets while
concealed within a bag, forged driving licences and identity
documents it said Rafeh had received from Israel.
The footage also showed an air conditioning unit and a large
speaker converted into secret cabinets that the army said were
used to transport explosives used in the Sidon bombing.
Other finds included a television cabinet and a table fitted
with secret drawers to conceal coded messaging devices.
The army said the attackers had used a car door, packed with
explosives before being smuggled from Israel, in the bombing
that killed the two Islamic Jihad officials in Sidon.
The army is hunting a Palestinian man also believed to be part
of the network, and those arrested will be taken to court,
security sources said.
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