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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Hizbullah: Swap negotiations 'serious'
2007-04-23
UN-mediated negotiations to secure a prisoner swap between Hizbullah and Israel are going on in a "serious" manner, but so far there have been no results, Hizbullah's deputy leader said Sunday. Sheik Naim Kassem also stressed that IDF reservists Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad Regev, whose capture by Hizbullah last summer triggered the 34-day Second Lebanon War, would be freed only in exchange for freedom of all Lebanese prisoners held in Israel. "The negotiations are serious and when they reach any result, it will be announced, because we have agreed not to announce details of the negotiations to secure their success and to keep them away from political and media blackmail," Kassem said.

On the same day the two Israelis were captured, Hizbullah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah told a news conference that the two soldiers would be released only through a prisoner exchange with Israel.

Israel had initially rejected calls for a prisoner swap to secure the soldiers' freedom, calling instead for their unconditional release. It later accepted a UN mediation in the case. A special UN envoy dispatched last September by then-UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan has been mediating between Hizbullah and Israel on a possible prisoner swap. Hizbullah has not released any details on the conditions of Goldwasser and Regev or provided any sign they are still alive since their capture.

Kassem hoped that the indirect negotiations between Israel and Hizbullah would end "quickly and in a better way," stressing that all Lebanese prisoners must be freed in any deal. "We are committed to this slogan regardless of the patience and sacrifices we endure. We are confident that the Israelis will eventually comply," he said.

Kassem was speaking at a Hizbullah rally in a mosque in Beirut's war-devastated southern suburbs to mark the 28th anniversary of Samir Kantar's captivity in Israel. Kantar is serving a 542-year prison sentence in Israel for killing three Israelis during an attack in 1979 and is one of four men who Hizbullah demands be released by Israel. "There can be no solution to the prisoners' issue except through an equal exchange that will release our prisoners, on top of them is Samir Kantar," Kassem said, drawing cheers from the crowd that included Kantar's mother and family members.

Israel says it will not release Kantar until it receives information about Ron Arad, an air force navigator who went missing after his plane was shot down over Lebanon in 1986. His fate is unknown.

Israel and Hizbullah have had prisoner swaps in the past. During his visit to Lebanon last month, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon expressed disappointment that there had been no progress toward the release of the two Israeli soldiers.
Posted by:Fred

#5  In the good olde days™ Israel did not negotiate with terrorists---they went all the way to Uganda to free Israeli citizens taken by terrorists. And killed the perps. They did not put up with this sh*t. Now, by negotiating with Hizb'Allah, they are in effect recognizing them as a viable entity. This is an extremely grave and detrimental thing for the state of Israel.

Hizb'Allah and their friends should be giving over the two Israeli soldiers, while begging for mercy. The latest half-a$$ed attack on Hizb'Allah in Lebanon, though hurting Hizb'Allah, was an unmitigated disaster for Israel, because they did not destroy Hizb'Allah and their leadership.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2007-04-23 21:26  

#4  OK, Israel needs to nuke all of Lebanon south of Beirut. Forget warnings, forget anything else. The UNIFIL is really UNIFAIL, the Lebanese Army control of southern Lebanon is a joke. Take out Hezbollah and all its Iranian-supplied fancy weapons. Take out Nastyrailalot and his henchmen. Take out half of Lebanon, and tell the other half (plus Gaza, Ramallah, Syria, Jordan, and Egypt) they'd better get their sh$$ straight, or they're next. It's the only way Israel can guarantee a "buffer zone" on their northern border. It's past time to do it. They're never going to get anything from Hezbollah but trouble.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2007-04-23 21:06  

#3  As serious as any negotiations with Muzzies can be.
Posted by: gromgoru   2007-04-23 10:56  

#2  This is another reason why a death penalty should have been carried out for a man like Samir Kantar, to prevent a feckless future government from releasing him to satisfy the demands of a terrorist group.

Israel may have a reputation for being tough in combatting terrorism but they are in actuality far too gentle.
Posted by: Vinegar Ulerong1260   2007-04-23 02:46  

#1  Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad Regev, whose capture by Hizbullah last summer triggered the 34-day Second Lebanon War, would be freed only in exchange for freedom of all Lebanese prisoners held in Israel.

How is the Muslim mind so shameless that even broaches such blatantly ridiculous proposals? Negotiators who have the gall to utter such patent absurdities aloud should be shot on the spot, a la Korbin Dallas School of Negotiation™.

Kassem was speaking at a Hizbullah rally in a mosque in Beirut's war-devastated southern suburbs to mark the 28th anniversary of Samir Kantar's captivity in Israel. Kantar is serving a 542-year prison sentence in Israel for killing three Israelis during an attack in 1979 and is one of four men who Hizbullah demands be released by Israel.

Israel says it will not release Kantar until it receives information about Ron Arad, an air force navigator who went missing after his plane was shot down over Lebanon in 1986. His fate is unknown.


Samir Kantar remains jailed for smashing in the head of four year-old Einat Haran with his rifle butt after making her watch him kill her father in cold blood. This brutal Neanderthal must never be allowed to see the light of day. Aviator Arad is most likely in Iran, if he is alive at all. There remains no proof that any of Israel's captive soldiers are even alive at this time. This entire proposition is a travesty of monstrous proportions and will only encourage further predation upon Israeli citizens by these vicious thugs.

From Front Page Magazine:
This time Israel is supposed to trade 420 convicted terrorists, including 20 Lebanese and 400 Palestinians, to the Hizbullah terror organization for one kidnapped Israeli civilian and the bodies of three Israeli soldiers. The civilian, Elchanan Tannenbaum, was kidnapped by Hizbullah in October 2000 apparently while on a business trip in an Arab country and, according to reports, has been severely tortured. The soldiers, St.-Sgts. Benny Avraham, Adi Avitan, and Omar Sawayid, were also kidnapped by Hizbullah that same month while on patrol on the Israeli side of Israel's border with Lebanon, and are presumed to have been killed. The 20 Lebanese Israel is supposed to hand over include Sheik Obeid and Mustafa Dirani, ShiÂ’ite militia leaders whom Israel claimed it was holding as bargaining chips for Ron Arad, the captured Israeli airman who is still believed to be held in Iran and will not be part of the exchange

After months of agonizing debate, including appeals and demonstrations by relatives (and their supporters) of the four dead or imprisoned Israelis and of Arad, Israel has decided to pay the heavy price despite dire warnings by opponents of the deal that it means rewarding, and further encouraging, anti-Israeli terror.

But now there’s a wrench in the works—Samir Kuntar. Hassan Nasrallah, the Hizbullah terror master, says that unless this 421st terrorist is also released, there’s no deal. Israel says, no way.

Who is Samir Kuntar? On April 22, 1979, he led a group of four terrorists who infiltrated Israeli waters from Lebanon and beached their rubber dinghy in the coastal town of Nahariya. Breaking into the apartment of the Haran family, they took 28-year-old Danny Haran hostage along with his four-year-old daughter Einat. Smadar Haran, hiding in the attic with her two-year-old daughter Yael, tried desperately to keep the girl quiet and ended up suffocating her. During a resultant shootout with Israeli policemen and soldiers, the terrorists killed the father and the four-year-old girl in cold blood, a policeman and two of the terrorists were killed, and Kuntar and the other terrorist were captured. The latter, Ahmed Abarrass, has long been a free man: along with 1100 other terrorists, he was freed by Israel in the 1986 Ahmed Jibril prisoner deal in return for three Israeli soldiers.

What makes Kuntar different from all the other prisoners Israel is supposed to release this time? The difference is that he’s the only one who’s defined as having “blood on his hands”—of having murdered Israeli civilians. This time, Israel says, that’s where it draws the line. The other detainees include Obeid and Dirani, the Lebanese Shi’ite militia leaders, one of whom, Dirani, is charged with having held and tortured Ron Arad in the first period of his captivity and then selling him to Iran; other Lebanese who took part in killing Israeli soldiers in that country; and 400 Palestinians who played various accessory roles in terrorism but did not directly kill anyone themselves. But as Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom stated: “Prime Minister Sharon said that Kuntar’s release is out of the question. The murder of a family in Israel is unforgivable. . . . We have stated in the clearest possible terms throughout the negotiations that Kuntar is not on the list.” Says Nasrallah: “Any swap that excludes any of the Lebanese detainees will not be acceptable. . . . I say to the enemy [Israeli] government . . . that the first name on the list must be Samir Kantar.”
Posted by: Zenster   2007-04-23 02:09  

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