That really was another outrageous lie noodles. Try and educate...

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    That really was another outrageous lie noodles.
    Try and educate yourself.

    Israeli–Lebanese conflict - Wikipedia

    Israel has been meddling in and destabilizing Lebanon and the Palestinians since inception -- long before 1975
    Stealing and encroachment was the policy then as now.

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    1948 Arab–Israeli War

    In 1948, the Lebanese army had by far the smallest regional army, consisting of only 3,500 soldiers.[25] At the prompting of Arab leaders in the region, Lebanon agreed to join the other armies that were being assembled around the perimeter of the British Mandate territory of Palestine for the purpose of invading Palestine.[citation needed] Lebanon committed 1,000 of these soldiers to the cause. The Arab armies waited for the end of the Mandate and the withdrawal of British forces, which was set for 15 May 1948.

    Israel declared its independence on 14 May 1948. The next day, the British Mandate officially expired and, in an official cablegram, the seven-member Arab League, including Lebanon, publicly proclaimed their aim of creating a democratic "United State of Palestine" in place of the United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine. The League soon entered the conflict on the side of the Palestinian Arabs, thus beginning the international phase of the 1948 Arab–Israeli War. Egypt, Lebanon, Syria, Transjordan, and Iraq declared war on the new state of Israel. They expected an easy and quick victory in what came to be called the 1948 Arab–Israeli War. The Lebanese army joined the other Arab armies in the invasion. It crossed into the northern Galilee. By the end of the conflict, however, it had been repulsed by Israeli forces, which occupied South Lebanon. Israel signed armistice agreements with each of its invading neighbors. The armistice with Lebanon was signed on 23 March 1949.[26] As part of the agreement with Lebanon, Israeli forces withdrew to the international border.

    By the conclusion of that war, Israel had signed ceasefire agreements with all of the neighbouring Arab countries.[27] The territory it now controlled went well beyond what had been allocated to it under the United Nations Partition Plan, incorporating much of what had been promised to the Palestinian Arabs under the Plan. However, it was understood by all the state parties at the time that the armistice agreements were not peace treaties with Israel, nor the final resolution of the conflict between them, including the borders.

    After the war, the United Nations estimated 711,000[28] Palestinian Arabs, out an estimated 1.8 million dwelling in the Mandate of Palestine,[29] fled, emigrated or were forced out of Israel and entered neighboring countries. By 1949, there were 110,000 Palestinian Arabs in Lebanon,[30] moved into camps established by and administered by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East.[31]

    With the exception of two camps in the Beirut area, the camps were mostly Muslim.[31] Lebanese Christians feared that the Muslim influx would affect their political dominance and their assumed demographic majority.[31] Accordingly, they imposed restrictions on the status of the Palestinian refugees. The refugees could not work, travel, or engage in political activities. Initially the refugees were too impoverished to develop a leadership capable of representing their concerns.[31] Less democratic regimes also feared the threat the refugees posed to their own rule, but Lebanon would prove too weak to maintain a crackdown.[11]

    The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) recruited militants in Lebanon from among the families of Palestinian refugees who had left Israel in 1948.[11][12]

    War over water and the Six-Day War (1964–1967)

    Despite sharing in the ongoing border tensions over water,[32] Lebanon rejected calls by other Arab governments to participate in the 1967 Six-Day War.[33] Militarily weak in the south, Lebanon could not afford conflict with Israel.[33]

    Nevertheless, the loss of additional territory radicalized the Palestinians languishing in refugee camps hoping to return home.[11] The additional influx of refugees turned Palestinian camps throughout the Middle East into centers of guerrilla activity.[1


 
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