Lebanon Civil War
Lebanese Civil War |
![Martyrs Square 1982.jpg](//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a4/Martyrs_Square_1982.jpg/300px-Martyrs_Square_1982.jpg)
The Martyr's Square statue in Beirut, 1982, during the civil war |
Date |
13 April 1975 – 13 October 1990
(15 years and 6 months) (Syrian occupation ended on 30 April 2005)
|
Location |
Lebanon |
Result |
- Taif Agreement
- Christian 6:5 ascendancy replaced by 1:1 representation
- Muslim prime-ministerial powers strengthened
- PLO expulsion from Lebanon
-
Syrian occupation of most of Lebanon
-
Conflict in South Lebanon
|
|
Belligerents |
LF
AFL (until 1977) SLA (from 1976)
Israel (from 1978)
Tigers Militia (until 1980)
Marada Brigades (left LF in 1978; aligned with Syria)
|
LNM (until 1982)
Jammoul (from 1982)
PLO
Amal Movement
Hezbollah (from 1985)
Iran (from 1980, mainly IRGC paramilitary units)
Islamic Unification Movement (from 1982)
|
LAF
UNIFIL (from 1978) Multinational Force in Lebanon (1982–1984)
United States
France
Italy
Syria 1976, and from 1983
Arab Deterrent Force (1976–1982)
|
Commanders and leaders |
Bachir Gemayel †
Amine Gemayel
William Hawi †
Samir Geagea Michel Aoun Etienne Saqr
Georges Adwan Saad Haddad † Antoine Lahad
Menachem Begin
Ariel Sharon
Dany Chamoun †
Tony Frangieh † Suleiman Frangieh
|
Kamal Jumblatt †
Walid Jumblatt
Inaam Raad
Abdallah Saadeh
Assem Qanso
George Hawi
Elias Atallah
Muhsin Ibrahim
Ibrahim Kulaylat Ali Eid
Yasser Arafat
George Habash
Nabih Berri
Abbas al-Musawi
Said Shaaban |
Emmanuel A. Erskine
William O'Callaghan
Gustav Hägglund
Timothy J. Geraghty
Hafez al-Assad
Mustafa Tlass
|
Strength |
|
25,000 troops (1976)
1,200 troops
1,000 troops
1,000 troops
700 troops
700 troops |
120,000–150,000 people killed
|
LF
AFL (until 1977)
SLA (from 1976)
Israel (from 1978)
Tigers Militia (until 1980)
LNM (until 1982)
Jammoul (from 1982)
PLO
...
Wikipedia