Lebanese army says defeated ISIS on Syria-Lebanon border

Islamic State pocket straddling Syria-Lebanon border surrenders as cease-fire takes effect, Lebanese military officials say • Syrian army, Hezbollah announce a cease-fire in assault on ISIS • Hezbollah footage shows Iranian drones strike ISIS targets.

צילום: AFP // Lebanese army soldiers near the town of Ras Baalbek, Lebanon

A cease-fire took effect on Sunday in an Islamic State pocket straddling the Syria-Lebanon border, where the jihadists have been fighting the Lebanese army on one front and Hezbollah with the Syrian army on the other.

The Lebanese army announced that a cease-fire in its own offensive took effect at 7 a.m. but did not mention a cease-fire on Syria's side of the border.

Hezbollah and the Syrian army announced a cease-fire in their assault against Islamic State in Syria's western Qalamoun region as well, Hezbollah's Al-Manar TV said.

The fighting began a week ago when the Lebanese army, and Hezbollah together with the Syrian army, launched separate but simultaneous offensives against the Islamic State enclave straddling the border.

Last week, Lebanon and Hezbollah each said they had made significant gains against Islamic State militants, driving them back into a smaller part of the arid hills on the border.

Northeast Lebanon saw one of the worst spillovers of Syria's war into Lebanon in 2014, when Islamic State and other militants briefly overran the border town of Arsal. The fate of nine soldiers that Islamic State took captive then remains unknown.

Lebanon's army said Sunday's cease-fire took effect to allow for negotiations over the fate of the soldiers. Mediated talks have begun with the militants, a Lebanese security source said later.

The presence of two other militant groups on the border ended earlier this month, when they withdrew to rebel territory in Syria after offensives by Hezbollah and the Syrian army.

The security source said on Sunday that Hezbollah members had entered an area in western Qalamoun to confirm that the remains of the Lebanese soldiers were buried there.

In a speech last week, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah said the Iran-backed group had begun talks with Islamic State on a truce.

He said that if the Lebanese state wanted to negotiate for Islamic State to evacuate its territory, the Syrian government would be ready to accept any formal request from Beirut.

The Shiite terrorist group is a close ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's government and its forces fight alongside the Syrian army in major battles. Washington classifies Hezbollah as a terrorist group.

Any coordination between the Lebanese army and either the Syrian army or Hezbollah would be politically sensitive in Lebanon and could jeopardise the sizeable U.S. military aid the country receives.

The Lebanese army has said it is not coordinating its attack with Hezbollah or the Syrian army.

A Western diplomat praised the Lebanese army's performance in the border battle in "a risky and complex operation" that the diplomat said would have been "simply unimaginable" a decade ago.

"We see no evidence of substantive cooperation [between the army and Hezbollah]," the diplomat added.

A source familiar with the talks said there has been some communication between the Lebanese army and Hezbollah in the run up to the simultaneous cease-fires on Sunday.

Meanwhile, Hezbollah over the weekend provided further proof of Iran's increasing involvement in Syria, as Al-Manar aired footage of missile strikes -- carried out by Iranian Revolutionary Guards drones -- against Islamic State vehicles on Syrian soil.

According to reports, the drones were sent into action after Islamic State attacked Syrian military forces and the Iranian-backed Afghani "Fatemiyoun Division," which is active along the Iraqi-Syrian border.

The video shows the Iran-backed fighters on the ground preparing to repel the Islamic State attack, along with footage taken from Islamic State fighters themselves of their own preparations. The video also contains footage from the actual drone strikes that destroyed the ISIS vehicles.

The Hezbollah-affiliated Al Mayadeen network reported that the airstrikes changed the tide of the battle, killing and wounding a large number of Islamic State combatants.

Nasrallah said on Saturday that Islamic State, via a third-party mediator, has asked to evacuate its fighters from the Qalamun Mountains to areas under the organization's control in the Deir ez-Zor Province. It is still unclear whether an evacuation will take place, but the very fact that it was requested testifies to the dire situation facing the 500 ISIS fighters entrenched in their positions on the Qalamun Mountains.

Also Saturday, Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman warned against Iran's expanding presence in Syria.

"The fact that Iran is trying to turn all of Syria into a forward base of operations against Israel, with military bases and thousands of Shiite mercenaries imported into Syria from across the Middle East; with Revolutionary Guard's air force and naval bases and efforts to manufacture precision weaponry in Lebanon -- this is a reality we do not intend to accept," Lieberman said.

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