Basra University organizes a workshop on (The Amal Movement's position on Syrian interference)
Basra University organized a workshop on .. (The Amal Movement's position on the Syrian intervention and the Israeli attacks on southern Lebanon between 1976-1978) with the participation of researchers and specialists,
The workshop included a lecture given by Dr. ... (Ibrahim Muhammad Jabbar Lewis)
During which he addressed (the Amal Movement’s position on the Syrian intervention and the Israeli attacks on southern Lebanon between 1976-1978, the Syrian intervention came with the aim of re-establishing the balance of power between the two available parties, the Palestinian and the Christian, and to avoid the horror of a decisive military operation that could have led to the division of Lebanon. As for the position of the Amal Movement, it was lost. Mussa Al-Sadr expressed it in his appeal to President Hafez Al-Assad, where he asked him to intervene directly and without intermediaries.)
The workshop discussed ... (The position of the Lebanese Resistance Movement, Amal from the Syrian intervention and the Israeli attacks on southern Lebanon between 1976-1978, as it was agreed between the Syrian President Hafez al-Assad and the Lebanese President Elias Sarkis that the Syrian forces would maintain security and order in the areas surrounding Beirut and dealt with the Israeli invasion. For southern Lebanon in 1978, and the aim was to eradicate the bases of saboteurs near the border and hit the bases of the Palestinian resistance in southern Lebanon. The Israeli enemy called Operation Litani for its war against Lebanon)
The workshop showed, (that the entry of the Syrian forces into Lebanon saved the local forces from the fighting, and the Syrians were able to impose a relative calm after they succeeded in absorbing the Palestinian military surge: and that the Israeli invasion of southern Lebanon failed to eliminate the fedayeen and their military installations, but it fulfilled Moshe Dayan's dream of establishing the belt. Security forces along the border with Lebanon, and this belt was established by a Lebanese militia named the South Lebanon Army, led by Major Saad Haddad)