Peace Agreement
(May 17, 1983)
Israeli and Lebanese negotiations held over 35 sessions
alternatively in Khalde, Kiryat
Shmona and Netanya. The
meetings started on 28 December and the agreement was finally signed
on 17 May, following high-level U.S. involvement, including a ten day
shuttle diplomacy by Secretary of State Shultz. Following is the full text of the agreement and the annex dealing with
security arrangements and an appendix detailing the military equipment
to be allowed in the security zone. The agreement was subsequently abrogated
after Lebanese President Gemayel was assassinated and the Syrians prevented
his successors from implementing it.
The Government of the State of Israel and the Government of the Republic
of Lebanon:
Bearing in mind the importance of maintaining and strengthening international
peace based on freedom, equality, justice, and respect for fundamental
human rights;
Reaffirming their faith in the aims and principles of the Charter of
the United Nations and recognizing their right and obligation to live
in peace with each other as well as with all states, within secure and
recognized boundaries;
Having agreed to declare the termination of the state of war between
them;
Desiring to ensure lasting security for both their States and to avoid
threats and the use of force between them;
Desiring to establish their mutual relations in the manner provided
for in this Agreement;
Having delegated their undersigned representative plenipotentiaries,
provided with full powers, in order to sign, in the presence of the
representative of the United States of America, this Agreement;
Having agreed to the following provisions:
ARTICLE I
1. The Parties agree and undertake to respect the sovereignty, political
independence and territorial integrity of each other. They consider
the existing international boundary between Israel and Lebanon inviolable.
2. The Parties confirm that the state of war between Israel and Lebanon
has been terminated and no longer exists.
3. Taking into account the provisions of paragraphs I and 2, Israel
undertakes to withdraw all its armed forces from Lebanon in accordance
with the Annex of the present Agreement.
ARTICLE 2
The Parties, being guided by the principles of the Charter of the United
Nations and of international law, undertake to settle their disputes
by peaceful means in such a manner as to promote international peace
and security, and justice.
ARTICLE 3
In order to provide maximum security for Israel and Lebanon, the Parties
agree to establish and implement security arrangements, including the
creation of a Security Region, as provided for in the Annex of the present
Agreement.
ARTICLE 4
1. The territory of each Party will not be used as a base for hostile
or terrorist activity against the other Party, its territory, or its
people.
2. Each Party will prevent the existence or organization of irregular
forces, armed bands, organizations, bases, offices or infrastructure,
the aims and purposes of which include incursions or any act of terrorism
into the territory of the other Party, or any other activity aimed at
threatening or endangering the security of the other Party and safety
of its people. To this end all agreements and arrangements enabling
the presence and functioning on the territory of either Party of elements
hostile to the other Party are null and void.
3. Without prejudice to the inherent right of self-defense in accordance
with international law, each Party will refrain:
a. from organizing, instigating, assisting, or participating in threats
or acts of belligerency, subversion, or incitement or any aggression
directed against the other Party, its population or property, both within
its territory and originating therefrom, or in the territory of the
other Party.
b. from using the territory of the other Party for conducting a military
attack against the territory of a third state. c. from intervening in
the internal or external affairs of the other Party.
4. Each Party undertakes to ensure that preventive action and due proceedings
will be taken against persons or organizations perpetrating acts in
violation of this Article.
ARTICLE 5
Consistent with the termination of the state of war and within the
framework of their constitutional provisions, the Parties will abstain
from any form of hostile propaganda against each other.
ARTICLE 6
Each Party will prevent entry into, deployment in, or passage through
its territory, its air space and, subject to the right of innocent passage
in accordance with international law, its territorial sea, by military
forces, armament, or military equipment of any state hostile to the
other Party.
ARTICLE
7
Except as provided in the present Agreement, nothing will preclude
the deployment on Lebanese territory of international forces requested
and accepted by the Government of Lebanon to assist in maintaining its
authority. New contributors to such forces shall be selected from among
states having diplomatic relations with both Parties to the present
Agreement.
ARTICLE 8
1. a. Upon entry into force of the present Agreement, a Joint Liaison
Committee will be established by the parties, in which the USA will
be a participant, and will commence its functions. This Committee will
be entrusted with the supervision of the implementation of all areas
covered by the present Agreement. In matters involving security arrangements,
it will deal with unresolved problems referred to it by the Security
Arrangements Committee established in subparagraph c below. Decisions
of this Committee will be taken unanimously.
b. The Joint Liaison Committee will address itself on a continuing
basis to the development of mutual relations between Israel and Lebanon,
inter alia the regulation of the movement of goods, products and persons,
communications, etc.
c. Within the framework of the Joint Liaison Committee, there will
be a Security Arrangements Committee whose composition and functions
are defined in the Annex of the present Agreement.
d. Subcommittees of the Joint Liaison Committee may be established
as the need arises.
e. The Joint Liaison Committee will meet in Israel and Lebanon, alternately.
f. Each Party, if it so desires and unless there is an agreed change
of status, may maintain a liaison office on the territory of the other
Party in order to carry out the above-mentioned functions within the
framework of the Joint Liaison Committee and to assist in the implementation
of the present Agreement.
g. The members of the Joint Liaison Committee from each of the Parties
will be headed by a senior government official.
h. All other matters relating to these liaison offices, their personnel
and the personnel of each Party in connection with the implementation
of the present Agreement will be the subject of a protocol to be concluded
between the Parties in the Joint Liaison Committee. Pending the conclusion
of this protocol, the liaison offices and the above-mentioned personnel
will be treated in accordance with the pertinent provisions of the Convention
on Special Missions of 8 December 1969, including those provisions concerning
privileges and immunities. The foregoing is without prejudice to the
positions of the Parties concerning that Convention.
2. During the six-month period after the withdrawal of all Israeli
forces from Lebanon
in accordance with Article I of the present Agreement and the simultaneous
restoration of Lebanese governmental authority along the international
boundary between Israel and Lebanon, and in light of the termination
of the state of war, the Parties shall initiate, within the Joint Liaison
Committee, bona fide negotiations in order to conclude agreements on
the movement of goods, products and persons and their implementation
on a non-discriminatory basis.
ARTICLE 9
1. [Lines missing] abrogation of treaties, laws and regulations deemed
in conflict with the present Agreement, subject to and in conformity
with its constitutional procedures.
2. The Parties undertake not to apply existing obligations, enter into
any obligations, or adopt laws or regulations in conflict with the present
Agreement.
ARTICLE 10
1. The present Agreement shall be ratified by both Parties in conformity
with their respective constitutional procedures. It shall enter into
force on the exchange of the instruments of ratification and shall supersede
the previous agreements between Israel and Lebanon.
2. To Annex, the Appendix and the Map attached thereto, and the Agreed
Minutes to the present Agreement shall be considered integral parts
thereof.
3. The present Agreement may be modified, amended, or superseded by
mutual agreement of the Parties.
ARTICLE 11
1. Disputes between the Parties arising out of the interpretation or
application of the present Agreement will be settled by negotiation
in the Joint Liaison Committee. Any dispute of this character not so
resolved shall be submitted to conciliation and, if unresolved, thereafter
to an agreed procedure for a definitive resolution.
2. Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph 1, disputes arising
out of the interpretation or application of the Annex shall be resolved
in the framework of the Security Arrangements Committee and, if unresolved,
shall thereafter, at the request of either Party, be referred to the
Joint Liaison Committee for resolution through negotiation.
ARTICLE 12
The present Agreement shall be communicated to the Secretariat of the
United
Nations for registration in conformity with the provisions of Article
102 of the Charter of the United Nations.
Done at Kiryat Shmona and Khaldeh this seventeenth day of May, 1983,
in
triplicate in four authentic texts in the Hebrew, Arabic, English,
and French languages. In case of any divergence of interpretation, the
English and French texts will be equally authoritative.
For the Government of the State of Israel
For the Government of Republic of Lebanon
Witnessed by:
For the Government of the United States of America
ANNEX
SECURITY ARRANGEMENTS
1. Security Region
a. A Security Region in which the Government of Lebanon undertakes
to implement the security arrangements agreed upon in this Annex is
hereby established.
b. The Security Region is bounded, as delineated on the Map attached
to this Annex, in the north by a line constituting "Line A",
and in the south and east by the Lebanese international boundary.
2. Security Arrangements
The Lebanese authorities will enforce special security measures aimed
at detecting and preventing hostile activities as well as the introduction
into or movement through the Security Region of unauthorized armed men
or military equipment.
The following security arrangements will apply equally throughout the
Security Region except as noted:
a. The Lebanese Army, Lebanese Police, Lebanese Internal Security Forces,
and the Lebanese Auxiliary Force (ANSAR), organized under the full authority
of the Government of Lebanon, are the only organized armed forces and
elements permitted in the Security Region except as designated elsewhere
in this Annex. The Security Arrangements Committee may approve the stationing
in the Security Region of other official Lebanese armed elements similar
to ANSAR.
b. Lebanese Police, Lebanese Internal Security Forces, and ANSAR may
be stationed in the Security Region without restrictions as to their
numbers. These forces and elements will be equipped only with personal
and light automatic weapons and, for the Internal Security Forces, armored
scout or commando cars as listed in the Appendix.
c. Two Lebanese Army brigades may be stationed in the Security Region.
One will be the Lebanese Army Territorial Brigade stationed in the area
extending from the Israeli-Lebanese boundary to "Line B" delineated
on the attached Map. The other will be a regular Lebanese Army brigade
stationed in the area extending from "Line B" to "Line
A". These brigades may carry their organic weapons and equipment
listed in the Appendix. Additional units equipped in accordance with
the Appendix may be deployed in the Security Region for training purposes,
including the training of conscripts, or, in the case of operational
emergency situations, following coordination in accordance with procedures
to be established by the Security Arrangements Committee.
d. The existing local units will be integrated as such into the Lebanese
Army, in conformity with Lebanese Army regulations. The existing local
civil guard shall be integrated into ANSAR and accorded a proper status
under Lebanese law to enable it to continue guarding the villages in
the Security Region. The process of extending Lebanese authority over
these units and civil guard, under the supervision of the Security Arrangements
Committee, shall start immediately after the entry into force of the
present Agreement and shall terminate prior to the completion of the
Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon.
e. Within the Security Region, Lebanese Army units may maintain their
organic anti-aircraft weapons as specified in the Appendix. Outside
the Security Region, Lebanon may deploy personal, low, and medium altitude
air defense missiles. After a period of three years from the date of
entry into force of the present Agreement, the provision concerning
the area outside the Security Region may be reviewed by the Security
Arrangements Committee at the request of either Party.
f. Military electronic equipment in the Security Region will be as
specified in the Appendix. Deployment of ground radars within ten kilometers
of the Israeli-Lebanese boundary should be approved by the Security
Arrangements Committee. Ground radars throughout the Security Region
will be deployed so that their sector of search does not cross the Israeli-Lebanese
boundary. This provision does not apply to civil aviation or air traffic
control radars.
g. The provision mentioned in paragraph e. applies also to anti-aircraft
missiles on Lebanese Navy vessels. In the Security Region, Lebanon may
deploy naval elements and establish and maintain naval bases or other
shore installations required to accomplish the naval mission. The coastal
installations in the Security Region will be as specified in the Appendix.
h. In order to avoid accidents due to misidentification, the Lebanese
military authorities will give advance notice of all flights of any
kind over the Security Region according to procedures to be determined
by the Security Arrangements Committee. Approval of these flights is
not required.
i. (1) The forces, weapons and military equipment which may be stationed,
stocked, introduced into, or transported through the Security Region
are only those mentioned in this Annex and its Appendix.
(2) No infrastructure, auxiliary installations, or equipment capable
of assisting the activation of weapons that are not permitted by this
Annex or its Appendix shall be maintained or established in the Security
Region. (3) These provisions also apply whenever a clause of this Annex
relates to areas outside the Security Region.
3. Security Arrangements Committee
a. Within the framework of the Joint Liaison Committee, a Security
Arrangements Committee will be established.
b. The Security Arrangements Committee will be composed of an equal
number of Israeli and Lebanese representatives, headed by senior officers.
A representative of the United States of America will participate in
meetings of the Committee at the request of either Party. Decisions
of the Security Arrangements Committee will be reached by agreement
of the Parties.
c. The Security Arrangements Committee shall supervise the implementation
of the security arrangements in the present Agreement and this Annex
and the timetable and modalities, as well as all other aspects relating
to withdrawals described in the present Agreements and this Annex. To
this end, and by agreement of the Parties, it will:
(1) Supervise the implementation of the undertakings of the Parties
under the present Agreement and this Annex.
(2) Establish and operate Joint Supervisory Teams as detailed below.
(3) Address and seek to resolve any problems arising out of the implementation
of the security arrangements in the present Agreement and this Annex
and discuss any violation reported by the Joint Supervisory Teams or
any complaint concerning a violation submitted by one of the Parties.
d. The Security Arrangements Committee shall deal with any complaint
submitted to it not later than 24 hours after submission.
e. Meetings of the Security Arrangements Committee shall be held at
least once every two weeks in Israel and in Lebanon, alternately. In
the event that either Party requests a special meeting, it will be convened
within 24 hours. The first meeting will be held within 48 hours after
the date of entry into force of the present Agreement.
f. Joint Supervisory Teams
(1) The Security Arrangements Committee will establish Joint Supervisory
Teams (Israel-Lebanon) subordinate to it and composed of an equal number
of representatives from each Party.
(2) The teams will conduct regular verification of the implementation
of the provisions of the security arrangements in the Agreement and
this Annex. The teams shall report immediately any confirmed violations
to the Security Arrangements Committee and ascertain that violations
have been rectified.
(3) The Security Arrangements Committee shall assign a Joint Supervisory
Team, when requested, to check border security arrangements on the Israeli
side of the international boundary in accord with Article 4 of the present
Agreement.
(4) The teams will enjoy freedom of movement in the air, sea, and land
as necessary for the performance of their tasks within the Security
Region.
(5) The Security Arrangements Committee will determine all administrative
and technical arrangements concerning the functioning of the teams including
their working procedures, their number, their meaning, their armament,
and their equipment.
(6) Upon submission of a report to the Security Arrangements Committee
or upon confirmation of a complaint of either Party by the teams, the
respective Party shall immediately, and in any case not later than 24
hours from the report or the confirmation, rectify the violation. The
Party shall immediately notify the Security Arrangements Committee of
the rectification. Upon receiving the notification, the teams will ascertain
that the violation has been rectified.
(7) The Joint Supervisory Teams shall be subject to termination upon
90 days notice by either Party given at any time after two years from
the date of entry into force of the present Agreement. Alternative verification
arrangements shall be established in advance of such termination through
the Joint Liaison Committee. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Joint
Liaison Committee may determine at any time that there is no further
need for such arrangements.
g. The Security Arrangements Committee will ensure that practical and
rapid contacts between the two Parties are established along the boundary
to prevent incidents and facilitate coordination between the forces
on the terrain.
4. It is understood that the Government of Lebanon may request appropriate
action in the United Nations Security Council for one unit of the United
Nations Interim forces in Lebanon (UNIFIL) to be stationed in the Sidon
area. The presence of this unit will lend support to the Government
of Lebanon and the Lebanese Armed Forces in asserting governmental authority
and protection in the Palestinian refugee camp areas. For a period of
12 months, the unit in the Sidon area may send teams to the Palestinian
refugee camp areas in the vicinity of Sidon and Tyre to surveil and
observe, if requested by the Government of Lebanon, following notification
to the Security Arrangements Committee. Police and security functions
shall remain the sole responsibility of the Government of Lebanon, which
shall ensure that the provisions of the present Agreement shall be fully
implemented in these areas.
5. Three months after completion of the withdrawal of all Israeli forces
from Lebanon, the Security Arrangements Committee will conduct a full-scale
review of the adequacy of the security arrangements delineated in this
Annex in order to improve them.
6. Withdrawal of Israeli Forces
a. Within 8 to 12 weeks of the entry into force of the present Agreement,
all Israeli forces will have been withdrawn from Lebanon. This is consistent
with the objective of Lebanon that all external forces withdraw from
Lebanon.
b. The Israel Defense Forces and the Lebanese Armed Forces will maintain
continuous liaison during the withdrawal and will exchange all necessary
information through the Security Arrangements Committee. The Israel
Defense Forces will cooperate during the withdrawal in order to facilitate
the reassertion of the authority of the Government of Lebanon as the
Israeli armed forces withdraw.
APPENDIX
In accordance with the provisions of the Annex, the Lebanese Armed
Forces may carry, introduce, station, stock, or transport through the
Security Region all weapons and equipment organic to each standard Lebanese
Armed Force brigade. Individual and crew-served weapons, including light
automatic weapons normally found in a mechanized infantry unit, are
not prohibited by this Appendix.
1. Weapon systems listed below presently organic to each brigade in
the Security Region are authorized in the number shown:
Tanks
- 40 tanks
- 4 medium tracked recovery vehicles
Armored Cars
- 10 AML-90/Saladin/etc.
Armored Personnel Carriers
- 127 M I 13A I/ VCC-L, plus 44 M 113 family vehicles
Artillery/ Mortars
- 18 155MM towed howitzers (also 105MM/122MM)
- 12 120MM mortars
- 27 81MM mortars (mounted on M-125 tracked mortar carriers)
Anti-tank Weapons
- 112 RPG
- 30 anti-tank weapons (106MM recoilless rifle/ TOW/ MILAN)
Air Defense Weapons
- 12 40MM or less guns (not radar-guided)
2. Brigade Communications Equipment:
- 482 AN/ GRC-160
- 74 AN/VRC-46
- 16 AN/VRC-47
- 9 AN/VRC-49
- 43 GRA-39
- 539 TA-312
- 27 SB-22
- 8 SB-993
- 4 AM/GRC-106
3. Brigade Surveillance Equipment:
- Mortar locating radars
- Artillery locating radars
- Ground surveillance radars
- Night observation devices
- Unattended ground sensors
4. In accordance with the provisions of the Annex, armored vehicles
for the Internal Security Forces will be as follows:
- 24 armored wheeled vehicles with guns up to 40MM
5. In accordance with the provisions of the Annex, there will be no
limitations on the coastal installations in the Security Region, except
on the following four categories:
- Coastal sea surveillance radars: 5
- Coastal defense guns: 15 50MM or less
- Coastal air defense guns: 15 40MM or less (not radar-guided)
- Shore-to-sea missiles: None
6. The Lebanese Army Infantry Brigade and Territorial Brigade in the
Security Region are each organized as follows:
1 Brigade Headquarters
and Headquarters Company Off: 14 Enl: 173
3 Infantry Battalions Off: 31 ea Enl: 654 ea
1 Artillery Battalion Off. 39 Enl: 672
1 Tank Battalion
3 Tanks
1 Reconnaissance Company Off: 37 Enl: 579
1 Logistics Battalion Off: 26 Enl: 344
1 Engineer Company Off. 6 Enl: 125
1 Anti-Tank Company Off: 4 Enl: 117
1 Anti-Air Artillery Company Off: 4 Enl: 146
Total: 4,341 Off: 223 Enl: 4,118
Off: = Officers; Enl: = Enlisted men.
AGREED MINUTES
ART. 4.4
Lebanon affirms that Lebanese law includes all measures necessary to
ensure implementation of this paragraph. ART.6 Without prejudice to
the provisions of the Annex regarding the Security Region, it is agreed
that non-combat military aircraft of a foreign state on non-military
missions shall not be considered military equipment.
ART. 6
It is agreed that, in the event of disagreement as to whether a particular
state is "hostile" for purposes of Article 6 of the Agreement,
the prohibitions of Article 6 shall be applied to any state which does
not maintain diplomatic relations with both Parties.
ART. 8.1.b
It is agreed that, at the request of either Party, the Joint Liaison
Committee shall begin to examine the question of claims by citizens
of either Party on properties in the territory of the other Party.
ART. 8.1.h
It is understood that each Party will certify to the other if one of
its personnel was on official duty or performing official functions
at any given time
ART. 8.2
It is agreed that the negotiations will be concluded as soon as possible.
ART. 9
It is understood that this provision shall apply mutatis mutandis to
agreements concluded by the Parties pursuant to Article 8, paragraph
2.
ART. 11
It is agreed that both parties will request the United States of America
to promote the expeditious resolution of disputes arising out of the
interpretation or application of the present Agreement.
ART. 11
It is agreed that the phrase "an agreed procedure for a definite
resolution" means an agreed third-party mechanism which will produce
a resolution of the dispute which is binding on the Parties.
ANNEX PARA 1.b
It is agreed that, in the portion of Jabal Baruk shown on the map attachment
to the Annex, only civilian telecommunications installations, such as
television facilities and radars for air traffic control purposes, may
be emplaced. The restrictions on weapons and military equipment that
are detailed in the Appendix to the Annex will also apply in that area.
ANNEX PARA 2.d
The Government of Lebanon affirms its decision that the Territorial
Brigade established on April 6, 1983, mentioned in subparagraph c, will
encompass the existing local units which had been formed into a near
brigade-sized unit, along with Lebanese Army personnel from among the
inhabitants of the Security Region, in conformity with Lebanese Army
regulations. This brigade will be in charge of security in the area
extending from the Israeli-Lebanese boundary to "Line B" delineated
on the map attachment to the Annex. All the Lebanese Armed Forces and
elements in this area, including the Lebanese Police, Lebanese Internal
Security Forces and ANSAR, will be subordinated to the brigade commander.
The organization of the existing local units will be adapted, under
the supervision of the Security Arrangements Committee, in conformity
with the Table of Organization for the Territorial Brigade as shown
in the Appendix.
ANNEX PARA 2.g
1. An area extending from:
33 degrees 15 minutes N 35 degrees 12.6 minutes E; to
33 degrees 05.5 minutes N 35 degrees 06.1 minutes E; to
33 degrees 15 minutes N 35 degrees 08.2 minutes E; to
33 degrees 05.5 minutes N 35 degrees 01.4 minutes E;
which is at present closed for civil navigation, will be maintained
by Lebanon.
2. In order to prevent incidents, there will be continuous communications
between the southern command of the Lebanese Navy and the Israeli Navy
in order to exchange information concerning suspected vessels. The procedures
for the abovementioned exchange of information will be established by
the Security Arrangements Committee.
3. The Lebanese Navy will act promptly in order to ascertain the identity
of such suspected vessels. In emergency cases, there will be direct
communications between vessels.
ANNEX PARA 3.f
1. The Joint Supervisory Teams will carry out their functions in recognition
of the fact that the responsibility for military, police, and other
control operations rests with the Lebanese Armed Forces, police, and
other authorized Lebanese organizations, and not with the teams.
2. If the Joint Supervisory Teams uncover evidence of a violation or
a potential violation, they will contact the proper Lebanese authorities
through the Security Arrangements Supervision Centers created pursuant
to the Agreed Minute to paragraph 3.f(5) of the Annex, in order to assure
that Lebanese authorities take appropriate neutralizing and preventive
action in a timely way. They will ascertain that the action taken rectified
the violation and will report the results to the Security Arrangements
Committee.
3. The Joint Supervisory Teams will commence limited activities as
early as possible following the coming into force of the Agreement for
the purpose of monitoring the implementation of the Israel Defense Forces
withdrawal arrangements. Their other supervisory and verification activities
authorized in the Annex will commence with the final withdrawal of the
Israeli armed forces.
4. Joint Supervisory Teams will conduct daily verifications if necessary
during day and night. Verifications will be carried out on the ground,
at sea, and in the air.
5. Each Joint Supervisory Team will be commanded by a Lebanese officer,
who will recognize the joint nature of the team when making decisions
in unforseen situations, during the conduct of the verification mission.
6. While on a mission, the Joint Supervisory Team leader at his discretion
could react to any unforseen situation which could require immediate
action. The team leader will report any such situation and the action
taken to the Security Arrangements Supervision Center.
7. The Joint Supervisory Teams will not use force except in self defense.
8. The Security Arrangements Committee will decide inter alia on the
pattern of activity of the Joint Supervisory Teams, their weaponry and
equipment, their mode of transport, and the areas in which the teams
will operate on the basis of the rule of reason and pragmatic considerations.
The Security Arrangements Committee will determine the overall pattern
of activity with a view to avoiding undue disruption to normal civilian
life as well as with a view to preventing the teams from becoming targets
of attack.
9. Up to a maximum of eight Joint Supervisory Teams will function simultaneously.
ANNEX PARA 3.f.5
1. Two Security Arrangements Supervision Centers will be set up by the
Security Arrangements Committee in the Security Region. The exact locations
of the Centers will be determined by the Security Arrangements Committee
in accord with the principle that the Centers should be located in the
vicinity of Hasbaya and Mayfadun and should not be situated in populated
areas.
2. Under the overall direction of the Security Arrangements Committee,
the purpose of each Center is to:
a) Control, supervise, and direct Joint Supervisory Teams functioning
in the sector of the Security Region assigned to it.
b) Serve as a center of communications connected to the Joint Supervisory
Teams and appropriate headquarters.
c) Serve as a meeting place in Lebanon for the Security Arrangements
Committee.
d) Receive, analyze, and process all information necessary for the
function of the Joint Supervisory Teams, on behalf of the Security Arrangements
Committee.
3. Operational Arrangements:
a) The Centers will be commanded by Lebanese Army Officers.
b) The Centers will function 24 hours a day.
c) The exact number of personnel in each Center will be decided by
the Security Arrangements Committee.
d) Israeli personnel will be stationed in Israel when not engaged in
activities in the Centers.
e) The Government of Lebanon will be responsible for providing security
and logistical support for the Centers.
f) The Joint Supervisory Teams will ordinarily commence their missions
from the Centers after receiving proper briefing and will complete their
missions at the Centers following debriefing.
g) Each center will contain a situation room, communications equipment,
facilities for Security Arrangements Committee meetings, and a briefing
and debriefing room.
ANNEX PARA 3.g
In order to prevent incidents and facilitate coordination between the
forces on the terrain, "practical and rapid contacts" will
include direct radio and telephone communications between the respective
military commanders and their staffs in the immediate border region,
as well as direct face-to-face consultations.
Sources: Israeli
Foreign Ministry |