Siege of Beirut (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Siege of Beirut" in English language version.

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  • Keiler, Jonathan F. (2010). "Who won the Battle of Fallujah?". In Schlosser, Nicholas J. (ed.). U.S. Marines in Iraq, 2004-2008: Anthology and Annotated Bibliography. U.S. Marines in the Global War on Terrorism. University of Michigan. p. 108. Dating from the siege of Beirut in 1982, Israel has practiced a complex and limited form of urban warfare. In Beirut, this involved a cordon around the city, accompanied by limited attacks with artillery, ground, and air forces to put pressure on the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) and Syrian forces inside. The IDF did not launch a general assault on the city; it awaited a political solution that resulted in evacuation of enemy forces under the auspices of outside powers. Despite the IDF's restraint, it was depicted as little short of barbaric by much of the international media. The PLO's evacuation was treated as a victory parade, rather than the retreat it was, and the PLO lived to fight another day. The battle was a tactical victory for Israel, but a strategic defeat.

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