This article is missing information about the second part of the conflict.(July 2020) |
War of Brothers حرب الإخوة | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Supported by: |
Supported by | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
15,000–30,000[1] (only a few engaged) | 25,000[1] (only a few engaged) | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
Between 500 and 750 dead
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The War of Brothers (Arabic: حرب الإخوة; Harb al-Ikhwa)[n 1] was a period of violent armed clashes between rivals Amal and Hezbollah, Lebanon's main Shiite militia movements, during the final stages of the Lebanese Civil War. The fighting broke out in April 1988 and proceeded intermittently in three phases over the following years until the signing of an agreement brokered by their respective foreign backers, Syria and Iran, in November 1990.
The Amal Movement was formed in 1974 as the armed wing of popular Shiite cleric Musa al-Sadr's Movement of the Dispossessed. Amal supported the intervening Syrian army against the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO). Hezbollah, on the other hand, which began as an umbrella organization consisting of more conservative elements of Lebanon's Shiite community, was born in 1982 in reaction to Israel's invasion and occupation of South Lebanon. As the Amal-initiated "War of the Camps" against the PLO ended, Hezbollah and its rival Amal began clashing in South Lebanon and in Beirut's southern suburbs.
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