at Tel al-Zaatar, 1976. The Guardians of the Cedars started to form a militia in the years leading up to the Lebanese Civil War and commenced military operations in April 1975. In September 1975, Communiqué No. 1 was issued to denounce advocates of the partition of Lebanon. The second communiqué contained a bitter attack on the
Palestinians. The third articulated the party's stance on the issue of Lebanese identity: Lebanon should dissociate itself from Arabism. The party spread its messages by means of
graffiti in East
Beirut, including slogans against
Syria, the
Palestinian Resistance, and
Pan-Arabism, sometimes with violent anti-Palestinian tones, as in the slogan على كل لبناني ان يقتل فلسطينياً ("
It is a duty for each Lebanese to kill a Palestinian"). The Guardians of the Cedars joined other pro-status quo, mainly
Christian Lebanese, militias in 1976 to form the
Lebanese Front.
1970s In March 1976, they confronted Palestinian and leftist forces in West
Beirut. A Guardians unit was also dispatched to
Zaarour, above the mountain road to
Zahlé, to support
Phalangist forces. In April, Guardian fighters held a line in the area of
Hadath,
Kfar Shima, and
Bsaba, south of Beirut, against a coalition of Palestinian,
PSP, and
SSNP forces. In the summer of 1976, the Guardians were among the first militias to assault
Tel al-Zaatar, the last remaining Palestinian refugee camp in east Beirut. The camp fell after a 52-day siege. The actions of the Guardians and their allies following the capture of the camp have been widely reported as amounting to a
massacre of many of its civilian inhabitants. During this battle,
Saqr led a unit of Guardians force to
Chekka, where Christian civilians were being sieged by leftist-Palestinian forces, and fought off the Palestinian forces. The Guardians and allied Christian militias then invaded the
Koura region in northern Lebanon and reached
Tripoli, to support Christian residents trapped by fighting. In 1978 as part of the Lebanese Front they did small attacks on the Syrian army in Beirut and again in 1981 in the
Battle of Zahle. This came after the alliance between the Phalanges and most Christian groups with the Syrians had taken a twist. During the war, the Guardians earned a reputation for specializing in cruelty. Militia members usually tied Palestinian prisoners to the backs of taxis and then dragged them up the motorway into
Jounieh. Their carcasses would then be flung into a dried-up riverbed. Commanding his followers to slay all Palestinians, Saqr once stated, "If you feel compassion for the Palestinian women and children, remember they are
communists and will bear new communists".
1980s In 1985 the Guardians of the Cedars mounted a fierce defense of
Kfar-Fallus and
Jezzine, battling Palestinians and Shiite-Druze militias and protected thousands of Christians in South Lebanon. Towards the close of the 1980s, and continuing to 2000, most of the remaining fighting in Lebanon occurred in the south, inside the Israeli-occupied zone, under the Southern-Lebanese-Army influence led by
Saad Haddad and later by
Antoine Lahd, the latter who had close ties with the
National Liberal Party (Al Ahrar in Arabic). The Guardians and other militias were largely reorganized into the
South Lebanon Army, preserving much of the early ideology while adopting new military tactics. ==Military structure and organization==