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Chief of Staff Yitzhak Rabin was concerned that the supposed Egyptian shelling was the prelude to an amphibious landing that could outflank Israeli forces. Rabin reiterated the standing order to sink any unidentified ships in the area, but advised caution, as Soviet vessels were reportedly operating nearby.
The Chekka massacre (Arabic: مجزرة شكا) occurred on July 5, 1976, when Palestinian and Lebanese National Movement fighters killed roughly 200 people in the Christian towns of Chekka and Hamat during the Lebanese Civil War. The attack was launched from Tripoli by Palestinian militants and members of an Islamist group called Jund Allah.
Hammath or Hamma is the Hebrew and Semitic word for "hot spring." [verification needed] Hammat Tiberias is adjacent to the ancient city of Tiberias, which was established in the first century; Since several places bore the name Hammath, these springs and the resort were called Hammat Tiberias.
Hamat Gader, hot springs and archaeological site at the site of Al-Hamma; Emmaus, town mentioned in the New Testament; name derived from Hamma or Hammat; Hamat, a village in Lebanon; Hamat Tiberias, archaeological site at ancient town, Israel; Hamath-zobah, ancient place or kingdom in Aram; Mevo Hama, Israeli settlement in the Golan Heights
Hamat Gader (Hebrew: חַמַּת גָּדֵר; Imperial Aramaic: חמתא דגדר, hammata degader; Ancient Greek: Ἑμμαθά, Emmatha or ῎Αμαθα, Amatha; [1] Arabic: الحمة السورية al-Hamma) is a hot springs site in the Yarmuk River valley, located in an area under Israeli control, near the Golan Heights and the border with Jordan.
Hamat Air Base (Arabic: قاعدة حامات الجوية) is a Lebanese Air Force base in Hamat, Lebanon. It was built in the mid-1970s. It was built in the mid-1970s. The airport was however never used for civilian purposes.