Reading time: 7 minutes

By Nathan Drescher

A French soldier looks at a poster from a German colonial league in the Saar region.
German territory hold by French troops during the Saar Offensive. Arderiu, CC BY-SA 3.0

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AUSTRALIAN_FORCES_IN_LEBANON,_1941

Australia’s War with France

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The Nahr al-Kalb, or ‘Dog River’, meets the Mediterranean Sea just north of Beirut, after meandering thirty kilometres downstream from its wellspring in the Lebanon range. A four-lane highway overpass runs along this stretch of coast, and tentacles of concrete obscure the river mouth. The strip of land to the north and south has been reclaimed from the sea. It’s a flat, featureless stretch of windblown sand and garbage. In ancient times, though, the view was very different. The steep riverbanks dropped straight into the ocean, and the Lycus, as the river was then known, was a significant obstacle to conquering armies.

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