Lebanon and Syria have not been in direct conflict since the Syrian army ended the Syrian Occupation of Lebanon in April 2005. There have been some border skirmishes, especially because some of the Syrian Civil War spills over into Lebanon, but there is no declared war between the Syrian Regime or any of the other Syrian Civil War parties and Lebanon.
Anjar is in north lebanon, near the syrian border called al masnaa
YES. Lebanon has been dragged into the Syrian Civil War, but on a more localized front.
There are three - the government, anti-government rebels, and ISIS.
The country in question is Lebanon. The Israeli Occupation of southern Lebanon took place from 1985-2000. The Syrian Occupation of northeastern Lebanon took place from 1976-2005. Syrian presence was also strongly felt in other parts of the country and Syrians also heavily influenced Lebanese politics.
Beirut, Lebanon
It's not a clear YES/NO. The Syrian Assad Regime, during its occupation of Lebanon (1986-2006) oversaw a period of hostility against the Christian population in Lebanon. During this period a number of different militant groups bombed churches in Lebanon and they were not actively thwarted by the Syrian authorities. As a result, they tacitly approved of these attacks, but were not directly responsible.
syria,eygpt,libya,lebanon,yemen,tajikstan,belruss
Lebanon is actually one of the smaller Middle Eastern states. Within Lebanon, the largest governate (muhafaza) is Mount Lebanon (Jebel Lubnan) at 4,934 sq. km. or 1,905 sq mi and which has the majority of Lebanon's population (excluding Syrian Refugees who are mostly in Bekaa governate).
Many Lebanese Christians and Sunnis hate Syria because of what the Syrian rule of the last 40 years has done to Lebanon. The Syrian government meddle in Lebanese affairs and have never respected the independence and sovereignty of Lebanon and have always had a great influence over Lebanon. Many Sunnis and Christians want Lebanon to be an independent state, and are supporters of Lebanese nationalism. Syria has never accepted this and the Lebanese have never been fond of them for this.
The Minutemen
Hezbollah and the Syrian regime have a lot in common with each other. The Syrian regime is run by Shiites just like Hezbollah. The Syrian regime hates Israel and America just like Hezbollah. All these common factors makes the Syrian regime to support Hezbollah.