KTU 1.119
Cuneiform Texts from UgaritWhen the mighty one attacks your gate, the warrior, your walls, you shall lift up your eyes to Ba’al. O Ba’al: If you drive the mighty one from our gate, the warrior from our walls: A bull, O Ba’al, we will consecrate; a vow, Ba’al, we will fulfill; a firstborn, Ba’al, we will consecrate; a flesh sacrifice, Ba’al, we will fulfill. A feast, Ba’al, we will prepare; the sanctuary, Ba’al, we will ascend; the path of Ba’al’s temple, we will walk. Then Ba’al will listen to your prayer. He will drive the mighty one from your gate, the warrior from your walls.
2 Kings 3:26
25 They tore down the cities, and each man threw a stone into every cultivated field until they were covered. They stopped up every spring and chopped down every productive tree. Only Kir Hareseth was left intact, but the soldiers armed with slings surrounded it and attacked it. 26 When the king of Moab realized he was losing the battle, he and 700 swordsmen tried to break through and attack the king of Edom, but they failed. 27 So he took his firstborn son, who was to succeed him as king, and offered him up as a burnt sacrifice on the wall. There was an outburst of divine anger against Israel, so they broke off the attack and returned to their homeland.
Notes and References
"... From the limited number of ritual texts available from Ugarit, it is not possible to determine whether the identified deities were the only ones associated with individual problems. Sometimes, relevant information is available from other sources in Syria-Palestine; in the case of the besieged city, for example, the biblical book of Kings (2 Kings 3:26-27) provides an example of calling on a god to lift a siege on a city, though unfortunately the deity being petitioned by means of the child sacrifice is not named. Whether the deities referred to in the various Ugaritic incantations would vary by location is also uncertain ..."
Handy, Lowell K. Among the Host of Heaven: The Syro-Palestinian Pantheon as Bureaucracy (p. 27) Eisenbrauns, 1994