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Since launching its ground invasion, Israel has carried out a series of attacks on the UNâs peacekeeping forces, who may see them as an impediment to its plans to create a buffer zone in southern Lebanon.
A confidential report by the Financial Times on Tuesday underscored how Israeli troops have targeted UNIFIL -Ìęincluding by using the incendiary, internationally-banned chemical white phosphorus close to a marked UN base, injuring 15 peacekeepers.
The Israeli army also recently Ìęinto and on UNIFIL observation towers, as well as âforciblyâ enteredÌęone of UNIFILâs positions and on a separate occasion hit a UN base with explosions, injuring two peacekeepers.
Israeli forces began directly firing on UNIFIL bases after 8 October, the leaked report said, although there had been incidents before nearby.
âNetanyahu wants to flex the Israeli military muscle and show they have the might to take Hezbollah on⊠UNIFIL is a nuisance to them,â Declan Power, an Irish security and defence analyst and former UNIFIL soldier, told °źÂț”ș.
Rights watchdog groups have that Israelâs attacks on peacekeepers âamount to war crimesâ. UN peacekeeping forces have been in southern Lebanon since 1978 to monitor the cessation of hostilities and help humanitarian access to civilians. The mission is the of all UN peacekeeping operations, with 337 peacekeepers killed in hostilities since 1978.Ìę
Israel has said the UN forces are being used as âhuman shieldsâ by Hezbollah, accusing the Lebanese armed group of âlarge quantities of weaponsâ near their posts.
On 14 October -Ìęthe day after Israel reportedly used white phosphorus near peacekeeping troops âÌęIsraeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called on UNIFIL to withdraw from southern Lebanon.
âThe IDF has repeatedly asked for this, and has been met with repeated refusals, all aimed at providing a human shield to Hezbollah terrorists,â Netanyahu said. âYour refusal to evacuate UNIFIL soldiers makes them hostages of Hezbollah.âÌę
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Since Israelâs ground invasion in early October, Israeli troops have engaged in intense fighting with Hezbollah in south Lebanon. Heavy Israeli airstrikes have also wiped out civilian infrastructure across the country, killing over 2,574 people and wounding over 12,001 since 8 October 2023, to the Lebanese health ministry.Ìę
âIsrael has a very low tolerance threshold now,â Power said. âThere is an unspoken attitude that theyâre there to punish anybody who has support from Hezbollah, whether youâre an active combatant in Hamas or Hezbollah or whether youâre a civilian -Ìęthis extends to the peacekeepers, as well,â he added.ÌęÌę
âThey have unfinished business from 2006,â he said, referring to the 34-day war between Israel and Hezbollah, touted as a victory by Hezbollah and its supporters.
Video footage from south Lebanon shows entire villages , the once-green groves of trees and bustling city centres reduced to piles of grey rubble.Ìę
In one video circulated on social media from 8 October 2024, Israeli soldiers raise their flag atop a pile of rubble in the Lebanese border village of Maroun al-Ras. However, Power said that he doubts Israel âhas any stomachâ to re-occupy Israel as it did between 1982 and 2000, considering the lack of military capacity with their troops tied down in Gaza.Ìę
Power was in southern Lebanon in 1996 and 1998, and remembers Israelâs occupation and military proxy, the South Lebanon Army (SLA). He said that Israel would be unlikely to attract a private army this time around, necessary to manage an occupation.Ìę
Instead, he said that Israel is likely to attempt to âdominate south Lebanon by attrition [continuous attacks to wear down the enemy] and the projection of forces, pushing Hezbollah back up to a point and then withdrawingâ.Ìę
After withdrawal, Power said that Israel may try to keep Hezbollah back âusing airpower and more minor incursionsâ, maintaining an âIsraeli free fireâ zone inside Lebanon that would be âtoo dangerous for normal habitationâ.Ìę
This would be âcheaper than physical occupationâ and would disrupt Hezbollahâs attempts to launch rockets from Lebanese border villages. But standing in the way of their plans is UNIFILâs continued presence in the area, Power said.Ìę
Israeli officials have called for a âsouth Lebanon buffer zoneâ to halt Hezbollahâs attacks in the north of Israel.Ìę
The head of Israelâs Northern Command, Ori Gordin, was advocating in early September for the military to be given the green light to seize and occupy a buffer zone in southern Lebanon, the Israeli daily, Israel Hayom, .
Days after Israel invaded Lebanon, its former national security adviser Meir Ben-Shabbat, a key ally of Netanyahu, in Israel Hayom that de-populating the border area in Lebanon would be one way to ensure residents in northern Israel could return home.Ìę
The Lebanese news outlet, Naharnet, that Israel wants âits forces to enter south Lebanon by a depth of three kilometers and will leave it after cleaning the area of Hezbollahâs presenceâ, quoting diplomatic sources. The other seven kilometres would be the responsibility of UNIFIL and the Lebanese Army, and if the two sides âdo not do what is required of them, it will take over the mission later,â according to the sources.Ìę
Ori Goldberg, an Israeli political analyst, told °źÂț”ș that Israelâs ground incursion has been âheavily censoredâ with the Israeli militaryâs goals unclear to the majority of Israelis.Ìę
Israel has called on residents of southern villages to move as far north as the Awali River -Ìęalmost 50 kilometres from the border and much farther north than the Litani River, which marked the UN buffer zone set following the 2006 war.
But Goldberg noted that âNetanyahu is not interested in a land grabâ. He said that the incursion is âa political decision, not a military decisionâ, related to Netanyahuâs aims to boost his approval ratings.Ìę
â[Israel] is creating âdebilitating chaosâ [in Lebanon],â he said. âBut there isnât any kind of master plan being followed or realised, or gradually pursued.âÌę
He noted that the 'Greater Israel' movement - a far-right ideology pushing for the expansion of Israeli territory into âhistoric Biblical Landâ, including Lebanon -Ìęis still âvery sectoralâ, isolated within âa settler agendaâ, and is not reflected in Israelâs military operation in southern Lebanon.
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Israeli politicians have on multiple occasions accused UNIFIL of failing to uphold UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which, adopted in 2006, called for a permanent ceasefire where Israel would withdraw from Lebanese territory and Hezbollah would disarm and move north of the Litani.Ìę
âThe UN is a failed organization and UNIFIL is a useless force that failed to enforce Resolution 1701 and failed to prevent Hezbollah from establishing itself in southern Lebanon,â Israeli cabinet minister Eli Cohen on X on 14 October.Ìę
âTo blame UNIFIL for [1701 violations] is like blaming an ordinary police officer on the street for the poor laws of the land,â Power said.Ìę
âThings became very tense for UNIFIL, their mandate wasnât really enforceable, and they didnât have any kind of means to enforce it,â Power added. âBoth parties started to flout the resolution despite having signed up to it voluntarily.âÌę
Hezbollah was able to build its arsenal and rise to become one of the worldâs most powerful non-state actors, but Israel also breached the terms of 1701, âroutinely sending in specialist unitsâ into southern Lebanon and continuously violating Lebanese airspace, Power noted.
âIsrael had the right to feel concerned and defend itself, but I think they went about it the wrong way,â he said, noting that Israel âas a UN memberâ should have gone to the UN Security Council and insisted upon a review of the 1701 resolution.Ìę
âThe feeling [among UNIFIL] is that the Israelis were being very cynical, and that it didnât suit their strategic interests to have UNIFIL there and they wanted it to fail,â Power said.Ìę
âUNIFIL is a prop for [Israel], to show its omnipotence, to demonstrate that it doesnât care anymore,â Goldberg, the Israeli analyst, said. He noted that Israelâs narrative of UNIFILâs failure and collusion with Hezbollah is part of its efforts to present Lebanon as a âdiabolical Hezbollah ployâ.Ìę
Power said that such narratives of UNIFIL facilitating Hezbollahâs activities are âextremely dangerous and inaccurateâ.
He referenced an incident in October 2023, when Israeli forces fired on UNIFIL peacekeepers at the Lebanese border,ÌęÌęa Nepali officer.
âSome of the [Israeli] soldiers had been fed such an anti-UN diet, about the UN being complicit with Islamic extremists, that they could jump to the conclusion that these [peacekeepers] must be militants who had taken control of UN vehicles,â he said.
Hanna Davis is a freelance journalist reporting on politics, foreign policy, and humanitarian affairs.
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