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UNIFIL’s Misguided Role in Southern Lebanon: A Threat to Israel's Security


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The United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) was created with a clear mission: to prevent armed militants, particularly Hezbollah, from operating in southern Lebanon and threatening Israel. However, over the years, UNIFIL has failed to fulfill this critical duty, allowing Hezbollah to strengthen its presence in the region. As a result, Israel now finds itself in a position where it must confront the threat directly, while UNIFIL appears to hinder rather than help the situation.

 

UNIFIL’s presence was meant to keep the southern border of Lebanon free from armed militias, ensuring the safety of northern Israel. Instead, Hezbollah has entrenched itself in the region, storing weapons in civilian homes and constructing a sophisticated network of attack tunnels and arms depots. Recently, Israeli forces discovered a tunnel located just 100 meters from a UNIFIL outpost, a shocking indication of how deeply Hezbollah has embedded itself right under the peacekeepers' watch.

 

For nearly a year, Hezbollah launched over 8,500 rockets and missiles into Israel from southern Lebanon, operating largely unchecked by UNIFIL. The region, designated as militia-free by the U.N. Security Council, has become a haven for one of the world’s most dangerous terrorist organizations. Yet, during this time, UNIFIL remained largely passive, doing little to prevent Hezbollah’s militarization of the area.

 

On October 1, Israeli forces entered Lebanon, asking UNIFIL multiple times to relocate north, away from the conflict zone. Despite the escalating situation, UNIFIL refused to move. According to a UNIFIL spokesperson, “There was a unanimous decision to stay because it’s important for the U.N. flag to still fly high in this region.” This stance reflects a troubling prioritization of symbolism over the safety of its peacekeepers and the region’s security.

 

In recent weeks, UNIFIL’s actions have increasingly obstructed Israel's efforts to defend itself against Hezbollah. On October 6, the peacekeeping force raised alarms when Israeli troops were reportedly near one of its positions, labeling it “extremely dangerous” and “unacceptable.”

 

Days later, UNIFIL complained about explosions near an observation tower that injured two of its peacekeepers. Additional injuries were reported on October 12 due to nearby gunfire, and on October 13, the peacekeepers raised concerns again when Israeli tanks passed through one of their gates. Even the smoke from nearby combat rounds has led to what UNIFIL described as “skin irritation and gastrointestinal reactions” among its personnel. While these injuries are regrettable, they underscore the dangers of remaining in a war zone, especially when no peace is left to keep.

 

Despite these incidents, UNIFIL has garnered significant diplomatic support for its criticism of Israel. France, Spain, and Italy have voiced their outrage over the “unjustifiable” harm caused to UNIFIL personnel, while the European Union’s foreign policy chief condemned the events as a “grave violation of international law.” Media outlets like Reuters have framed Israel’s actions as the “targeting of the U.N. peacekeeping mission.”

 

Hezbollah, undoubtedly, benefits from this diplomatic fervor. The international outcry against Israel has shifted focus away from the core issue: Hezbollah’s unchecked control over southern Lebanon. The same diplomatic voices that now decry Israel’s actions were notably silent when Hezbollah was using the region to launch attacks against Israel, leading to the displacement of many residents in northern Israel.

 

Ultimately, UNIFIL’s inability to prevent Hezbollah’s rise in southern Lebanon has made the peacekeeping force a bystander in a conflict it was supposed to prevent. Rather than addressing the root of the problem—Hezbollah’s dominance in the area—UNIFIL has chosen to grandstand, leaving its peacekeepers in harm’s way while Israel takes on the responsibility of neutralizing the threat that UNIFIL failed to contain.

 

Based on an opinion from a WSJ author 2024-10-18

 

Related:

Hezbollah’s Tunnels Next to UN Peacekeeping Outposts Reveal the UN's Failures

IDF Discovers Hezbollah Bunker Stocked for Planned Invasion Bigger than October 7 Attacks

 

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19 minutes ago, LukKrueng said:

You obviously skipped the beginning of the article which describes what unifil mission is and how they totally failed in keeping it.

As for Gaza - unra - most of their sites are used by hamas to hide weapons and terrorists, many of the unra employees are in fact supporting hamas and some were even part of the October 7th attack on Israel. Unra was established to take care of Palestinian refugees, meaning to help them get out of the refugee status, yet after nearly 80 years they have solved 0 cases

Like any government organization, UNRWA wants to stay alive. If they actually were to fulfil their mission and see the Palestinians all resettled, then there would be no need for UNRWA. They would all lose their cushy jobs and bloated paychecks, and have to actually work for a living. The Palestinian population has exploded in recend decades, much to the delight of UNRWA. Gives them reason to demand more money and the ability to hire more of their cronies.

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2 hours ago, LukKrueng said:

You obviously skipped the beginning of the article which describes what unifil mission is and how they totally failed in keeping it.

As for Gaza - unra - most of their sites are used by hamas to hide weapons and terrorists, many of the unra employees are in fact supporting hamas and some were even part of the October 7th attack on Israel. Unra was established to take care of Palestinian refugees, meaning to help them get out of the refugee status, yet after nearly 80 years they have solved 0 cases

You obviously missed the very end of the article in which it is confirmed as an ‘opinion’:

 

“Based on an opinion from a WSJ author 2024-10-18”

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21 minutes ago, Chomper Higgot said:

You obviously missed the very end of the article in which it is confirmed as an ‘opinion’:

 

“Based on an opinion from a WSJ author 2024-10-18”

Do you disagree with that opinion? I mean, who can really say the UN was anything but a failure in their role in Lebanon?

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1 hour ago, Chomper Higgot said:

You obviously missed the very end of the article in which it is confirmed as an ‘opinion’:

 

“Based on an opinion from a WSJ author 2024-10-18”

The actual job of UNIFIL is a fact, not an opinion. 

The Hezbollah presence in southern Lebanon is a fact., not an opinion.

The weapons, missiles, exploding drones being stored in and fired to Israel FROM southern Lebanon - all facts, not an opinion.

The tunnels discovered next to UNIFIL posts are a fact, not an opinion.

 

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Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Interim_Force_in_Lebanon

 

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5 minutes ago, Chomper Higgot said:


Yes I do disagree with the option, it starts with a false, simplistic and misleading premise:

 

https://peacekeeping.un.org/en/mission/unifil

Why, the article is saying the UN failed in its mission, what is simplistic and misleading in the premise? The related links in the OP hold testament to that. 

 

 

 

"The United Nations has been criticised for failing to implement Resolution 1701 and its failure to dismantle or disarm Hezbollah and for failing to prevent it from deploying forces south of the Litani river per Resolution 1701.[49][50][51] According to one analyst, "since 2006, Hezbollah has instead fortified southern Lebanon, particularly towns and villages along the 120-kilometer-long (about 75-mile-long) demarcation line. It has built unauthorized firing ranges, stocked rockets in civilian infrastructure, built tunnels into Israel, and repeatedly stopped UNIFIL from accessing certain areas."[50] Since the 7 October Hamas massacre in Israel, Hezbollah has continued to fire hundreds of rockets into civilian areas of Northern Israel.[52] Approx. 300,000 Israeli civilians have been internally displaced and forced to flee south as a consequence of the bombardment and more than 2,000 civilian buildings destroyed by Hezbollah rockets.[53][54][55]"

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Security_Council_Resolution_1701

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