Sunday, August 19, 2007

Then, What's the Point?

'UNIFIL won't receive power boost in southern Lebanon'

JPost.com Staff, THE JERUSALEM POST
Aug. 19, 2007

The cabinet agreed on Sunday to support the extension of the UNIFIL mandate in southern Lebanon, although the Foreign Ministry said the multinational force would not receive any additional concrete powers in the new mandate. Foreign Ministry director-general Avraham Abramovich told the cabinet that the members of the UNIFIL force - put in place as part of a cease-fire agreement following the Second Lebanon War last summer - were not prepared to increase activity against Hizbullah, insofar as closing the border with Syria and enforcing an arms embargo.

However, Abramovich noted that despite the lack of action, the UN will reiterate its demand that Hizbullah immediately release kidnapped IDF soldiers Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad Regev, and call for a weapons-free zone south of the Litani River.

Earlier this month, The Jerusalem Post reported that Israel has been working through diplomatic channels to insert several changes in the UNIFIL mandate in Lebanon to make sure that international forces in the South patrol more in urban areas.

The mandate of the 13,600-strong UN peacekeeping force is due to expire at the end of August.

1 comment:

Alan said...

In the spectrum of the worst to the best results of the premature end to the operations against Hezbollah, UNIFIL's essentially ineffective role puts things near the worst. Hezbollah has effectively rearmed and when they decide it's time for the next round, UNIFIL will again inhibit Israel's defense far more than it will inhibit the terrorists.