The Jerusalem Post

Hezbollah: A systematic violator of int’l law

- • By ELI BAR- ON The writer, a retired IDF colonel, is a publishing expert at The MirYam Institute and a former deputy military advocatege­neral of the IDF.

As Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu outlined during his recent presentati­on to the UN General Assembly, Hezbollah is a terrorist organizati­on, one that draws its influence through systemic violations of internatio­nal law.

In early August, a powerful blast caused by the detonation of an enormous quantity of ammonium nitrate stored at Beirut port shook the entire Lebanese capital, killing at least 190, injuring thousands and causing devastatin­g damage to property.

While an investigat­ive report into the explosion has yet to be published, many Lebanese protesters have been pointing fingers at Hezbollah as the prime culprit responsibl­e for the explosion. Circumstan­tial suspicion of Hezbollah’s responsibi­lity for this tragedy is predicated upon the organizati­on’s well- known control of the port, and its pattern of storing ammonium nitrate for terrorist purposes in various locations around the world, including Germany, Cyprus, the UK and Thailand.

This tragic incident reminds the world of Hezbollah’s malign activities and violations of the law in general, and internatio­nal law in particular, in Lebanon, the Middle East and throughout the world.

HEZBOLLAH WAS establishe­d in 1982 as an Iranian- backed terrorist organizati­on. Since then, it has gained growing political power in Lebanon. By the elections of 2018, Hezbollah and its political allies had won the majority of seats in the Lebanese

parliament. At the same time, Hezbollah’s military wing has morphed into a fully equipped and welltraine­d modern army. In many ways, Hezbollah is operating as “a state within a state” in Lebanon.

As was explicitly admitted by the organizati­on’s secretary- general, Hassan Nasrallah, the lion’s share of Hezbollah’s budget, some $ 700 million a year ( a decrease from past years), comes directly from Iran. An estimated $ 200m. more comes from illegal internatio­nal Hezbollah activities, such as the traffickin­g of narcotics and money laundering.

In recent years, the organizati­on has been struggling to deal with internatio­nal sanctions that were imposed on its funding, mainly by the US.

Hezbollah in its entirety has been designated as a terrorist organizati­on by a growing number of countries, which recognize that there is no distinctio­n whatsoever between its political and military wings. Prominent countries that have banned Hezbollah in its entirety include the US, the UK, Canada, Japan, the Netherland­s, Germany, Lithuania, Israel and several Latin American countries. The Arab League has also declared it a terrorist entity, as has the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council.

Unfortunat­ely, the European Union, which has designated only the military wing of the organizati­on as a terrorist group, has yet to follow suit, creating an obstacle in the effort to disrupt Hezbollah’s overseas activities.

Hezbollah’s footprint in global terrorism has been enormous ever since

its inception. While many of its terrorist plots have been foiled, examples of its deadly attacks include the 1983 Marine Corps barracks attack in Beirut, the 2012 Burgas bus bombing, and mass casualty bombings of Jewish and Israeli targets in Argentina in the 1990s. Hezbollah terrorist cells are active around the world.

IN LEBANON itself, Hezbollah is a non- state actor that has gradually come to take control of Lebanese state institutio­ns. After the Hezbollahl­ed bloc took control of the cabinet and parliament in 2019, and following the organizati­on’s growing penetratio­n of state budgets and

ministries, it has become increasing­ly difficult to distinguis­h between Hezbollah and Lebanon.

Lebanon is either unwilling or unable to take control of this rogue organizati­on, and both Lebanon’s and Hezbollah’s systematic violations of UN Security Council resolution­s go unchalleng­ed.

Resolution 1559, passed in 2004, called for the disbanding and disarmamen­t of all Lebanese and non- Lebanese militias. Resolution 1701, passed during the Second Lebanon War ( 2006), calls for full respect of the Blue Line ( the border demarcatio­n between Lebanon and Israel, declared by the UN in 2000) and the disarmamen­t of all armed groups in Lebanon. It also stipulates that the area south of the Litani River must be free of armed personnel, assets and weapons other than those of UNIFIL ( the UN’s observer force in the area) and the Lebanese military. These resolution­s have been violated continuous­ly in various ways, both by Lebanon and Hezbollah.

Hezbollah continues to store weapons across southern Lebanon – whether received from Iran and Syria or produced internally. It continues to develop its program to produce precision- guided missiles. In the whole of Lebanon, Hezbollah, replenishe­d by Iran since the 2006 war, has an arsenal estimated to be as high as 170,000 projectile­s.

Armed Hezbollah operatives maintain a presence on the Blue Line itself. In April 2017, on a tour that was organized by Hezbollah, foreign and Lebanese media documented armed Hezbollah operatives on the border with Israel. UNIFIL later said it did not see them.

The Green Without Borders organizati­on is a Hezbollah front group that purportedl­y advances an environmen­tal agenda, but which is linked to the terrorist organizati­on, and maintains at least 16 known posts along the Israeli border that are manned by armed Hezbollah operatives.

Following the September 2019 missile attack on an IDF vehicle near Avivim in northern Israel, a UNIFIL investigat­ion found that the attack was launched from a location next to a Green Without Borders post, an area UNIFIL says it has no access to.

Hezbollah will sometimes organize “protests” by civilians whom it rallies to the border, who occasional­ly cross into Israeli territory and carry out operationa­l missions. It also uses goat herders for reconnaiss­ance. Moreover, it attacks and harasses UNIFIL observers and prevents them from gaining full access to any point along the Blue Line on a regular basis.

In December 2018, the IDF exposed six Hezbollah cross- border tunnels, which were intended to enable thousands of elite terrorist operatives to cross into Israel and massacre civilians. The tunnels represent another blatant violation of Resolution 1701.

While the Lebanese Armed Forces and the Lebanese government were supposed to disarm Hezbollah according to UN Security Council resolution­s, the opposite is happening. Hezbollah is infiltrati­ng the Lebanese Army and increasing­ly using its assets, as well as those of the Lebanese government. During a 2016 Hezbollah parade in Syria, armored personnel carriers taken from the Lebanese Army were put on display.

The prime minister was correct. The growing menace of Hezbollah must be tackled, not merely for the sake of Lebanon’s neighbors, including Israel, but for the sake of the Lebanese themselves. They have borne the brunt of Hezbollah’s flagrant violation of internatio­nal law once already this year. Let there be no recurrence of such suffering.

 ?? ( Aziz Taher/ Reuters) ?? IN MANY ways, Hezbollah is operating as ‘ a state within a state’ in Lebanon. Pictured: A Hezbollah flag flutters in the southern Lebanese village of Khiam, near the border with Israel, in July.
( Aziz Taher/ Reuters) IN MANY ways, Hezbollah is operating as ‘ a state within a state’ in Lebanon. Pictured: A Hezbollah flag flutters in the southern Lebanese village of Khiam, near the border with Israel, in July.

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