US says UN Lebanon commander 'blind' to Hizballah arms smuggling
The United States slammed the commander of the UN peacekeeping force in Lebanon on Friday, accusing him of turning a blind eye to Hizballah weapons smuggling.
US ambassador Nikki Haley said the 10,500-strong UNIFIL force was "not doing its job effectively" and singled out its Irish leader, Major General Michael Beary.
"What I find totally baffling is the view of the UNIFIL commander General Beary," Haley told reporters, accusing him of ignoring Hizballah's arms dumps.
"He seems to be the only person in south Lebanon who is blind. That's an embarrassing lack of understanding on what's going on around him," she said.
But the United Nations spokesman Stephane Dujarric dismissed the comments and confirmed "we have full confidence in his work."
Haley was speaking at UN headquarters as member states debate the future of UNIFIL, which is deployed to keep the peace on Lebanon's southern border with Israel.
The existing mandate, last modified in 2006, expires at the end of the month, and the United States would like to see its language toughened.
Washington wants the UN force to take a tougher line on Hizballah, an Iranian-backed Shia armed movement that is represented in Lebanon's government.
Israel alleges that Hizballah is restocking its arms dumps and missile batteries in southern Lebanon, under the eyes of Blue Helmet peacekeepers.
But Russia, which is allied with Iran and thus with Hizballah in support of regime forces in the conflict in neighboring Syria, wields a UN Security Council veto.
US allies France and Italy, which have hundreds of soldiers in the UN force that would be in danger if it clashed with the militia, are also concerned.
"Since 2006 there has been a massive flow of illegal weapons to Hizballah, mostly smuggled in by Iran," Haley alleged.
"They openly threaten Israel. Hizballah is a terrorist organisation that is very destabilising to the region,” she claimed.
Haley said the mandate obliges UNIFIL to work with the Lebanese Armed Forces to disarm illegal groups and that she would seek to underline this in the renewal.
Hizballah is waging a war against IS militants in eastern Lebanon, close to the Syrian border.