Israeli drone strikes on Lebanon ‘equal to declaration of war,’ Aoun tells UN

Special Israeli drone strikes on Lebanon ‘equal to declaration of war,’ Aoun tells UN
1 / 2
A Lebanese army soldier walks past military intelligence forensic investigators of inspecting the scene where two drones came down in the vicinity of a media center of the Shiite Hezbollah movement earlier in the day, in the south of the capital Beirut on August 25, 2019. (AFP / ANWAR AMRO)
Special Israeli drone strikes on Lebanon ‘equal to declaration of war,’ Aoun tells UN
2 / 2
Lebanese President Michel Aoun on Monday said Israel's drone strikes in Lebanon is tantamount to a declaration of war. (Hussein Malla/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo)
Updated 27 August 2019
Follow

Israeli drone strikes on Lebanon ‘equal to declaration of war,’ Aoun tells UN

Israeli drone strikes on Lebanon ‘equal to declaration of war,’ Aoun tells UN
  • Drones targetted Hezbollah-linked base in Bekaa Valley and and southern Lebanon
  • UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said the UN took note of Aoun’s statements

BEIRUT: Three Israeli airstrikes on a Palestinian base in eastern Lebanon near the border with Syria were “equal to a declaration of war,” Lebanese President Michel Aoun said on Monday.

The three drone attacks a few minutes apart early on Monday hit a base near Qusaya in the Bekaa Valley of a Syrian-backed group known as the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command, an ally of Hezbollah.

The strikes came a day after an Israeli drone crashed in a Hezbollah stronghold in southern Beirut, and another exploded and crashed nearby. The attacks violated the UN Security Council resolution that ended the 2006 war between Israel and Hezbollah, Aoun told the UN Special Coordinator for Lebanon, Jan Kubis.

“What happened is equal to a declaration of war and gives us the right to defend our sovereignty, independence, and the safety of our land,” Aoun said. “We are people who seek peace and not war, and we don’t accept that anyone threatens us through any means.”

UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said the UN took note of Aoun’s statements and repeated its appeal to stop violations of the Security Council resolution and implement all its provisions.

“The UN calls on the parties to exercise maximum restraint, both in action and in rhetoric,” Dujarric said.

Lebanese diplomatic expert Riyad Tabarah said the drone incidents in the southern Beirut suburbs were mysterious. “This kind of drone is usually used to target people and not places,” he told Arab News.

“Israel has been using these drones lately in Syria and Iraq to kill Iranians. These drones do not usually explode in the skies. The Israeli technology does not work this way. Plus, there is a difference between the places where the first drone crashed and the second exploded.

“Israeli media said that, according to the images on Lebanese TV channels, the drone that was downed was Iranian, and not made in Israel.”

He said that increasing Israeli pressure against Hezbollah and Iran came from the US, which could not exert this pressure directly. Israel was acting on behalf of the US, to force Iran to come to the negotiating table, he said.

Meanwhile, Israeli drones continued on Monday to fly over the Bekaa Valley and also southern Lebanon, where the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) patrols the border with Israel.

“Our mission is limited to the south of Lebanon,” UNIFIL spokesman Andrea Teneneti told Arab News.  “The Lebanese authorities are handling this part with the relevant authorities.

“We are issuing reports regarding the air violations and focusing on preventing any tensions in the south. Our mission is confined to the south ... and the situation there is stable and calm, just as it was before.”