Taoiseach Simon Harris has accused Israel of âan extremely egregious breach of international lawâ after the United Nations (UN) confirmed the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) had deliberately fired on UN positions and peacekeepers in southern Lebanon.
He said he had raised his extreme level of concern with US president Joe Biden, who he met in Washingtony. He said Unifil, and the 50 nations contributing troops to that peacekeeping force in Lebanon, must strongly âprotestâ Israelâs actions.
âThe conversation I had with the president left me in no doubt of the significance of what he had discussed with the prime minister of Israel,â Mr Harris said in Washington. âIsrael will have to be judged on what it does and not what it says.
âAnd what happened here today is extraordinarily concerning. The loss of civilian life is concerning, the incursion into Lebanon, the bombing of Gaza is beyond concerning, it is despicable. And I think the intimidatory behaviour towards peacekeepers is utterly unacceptable and must be protested at the highest level.â
The White House said it was âdeeply concernedâ by reports of the IDF firing on UN troops, a national security council spokesperson said. It said Israel was acting to âdestroy Hizbullah infrastructure that could be used to threaten Israeli citizensâ but must ânot threaten UN peacekeepersâ safety and securityâ.
About 50 nations contribute soldiers to the 10,000-strong Unifil ranks, with some of those joining Irelandâs condemnation of the IDFâs attacks. Italyâs defence minister, Guido Crosetto, said firing on Unifil bases was âtotally unacceptableâ and clearly flouted international law. The French foreign ministry condemned the attack, and said it was awaiting explanation from Israel.
The IDF said its troops on Thursday morning had âoperated in the area of Naqura, next to a Unifil baseâ, which is the missionâs headquarters. âAccordingly, the IDF instructed the UN forces in the area to remain in protected spaces, following which the forces opened fire in the area,â it said.
Separately, Israeli strikes on central Beirut on Thursday night killed 18 people and wounded at least 92, Lebanonâs health ministry said, as a Lebanese security source said at least one senior Hizbullah figure was targeted in the attacks.
Tánaiste Michéal Martin said âIsrael is not listening to its alliesâ and âseems to be [at] all-out warâ. It was engaging in âdestructive warfareâ and had âdestroyedâ communities in âa clear breach of international humanitarian lawâ.
Though Irish troops serving with Unifil had not been fired upon, the Defence Forces on Thursday night said the Irish were operating âamid ongoing tensions along the blue line, where the situation is most intenseâ. They were âin austere field conditionsâ but they remained âdeterminedâ.
Unifil said the IDF had âdeliberatelyâ targeted a number of its positions in attacks apparently aided by drone surveillance, including firing at personnel on Thursday morning. Two peacekeepers were injured after an IDF Merkava tank fired its weapon toward an observation tower at Unifilâs headquarters in Naqoura âdirectly hitting it and causing them to fallâ, it said.
Among other incidents an IDF drone flew into UN position (UNP) 1-31 in Ras Naqoura, where the IDF also fired at Unifil troops âhitting the entrance to the bunker where peacekeepers were sheltering, and damaging vehicles and a communications systemâ.
Last weekend IDF tanks advanced on an outpost manned by about 30 Irish troops called UNP 6-52, one of 29 Unifil posts along the blue line border between southern Lebanon and northern Israel. The Israelis used earth movers to create firing positions and remained outside the Irish post for several days, causing concern among the Irish troops. However, on Tuesday morning the Israeli troops moved on after Hizbullah said it would not fire on the IDF at that position.
Additional reporting: Wires