BEIRUT — U.N. peacekeepers patrolling southern Lebanon have faced a dramatic surge of ''aggressive behavior'' by Israeli forces over the last year, including drone-dropped grenades and machine-gun fire, according to an internal report seen by The Associated Press.
The report by one of the 48 nations that together have more than 7,500 peacekeepers in southern Lebanon says the number of incidents jumped from just one in January to 27 in December. The hilly frontier zone where the UNIFIL force patrols has seen decades of cross-border violence. Israel and Lebanon's Hezbollah militants fought a full-scale war in 2024.
The targeting of peacekeepers appears aimed at undermining the international force and strengthening Israel's military footprint along the U.N.-drawn border with Lebanon, known as the Blue Line, the report alleges. It was shared with AP on condition that the news organization not identify the country whose peacekeepers compiled the findings for internal use by their senior command.
Israel has long mistrusted UNIFIL, accusing it of failing to prevent Hezbollah from building up its military presence along the border in violation of ceasefire agreements going back two decades.
The growing catalog of run-ins comes as a half-century of international peacekeeping efforts along the border face an uncertain future. UNIFIL's mission is scheduled to end this year and U.S. President Donald Trump 's administration regards it as a waste of money.
Israel says it tries to reduce harm
In a statement to AP, the Israeli military said it ''is not conducting a deterrence campaign against UNIFIL forces" and is working within accepted frameworks to dismantle Hezbollah, largely based in southern Lebanon.
The military ''takes steps to reduce harm to UNIFIL forces and other international actors operating in the area,'' it said.