by Maj. Gen. (res.) Gershon Hacohen
Hezbollah and the Lebanese army have a strategic relationship and it is impossible to rule out the possibility that, in the next war between the IDF and Hezbollah, Lebanon's military will side with the terrorist group.
The  Lebanese government's responsibility for Hezbollah's offensive  activities on its soil against Israel is a central and unavoidable  issue, which was at the heart of a dispute between Prime Minister Ehud  Olmert and IDF Chief of Staff Dan Halutz during the 2006 Second  Lebanon War.
Seeing Beirut as responsible for  Hezbollah's offensive actions from Lebanese territory, Halutz demanded  that the IDF be allowed to target strategic assets in Lebanon, but  Olmert prevented him from doing so, in part, over pressure exerted on  Israel by the European Union.
The war ended with U.N. Security Council  Resolution 1701, which expressed an expectation that the Lebanese  government would regain sovereignty over its side of the border with  Israel. To facilitate that, the resolution imposed restrictions on  Hezbollah activity in southern Lebanon, and the Lebanese army was to  redeploy in the region. 
But this was only partially realized. Since  2016, not only has Hezbollah's gain political power in Lebanon, the  Lebanese army has largely become part of the Shiite terrorist group's  efforts to bolster its presence on the ground, including near the  border with Israel.
Hezbollah, it seems, used the very  restrictions imposed on it in Resolution 1701 to develop more  sophisticated collaboration mechanisms with the Lebanese army. 
The legitimacy of working with the Lebanese  Armed Forces affords Hezbollah advantages that allow for its  interests to be represented in the international arena, as is the case  in the monthly meetings between Lebanese, Israeli and UNIFIL officials.  
This means a new reality has developed in  the sphere between the Lebanese state and Hezbollah, where the two's  useful symbiosis and strategic division of labor manifests, as  illustrated in the fact that Lebanese forces fought shoulder to  shoulder with Hezbollah operatives against Islamic State terrorists on  the Lebanon-Syria border. 
Under these circumstances, it is impossible  to rule out the possibility that, in the next war between the IDF and  Hezbollah, the Lebanese army may actively assist the Shiite terrorist  group. This is doubly concerning given that in recent years, the  Lebanese army has received American support, including training and  weapons. 
Lebanon, as a hybrid state, has maximized  the inherent advantages of being able to conduct itself between two  opposing poles: It maintains close ties with the West, mainly with  France and the United States, with respect to military and economic  cooperation in the search for political stability, while also  maintaining close ties with Iran and Syria – through Hezbollah –  despite their nefarious attempts to destabilize the region. 
To a great extent, this is where the secret  to Lebanon's success in preserving its existence as an island of  stability in the turbulent Middle East lies. This pattern of behavior  has also allowed Lebanon to avoid being identified as a willing  accomplice to Hezbollah, something that would result in its  international isolation. 
Given Hezbollah's growing strength and its  aggressive deployment against Israel in Lebanon, Jerusalem must devise  a new approach to Beirut.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was right  to declare that Lebanon shoulders responsibility for Hezbollah's  attempts to breach Israeli sovereignty, but it is not enough. The  Israeli government must embark on a diplomatic effort to clarify what  is at stake for Lebanon if it sides with Hezbollah in its next war  with Israel.
Maj. Gen. (res.) Gershon Hacohen is a senior research fellow at the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies.
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/opinions/lebanon-should-be-held-accountable/
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