Defense Minister Ehud Barak met Sunday with the commander of the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon to protest Hezbollah's continued arms smuggling from Syria, in violation of Security Council Resolution 1701.

Barak said the Israel Defense Forces is closely monitoring the Lebanon border, and has seen Hezbollah gaining strength over the past two years, with close Syrian assistance. "The repeated violation of 1701 could lead us to upset of the delicate balance that exists in Lebanon, and it poses a substantive danger to the entire region," Barak said.

Resolution 1701 calls or a full cessation of hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah, who engaged in a month-long conflict in southern Lebanon during the summer of 2006. The resolution also calls for withdrawal of both Israeli and Hezbollah troops from southern Lebanon, to be replaced by UNIFIL peacekeeping troops. It also requires Hezbollah to disarm.

The UNIFIL commander met with IDF Chief of Staff Gabi Ashkenazi on Thursday, who similarly complained to the visiting UNIFIL commander about continued arms smuggling. The two also discussed Israel's withdrawal from the divided border town of Ghajar.

NY Times: U.S. providing light arms to Lebanese military

Meanwhile, the New York Times reported Saturday that the United States is providing light arms and brand new equipment to the Lebanese army in line with its policy of supporting the Western-backed Beirut government.

Officials in the Pentagon and State Department are weighing a Lebanese request for far more substantial weaponry, including tanks, anti-tank missiles and an air defense system to deter Israeli air force sorties in Lebanese airspace, though significant arms sales require that Congress be officially notified, the Times reported.

Israeli officials have conveyed their concerns to the Bush administration that any weapons delivered to the Lebanese army may eventually fall into the hands of the Shi'ite terrorist organization Hezbollah, which has seen its political standing in the country enhanced in recent months, according to The New York Times.

The Times reported that thus far the Americans have provided the Lebanese less than half of the $410 million worth of weapons Washington pledged to deliver in 2006. Wrangling among officials in the Pentagon and the State Department have delayed the pace of the weapons transfers, frustrating Lebanese military officials, the Times reported.

Lebanese and American military officials told the Times that the U.S. has so far provided light weapons, spare parts, Humvees, rifles, grenade launchers, and ammunition.

Lebanon is anxious to upgrade its antiquated fleet of tanks as well as provide night-vision equipment for its soldiers patrolling the border areas, the Times reported.

Talks between the Bush administration and the Lebanese government over the precise nature of further military aid packages are still ongoing, according to the New York Times.

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