The meeting leading to the adoption of Resolution 426 was the consequence of two letters addressed to the President of the Security Council: one from the Permanent Representative of Lebanon to the UN and the other from the Permanent Representative of Israel to the UN. The Israeli letter condemned acts of
terrorism launched from Southern Lebanon. The Security Council acknowledged both letters. In March 1978, after the UNSC resolution was adopted, the Israeli delegate criticized the resolution as “inadequate and hardly sufficient in that it does not condemn terrorism”. The Resolution failed to prevent the PLO and other Palestinian organisations conducting rocket attacks against Israeli territory from Lebanon. On 3 May 1978,
Resolution 427 modifies Resolution 426 by changing the number of troops initially requested for the UNIFIL from 4,000 to 6,000. It also reiterates the demand that Israel should leave South Lebanon without any further delay. On 13 June 1978, a few months after the adoption of Resolution 426, the Israel Defence Forces withdrew from South Lebanon but UNSC Resolutions 425 and 426 were still a long way from being implemented. Instead of giving up their positions to the UNIFIL, they transferred them to Major
Saad Haddad, head of the Christian
South Lebanon Army in Lebanon and a man who had been working closely with Israel for years and was then regarded by Israel as a member of their forces. a fact that partly explains the indefinitely protracted situation in South Lebanon. Implementation issues related to Resolution 426 illustrate the complexity of peacebuilding missions and the time they can take. Indeed, it was not before May 2000 that Israeli troops effectively left Lebanon's territory. Despite the dispositions concerning the transitional and provisional nature of UNIFIL in Resolution 426, the Force still exists and operates in Lebanon to this day, with enhanced roles and annually renewed mandates. ==See also==