Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Hariri Arrest Warrants Names Leaked |
2011-07-01 |
[An Nahar] Media reports have stated that the indictment in the murder case of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri includes the names of four suspects: Mustafa Badreddine, who is close to Hizbullah, Salim Ayyash, Hassan Aneissy, known as Hassan Issa, and Assad Sabra. Born in 1963 in the southern town of Harouf, Ayysah is a Civil Defense volunteer and a member of Hizbullah. Known as Abu Salim, he may hold an American citizenship. According to the arrest warrant, he is responsible for the cell that executed Hariri's liquidation and he himself participated in the operation. Badreddine, also known as Sami Issa, was born 1961. He is a cousin and the brother-in-law of slain prominent Hizbullah official Imad Mughnieh. He is a member of the Hizbullah's Shura council and the head of its external operations. He was locked away and imprisoned in Kuwait in 1983. In 1990, he managed to escape prison and flee to Iran where the Revolutionary Guard returned him to Beirut. According to the arrest warrant in the Hariri murder case, he is accused of planning and overseeing the execution of the liquidation. The name of Abdul Majid Ghamloush is not among the names if the suspects as had been previously reported. A delegation from the Special Tribunal for Leb had visited General Prosecutor Saeed Mirza at the Justice Palace on Thursday in order to hand him the indictment. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Hezbollah threatens Israeli leaders |
2011-02-17 |
[Asharq al-Aswat] The head of Hezbullies urged his fighters on Wednesday to stand ready to take Galilee in any future Leb-Israel war and threatened Israeli leaders "anytime, anywhere" to avenge a top operative's killing. "I say to the fighters of the Islamic Resistance: Be ready. If a new war is imposed on Leb we may ask you to take Galilee, to free Galilee," Hassan Nasrallah said in a televised speech to mark his Shiite party's martyrs' day. "I hope the people of Israel have good bomb shelters," he added. Nasrallah vowed that the liquidation of Imad Mughnieh, killed in a February 2008 car booming in Damascus that Iranian-backed Hezbullies has blamed on Israel, would not be forgotten or go unpunished. "I do not want to go into details. Suffice to say that our decision remains the same and will be executed, God willing, at the right time," he said to thunderous applause from hundreds of supporters gathered in a stadium. "To the Zionist generals, I say: Anywhere you go in the world, at any time, watch out, for the blood of Imad Mughnieh will not go to waste." A month-long war between Hezbullies and Israel in 2006 destroyed much of Leb's infrastructure and killed more than 1,200 Lebanese, mainly civilians, and 160 Israelis, mainly soldiers. Nasrallah's comments came a day after Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak warned that his army may have to re-enter Leb to ensure Hezbullies "remembers" the 2006 war. "Even though it's quiet and deterrence exists -- Hezbullies remembers the heavy beating they suffered from us in 2006 -- but it is not forever, and you may be called to enter again," said Barak during a tour of the border region. Waving Iranian, Egyptian and yellow Hezbullies flags, hundreds of supporters cheered as the reclusive Nasrallah gave a fiery speech, transmitted on a giant screen in a stadium laced with pictures of assassinated Hezbullies leaders along with Mughnieh. Mohammed Yusuf Mansour, alias Sami Shehab, also made an appearance at the rally, taking a seat in the front row as a presenter lauded him as a "freed prisoner" and a "brother in our struggle". Mansour is the head of a 22-member Hezbullies cell who beat feet from an Egyptian prison during the Cairo uprising last month. |
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Terror Networks |
Israel foiled Hezbollah kidnap plots abroad |
2008-09-02 |
JERUSALEM (AFP) - Israeli security forces have foiled at least five attempts by the Lebanese Hezbollah militia to abduct Israeli businessmen in Africa, Asia, and South America, Israeli newspapers reported on Tuesday. Each time, Hezbollah -- which fought a bloody war against Israel in the summer of 2006 -- tried to use "sleeper cells" embedded in far-flung Shiite Muslim communities, the mass-selling Yediot Aharonot reported. Yediot and other newspapers cited unnamed Israeli security officials and said further details about the plots remain under official censorship. Israel has been on high alert since senior Hezbollah commander Imad Mughnieh was assassinated in a car bombing in Damascus in February in an attack welcomed by the Jewish state but for which it denied any responsibility. Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah blamed Israel for the attack and has repeatedly vowed to avenge the killing. Last month, Israel issued a warning to its citizens living and travelling abroad to take extra precautions against possible Hezbollah attacks or abductions. Israel's counter-terror bureau issued the warning at a peak travelling season for Israelis, calling on tourists and businessmen to take special precaution in hotels, restaurants and recreational spots. Israelis were also urged to turn down "unexpected and alluring proposals in both business and recreation" and to alter routines and habits. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | |
Top Syrian general assassinated: reports | |
2008-08-03 | |
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The Saudi-owned pan-Arab daily Al-Hayat on Sunday quoted "informed sources" in London as saying that a senior Syrian officer had been found dead. "The circumstances of the incident are not clear," the London-based paper said in its report, which said the sources suggested that the slain officer had been "in charge of sensitive files and closely linked to the Syrian top brass." | |
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Arabia |
Kuwait grills Shiite ex-MPs over Hezbollah links |
2008-03-26 |
Kuwait's public prosecutor on Tuesday questioned two Shiite members of the dissolved parliament for allegedly joining an underground group working to overthrow the government, their lawyer said. Adnan Abdulsamad and Ahmad Lari, who went to the prosecutor voluntarily, were accused of joining the previously unknown Hezbollah Kuwait, Abdulkarim bin Haider told AFP. They were also accused of spreading false news that undermine Kuwait's foreign position, he said. The two denied the charges and were later freed on a hefty 10,000-dinar (37,170-dollar) bail, pending further investigations. Two weeks ago, the prosecution interrogated eight leading Shiites over the same accusations. It freed them on bail after detaining them for several days. The action came after activists from Kuwait's minority Shiite community last month organised a rally to mourn Lebanon's Hezbollah commander Imad Mughnieh who was killed in a car bombing in Damascus. Mughnieh is suspected of hijacking a Kuwaiti passenger plane in 1988 in which two Kuwaitis were killed. Abdulsamad spoke at the rally and described Mughnieh as a "martyr hero." The prosecution had asked parliament to strip the two former MPs of their immunity to question them but parliament was dissolved by Kuwait's ruler last week and their immunity was automatically lifted. The crackdown on Shiite activists triggered angry protests with the case fuelling sectarian tensions in this oil-rich emirate where Shiites form about a third of the native population of one million. Kuwait's Emir Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah on April 19 dissolved the opposition-dominated parliament calling for a new election on May 17, the second in less than two years. |
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Arabia |
Kuwait appeals for unity over Hezbollah tensions |
2008-03-11 |
Kuwait's government appealed for unity on Monday amid rising sectarian tension in the Gulf state following demonstrations in support of the slain commander of Lebanon's Hezbollah. The government has become increasingly concerned after hundreds of people took part in a rally last month to mourn Imad Mughnieh, killed in a Damascus car bomb. The rally caused uproar in the oil-rich emirate because Mughnieh was accused of hijacking a Kuwaiti plane two decades ago. "The cabinet urges citizens and the media to avoid issues that could undermine our national unity and the solidarity of the Kuwaiti people," said a statement issued after the weekly cabinet meeting. "We should work together to safeguard Kuwait's security and stability," said the statement, adding that legal measures will be applied to all. Since the rally, eight leading Shiite activists including two former MPs and a prominent cleric have been arrested on charges of being members of Hezbollah Kuwait, a previously unknown group. Two have been freed on bail. Hundreds of angry Shiites demonstrated for the second day in a row on Monday outside the interior ministry in Kuwait City to protest at the detention of one of those arrested, Sheikh Hussein al-Maatuq. The protest, which included many women activists, came after the public prosecution remanded the six activists for another day in police custody pending investigation. "I call on Kuwaiti society... to be solidly united and stay away from these tensions... which are against our national interests," parliament speaker Jassem al-Khorafi told reporters. "Our country cannot bear this... We should remember what happened to us when our country was occupied," by Iraqi troops in August 1990, Khorafi said. Around one-third of Kuwait's native population of one million are Shiite, with the rest being Sunni. |
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Arabia |
Kuwait to deport foreigners who mourned Hezbollah chief |
2008-03-03 |
![]() "We will deport any foreigner who took part in the mourning rally. This is a decision we will implement and we will not back down," Sheikh Jaber Khaled al-Sabah told Al-Watan newspaper. He did not say how many people will be deported or if the ministry has begun rounding up suspects. The rally, in which hundreds of Shiite activists including Kuwaitis, Bahrainis, Lebanese and Iranians took part, caused uproar in the oil-rich emirate because Mughnieh was accused of hijacking a Kuwaiti plane two decades ago. Reactions to the protest have taken a sectarian turn in Kuwait, where a third of the native population of one million are Shiite Muslims. Two Kuwaiti lawmakers, Adnan Abdulsamad and Ahmad Lari, and a number of leading Shiite activists are being sued by four lawyers and the interior minister in connection with the protest. Three leading activists have been remanded in custody and are being questioned on suspicion of belonging to Hezbollah Kuwait, a previously unknown organisation. The prosecution service aslo plans to interrogate others including former MPs and a member in the municipal council on the same charges. Abdulsamad and Lari cannot be interrogated unless parliament strips them of their immunity, however. Mughnieh, who was killed last month by a car bomb in Damascus, was described at the rally as a "martyr hero," but Kuwait says he was responsible for killing two Kuwaiti passengers on a hijacked plane in 1988. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
US sends warship near Lebanon |
2008-02-29 |
![]() The guided missile destroyer USS Cole was the target of a bombing by Al-Qaeda extremists in October 2000 in the Yemeni port of Aden that killed 17 US sailors. Nice touch, sending the Cole. Maybe they can get some payback. Asked whether US President George W. Bush had given the order, White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe said: "The president is concerned about the situation in Lebanon and discusses the issue regularly with his national security team." Lebanon's presidential vacuum has entered its fourth month with no resolution in sight, fueling fears that a deepening sectarian rift could stoke civil strife. Arab leaders have stepped up efforts to bridge the divide between the Western-backed ruling coalition and the opposition supported by Syria and Iran, but analysts said they do not hold out much hope of a deal ahead of an Arab summit next month. Recent street clashes between supporters of rival factions have further raised tensions and prompted several Gulf nations and Western states to advise their citizens against traveling to Lebanon. Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal even warned earlier this month that the country was "on the verge of civil war." Adding to the tension, Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah has vowed "open war" against Israel, blaming it for the February 12 car-bombing death in Damascus of Hezbollah top commander Imad Mughnieh, which Israel welcomed but denied any involvement in. Lebanon has been without a president since November 24 when Damascus protege Emile Lahoud stepped down in the midst of the worst political crisis since the country's 1975-1990 civil war. Analysts say plans for an international tribunal to try the assassins of former prime minister Rafiq Hariri, who was close to Saudi Arabia, is another source of the tension. Syria is widely blamed for the February 2005 killing of Hariri in a massive Beirut car bombing but Damascus has denied any involvement. However, two months after the murder, Syria pulled out its troops from Lebanon under domestic and international pressure, ending a 29-year military domination of its neighbor. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Israel faces certain death: Iran |
2008-02-22 |
The assassination of a top commander of the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah has hastened the certain death of Israel, the top military adviser to Irans supreme leader said on Thursday. General Yahya Rahim Safavi, in the latest of a spate of anti-Israel verbal attacks by Iran, said the murder of Imad Mughnieh in a Damascus car bombing last week had enraged thousands of young members of Hezbollah. With this anger, the certain death of the Zionist regime had been brought forward, he said, according to the state-run IRNA news agency. US, Arab role: Safavi, who was for a decade top commander of Irans Revolutionary Guards, again accused Israel of carrying out the attack that killed Mughnieh but also said that security terrorists from the United States and one Arab nation had cooperated. He did not name the Arab country. Iran has stepped up its rhetoric against Israel in the last days after the murder of Mughnieh, which it blamed on the Jewish state. Israel has denied any involvement. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Wednesday called Israel a dirty microbe and savage animal.The current head of the Revolutionary Guards, Irans ideological army, Mohammad Ali Jafari, weighed in with a prediction that Hezbollah would destroy the Jewish state. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | |
Iran predicts Hezbollah will destroy Israel | |
2008-02-19 | |
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Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has already blamed Israel for killing Mughnieh, hailing him as a "great" man whose his death would serve to increase resistance against the Jewish state. In a sign of Iran's respect for Mughnieh, Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki attended his funeral in the Shiite suburbs of Beirut on Thursday and gave a speech. | |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Khamenei appoints Qassem as Hezbollah military commander |
2007-12-14 |
![]() The pan-Arab daily said the decision was taken in light of a report presented by a team from the Intelligence apparatus of the Revolutionary Guards that had visited Lebanon to assess the status of Hezbollah 's military and its capabilities. It quoted a revolutionary Guards officer in the Bekaa Valley as saying "intense differences" between Qassem and Nasrallah on "destiny issues related to the party's military wing led to the interference by Khamenei's office to re-organize Hezbollah's command structure." The unnamed source said Hezbollah 's annual budget of 400 million dollars was raised to over one billion dollars in the past 18 months to compensate for the losses sustained during the 34-day war with Israel in the summer of 2006. Khamenei assigned a team comprising major officers of the Revolutionary Guards in addition to Hezbollah 's ex-Intelligence Chief Imad Mughnieh to restructure the party's military branch in light of the team's recommendations, the report said. Qassem, in light of the report, assumed the higher responsibility for Hezbollah 's military branch, while Nasrallah maintained his post of secretary general in charge of the party's intelligence agency. Mughnieh, the report added, remains in charge of coordination between Hezbollah, Palestinian factions and Iranian intelligence agencies. |
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Israel-Palestine |
Hezbollah taking over al Aqsa Intifada |
2004-03-09 |
Hat tip JihadWatch ELF Palestinian terrorism has a new boss: Master terrorist Imad Mughnieh, Nasrallahâs deputy of operations. He heads âThe Organization for Internal Operationsâ. His people manufacture terror attacks. From instructions for assembling devices through explanations on the exact place in the bus to explode. From ways to smuggle materiel through ways to finance terror cells. A new nightmare for the GSS. The last time that Shadi Abdu from Nablus visited Jordan, he received a very attractive gift, a new Sony PlayStation. However, Shadiâs present, generously purchased by the Hezbollah, was not intended for playing games. Truthfully, nothing could have farther from his mind. A digital memory card, which could be removed and installed in any home computer, was concealed inside the popular game. The card came from a Hezbollah laboratory and contained clear, detailed diagrams that showed precisely how to manufacture explosives, explosive vests and roadside charges. For three years, the Lebanese organization (with full support from Iran) has been trying to tighten its hold on the Palestinian terrorist cells. On the Israel Security Serviceâs maps, names of the Palestinian cells and terrorists, with Hezbollah connections, can be found in every city in Judea and Samaria, from Jenin in the north to Hebron in the south. The Gaza Strip, too, has not been forgotten. The Hezbollahâs take-over of Judea, Samaria and parts of the Gaza Strip began gradually, developed and gathered strength. When the flow of money from the Palestinian Authority and its security organizations ceased, Hezbollah representatives arrived with full pockets that caused the Tanzim to become addicted to Lebanese money. A friend introduces a friend and additional cells began to receive instructions from abroad. Today, almost 100% of the Fatahâs operations under the name âAl-Aqsa Brigadesâ are financed and directed by the Shiite organization and Iran. âHezbollah has become an employment agency for the Tanzimâ, explained a source from the security services. Although the process was gradual, Israeli sources say that neither coincidence nor luck were involved. Rather, it was an official Iranian decision that Sheik Hassan Nasrallah and his cohort translated into policy. Iran and the Hezbollah established an entire organization for this purpose and invest millions of dollars annually. Recently, it appears that Hezbollah is not content with only the Tanzim and is continuing in other directions. The more they eat, the hungrier they get. The new trend is to the take-over Islamic Jihad cells and to control them directly. Ahmed Sari Hussein, a senior terrorist from Tul Karm, who received money and instructions from Lebanon without reporting it to the Jihad offices in Damascus, is a good example. The Islamic Jihad is considered a close ally of Iran and its leader Ramadan Shallah was appointed as a result of Iranian pressure. The fact that the Hezbollah is stealing Jihad activists could be a sign that Iran is pleased with the system they used with the Tanzim and wants to expand its influence in the Palestinian sector. Two Iranian organizations are at the top of the command hierarchy that controls Palestinian terrorism: the Intelligence Ministry and the Revolutionary Guard. Beneath them are Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah and Imad Mughnieh, his deputy for the military affairs. Mughnieh heads a special group, âThe Organization for Internal Operationsâ that is responsible for all activities in Israel and the territories. The entire complex operation is managed from a small office that employs only a few people. Hezbollah assigned the task to a small group of veterans who were responsible for the military operations against the IDF in southern Lebanon. They have killed Israelis themselves and understand the needs of terrorists in the field and know how to get it to them. Now they are taking advantage of their knowledge and combat experience to operate the Palestinians by remote control. Israel is still trying to map out how the organization works. It is involved in the finest details of terror attacks including training, finances and sending the bombers to their targets. The developing portrait reveals that Hezbollah has allocated several operators to guide the terrorist activities in the territories. One of these is Kais Obeid, the Israeli Arab from Taibeh who was involved in kidnapping Elhanan Tennenbaum. Israeli intelligence officials claim that Obeid is very valuable to Hezbollah because he can connect them directly to the field, using e-mail, ordinary and cellular telephones and every other possible means of communication. The curfews and closures on Palestinian cities and the focus on building the anti-terrorism barrier make it hard for terror cells from different cities to cooperate. This has created an absurd situation; only someone in Lebanon can see the whole picture and connect the suicide bomber in Jenin with the explosive vest in Nablus. In the middle of last year Kais Obeid was able to recruit Firas Halaileh, an explosives expert from Nablus. Halaileh began to receive payments from Hezbollah, through messengers from abroad, in order to carry out attacks and recruit members for the Shiite organization. He took a central role in the Hezbollahâs operations in Samaria and began to supply weapons and explosives throughout Judea and Samaria. By the time he was arrested in October, he was able to connect Obeid to Bethlehem and Hebron where Hezbollah still has infrastructure. In addition to controlling existing cells, Hezbollah is trying to establish independent cells that will have no other loyalties. Shadi Abu-Hussein, a pharmacist from Gaza, organized one of these, until he was arrested last month. For three years, he was in constant contact with Lebanon, receiving instructions and money. He sent messengers to Lebanon who returned with expertise in explosives. They tried to build rockets, shoulder-launched missiles and sophisticated explosives. Shortly before the cell was uncovered, they were in the advanced stages of producing an explosive model airplane. They built the airplane, installed the motor and had added the explosive device. They had even conducted an unsuccessful experiment. The plane took off but landed immediately. Security officials believe it was intended for use against settlements or IDF posts in the Gaza Strip. The Hezbollah operation is highly departmentalized. The leaders make every effort to conceal their identities from the heads of Palestinian cells. For example, Ali Hussein Salah was a Hezbollah terrorist who operated cells in the Gaza Strip. In August, a mysterious explosion killed him in his car. Even though the incident received broad media coverage, his operatives did not connect the story to their contact in Lebanon. Only two weeks later did rumors spreading by word-of-mouth, lead them to understand that someone had settled accounts with their Lebanese supervisor. Hezbollah invests great efforts in smuggling sophisticated weapons into Judea, Samaria and the Gaza Strip. Most of the smuggled materiel is light weapons, like Kalashnikov rifles, but the security services have also captured heavier arms, including rockets and advanced missiles. However, the assumption is that if any of these had gotten through to terrorists in the Gaza Strip, they would have used them against Israel by now. In addition to familiar methods of smuggling, Hezbollah is trying to develop new channels. Investigation of Arab Israelis who were recruited by Hezbollah and arrested by the GSS, revealed plans to smuggle weapons directly into Israel, concealed as imported electronic appliances. Their assumption was that not every container entering Israel is inspected. Since smuggling weapons isnât easy, especially in Judea and Samaria, experts in explosives and other technologies from Hezbollah and Iran searched for ways to improve the Palestinianâs engineering skills. They also use the Internet. Knowledge trickles down to the field, especially in the Gaza Strip. Israeli security sources estimate that several of the sophisticated devices captured in the Gaza Strip were based on Lebanese-Iranian technology. There are training films that teach how to produce R-D-X, an especially strong explosive, and how to use it to build a catapult-like device that can propel metal balls over a distance of several dozen meters. Another shows how to build a thin explosive vest that is hard to detect. Later in the film, it shows exactly where in the bus should a suicide bomber stand so the maximum effect would be achieved. Unlike written instructions for building explosive devices, which can be found on many Internet sites, the films come with clear, visual explanations. This is a serious, professional production that demonstrates, step-by-step, how to build deathly devices. Israeli experts in the field who have seen the films estimate that even someone without any previous background could build an explosive vest after viewing them. The Palestinian Authority is aware of Hezbollahâs activities on its home court but is doing nothing to change the situation. Arafat, either unwilling or unable to act, watches from the side as Nasrallah steals his former loyalists. The last time Arafat felt his leadership challenged, during the prisoner exchange, he did nothing. Nasrallah has won a place in Palestinian hearts â paying the Tanzim and releasing prisoners â but the PA does nothing to disconnect the lines between Lebanon and the Judea, Samaria and the Gaza Strip. The security forces have difficulty understanding why the international community, and maybe Israel, too, doesnât take the intensive Hezbollah activity in its backyard more seriously. They claim that Lebanese involvement in Palestinian terrorism is much more extensive than the terrorist activity on the northern border. In the last year, Tanzim cells, directed and financed by Hezbollah, carried out 16 serious attacks in which 32 Israelis and one foreign worker were killed. Despite this, Hezbollah is still considered a threat on the northern border |
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