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Hezbollah confirms the death of Hasan Nasrallah in Israeli carpet-bombing

Considered an icon of resistance against Israel and one of the most influential political figures in the Arab world, Hasan Nasrallah was killed by a massive Israeli airstrike that leveled an entire residential block in Beirut’s Dahiya district.

The Secretary General of Hezbollah, Hasan Nasrallah, was killed by the latest Israeli carpet-bombing of Beirut’s southern Dahiya district on Friday, according to an official announcement by the Lebanese resistance group on Saturday afternoon.

Israel had bombed a residential block in the Haret Hraik area in the Dahiya district with several 2000-pound bunker-buster bombs. The massive airstrike leveled an entire residential block and completely flattened at least six residential buildings. 

Israeli media outlets first reported that Nasrallah was the target of the strike, while AFP and Reuters quoted sources described as “close to Hezbollah” saying that he was still alive. On Saturday morning, the Israeli army officially announced that it had confirmed the killing of Nasrallah, and a few hours later, Hezbollah published a statement confirming the news.

Since late Friday, Israel put its forces on full alert along the Lebanese border, calling two reserve units to duty, and opening public shelters in several cities, bracing for a Hezbollah retaliation.

Hezbollah expanded its rocket reach on Saturday to central Israel and even the central West Bank. Israeli air defenses intercepted Hezbollah’s rockets near Ramallah a few hours before Hazbollah’s official announcement of Nasrallah’s death.

Israel’s escalation comes as the U.S. and other European countries say they are trying to reach a ceasefire deal on the Lebanese border. Israel has pledged to secure the return of evacuated Israelis to the north, while Hezbollah continues to refuse to cease the activity of the “support front” in solidarity with Gaza unless Israel ends its war on the besieged coastal enclave.

Since Israel began its offensive on Lebanon last Monday, it has killed at least 1,250 Lebanese and wounded more than 5,000.

Who is Hasan Nasrallah?

Nasrallah was born in 1960 in a working-class neighborhood in Burj Hamoud near Beirut. He pursued religious studies in Iraq while engaging in political activity in the ranks of the Amal movement, a Lebanese Shi’a-based political group founded by Shi’a cleric and politician Musa al-Sadr, by whom Nasrallah was inspired. 

In Iraq, he met his mentor Abbas Musawi, and both men became close friends. Musawi and Nasrallah later quit the Amal movement and co-founded Hezbollah in the early 1980s following Israel’s invasion and occupation of Lebanon in 1982.

In the late 1980s, Hezbollah became an increasingly important component of the Lebanese resistance to Israeli occupation, with Nasrallah becoming a member of its political leadership. In 1992, Israel assassinated Abbas Musawi alongside his wife and newborn son. Nasrallah succeeded Musawi as Secretary General of the movement. In 1997, Nasrallah’s son, Hadi Nasrallah, was killed in action during combat with Israeli forces in southern Lebanon, contributing to the growth of Nasrallah’s popularity.

Nasrallah led Hezbollah through successive Israeli offensives against the movement, starting with the July 1993 offensive. In 1996, Nasrallah oversaw Hezbollah’s operations during Israel’s offensive, “Grapes of Wrath,” ending in a historic agreement that stipulated avoiding the targeting of civilians from both sides. In May 2000, Nasrallah led Hezbollah during the Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon and announced victory in an iconic speech in the border city of Bint Jbeil. He then led Hezbollah through the 2006 Israeli war on Lebanon, which ended with a full Israeli withdrawal and ceasefire, and catapulting Hezbollah’s status as the first resistance movement to successfully repel an Israeli military invasion. Two years later, Hezbollah concluded a prisoner exchange deal with Israel that saw the release of hundreds of Lebanese, Palestinian, and other Arab detainees from Israeli jails.

In 2012, Nasrallah announced Hezbollah’s involvement in the Syrian Civil War, siding with the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Asad. Under Nasrallah’s leadership, Hezbollah played a central role in defeating Syrian rebels, and later ISIS in Syrian territory and on Lebanon’s borders. The war propelled Hezbollah to a position of regional influence, even as it lost support among sectors of the Lebanese and Arab populations in the broader region that supported the Syrian opposition.

Throughout his political and military career, Nasrallah became famous for live and televised speeches and unconventional forms of “public diplomacy,” watched by millions across the region — including Israelis.

Nasrallah was Hezbollah’s third secretary general and his killing leaves the post vacant for the first time in 32 years. Lebanese media outlets and several analysts expect that his successor will be Hashem Safiyuddin, who currently serves as the chief of the movement’s executive council.

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NYT reports that Biden said

. . . the killing of Hassan Nasrallah ‘is a measure of justice for his many victims,’. . .

and

It is time for . . . the threats to Israel to be removed, and for the broader Middle East region to gain stability.

and

. . . the United States fully supports Israel’s right to defend itself against Hezbollah and other Iranian-backed terrorist groups . . .

and

He has directed Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III to further enhance the defense posture of U.S. military forces in the Middle East region to deter aggression . . .

I often think that the regional players would have found a better solution by now if the United States had limited itself to providing humanitarian and developmental support to those who truly need it, instead of weapons and impunity to Israel. For more than a hundred years Britain, France, and the United States have had a malign impact.

The mainstream media reports on Hezbollah in a completely a-historical manner, as if some group of anti-semitic crazies suddenly sprung up in Lebanon and decided to attack Israel.

I recommend “My War Diary: Lebanon, June 5-July 1, 1982” by Dov Yermiya. The Amazon blurb:
“A passionate, humane eyewitness account of the effects of the Israeli invasion of Lebanon on the civilian population by a lieutenant colonel in the Israeli Defence Forces.”

makes no difference whatsoever…the freedom struggle of Palestinians, Muslims and others in occupied Palestine will go on as long as occupiers exist.

Juan Cole has an enlightening blog post on the rise of Hezbollah in Lebanon.

During the Civil War, each community threw up militias, usually more than one, and these militias often targeted one another as much as their enemies. In the south, East Beirut, and the Biqaa Valley, Shiites predominated. They were the poorest of the Lebanese religious communities, often consisting of tobacco sharecroppers and other impoverished agriculturists in the countryside. In East Beirut they did day labor. Shiites back in the 1950s and 1960s had not been very involved in Lebanese politics, concentrating on the affairs of their villages.

https://www.juancole.com/2024/09/path-nasrallahs-assassination.html

 the U.S. and other European countries say they are trying to reach a ceasefire deal on the Lebanese border. 

The UN’s abject failure has one primary cause – Western imperialism

This week, the 79th General Assembly of the United Nations was held on the brink of world war. It should prompt pause and inquiry why an organization formed 79 years ago at the end of World War Two to prevent future wars is such a failure.

Unbridled Western imperialism is and always has been at the root of global danger and impotence of the UN.

The Second World War defeated specific forms of imperialism – Nazi Germany and Japan. It did not eradicate the disease of imperialism, which soon metastasized in the form of the United States and its Western partners.

Two concurrent conflicts threaten to spiral out of control into international wars. In the Middle East, the wanton aggression by Israel against Lebanon is threatening to drag the entire region into open conflict. The wholesale massacre of civilians by the Israeli regime in Gaza over the past year – now extended into Lebanon – is a diabolical affront to the UN and international law.

Of greater danger to world peace is the conflict in Ukraine, the biggest war on the European continent since the end of World War Two. That conflict is heading into its third year. It is recklessly being stoked by the United States and NATO powers that have sought every way to escalate the proxy war against Russia rather than seek a diplomatic solution.

https://strategic-culture.su/news/2024/09/27/un-abject-failure-has-one-primary-cause-western-imperialism/