Nut Job kills the leader of Hezbollah in airstrike

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planosteve
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Nut Job kills the leader of Hezbollah in airstrike

Postby planosteve » Sat Sep 28, 2024 8:12 am

WASHINGTON − Hassan Nasrallah, the revered and reviled longtime leader of Hezbollah, was killed Friday in an Israeli airstrike, the Israeli Defense Forces said.

Nasrallah, "the leader of the Hezbollah terrorist organization and one of its founders, was eliminated by the IDF," the Israeli military said in a statement Saturday.

"Following precise intelligence," the statement said, fighter jets "conducted a targeted strike on the Central Headquarters of the Hezbollah terrorist organization, which was located underground embedded under a residential building in the area of Dahieh in Beirut."

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Hezbollah confirmed Nasrallah's death later on Saturday, and the group's Al Manar TV station began airing Koranic verses.

The decapitation attack on Israel's strongest neighboring foe was a political earthquake for the region, threatening an armed response against Israeli and U.S. targets from Iran and its proxies in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen.

"It’s huge," said Mohamad Bazzi, director of the Kevorkian Center for Near East Studies at New York Universtiy. "It’s a tremendous blow to Hezbollah. Its a blow to Iran."

Nasrallah was among the most important leaders in the Middle East, commanding tens of thousands of fighters and armed with missiles supplied by the Shia Islamist movement's patron, Iran. Hezbollah governs southern Lebanon and its nearly 1 million residents independent of the weak Lebanese government.

"The strike was conducted while Hezbollah’s senior chain of command were operating from the headquarters and advancing terrorist activities against the citizens of the State of Israel," the Israeli statement said.

Friday's airstrike on Dahiyeh shook Beirut. A security source in Lebanon told Reuters the attack − a quick succession of massively powerful blasts − had left a crater more than 20 yards deep.

It was followed on Saturday by further airstrikes on Dahiyeh and other parts of Lebanon. Huge explosions lit up the night sky, and more strikes hit the area Saturday morning. Smoke rose over the city.

The death of the militant movement's longtime supremo came after a week of Israeli attacks that Tel Aviv said were meant to neuter Hezbollah's military capabilities and allow 60,000 residents of northern Israel to return to homes evacuated due to months of rocket fire from over the Lebanon border.

More: Netanyahu vows to continue Hezbollah attacks, rails against Israel's critics in UN speech

Hezbollah has been firing rockets into Israel since the Oct. 7 Hamas rampage in southern Israel and Israel's ongoing invasion of the coastal enclave.

More than 1,500 people have been killed in Lebanon in the last week, and more than 90,000 displaced, on top of 100,000 forced to flee since October.

A key figure in the 'Axis of resistance'
Among supporters, Nasrallah has been lauded for standing up to Israel and defying the United States. To enemies, he was head of a terrorist organization and a proxy for Iran's Shia Islamist theocracy in its tussle for influence in the Middle East.

"No doubt, he is a particularly important figure," Bazzi told USA TODAY. "He’s very charismatic, an excellent orator."

Still, Bazzi said, "His star has fallen in the Middle East since Hezbollah's involvement in the Syrian civil war," when Hezbollah fighters were key to the survival of Bashar al Assad's brutal government.

Nasrallah's regional influence has been on display over nearly a year of conflict ignited by the Gaza war, as Hezbollah entered the fray by firing on Israel from southern Lebanon in support of its Palestinian ally Hamas, and Yemeni and Iraqi groups followed suit, operating under the umbrella of an Iran-led "Axis of Resistance."

"We are facing a great battle," Nasrallah said in an Aug. 1 speech at the funeral of Hezbollah's top military commander, Fuad Shukr, who was killed in an Israeli strike.

More: Israel shoots down first Hezbollah missile aimed at Tel Aviv as group says it targeted spy agency

Pager blasts and a change in fortune
Yet when thousands of Hezbollah members were injured and dozens killed, when their pagers and walkie-talkies exploded in an apparent Israeli attack last week, that battle began to turn against his group.

Responding to the attacks on Hezbollah's communications network in a Sept. 19 speech, Nasrallah vowed to punish Israel.

"This is a reckoning that will come, its nature, its size, how and where? This is certainly what we will keep to ourselves and in the narrowest circle even within ourselves," he said.

He has not given a broadcast address since then.

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There is no bad peace and there are no good wars

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GFB
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Re: Nut Job kills the leader of Hezbollah in airstrike

Postby GFB » Sat Sep 28, 2024 8:16 am

Aw gee
If you’re “woke”..you’re a loser.

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planosteve
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Joined: Sun May 25, 2014 8:04 pm

Re: Nut Job kills the leader of Hezbollah in airstrike

Postby planosteve » Sat Sep 28, 2024 8:30 am

GFB wrote:Aw gee

Of course if Trump is elected he will become a target for retaliation. :twisted:
There is no bad peace and there are no good wars


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