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Tag: Hassan Nasrallah

  • IDF Brig.-Gen. reassures northern communities after Lebanese civilians approach Israeli border

    Lebanese individuals, allegedly civilians, were seen approaching up to 80 meters from the border with Israel.

    Brigadier-General (Brig.-Gen.) Yuval Gez, commander of the Galilee Division, sent a message on Friday to residents of the northern border, local authorities’ heads, security coordinators, and the regional council heads, clarifying that the rules of engagement have not changed.

    His message comes amid claims from local residents of a weakening of deterrence in recent days, after Lebanese individuals, allegedly civilians, were seen approaching up to 80 meters from the border with Israel.

    “Division 91 and the IDF as a whole are working day and night to prevent the rehabilitation of the Hezbollah terror organization in southern Lebanon.

    Our soldiers, both regular and reservists, carry out raids, destroy infrastructure, and thwart terrorists every day, and we maintain extensive operational freedom,” wrote Brig.-Gen. Gez in his letter.

    The division commander confirmed an increase in attempts to approach agricultural areas during the olive harvest, emphasizing that forces are taking action to distance the suspects.

    Members of the northern town of Katzrin emergency squad train with the IDF and Police in a joint drill, in Katzrin, Golan Heights, on June 11, 2025. (credit: MICHAEL GILADI/FLASH90)

    “We will not allow Hezbollah activity or rehabilitation at the front and will continue to act offensively and consistently,” he clarified.

    “We will continue our ongoing dialogue with you and examine every claim or request, with the goal of ensuring your security.” Gez wrote. Next week, the division will conduct a full-scale exercise, the largest since the beginning of the war.

    IDF targets Hezbollah in southern Lebanon

    On Sunday, the IDF killed a Hezbollah operative near the village of Kalbiyya in southern Lebanon, who was involved in rehabilitating the organization’s military infrastructure.

    Additionally, the IDF attacked an engineering vehicle used for the same purposes by the organization near the village of Blida in the southern region.

    “The Hezbollah terror organization continues its attempts to rehabilitate terror infrastructure throughout Lebanon, while endangering Lebanese civilians and using them as human shields. The actions of the terrorist and the attempts to rehabilitate military infrastructure in southern Lebanon constitute a violation of the understandings between Israel and Lebanon,” said an IDF spokesperson.

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  • One year after killing of leader Nasrallah, Hezbollah says no to disarming

    Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem has said the armed Lebanese group will not give up its weapons, one year after Israel killed his predecessor, Hassan Nasrallah, in an air attack on southern Beirut.

    Speaking on Saturday to the thousands who had gathered at Nasrallah’s tomb in Lebanon’s capital, Beirut, Qassem promised to maintain Hezbollah’s military capabilities, which have been significantly weakened by its recent war with Israel.

    “We will never abandon our weapons, nor will we relinquish them,” he said, adding that Hezbollah would continue to “confront any project that serves Israel”.

    His comments come after the new Lebanese government publicly committed to disarming the Iran-backed group.

    In the run-up to the first anniversary of his charismatic predecessor’s death, tensions soared between Hezbollah supporters and opponents in Lebanon.

    Images of Nasrallah and his heir apparent, Hashem Safieddine, who was killed in an Israeli air strike just weeks after his boss, were projected onto rocks off the coast of Beirut this week, despite orders from Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam prohibiting it.

    On Saturday, thousands of men, women and children wearing black flocked towards Nasrallah’s burial site, with many carrying portraits of the slain leader. Iran’s Supreme National Security Council secretary, Ali Larijani, also attended the commemoration.

    “We came here to tell everyone in Lebanon that Hezbollah is still strong,” said Fatima, whose husband was killed in the war with Israel last September.

    Speaking to the AFP news agency, Ali Jaafar, a 21-year-old university student, said he believed that disarmament of Hezbollah would not happen.

    “Handing over the weapons is the dream of the enemies, the internal and external ones – but it will remain just a dream,” he said.

    Nasrallah was killed on September 27 last year, when Israel dropped a series of bunker buster bombs on a Hezbollah complex in southern Beirut. He had been in charge of the movement for more than 30 years.

    After Israel began its war on Gaza following the deadly Hamas attacks on October 7, 2023, Hezbollah launched rockets at Israel in solidarity with the Palestinian people under attack in the coastal enclave.

    A year after joining the fight against Israel, Hezbollah was dealt a serious blow when Israel’s intelligence agency detonated explosives secretly planted inside thousands of pagers used by the group’s members to communicate. Many Lebanese civilians were casualties of the indiscriminate pager blasts, including an eight-year-old girl who was killed.

    As the Israeli military targeted and killed Nasrallah and other senior leaders in a massive aerial bombing campaign, it also sent thousands of troops across the border to destroy towns, villages and occupy areas of southern Lebanon.

    Despite a ceasefire agreement to end the conflict that was signed between Lebanon and Israel in November 2024, Israel’s military still occupies Lebanese territory and continues to conduct air strikes inside Lebanon that have killed many civilians, but which it claims are Hezbollah members.

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  • Hassan Nasrallah & Hezbollah | 60 Minutes Archive

    Hassan Nasrallah & Hezbollah | 60 Minutes Archive

    Hassan Nasrallah & Hezbollah | 60 Minutes Archive – CBS News


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    In 2003, Ed Bradley traveled to Beirut to interview Hassan Nasrallah as part of a 60 Minutes report on the Islamist terrorist organization Hezbollah. On Friday, Nasrallah, Hezbollah’s longtime leader, was killed during an Israeli airstrike in Beirut.

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  • Who was Hassan Nasrallah, the Hezbollah leader killed by Israeli airstrike in Beirut?

    Who was Hassan Nasrallah, the Hezbollah leader killed by Israeli airstrike in Beirut?

    Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, who led the terror group for more than 30 years, was killed in an Israeli airstrike.

    Nasrallah, 64, was killed during a massive airstrike on the Iran-backed group’s “central headquarters” in Beirut, Lebanon on Friday, the Israel Defense Forces said in a statement. 

    Hezbollah confirmed Nasrallah’s death, saying its longtime leader “has joined his fellow martyrs.”

    The strike also killed Ali Karki, the commander of Hezbollah’s southern front, and other Hezbollah leaders, the IDF said. The leaders were in a command facility “embedded under a residential building,” the IDF said. An Israeli military official said real-time intelligence on an operational opportunity allowed them to carry out the strike.

    The afternoon strike was part of a series of large explosions targeting leaders of the militant group, which has been firing rockets and drones across Lebanon’s southern border into Israel for nearly a year amid the war between Israel and Hamas

    People stand near a picture of Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah
    People stand near a picture of Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah during the funeral of Hezbollah member Ali Mohamed Chalbi, in Kfar Melki, Lebanon, Sept. 19, 2024.

    Aziz Taher / REUTERS


    Hassan Nasrallah’s background 

    Nasrallah was born in Beirut in 1960, the ninth of 10 children in a Shia family. His family was poor and lived an in impoverished northern suburb of Sharshabouk; his father sold vegetables. The city was then known as the “Paris of the Middle East,” but when Lebanon’s civil war broke out in 1975, the city deteriorated into disaster. 

    During that time, Nasrallah’s family fled Beirut. He joined a Shia militia called the Amal Movement, which later evolved into Hezbollah, which means “Party of God.” The group has been backed by Iran since its inception, according to Israeli and U.S. officials, with Iran training fighters and sending hundreds of millions of dollars annually. 

    Nasrallah studied in Iran for a time, then returned to the group and became Hezbollah’s secretary general after Israel assassinated his predecessor, Abbas al-Musawi, in a 1992 helicopter strike. 

    He held the title of “sayyid,” an honorific meant to the Shiite cleric’s lineage dating back to the Prophet Muhammad, the founder of Islam, according to the AFP. 

    Hezbollah under Hasrallah’s leadership

    Under Nasrallah’s fiery and charismatic leadership, Hezbollah crystallized its threats to destroy Israel and the U.S. presence in Lebanon. Washington declared the organization a terror group in October 1997, five years after Nasrallah took control. 

    Supporters saw Nasrallah as a charismatic and shrewd strategist who strengthened bonds with leaders in Iran and militant groups like Hamas, the AFP reported, while the West and some oil-rich Gulf Arab countries saw him as an extremist.  

    The group’s military wing has been linked to the mass casualty bombings of two U.S. embassy buildings in the 1980s. The bombings killed more than 80 people and wounded hundreds more. Hezbollah has also been linked to airplane hijackings, kidnappings, suicide bombings and espionage around the world. 

    Nasrallah was credited with leading the war of attrition that led to the withdrawal of Israeli troops from South Lebanon in 2000, after an 18-year occupation, the AFP reported. He also spearheaded Hezbollah’s 34-day war against Israel in 2006.

    Nasrallah also got the group heavily involved in neighboring Syria’s brutal conflict in 2011. Hezbollah fighters sided with Syrian President Bashar Assad’s forces, even as the rest of the Arab world ostracized him, the AFP reported. Hezbollah, and other key allies like Russia and Iran, helped Assad stay in power and retake territory lost earlier in the conflict.


    Israel’s Netanyahu addresses U.N. amid conflicts with Hezbollah, Hamas

    13:10

    Hezbollah has also expanded politically under Nasrallah’s leadership. After Lebanon’s civil war came to an end in 1990, Nasrallah gradually turned the organization into a “state within a state,” according to the AFP, with an elaborate social welfare network that provided schools, clinics, and housing in the impoverished and predominantly Shiite parts of Lebanon. Hezbollah continued to grow throughout the country, eventually winning elected seats in the nation’s parliament. 

    Nasrallah’s death leaves a void of leadership in the strongest paramilitary force in the Middle East.

    Nasrallah feared assassination 

    Nasrallah’s public appearances became rarer, even as the profile of Hezbollah grew. Afraid of assassination, he chose to deliver speeches via video from secret locations. The messages were broadcast on Hezbollah’s own radio and satellite TV station, leading to his status as an icon in Lebanon and throughout the Arab world, according to the AFP. 

    In his last televised remarks, on September 19, he blamed Israel for an exploding pager and walkie-talkie attack that killed dozens of Hezbollah soldiers and wounded several thousand more. In his final words, he vowed that “retribution will come.” 

    Nasrallah is survived by his wife, Fatima Yassin, his three sons Jawad, Mohammed-Mahdi and Mohammed Ali, and several grandchildren, according to the AFP. His eldest son, Hadi, was killed in 1997, while fighting against Israeli forces, and his daughter Zeinab was reportedly killed in the Beiruit airstrike on Friday.

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  • Israel says Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah killed by strike in Lebanon’s capital Beirut

    Israel says Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah killed by strike in Lebanon’s capital Beirut

    Israel’s military said Saturday that it had killed the overall leader of the Iran-backed group Hezbollah in an airstrike the previous day on the group’s “central headquarters” in Beirut, Lebanon. The Friday afternoon strike was the latest in a series of massive explosions targeting leaders of the militant group, which has been firing rockets and drones across Lebanon’s southern border into Israel for almost a year.

    The Israel Defense Forces said in a Saturday statement that Nasrallah, who led Hezbollah for more than three decades, “was eliminated by the IDF, together with Ali Karki, the Commander of Hezbollah’s Southern Front, and additional Hezbollah commanders” in a strike by Israeli fighter jets on the group’s command facility “embedded under a residential building” in Beirut’s southern suburbs, which have long been a stronghold of the U.S.-designated terrorist group.

    “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 IDF said.

    People stand near a picture of Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah
    People stand near a picture of Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah during the funeral of Hezbollah member Ali Mohamed Chalbi, in Kfar Melki, Lebanon, Sept. 19, 2024.

    Aziz Taher / REUTERS


    The Friday strikes leveled multiple high-rise apartment buildings in the biggest blasts to hit the Lebanese capital since Hezbollah started firing on Israel on Oct. 8, 2023, in response to Israel launching its war on the group’s Hamas allies in the Gaza Strip. 

    At least six people were killed and 91 were wounded in the strike, Lebanon’s health ministry said Friday, noting that the toll could rise as people were believed to be buried under rubble at the site.

    A senior Israeli official said Friday that the IDF had sought to minimize civilian casualties by striking in the daytime, when many people wouldn’t be home. He said Israel was not seeking a broader regional war, but that Hezbollah’s military capabilities had been meaningfully degraded by the recent series of Israeli military operations and that the objective of the strike was to leave Hezbollah with a significant leadership gap. 

    People inspect damage at the site of an Israeli strike in Beirut
    People inspect damage at the site of an Israeli strike amid ongoing hostilities between Hezbollah and Israeli forces, in Beirut’s southern suburbs, Lebanon, Sept. 27, 2024.

    Mohamed Azakir / REUTERS


    In a possible early sign of the strikes’ significance, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu abruptly cut short a visit to the United States to return home on Friday instead of waiting until the end of Sabbath on Saturday evening, his office said. Israeli politicians do not normally travel on the Sabbath except for matters of great import.

    Hours earlier, Netanyahu addressed the U.N., vowing that Israel’s campaign against Hezbollah would continue — further dimming hopes for an internationally backed cease-fire. Several delegates stood up and walked out before he gave his address. 

    To a degree unseen in past conflicts, Israel this past week has aimed to eliminate Hezbollah’s senior leadership. Israeli army spokesman Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said the strikes targeted the main Hezbollah headquarters, located beneath residential buildings. Defense Minister Yoav Gallant’s office said he was huddling with the head of Israel’s air force and other top commanders at military headquarters, following updates.

    In a separate statement Saturday, Israeli Army Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Herzi Halevi said Nasrallah’s killing  demonstrated “anyone who threatens the citizens of Israel — we will know how to reach them.” 

    The series of gigantic blasts around nightfall on Friday reduced six buildings to rubble in the Haret Hreik neighborhood of Beirut’s Dahiyeh suburbs, according to Lebanon’s national news agency. The shock wave rattled windows and shook houses some 18 miles north of Beirut. TV footage showed several craters — one with a car toppled into it — amid collapsed buildings in the densely populated, predominantly Shiite neighborhood.

    Smoke rises above buildings in Beirut, Lebanon, Sept. 27, 2024, in this still image obtained from social media video. 

    Social media image /via REUTERS


    Nasrallah had been in hiding for years, very rarely appearing in public. He regularly gave speeches, but always by video from unknown locations. The site hit Friday evening had not been publicly known as Hezbollah’s main headquarters, though it is located in the group’s “security quarters,” a heavily guarded part of Haret Hreik where it has offices and runs several nearby hospitals.

    The Pentagon said the U.S. had no advance warning of the strikes.

    The White House said President Biden was briefed by his national security team “several times” on Friday and “has directed the Pentagon to assess and adjust as necessary U.S. force posture in the region to enhance deterrence, ensure force protection, and support the full range of U.S. objectives. He has also directed his team to ensure that U.S. embassies in the region take all protective measures as appropriate.”

    “The events of the past week and the past few hours underscore what a precarious moment this is for the Middle East and for the world,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken said at a news conference Friday in New York. “Israel has the right to defend itself against terrorism. The way it does so matters. The choices that all parties make in the coming days will determine which path this region is on, with profound consequences for its people now and possibly for years to come.” 

    Israel dramatically intensified its airstrikes in Lebanon this week, saying it is determined to put an end to more than 11 months of Hezbollah fire into its territory. The scope of Israel’s operation remains unclear, but officials have said a ground invasion to push the militant group away from the border is a possibility. Israel has moved thousands of troops toward the border in preparation.

    Israel’s strikes this week have killed more than 720 people in Lebanon, including dozens of women and children, according to Health Ministry statistics.

    A predawn strike Friday in the mainly Sunni border town of Chebaa hit a home, killing nine members of the same family, the state news agency said. A resident identified the dead as Hussein Zahra, his wife Ratiba, their five children and two of their grandchildren.

    At the U.N., Netanyahu vowed to “continue degrading Hezbollah” until Israel achieves its goals. His comments dampened hopes for a U.S.-backed call for a 21-day truce between Israel and Hezbollah to allow time for a diplomatic solution. Hezbollah has not responded to the proposal.


    Netanyahu addresses United Nations as Israel continues targeting Hezbollah

    07:46

    Iranian-backed Hezbollah, the strongest armed force in Lebanon, began firing rockets into Israel almost immediately after Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack, which saw terrorists kill some 1,200 people in Israel and take 251 hostage. Since then, Hezbollah and the Israeli military have traded fire almost daily, forcing tens of thousands of people to flee their homes on both sides of the border.

    An Israeli security official said he expects a possible war against Hezbollah would not last for as long as the current war in Gaza, because the Israeli military’s goals are much narrower.

    In Gaza, Israel aims to dismantle Hamas’ military and political regime, but the goal in Lebanon is to push Hezbollah away from the border with Israel — “not a high bar like Gaza” in terms of operational objectives, said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity due to military briefing guidelines.

    contributed to this report.

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  • Clashes at Lebanon-Israel border raise fears of wider war | CNN

    Clashes at Lebanon-Israel border raise fears of wider war | CNN


    Southern Lebanon
    CNN
     — 

    On the face of it, the crossfire on Lebanon’s border with Israel appears marginal, dwarfed by the scale and intensity of the Hamas-Israel war further south.

    The fighting has stayed within a roughly 4-kilometer (2.5-mile) radius of either side of the demarcation line and less than 13 people have died here since last Saturday.

    Yet this barely populated swathe of mountainous terrain could be the launching pad of a regional war, drawing in a myriad of actors, including Iran and the United States.

    Hezbollah – an Iran-backed armed group that is also a regional force in its own right – dominates south Lebanon. It also operates alongside Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guard Corps in Syria, where the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights separates Israel from Tehran-aligned fighters.

    Israeli soldiers patrol a road near the border with Lebanon, on Monday, amid threat of a regional conflict between Israel and Iran-backed Hezbollah.

    Iran’s Foreign Minister Amir Abdollahian on Monday raised the specter of expanded fighting after talking to counterparts in Tunisia, Malaysia and Pakistan.

    “Underlined the need to immediately stop Zionist crimes & murders in Gaza & to dispatch humanitarian aid,” he wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

    “I stressed that time is running out for political solutions; probable spread of war in other fronts is approaching unavoidable stage,” he added.

    It is a scenario that has gained more currency across a restive Arab and Muslim world as images of dead Palestinian civilians, including more than 500 children, flash on television screens and social media posts, reflecting a civilian death toll rapidly rising at a rate not seen in decades.

    Meanwhile, the US has deployed two of its largest aircraft carriers — including the nuclear-powered USS Gerald Ford — to the eastern Mediterranean. It is an ominous sign of what may come if the situation on the Lebanon-Israel border combusts into a full-scale war.

    For most of last week, the skirmishes were a low-rumbling exchange of fire between Lebanon-based militants and Israeli forces.

    Palestinian militants fired the first shots from Lebanon, hours after Hamas’ surprise attack of October 7, launching rockets that were intercepted over Israel. Israel responded by shooting into Lebanese territory, including at Hezbollah positions. Hezbollah then launched missiles into Israel’s northern-most territory. That cycle repeated for several days.

    By Friday morning, three Israeli soldiers and three Hezbollah fighters had been killed in the exchanges across the border.

    But then the tit-for-tat escalated. At around 5 p.m. on Friday, Reuters journalist Issam Abdallah, who was also a south Lebanon native, was killed in an Israeli strike that wounded at least six other international journalists.

    A CNN video analysis found that the journalists were wearing vest jackets clearly marked as press.

    An Israeli Apache helicopter was flying over their location, according to a Lebanese security source as well as video seen by CNN, when they were fired upon by what Lebanese army and Israeli statements indicate was artillery.

    Israel said it was investigating the incident. In an Israeli military statement that was released around the time of the attack, it said it was shelling Lebanese territory with artillery fire in response to an explosion at a border fence in Israel’s Hanita, near to where Abdallah was killed.

    The situation at the border spiraled further the next day.

    On Saturday, Hezbollah launched a series of strikes at Israeli targets in the disputed Shebaa farms, which was followed by a barrage of artillery fire from Israel. On Sunday, the Lebanese militants fired at several Israeli locations at the border, killing one civilian and one soldier. Earlier that day, Israel turned the 4-kilometer area near its border into a closed military zone.

    In Hezbollah’s statements on Sunday, the group said its cross-border attacks were in response to Abdallah’s killing and the killing of two elderly civilians in Sunday’s Israeli attacks in the border region.

    Unlike low-tech rockets that are fired by Palestinian fighters in Lebanon — and are mostly intercepted by Israel — Hezbollah uses Russian anti-tank guided missiles known as Kornets.

    Every Hezbollah attack over the last week was followed by a video released by the group that demonstrated precision. They were direct hits that seemed to blindside Israeli troops seen in the videos.

    These videos are key to the psychological warfare that underpins this flare-up. It shows clearly how much more sophisticated the group’s arsenal had become since its last conflict with Israel in 2006, when it relied largely on inaccurate Soviet-era Katyusha rockets.

    Back then, the 2006 Lebanon-Israel war ended with no clear victor or vanquished. At the time, many parts of Lebanon were devastated, but Hezbollah foiled Israel’s ultimate plan to dismantle the group, dealing a blow to Israel’s aura of invincibility.

    In the intervening years, Hezbollah has dramatically built up its arsenal, and its fighters are far more experienced in urban warfare. They’re battle-hardened from fighting in Syria against ISIS, the al-Qaeda-affiliated Nusra Front, and armed opposition groups that tried to topple Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

    Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah has repeatedly evoked a hypothetical scenario where his fighters would conduct an incursion into northern Israel in case war erupted between Lebanon and Israel again. Israel and US officials have repeatedly expressed alarm about Hezbollah’s precision-guided missiles, which were used against Israel for the first time this month.

    Nasrallah has also said that his group boasts more than 100,000 fighters and reservists. Historically, Israeli and US officials have been reluctant to dismiss claims by the paramilitary leader, who oversaw a surge in the size and power of the group in the 32 years of his leadership.

    Yet Nasrallah, known for his fiery televised speeches, has been noticeably silent since October 7. Observers don’t know what to make of this. In addresses he delivered in recent months, Nasrallah lauded the growing alliance between his group and Hamas, though they were on opposite sides of Syria’s bloody civil war.

    He has also indicated that the loose rules of engagement between Hezbollah and Israel may soon change, with the Lebanon-based group possibly intervening on behalf of the Palestinians.

    This has led many observers to speculate that Hezbollah may expand its fight against Israel in case of the much-anticipated Israeli ground invasion into Gaza.

    Yet what happens from now is anyone’s guess. World leaders will continue to watch this border with bated breath.

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  • Militant Hamas group back in Damascus after years of tension

    Militant Hamas group back in Damascus after years of tension

    DAMASCUS, Syria — Two senior officials from the Palestinian militant Hamas group visited Syria’s capital on Wednesday for the first time since they were forced to leave the war-torn country a decade ago over backing armed opposition fighters.

    The visit appears to be a first step toward reconciliation between Hamas and the Syrian government and follows a monthslong mediation by Iran and Lebanon’s militant Hezbollah group — both key backers of Syrian President Bashar Assad. Over the years, Tehran and the Iran-backed Hezbollah have maintained their relations with Hamas despite Assad’s rift with the Palestinian militants.

    Before the rift, Hamas had long kept a political base in Syria, receiving Damascus’ support in its campaign against Israel. Hamas’ powerful leadership-in-exile remained in Syria — even after the group took power in the Gaza Strip in 2007.

    But when Syria tipped into civil war, Hamas broke with Assad and sided with the rebels fighting to oust him. The rebels are largely Sunni Muslims, like Hamas, and scenes of Sunni civilian deaths raised an outcry across the region against Assad, who belongs to the Alawites, a minority Shiite sect in Syria.

    On Wednesday, Khalil al-Hayeh, a senior figure in Hamas’ political branch, and top Hamas official Osama Hamdan were among several officials representing different Palestinian factions who were received by Assad.

    Al-Hayeh had regularly visited Beirut over the years, meeting with Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah; their last meeting was in August.

    After Wednesday’s meeting, al-Hayeh said Assad was “keen on Syria’s support to the Palestinian resistance” and called his visit a “glorious day.”

    “God willing, we will turn the old page and look for the future,” al-Hayeh said, adding that Hamas is against any “Zionist or American aggression on Syria.”

    Israel has carried out hundreds of airstrikes around Syria over the past years, mainly targeting Iran-backed fighters.

    Hamas’ re-establishing of a Damascus base would mark its rejoining the so-called Iran-led “axis of resistance” as Tehran works to gather allies at a time when talks with world powers over Iran’s nuclear program are stalled.

    The move by Hamas also comes after Turkey restored relations with Israel and after some Arab states, including the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, normalized relations with Hamas’ archenemy Israel.

    The pro-government Al-Watan daily says Damascus will be reconciling with the “resistance branch” of Hamas and not the Muslim Brotherhood faction — an apparent reference to Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal who was once based in Damascus but is now in Qatar.

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