Analysis: Hezbollah gets a billion dollar subsidy from
Iran
06 Mar 2008
Beirut- A few weeks ago, articles published around the
world reported that Hezbollah is undergoing two major
changes. Both portend greater violence from the
Iranian-sponsored global terrorist network.
The first change is a shift in leadership
responsibilities. A report published initially in the
Saudi owned Sharq al Awsat said the office of Ayatollah
Khomenei appointed deputy secretary general Sheikh Naim
Qassim as the new supreme commander of Hezbollah forces
and the personal representative of the Ayatollah in
Lebanon. Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, according to this
report remains as secretary general of the organization.
Sources said this change in control and command is
because of "differences in opinions" between Narsrallah
and Qassim.
The Hezbollah media arm rushed to deny the veracity of
this shift. But observers with direct knowledge of the
organization's inside structure said Khamenei indeed
ordered changes in Hezbollah's structures, but not
because of differences between its leaders. They said it
was in preparation for a potential massive move by
Hezbollah to seize more power in Lebanon and before a
possible clash with the Lebanese Government and the
United Nations over the disarmament process.
Sources believe the assassination of Brigadier General
Francois Hajj, director of operations in the Lebanese
Army was another preemptive measure ordered by the
Pasdaran command in Lebanon. Hajj was slated to become
the next commander of the Lebanese Army. The latter was
to deploy across Lebanon and eventually begin the
collection of weapons. Hence, believe the observers, a
Syro-Iranian order was issued to preempt and eliminate a
man who could have become the military commander to
force Hezbollah to disarm. This would have been compared
to the al Qaeda elimination of Masoud Shah in September
2001 just before the 9/11 strikes. Hence, the concerns
that the assassination and the reshuffling within the
organization may be a prelude to dramatic move by the
Iranian funded Terror group. Which lead to the other
important information revealed by al Shaq al Awsat and
published in the leading Lebanese Newspaper al Nahar.
The second major change according to these reports
Hezbollah is a huge increase in annual budget funded by
Tehran. Hezbollah’s funding was elevated from $400
million US to $1 billion. This ballistic leap would
enable the organization to crush any opponent inside
Lebanon and engage in worldwide operations against
Western Democracies and Arab moderates. According to
experts in Lebanon, the $400 millions figure was enough
to pay for hundreds of social centers and thousands of
salaries enough to insure a full control over the Shia
community, its representatives in Parliament and buy
significant influence inside the Sunni, Druze and
particularly Christian community. One hundred million
dollars alone, could pay for the activities of movements
opposed to the Cedars Revolution and the democratically
elected Government of Siniora.
Hezbollah obtained support in the Christian districts
and launched media outlets across the country. Another
thirty millions can put enormous pressures on soldiers
and officers of the various sectors of defense and
security. In return the Government branches and the
military have been deprived from solid financial support
coming from outside the country. Those who rose against
the Syrian occupation were mostly from the deprived and
oppressed segments of civil society. And those who dared
opposing Hezbollah's domination of the country lacked
the basic means of NGOs. The confrontation was totally
unbalanced. Iran was pouring 400 millions of
Petrodollars to roll back the Cedars Revolution while
the latter was highly praised overseas but wasn't a
recipient of freedom funds.
But if $400 million can buy Hezbollah a magic place
under Lebanon's sun, what would a $1 billion do?
Observers in Lebanon say: "anything anywhere." Indeed
the Moguls of the so-called "resistance" have been able
to create alternative TV and radio stations, launch
multiple dailies, pay for a nonstop sit-in across
Downtown Beirut, and more importantly leap to hyper
international power. Over the past year the
Iranian-funded hydra is said to have hired PR companies
from Beirut to major capitals to wage the mother of all
wars of ideas not just against the vulnerable Cedars
Revolution in Lebanon but also in defense of
Ahmedinijad's nuclear strategy. Indeed, stories filed
out of Tehran can't be credible.
But reports and analysis sprayed from dozens of
apparently neutral web sites or forwarded from credible
journalistic sources can do devastation in the West. And
what better launching pad than Beirut, cultural capital
of the Arab world, to use? All what the Iranian funded
organization has to do is to "double" if not "triple"
the income of any person of interest in any sector of
choice: media, academia, military, consulting,
intelligence, etc. both in Lebanon but also around the
world, including if needed in the United States.
One Billion dollars spent on Hezbollah in Lebanon can
have ripple effects as far as Detroit and Argentina.
There is no native force in Lebanon that can match this
tidal wave nor even one tenth of it. This is Iran's
Petro power deployed on the Eastern Mediterranean not a
local social movement building orphanages. A month ago
as I was participating in a cross fire program on al
Jazeera facing off with a coordinator of Iranian
propaganda in the Arab world, I was asked why the US
maintains a Navy in the Middle East. "Where are Iran's
fleets," he asked. I replied that the Iranian regime
maintains land fleets. "Hezbollah's 30,000 rockets and
its millions of dollars is an Iranian fleet" I answered.
* Dr Walid Phares, author of Future Jihad: Terrorist
Strategies against America, of The war of Ideas:
Jihadism against democracy and of the forthcoming book,
The Confrontation.
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