Party Allah
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Hezbollah leader Naim Qasim said Israeli troops must completely withdraw from Lebanese territory by February 18.
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The Israeli press published a comparative analysis of the damage suffered by Lebanon and Israel during the two-month war between Hezbollah and the Israeli army.
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Lebanon's Hezbollah movement has announced that Naim Qasim has been elected secretary general to replace its former leader, Hassan Nasrallah, who was killed by Israel. He leads the movement from Tehran, the capital of Iran.
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At least 25 Israeli soldiers have been wounded in clashes in southern Lebanon over the past 24 hours. There are also a number of victims, among them, as a result of the clash with Hezbollah, the reserve major of the Israeli army, the deputy commander of the 9308th battalion of the 228th "Alon" brigade, Aviram Harib, and 27-year-old Sa'ar Eliad Navarski, from the 7338th "Adirim" artillery regiment, died.
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The Hezbollah movement in Lebanon has rejected the appointment of the chairman of the executive council of the movement, Hashim Safiyeddin, to the post of secretary general after the death of Hassan Nasrallah. Harakat urged not to believe such reports until the official announcement of the Hezbollah leadership.
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The Shura Council (the main governing body) of the Hezbollah group in Lebanon has elected Hashim Safi al-Din as the organization's new secretary general. Safi al-Din is the cousin of the movement's former leader Hassan Nasrallah and the son-in-law of Qasem Soleimani, the former commander of Iran's Quds Force.
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According to the report, the general secretary of the Hezbollah movement, Hasan Nasrullah, was killed a day ago as a result of the Israeli army's airstrikes in the southern areas of Beirut.
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The Israeli army announced that Hassan Nasrullah was killed as a result of an airstrike on the underground headquarters of Hezbollah in the Dahiya district of Beirut, the capital of Lebanon, based on highly accurate intelligence. Hezbollah sources said he was not killed, but wounded.
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After the assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran and the assassination of many high-ranking Hezbollah commanders in Lebanon, Iran has recently softened the tone of its statements. indicated that it may not be used.
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The detonation of pagers and walkie-talkies in Lebanon, which killed 34 people and injured nearly 3,500, revealed a major security problem within Hezbollah's ranks. The movement bought devices with explosives and small metal spheres from a company indirectly owned by MOSSAD.





















