Subscribe to Print Edition | Wed., July 25, 2007 Av 10, 5767 | | Israel Time: 03:37 (EST+7)
Haaretz israel news English
web haaretz.com
  Back to Homepage
Print Edition
Diplomacy
Defense Real Estate Arts & Leisure Jewish World National Sports Advertising  
Magazine Week's End Opinion Business Rosner's Domain Anglo File Travel
Q&A
 
Bookmark to del.icio.us
Palestinians: Hezbollah influence in West Bank on the wane
By Avi Issacharoff and Yoav Stern

Hezbollah's influence on Fatah's Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades has been checked in recent months, Palestinian security sources said yesterday. On the other hand, the extremist Lebanese Shi'ite organization has restored its military capabilities, particularly its long-range missile arsenal, nearly a year following the Second Lebanon War, senior Israeli security sources confirmed yesterday.

According to Palestinian security sources, Hezbollah has not ceased its efforts to penetrate Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades cells, but its ability to do so has been seriously curtailed.

Advertisement

The sources pointed to a number of reasons Hezbollah is finding it difficult to penetrate the organization and gain control of its members in order to carry out terrorist activities on its behalf against Israel.

Israel's security forces have primarily succeeded in killing or arresting many of the cells that had been under Hezbollah control, mostly in the area of Nablus and northern West Bank.

Also, the flow of cash from Hezbollah to West Bank militants who carry out attacks, has been contained. The Palestinian Authority has also made an effort to convince many of the militants not to accept funding from foreign sources.

Palestinian security sources also insist that contact between Hezbollah and the West Bank has been weakened. They say this is due to a breakdown in cooperation with Palestinians in Lebanon who collaborate with the Shi'ite group and international jihadist elements based there.

There has also been a successful takeover, Palestinian sources say, of the Brigades by centrist elements, who managed to marginalize cells that nominally identified themselves with Fatah but in practice worked for Hezbollah.

However, Israeli security sources are skeptical about the drop in Hezbollah's overall activity in the West Bank, which they said continues unabated through other Palestinian militant groups.

"It is not possible to note a change in Hezbollah activity in the territories since the war. There is neither an increase nor a drop. The Lebanese group continues to view the territories as its main area of operation against Israel, so long as the calm in Lebanon is maintained," Israeli security sources said.

Hezbollah head Hassan Nasrallah yesterday emphasized the group's preoccupation with Israel in an interview on the Al-Jazeera satellite network; in the program, he boasted that Hezbollah was capable of targetting any point in Israel.

"Just like July 2006, so in July 2007, we have the capability of striking any target, on any point in occupied Palestine," Nasrallah said during yesterday's interview.

While confirming that Hezbollah had restored its abilities to fire long-range missiles against Israel, a senior Israeli security source challenged Nasrallah's assertions yesterday, saying that they could reach points in central Israel, north of the Tel Aviv region.

The same source also said that Nasrallah's visit to Damascus late last week, where he met with Syria's President Bashar Assad and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, was not his first since the end of the war last year.

Syrian officials are directly involved in the transfer of missiles from Iran to Hezbollah, the senior Israeli security source said.

"This is not smuggling, but the open transfer of weapons, a veritable industry," the source said.

United Nations Security Council Resolution 1701, which put in place a cease-fire agreement between Israel and Hezbollah, also forbids the unauthorized transfer of arms to Hezbollah.

Bookmark to del.icio.us
Save the trees
Israelis found a predator to thwart the wasp that ravages eucalyptus groves.
Bottom rung
Does a gap between colleges, universities mean worse education for the periphery?
 Today Online
Bradley Burston: The Right of Return of the Jewish People
Responses: 172
One year after war, Hezbollah missile arsenal restored
Responses: 280
Blair: There is a sense of possiblity in the Middle East
Responses: 172
Nadav Shragai: Rabbis were first to give up Temple Mount
Responses: 54
Rubinstein: To avoid racist law, state must reclaim JNF land
Responses: 84
Chief Justice: IDF defied High Court, let Hebron wall stand
Responses: 86


More Headlines
02:06 Officials meet privately on strike starting Wednesday
00:28 Olmert to Blair: I will work with you directly, provide full aid
03:04 New plan for Temple Mount bridge aims to silence critics
02:45 IDF intelligence: Syria not planning attack on Israel
03:36 PM offers to discuss 'Agreement of Principles' with Abbas
21:25 Panel to probe alleged IDF war crimes in Second Lebanon War
23:32 Young Diaspora Jews to visit Israel in record numbers in 2007
23:54 Palestinian boy, 14, says was attacked by two settlers
19:03 High Court reissues order for IDF to raze wall near Hebron
20:01 Israeli envoy to Croatia accuses TV official of anti-Semitism
Previous Editions
Special Offers
Advertisement
LEUMI
Mortgages in Israel tailor made to your specific needs and currency
Israeli History Documentaries.
Own a piece of Israel?s treasured past.
Skin Care Products
Beauty and skin care from the Dead Sea. Coupon code HAARETZ for 10% off!
JOIN FREE AT JDATE.COM
The most popular online Jewish dating community in the world! Explore the possibilities! Click Here!
Junkyard
Junk a car - get free towing nationwide and a tax-deductible receipt.
Holiday Inn and Crown Plaza Israel
Lowest internet rate Guaranteed at ichotelsgroup.com !
Home| Print Edition| Diplomacy| Opinion| Arts & Leisure| Sports| Jewish World| Underground| Site rules|
© Copyright  Haaretz. All rights reserved