Sami Shihab, a Hezbollah operative who escaped from an Egyptian prison, participated in a Hezbollah rally in Beirut. His network infiltrated operatives and weapons into the Gaza Strip and planned attacks against tourist sites in Egypt. His public appearance was a Hezbollah defiance of Egypt and might indicate Hezbollah-Iran self-confidence. | ||||||
Overview 1. On February 16 Hezbollah held its annual rally in the southern suburb of Beirut, commemorating the deaths of three of its senior operatives: Ghareb Harb, Abbas Mussawi and Imad Mughnieh. The main event of the rally was a speech (broadcast on a large screen) by Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah. Sami Shihab, commander of a Hezbollah network in Egypt, who recently escaped from an Egyptian prison, mounted the stage and waved a Hezbollah flag.1 Sami Shihab, Hezbollah operative who escaped from Egypt, appears before the large crowd attending the rally (Al-Manar TV, February 16, 2011). 2. Sami Hani Shihab is the alias of Muhammad Yussuf Ahmed Mansour, an operative in Hezbollah's Unit 1800. He headed a Hezbollah network in Egypt, which according to the Egyptians was directed by Iran. According to large amounts of detailed information in the Egyptian media, the network had 49 members. At first it smuggled weapons into the Gaza Strip by a route (whose starting point may have been Iran)through Sudan and from there to Egypt and the Gaza Strip through the tunnels in the Rafah area. According to the Egyptian media, at some point the network received instructions from Hezbollah to carry out attacks on Egyptian territory, especially targeting tourist sites along the Red Sea customarily visited by Israelis2 [the summary of the information revealed by interrogating Sami Shihab and appeared in the Egyptian media in April 2009; see the Appendix]. 3. The Egyptians regarded the exposure of the Hezbollah network as a sign of blatant Iranian intervention in Egypt's internal affairs and national security. The genuine fear of the possible implications of Iranian subversion led the Egyptians to undertake a media campaign against Iran, around which Egyptian President Mubarak, the Egyptian foreign minister and the Egyptian media rallied. The Saudi Arabian media were also enlisted, which put Iran and the Lebanese government on the defensive. Saudi Arabian cartoons about the exposure of the Hezbollah network in Egypt
4. Hezbollah's defiance may indicate its growing self confidence (and also of Iran, its patron), which was also expressed in a speech made at the rally by Hassan Nasrallah (who threatened to attack senior IDF officers traveling abroad and even to "take over the Galilee" if Lebanon was "forced" to go to war). The reason for the self-confidence is the perception of the radical camp (Iran, Syria, Hezbollah and Hamas) that it will profit from the dramatic events in Egypt and Tunisia, which may spread to other pro-Western countries. That is true despite the fact that there is also internal unrest in the radical camp's countries, especially Iran, unrest which is brutally suppressed by the regimes. Appendix Egyptian media reports about information revealed by the interrogation of Sami Shihab 1. On April 13, 2009, the Egyptian daily Al-Masri Al-Yawm printed a report of the interrogation ofMuhammad Yussuf Ahmed Mansour, a Lebanese Shi'ite from the southern suburb of Beirut, who entered Egypt on a forged passport. 2. Mansour admitted that he was a Hezbollah operative, aka Sami Hani Shihab, which was verified by Hassan Nasrallah in his speech. The main points of his statements made during interrogation by the Egyptian security services were the following:
3. Another operative who was detained, Muhammad Ramadan, admitted that he had infiltrated into Egypt [from the Gaza Strip] through the tunnels [in Rafah] with a friend. Their objective was to locate men who wouldinfiltrate into Israel to carry out suicide bombing attacks.4 Muhammad Ramadan met with Hezbollah network head Sami Shihab, who told him he could help him and provide him with the means of carrying out attacks. The Egyptian media claimed that the attacks were not carried out because the Israeli Arabs who were involved were apprehended by the Israeli intelligence service. 1 He appeared at the rally despite the fact that Hezbollah sources had previously leaked to the Arab newspaper Al-Sharq al-Awsat that he did not intend to appear. "Parliamentary sources" within Hezbollah claimed that "as opposed to the rumors, it is highly unlikely that Sami Shihab will attend the rally in Beirut's southern suburb, and the Sayid [i.e., Hassan Nasrallah] also will not speak or transmit any information about the Hezbollah network [in Egypt]. That is because that is not the way Sayid Nasrallah will bless the evolving Egyptian revolution, and he does not intend to exploit other people's victories" (Al-Sharq al-Awsat, February 12, 2011).2 For further information see the April 13, 2009 ITIC bulletin, " Egypt exposes a Hezbollah network on its soil, claiming it not only smuggled weapons into the Gaza Strip and but also planned to carry out terrorist attacks and subversion activities. Hassan Nasrallah admitted a detained Hezbollah operative was involved in smuggling but denied other accusations" at http://www.terrorism-info.org.il/malam_multimedia/English/eng_n/pdf/hezbollah_e010.pdf. Also see the April 28, 2009 ITIC bulletin " Exposure of a Hezbollah network in Egypt: state of affairs, implications, and reactions in Egypt and in the Arab and Muslim world" athttp://www.terrorism-info.org.il/malam_multimedia/English/eng_n/pdf/hezbollah_e011.pdf. 3 The Egyptian intelligence service interrogation revealed that Hezbollah customarily used the names of deceased Lebanese Sunnis to forge passports for its operatives (Al-Arab, April 22, 2009). 4 The Egyptian media did not state which organization Muhammad Ramadan and his friend belonged to, part of Egypt's tendency to focus on Iran and Hezbollah and to downplay the support Hamas gives Hezbollah networks. The Egyptian media also noted that among those detained were two Fatah operatives who admitted under interrogation that they had infiltrated into Egypt from the Gaza Strip. Both had been instructed to go to Sudan, Syria and Lebanon for training in carrying out suicide bombing attacks (Al-Masri Al-Yawm, April 16, 2009). |
I am not an historian, decent author or a journalist, and the chances are that unless there is a link or reference to somewhere else, the perpetrator is yours truly – Renaud Sarda. I created this blog as a focal point, to arm people with arguments and facts that they can perhaps use to counter biased media reporting and anti-Israel propaganda, and to help counter (BDS) campaign. I am a Zionist/Sephardi/Jew who will fly the Israeli flag, and defend whatever Israel does.
Search This Blog
Sunday, 20 February 2011
Sami Shihab, a Hezbollah operative who escaped from an Egyptian prison, participated in a Hezbollah rally in Beirut.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment