Middle East & Africa | Hizbullah’s role in Lebanon

Israel’s invasion of Lebanon may bolster support for Hizbullah

The group is deeply embedded in Lebanese politics and society

A pro-Iranian Hezbollah supporter holds up a poster of assassinated Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah in front of a building that was flattened in an Israeli air strike on Beirut
Photograph: dpa
|SAIDA

THE BRIGHT yellow flags of Hizbullah that line the highway leading south out of Saida, a port city in southern Lebanon, seem like the standards of a floundering kingdom. Head farther south, where Hizbullah, the Shia militia, holds sway, and the streets grow ever emptier. The only fighters visible are the dead ones staring down from posters. The decapitation, almost overnight, of the Hizbullah’s military leadership, and the assassination of its charismatic leader, Hassan Nassrallah, have shocked everyone, not least the Shia group’s own supporters.

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This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “Unintended consequences”

From the October 12th 2024 edition

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