By Yoav Stern,
The Lebanese newspaper A-Safir reported Saturday that the Lebanon-based
guerilla group Hezbollah has deployed 50,000 "activists" along the
southern border with Israel and declared a state of high alert in
southern Lebanon.
According to the report, the organization has also evacuated all
buildings in the area designated for social or political purposes in
recent days, in preparation for a confrontation with Israel in the wake
of the assassination of Hezbollah terror chief Imad Mughniyah.
Mughniyah, the organization's deputy secretary general, was killed in a
blast in an upscale Damascus neighborhood late Tuesday. On Thursday,
Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah blamed Israel for the assassination
and vowed to retaliate. Israel denied any involvement in the incident.
Meanwhile Saturday, another Lebanese newspaper reported that Lebanese
officials believe a serious military confrontation with Israel will
erupt in the near future.
According to a report in the Hezbollah-affiliated newspaper Al-Akhbar
this possibility has been raised in intensive discussions being held
between Hezbollah officials and Iranian and Syrian officials. The
various militant Palestinian organizations have also declared a state
of high alert, the report added.
Al-Akhbar also reported that Syrian investigators probing the
assassination suspect that "official security organizations operating
in Arab nations" may have been involved in the killing, and that some
of the suspects arrested in the course of the investigation were not
civilians.
The report also said the investigation revealed that Mughniyah had been
killed from a blast originating from a car bomb nearby, and not from a
bomb planted in the vehicle he was occupying, as originally believed.
The investigation revealed that the car bomb had been detonated
remotely as Mughniyah walked past.
Lebanese security officials have identified the owners of the vehicle
that exploded, Al-Akhbar reported. The reason why Mughniyah was in
Damascus at the time of his death is still unclear.
"The investigations are being kept in full confidentiality due to
considerations regarding the Mughniyah's location when he succumbed to
an ambush," the Lebanese newspaper said.
Syria says will launch investigation on its own
Syria alone will investigate Tuesday's killing of Mughniyah in
Damascus, contradicting earlier reports of a planned joint
investigative committee with Iran and Hezbollah, government officials
told the state-controlled Syrian news agency SANA on Saturday.
Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki agreed with Syrian
officials during a visit to Damascus on Thursday to set up a joint team
to investigate the killing, Mottaki's deputy Alireza Sheik-Attar said
on Friday.
Attar, speaking during Friday prayers, said that the team would
investigate the circumstances surrounding the car bombing in Damascus,
in order to "discover the identities of those who carried out this
filthy crime."
Also Friday, Al-Akhbar reported that Hezbollah investigators would also
launch a probe into the incident. According to the report, there has
been progress in the investigation.
The newspaper also reported "hysteria in Tel Aviv," referring to the
travel advisory issued to Israeli citizens traveling abroad by the
Counter-Terrorism Bureau.
On Friday, a Lebanese source said that a joint Syrian-Iranian
investigation into the assassination was well under way, and suspects
have been arrested in the Syrian capital.
The suspects arrested in connection to the killing have been mostly
Palestinians residing in Syria, the Lebanese source said.
Hezbollah and its main backer Iran have accused Israel of killing
Mughniyah, who was also among the United States' most wanted men.
Israel has denied any involvement.
The source added that Hezbollah has appointed a successor to Mughniyah.
"A successor to Imad Mughniyah has been appointed, which is natural,"
said the source, who requested anonymity. "That's how Hezbollah works,
they move quickly to choose successors of fallen leaders."
The source said the appointment was made hours after the announcement
of Mughniyah's death in a car bomb in Damascus on Tuesday. He did not
identify the successor, but said he was not one of the two names being
circulated in the Israeli media.
Iranian FM meets with Hamas, Islamic Jihad in Damascus
Mottaki held separate Friday meetings at the Iranian Embassy with
Damascus-based Hamas political leader Khaled Meshal and Islamic Jihad
chief Ramadan Abdullah Shallah, said the Iranian officials, speaking on
condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the
media.
Later in the day, Mottaki held a one-hour meeting with Syrian Vice
President Farouk al-Sharaa to discuss the Mughniyah assassination.
"We discussed the terrorist crime that led to the martyrdom of one of
the most senior commanders in the Lebanese Islamic Resistance
(Hezbollah), martyr Imad Mughniyah," Mottaki told reporters after
hismeeting with al-Sharaa.
Mottaki also discussed Mughniyah's death with Syrian President Bashar
Assad on Thursday, accusing Israel of retaliating for its "losses" in
the 2006 Second Lebanon War.
The Iranian foreign minister said he "imagined it could exact a heavy
price by assassinating one leader of the Lebanese resistance."
Mottaki flew to Damascus on Thursday from Lebanon, where he attended
Mughniyah's funeral and offered condolences to the man's family and
associates. Underlining Iran's close ties to Shiite Hezbollah, Mottaki
sat between Mughniyah's father and a senior Hezbollah official.
Moallem: Perpetrators to be found soon
On Thursday, Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Moallem said investigations
were underway into who was behind the car bomb that killed Mughniyah.
He added that he expected the perpetrators to be found soon.
"Syrian security forces are continuing investigations into this
terrorist crime and we hope you will hear results soon," Moallem said
at a joint press conference with Mottaki. "We as a state will show with
full proof the party involved in this crime and who stands behind
them."
Moallem said those who killed Mughniyah "assassinated any attempt to
revive the peace process," hinting for the first time that Israel might
be involved.
Meshal said Thursday that Mughniyah's death would not deter the
militant Palestinian group from continuing its resistance against
Israel.
"We accept the challenge and we are not afraid at all," said Meshal at
a wake for Mughniyah at a Palestinian refugee camp near Damascus.
During Friday prayers in Baghdad, Sheik Suhail al-Eqabi read
worshippers a statement that was issued Thursday by radical Shiite
cleric Muqtada al-Sadr regarding Mughniyah's death: "The dirty hands
have stretched out to get [Mughniyah] and he was sent to paradise where
he became a martyr of world Islamic resistance."
Al-Sadr on Thursday declared a three-day mourning period for the death
of Mughniyah.
Original Source
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50,000 Hezbollah men said deployed along border with Israel
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