Naharnet

Cold War Heats up between U.S. and Hizbullah

A war of words is heating up between Hizbullah and Washington, with allegations and counter-allegations flying between the two foes as the crisis in Syria takes its toll on the Shiite group.

The cold war between Iranian- and Syrian-backed Hizbullah and the United States runs back decades.

But with political upheaval in the Arab world at a peak, tensions between the two are skyrocketing.

"This year was not the first time Hizbullah has exposed intelligence networks, whether working for the United States or others, and the United States criminal case against Hizbullah goes back months," said Paul Salem, head of the Beirut-based Carnegie Middle East Center.

"But there's no doubt that, given what's happening in Syria along with the U.S. withdrawal from Iraq ... we're in a phase of high tension in which everyone's raising the pressure on their opponent."

The feud began to deepen earlier this year, when Hizbullah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah accused the Central Intelligence Agency of planting spies within his party's ranks.

Nasrallah's announcement in June, which the party hailed as a "victory" over the United States, marked the first acknowledgment of infiltration by the movement founded in 1982.

The United States filed a criminal lawsuit against a string of Lebanese financial institutions with alleged ties to Hizbullah on the grounds they were complicit in a massive scheme to funnel hundreds of millions of dollars.

U.S. federal authorities say the companies were part of a scheme to launder hundreds of millions of dollars in profits from narcotics dealing and other criminal activities in order to fund Hizbullah's activities.

But Hizbullah has staunchly denied the charges, with the group's second in command, Sheikh Naim Qassem, accusing Washington this week of waging a smear campaign against a Shiite Muslim group which, he said, would never follow a path "prohibited by religion."

Hizbullah upped the stakes by accusing the "terrorist" United States of being behind twin bombings in the Syrian capital on Friday which left 44 dead, according to officials.

"These bombings which resulted in the death and injury of dozens of people, mainly women and children, are the specialty of the United States, the mother of terrorism," read a statement released by the movement Friday.

It said the timing of the bombings, which ripped through two security service offices in the Syrian capital, clearly signaled they were a "cowardly, bloody act of revenge" over the U.S. "defeat" in Iraq.

Analysts say the crisis in Syria has dealt a blow to Hizbullah which must now face the possibility of a future without a key regional ally.

And as power structures shift in the Middle East, experts say Western pressure on the Lebanese movement will continue to mount as the group risks losing the support provided by the regime of embattled Syrian President Bashar Assad.

"The latest U.S. accusations against Hizbullah are ... part of a wider campaign against the Syria-Iran-Hizbullah axis," said Amal Saad-Ghorayeb, author of the forthcoming "The Iran Connection: Understanding the Alliance with Syria, Hizbullah and Hamas."

"We're only going to see more of these accusations," Saad-Ghorayeb told Agence France Presse

"The United States is aware that ... Hizbullah has already lost some support in the region because of Syria, so now's the time to tarnish its reputation, to move from labeling the group as terrorist to actually criminalizing it."

Source: Agence France Presse


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