Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah says his
group is still capable of fighting Israel, even as its fighters aid
Syrian President Bashar Assad's regime • Nasrallah: Assad is no longer
in danger of falling.
Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah
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Photo credit: Reuters |
Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah said Hezbollah was behind the roadside bombing that targeted an Israeli patrol in March along the Israel-Lebanon border.
In an interview published Monday in the
Lebanese daily As-Safir, Nasrallah said the bomb was placed in response
to a February airstrike on a Hezbollah base that the group accused
Israel of undertaking.
Nasrallah said the March bombing sent a
message that Hezbollah was still capable of fighting Israel, even as its
fighters are battling alongside Syrian President Bashar Assad's forces
to quell the three-year uprising in Syria.
No Israeli soldiers were wounded in the March
14 roadside bombing. Such attacks have been rare since the 2006 Second
Lebanon War.
In the interview, Nasrallah also said that Assad is no longer in danger of falling.
Nasrallah said the threat of bombings in
Lebanon "has dropped considerably" because of "measures adopted along
the Lebanese-Syrian border."
Hezbollah operatives have been fighting
alongside Syrian government troops against the rebels trying to oust
Assad from power. Hezbollah fighters were instrumental in helping
Assad's forces dislodge opposition fighters from their strongholds along
the Syria-Lebanon border.
However, Hezbollah's public role in the Syrian
conflict has inflamed sectarian tensions in Lebanon. The country's
Sunni Muslims support the Syrian rebels. In recent weeks, Sunni
militants have carried out several deadly attacks on Hezbollah
strongholds around Lebanon, claiming they were in revenge for
Hezbollah's help to the Syrian government.
As for Assad's government in Damascus, Nasrallah said: "The danger of the Syrian regime's fall has ended."
Syria's conflict began with largely peaceful
protests in March 2011. It has evolved into a civil war with sectarian
overtones, and Islamic extremists, including foreign fighters and Syrian
rebels who have taken up hard-line al-Qaida-style ideologies, have
played an increasingly prominent role among fighters, dampening the
West's support.
More than 150,000 people have been killed in the past three years, activists say.
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