Hizb Allah Resurrected: The Party of God's Return to Tradecraft
By Matthew Levitt
CTC Sentinel April 2013 . Vol 6 . Issue 4
During the past few years, Lebanese Hizb Allah's global operations increased
markedly, but until recently its efforts yielded few successes. In July
2012, however, Hizb Allah operatives bombed a busload of Israeli tourists in
Burgas, Bulgaria, killing five Israelis and a Bulgarian bus driver.1 Yet
what may prove no less significant than this operational success was another
plot foiled in Cyprus just two weeks earlier. The Cyprus plot provided the
clearest window yet on the rejuvenation of Hizb Allah's tradecraft and the
capabilities of the group's international terrorist wing, the Islamic Jihad
Organization (IJO).
1 "Israelis Killed in Bulgaria Bus Terror Attack, Minister Says," CNN, July
18, 2012; John Kerry, "Bulgarian Announcement on Hizballah's Role in Burgas
Attack," U.S. Department of State, February 5, 2013.
This article traces Hizb Allah's recent spike in operational activity since
2008, highlighting the group's efforts to rejuvenate the capabilities of its
IJO. Many of these details derive from the author's extensive conversations
with Israeli security officials in Tel Aviv, which were then vetted and
confirmed in conversations with American and European security, intelligence
and military officials.
The article also provides a detailed case study of Hossam Yaacoub-the
convicted Hizb Allah operative now serving time in a Cypriot prison for his
role in a plot targeting Israeli tourists-to show how Hizb Allah has
resurrected its terrorist capabilities. Drawn from the police depositions of
interviews with Yaacoub after his arrest, the case provides unique insights
into how Hizb Allah recruits and trains new operatives.
The article finds that while Hizb Allah's decision to stay out of the
crosshairs of the war on terrorism after 9/11 caused its global terrorist
capabilities to decline, the group has since rebuilt its IJO networks.
Operation Radwan Reveals Degraded Skills
In February 2008, a Damascus car bomb killed Hizb Allah's military chief,
Imad Mughniyyeh. At his funeral, Hizb Allah Secretary General Hassan
Nasrallah promised to retaliate with an "open war" against Israel. The
Israelis took the warning seriously, but Nasrallah may not have realized how
ill-prepared Hizb Allah was to follow through on the threat.
Israeli officials quickly took preventive action-from issuing specific
travel warnings to covert disruptive measures-against what they deemed the
most likely scenarios. Israeli officials did not have to wait long for Hizb
Allah to act. Yet when the IJO-then under the command of Mughniyyeh's
brother-in-law, Mustafa Badreddine, and Talal Hamiyeh-first set out to
avenge Mughniyyeh's death, Operation Radwan (named for Mughniyyeh, who was
also known as Hajj Radwan) experienced a series of setbacks.2
Even as it decided to operate in countries with comparatively lax security
rather than vigilant Western states, Hizb Allah's efforts to exact revenge
for Mughniyyeh's death failed repeatedly. In places such as Azerbaijan,
Egypt, and Turkey-and even with significant support from Qods Force3
agents-Hizb Allah suffered a series of failures, starting with the May 2008
fiasco in Baku, when a number of actions, including the planned bombing of
the U.S. and Israeli embassies, were disrupted.4 The event led to the quiet
release of Qods Force personnel, but the public prosecution of two Hizb
Allah operatives.5 Operations were soon
2 Personal interview, Israeli counterterrorism official, Tel Aviv, Israel,
March 17, 2008.
3 The Qods Force is the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps' (IRGC) special
unit responsible for extraterritorial operations. Like the IRGC, the Qods
Force is under the direct control of the Iranian government.
4 Sebastian Rotella, "Azerbaijan Seen as New Front in Mideast Conflict," Los
Angeles Times, May 30, 2009; Lada Yevgrashina, "Lebanese Militants Jailed in
Baku Over Israel Plot," Reuters, October 5, 2009.
5 Sebastian Rotella, "Before Deadly Bulgaria Bombing, foiled in Egypt and
Turkey too, as well as attempts to kidnap Israelis in Europe and Africa.6
Nevertheless, however committed Hizb Allah was to carrying out such attacks,
the IJO was not up to the task. Hizb Allah's leaders had actively pared down
the IJO's global network of operatives following the 9/11 attacks in an
effort to stay out of the crosshairs of the war on terrorism. Moreover, the
"strategic partnership" it had shared with Iran for the past decade appears
to have focused on funding, training, and arming Hizb Allah's increasingly
effective standing militia, not on its cadre of international terrorists.
Therefore, Hizb Allah not only lacked the resources and capabilities to
execute a successful operation abroad, but it could also not rely on
Mughniyyeh to plan and direct operations.7
New Tasking from Tehran: Target Israeli Tourists
A foiled attack in Turkey in September 2009 was a watershed event for Hizb
Allah's operational planners and their Iranian sponsors.8 Despite the
increased logistical support Qods Force operatives provided for that plot,
Hizb Allah operatives still failed to execute the attack successfully.9
Israeli officials claimed that Hizb Allah and the Qods Force blamed each
other for the two years of failed operations, culminating in the botched
attack in Turkey and then another failed plot in Jordan in January 2010.10
Meanwhile, by late 2009 Israeli officials contended that Iran's interest in
Hizb Allah's operational prowess focused less on local issues like avenging
Mughniyyeh's death and Tracks of a Resurgent Iran-Hezbollah Threat," Foreign
Policy, July 30, 2012.
6 Personal interview, Israeli counterterrorism official, Tel Aviv, Israel,
September 13, 2012; Daniel Edelson, "Hezbollah Plans Attacks on Israeli
Targets in Turkey," Ynetnews.com, October 20, 2009; Rotella, "Before Deadly
Bulgaria Bombing, Tracks of a Resurgent Iran-Hezbollah Threat"; "Hezbollah
Denies Egypt Accusations," al-Jazira, April 11, 2009; Amos Harel, "Hezbollah
Planning Attack on Israelis in West Africa," Haaretz, August 4, 2008.
7 Ibid.
8 Edelson.
9 Ibid.
10 Personal interview, Israeli counterterrorism official, Tel Aviv, Israel,
September 13, 2012; Barak Ravid, "IDF Chief Reported: Hezbollah was Involved
in Attack on Israeli Convoy in Jordan," Haaretz, December 8, 2010.more on
the much larger concern of combating threats to its nascent nuclear
program.11 Malfunctioning components ruined Iranian centrifuges,12 Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) officers defected,13 and then a bomb killed
Iranian physics professor Masoud Ali Mohammadi outside his Tehran home in
January 2010.14
According to Israeli intelligence officials, Iranian leaders reached two
conclusions after Mohammadi's death: 1) Hizb Allah's IJO had to revitalize
its operational capabilities, not only to avenge Mughniyyeh's death, but
also to play a role in Iran's "shadow war" with the West; and 2) the IRGC
would no longer rely solely on Hizb Allah to carry out terrorist attacks
abroad.15 These officials claimed it would now deploy Qods Force operatives
to do so on their own, not just as logisticians supporting Hizb Allah hit
men.16 Even more than the loss of its scientists, Tehran sought to address
its damaged prestige-the image of an Iran so weak that it could not even
protect its own scientists at home.17 For its part, Israeli officials
contended that the Qods Force instructed Hizb Allah to prepare a campaign of
terrorist attacks targeting Israeli tourists worldwide.18
Under Nasrallah's instructions, Badreddine and Hamiyeh "undertook a massive
operational reevaluation in January 2010, which led to big changes within
the IJO over a period of a little over six months," in the words of one
Israeli official.19 During this period, IJO operations were put on hold and
major personnel changes made.20 New operatives were recruited
11 Personal interview, Israeli counterterrorism official, Tel Aviv, Israel,
September 13, 2012.
12 "Stuxnet: Targeting Iran's Nuclear Programme," International Institute
for Strategic Studies, February 2012.
13 Laura Rozen, "Where is Ali-Reza Asgari?" Politico, December 31, 2010.
14 Alan Cowell, "Blast Kills Physics Professor in Tehran," New York Times,
January 12, 2010.
15 Personal interviews, Israeli intelligence officials, Tel Aviv, Israel,
September 13, 2012.
16 Ibid.
17 Ibid.
18 Ibid.; Rotella, "Before Deadly Bulgaria Bombing, Tracks of a Resurgent
Iran-Hezbollah Threat."
19 Personal interviews, Israeli intelligence officials, Tel Aviv, Israel,
September 13, 2012.
20 Ibid.
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3
from the elite of Hizb Allah's military wing for intelligence and
operational training, while existing IJO operatives were moved into new
positions.21 At the same time, the IJO invested in the development of
capabilities and tradecraft that had withered since the 2001 decision to
rein in operations.22
Fits and Starts
Meanwhile, Hizb Allah operatives were busy planning operations to fulfill
their end of Iran's "shadow war" with the West: targeting Israeli tourists
abroad.23 Although it was still struggling to rebuild its foreign operations
capabilities, Hizb Allah continued to dispatch insufficiently prepared
operatives abroad in the hopes that one might succeed. Yet the increase in
plots did not yield results. According to a U.S. law enforcement official,
in one plot Hizb Allah paid criminal gang members $150,000 each to target a
Jewish school in Baku.24 Then, around the same time that authorities foiled
a January 2012 plot targeting Israeli vacationers in Bulgaria-just weeks
ahead of the anniversary of Mughniyyeh's assassination-authorities disrupted
another Hizb Allah plot in Greece.25 Yet it was halfway across the world, in
Bangkok, where Israeli and local authorities broke up a far more
ambitious-but no less desperate-Hizb Allah bid to target Israeli tourists.
On January 12, 2012, acting on a tip from Israeli intelligence, Thai police
arrested Hussein Atris-a Lebanese national who also carried a Swedish
passport-at Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi Airport as he attempted to flee the
country.26 Another suspect, whose police composite portrait strongly
resembled Naim Haris, a Hizb Allah recruiting agent whose photo Israeli
officials had publicized a year
21 Ibid.
22 Ibid.
23 Ibid.; Rotella, "Before Deadly Bulgaria Bombing, Tracks of a Resurgent
Iran-Hezbollah Threat."
24 Judith Miller, "Bagels and Plots: Notes on the NYPD's High Holy Days
Threat Briefing," City Journal, September 7, 2012.
25 Personal interview, Israeli official, Tel Aviv, Israel, September 13,
2012.
26 Dudi Cohen, "Bangkok Threat: Terrorist's Swedish Connection,"
Ynetnews.com, January 15, 2012; "Second Terror Suspect Sought, Court Issues
Warrant for Atris's Housemate," Bangkok Post, January 20, 2012.earlier,
escaped.27 Within days, police issued an arrest warrant for Atris' roommate,
a Lebanese man who went by the name James Sammy Paolo.28
Questioned over the weekend of January 12, Atris led police to a three-story
building on the outskirts of Bangkok where he and his housemate had
stockpiled approximately 8,800 pounds of chemicals used to make
explosives.29 The materials were already distilled into crystal form, a step
in building bombs.30 Information on international shipping forms found at
the scene indicated that at least some of the explosives-which were stored
in bags marked as cat litter-were intended to be shipped abroad. Israeli
intelligence officials surmised that Hizb Allah had been using Thailand as
an explosives hub-Atris had rented the space a year earlier-and decided to
task its on-hand logistical operatives, who were apparently not trained in
the art of surveillance, to target Israeli tourists. The conclusion should
not have been a surprise: U.S. officials had already determined that Hizb
Allah was known to use Bangkok as a logistics and transportation hub,
describing the city as "a center for a [Hizb Allah] cocaine and
money-laundering network."31
Six months after its failed attempt to target Israeli skiers in Bulgaria,32
Hizb Allah bombed the Israeli tour bus in Burgas. While successful, some
elements of the Burgas plot highlighted operational shortcomings, such as
27 Ibid.
28 Ibid.
29 James Hookway, "Thai Police Seize Materials, Charge Terror-Plot Suspect,"
Wall Street Journal, January 17, 2012; Rotella, "Before Deadly Bulgaria
Bombing, Tracks of a Resurgent Iran-Hezbollah Threat."
30 Ibid.
31 Thomas Fuller, "In Twisting Terror Case, Thai Police Seize Chemicals,"
New York Times, January 16, 2012.
32 Yaakov Katz, "Bulgaria Foils Terror Attack Against Israelis," Jerusalem
Post, January 8, 2012.the fake Michigan driver's license used by the bomber
that featured a Baton Rouge, Louisiana, address.33 Other aspects of the
plot, however, demonstrated improved tradecraft. Hizb Allah dispatched two
operatives to see the bomber through his mission, both of whom traveled on
legitimate foreign passports (one Canadian, the other Australian).34 They
traveled to Bulgaria through Poland, then returned through Romania and
Turkey.35 Yet little more has been made public by Bulgarian authorities, and
despite their conclusion that Hizb Allah executed the attack, the
investigation remains open with investigators pursuing leads on at least
three continents.
The Cyprus Case Study: A Window into Hizb Allah Recruitment and Training
In contrast to the aforementioned plots, a treasure trove of information has
poured out of the trial in Cyprus of Hossam Yaacoub, the Lebanese-Swedish
dual citizen and self-confessed Hizb Allah operative arrested just days
before the Burgas bombing.36 All of the subsequent details on this case are
derived from Yaacoub's police interviews and depositions from the official
English translation, which are in the author's possession.
Arrested in his Limassol hotel room on the morning of July 7, 2012, just a
few hours after returning from a surveillance operation at Larnaca airport,
Yaacoub was first interviewed by Cypriot police over a five hour period
starting within an hour of his arrest. At first, Yaacoub provided only basic
background information about himself and insisted
33 See cover photo at Matthew Levitt, "Hizballah and the Qods Force in
Iran's Shadow War with the West," The Washington Institute for Near East
Policy, January 2013.
34 Matthew Brunwasser and Nicholas Kulish, "Multinational Search in Bulgaria
Blast," New York Times, February 6, 2013.
35 Ibid.
36 All references to Hossam Yaacoub's interviews and depositions came from
the official English translation of his police depositions. These were taken
in Arabic, translated into Greek, and then into English by a certified
translator. For details, see Depositions of Hossam Taleb Yaacoub (some
spelled Yaakoub), Criminal Number Σ/860/12, File Page 35, 79, 85, 110, 134,
187, by interviewing police officer Sergeant Michael Costas. Depositions
taken on July 7, 2012, July 11, 2012, July 11-12, 2012, July 14, 2012, July
16, 2012, and July 22, 2012.
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"The Bulgarian and Cypriot cases present compelling evidence of Hizb Allah's
return to traditional tradecraft."
4
he was nothing more than a Lebanese businessman looking to import Cypriot
goods into Lebanon. He had been to Cyprus three times, he explained, first
as a tourist about three years earlier, then for business in December 2011
and now again in July 2012. Yaacoub stuck to his cover story throughout his
first two police interviews on July 7 and July 11, 2012.
Several hours passed after the second interview, and as soon as Cypriot
police began their third interview of Yaacoub later that same night the
story began to change. "With regard to the previous deposition I gave to the
police," Yaacoub said. "I did not tell the whole truth." Four deposition
pages later, Yaacoub had changed his story, claiming to have been approached
in Lebanon by a man named Rami in June 2012. He described clandestine
meetings with Rami, always conducted during outdoor walks on which he was
not allowed to bring his cell phone. Rami tasked Yaacoub with checking on
the arrival of Israeli flights at Larnaca airport. Whatever favors he asked,
Yaacoub recalled Rami saying, would "be done for the sake of the religion
and the 'end.'" Yaacoub detailed Rami's instructions to set up e-mail
accounts through which he could contact Rami, to change his appearance and
avoid cameras at the airport, and to collect leaflets from specific Cypriot
hotels. Yaacoub said he took the $500 that Rami offered, traveled to Cyprus,
wore a hat and glasses and avoided security cameras when he went to the
airport to observe the arriving Israeli flights, and went to an internet
cafe to create the new e-mail accounts per Rami's instructions.
Yaacoub described Rami as a 38-year-old Lebanese man, muscular and 5'11"
tall, with a fair complexion, green eyes and blond hair. "I could recognize
him from a picture," Yaacoub noted, adding, "I don't know if Rami belongs to
Hizb Allah, he never mentioned such a word, but I suspected that he belongs
to this organization." Yaacoub concluded by saying "everything I said in my
deposition is the truth." It was not the truth, however. "Rami" never
existed. Only later would Yaacoub admit that "the story I told you in a
previous deposition about a guy called Rami, as you can guess, did not
happen."
The next interview took place a couple of days later and ran for two and a
half hours in the middle of the night. By the time the interview ended at
3:15 AM, police had a much fuller picture of Yaacoub's recruitment by Hizb
Allah and the nature of his mission in Cyprus and his previous operations
elsewhere in Europe. Again, Yaacoub opened the interview with a bombshell:
"I am an active member of Hizb Allah organization [sic] for approximately
four years now. I was recruited by a Lebanese called Reda in 2007."
For a full week after his arrest, Yaacoub kept Cypriot police at bay first
by sticking to his well-established cover story as a Lebanese merchant and
then by conceding that he was asked to collect information on Israeli
flights but making up a fake story about his recruitment. In fact, Hizb
Allah has a long history of teaching its operatives basic but effective
resistance-to-interrogation techniques. In March 2007, the same year Hizb
Allah recruited Yaacoub, a seasoned Hizb Allah operative was captured by
British forces in Iraq. In that case, Ali Musa Daqduq al-Musawi pretended to
be deaf and mute for several weeks before speaking and admitting to being a
senior Hizb Allah operative.37 From a counterintelligence perspective,
misleading one's interrogators for a period of time enables other operatives
to escape. The reason Yaacoub ultimately revealed the truth after a week of
deceptive statements likely parallels al-Musawi's experience in Iraq:
presented with hard evidence undermining his cover stories, and having
bought time for accomplices to cover their tracks, there was no longer a
need to mislead.
How Hizb Allah spotted Yaacoub is unknown, although their interest in his
European citizenship and import business was clear. Reda apparently called
Yaacoub on the telephone suddenly, inviting Yaacoub for a meeting in his
office at a Hizb Allah bureau responsible for "student issues." It was
37 "Press Briefing with Brig. Gen. Kevin Bergner, Spokesman, Multi-National
Force-Iraq," Multinational Force-Iraq, July 2, 2007; U.S. Military
Commission Charge Sheet for Ali Musa Daduq al Musawi, ISN #311933, January
3, 2012; Mark Urban, Task Force Black: The Explosive True Story of the
Secret Special Forces War in Iraq (New York: St. Martin's Press, 2010), pp.
224-225. there, not at a Hizb Allah military or terrorist facility, that
Yaacoub was told he was needed "for the secret mission of Hizb Allah."
Yaacoub was flattered: "I accepted because I considered that he needed me
for something great and I was for them the chosen one."
Reda immediately arranged for Yaacoub to meet his first Hizb Allah trainer,
Wahid, later that same day outside a Beirut storefront. Yaacoub worked with
Wahid for two to three months before going to Sweden to visit his father.
Yaacoub explained that "when I say 'work' I mean that Wahid explained to me
roughly the secret operation, in which I would participate. He always
pointed out that nobody should know anything, neither my family nor my
friends." Wahid trained Yaacoub for another couple of months after he
returned from Sweden, all of which was theoretical discussion focused on
"explaining to me that my secret mission would be surveillance and
undercover activities on behalf of Hizb Allah." Then Wahid handed Yaacoub
off to his next trainer.
A man named Yousef trained Yaacoub for another five to seven months,
focusing on operational security concepts. Yousef taught Yaacoub "how to
handle my personal life and my activities, so that people won't get
information about me and so that I can work undercover and persuasively
without giving rise to suspicions...he taught me how to create stories
undercover."
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"For all of his European travels on behalf of Hizb Allah, Yaacoub used his
Swedish passport, which he had renewed for this purpose. Once his basic
training was complete, Yaacoub became a salaried Hizb Allah operative,
earning $600 a month since 2010."
5
Later, Mahdi took over the training regimen which included Yaacoub's first
test-run. In 2008, Yaacoub was given a large, thin envelope to deliver to
someone in Antalya, Turkey, with specific instructions about the day, time
and place where the delivery was to be made. The meeting point was outside a
Turkish department store, and the recipient recognized Yaacoub based on the
specific hat and clothes Yaacoub wore, per his instructions. Once they
exchanged the pre-arranged code words, the handoff was made. Yaacoub stayed
in Turkey a couple of more days, at Hizb Allah's expense, before returning
to Lebanon. "I don't know what its contents was [sic] and I had not
entitlement to ask, because everything is done in complete secrecy within
the organization," he explained.
Having passed this test, Yaacoub was finally ready for military training and
was assigned yet another instructor named Abu Ali who he first met at a
secret meeting arranged by Mahdi. Abu Ali organized Yaacoub's military
training over the next few years, which involved six to seven different
training sessions each lasting for three to five days at a Hizb Allah
military camp. Yaacoub would get picked up at different spots in Beirut each
time, and was driven in closed vans so he and fellow trainees could not see
where they were going. Once there, Yaacoub added, it was clear from the
topography that they were in southern Lebanon.
Each military training group consisted of 10-13 trainees, all of whom wore
hoods-as did the instructors-to hide their identities from one another. They
each slept in their own tent and trained at another site. Yaacoub described
being trained in the use of multiple firearms, from handguns to
shoulder-fired missiles, including the FN Browning, Glock, AK-47, M-16,
MP-5, PK-5, and RPG-7. He also trained in the use of C4 explosives. Over the
same period of time while under the overall responsibility of Abu Ali,
Yaacoub attended training sessions in Beirut basements focused on teaching
surveillance techniques, how to work safely undercover, how to create a
cover story, and resistance-to-interrogation techniques such as how to
defeat a polygraph test.
In 2009, Yaacoub explained, Abu Ali sent him on a mission to Cyprus "to
create a cover story for people to get to know me, to keep coming with a
justifiable purpose and without giving rise to suspicions." He traveled to
Cyprus via Dubai to strengthen his cover, and spent a week vacationing in
Ayia Napa at Hizb Allah's expense. When he returned to Cyprus two years
later, he would be able to say that the idea for importing merchandise from
Cyprus came to him while on vacation there in 2009.
Each time he returned from a mission, including this one, Yaacoub was
debriefed by a Hizb Allah security official who wanted to know where Yaacoub
went, who he met, what the climate was like, how people live in the given
location, and the state of the economy. On his return from his 2009 Cyprus
vacation, Yaacoub was assigned to a new instructor, Aiman, who sent him on
his next mission to Lyon, France, at Hizb Allah's expense. His assignment:
to receive a bag from one person and deliver it to someone else, all using
the same tradecraft (identification signs and codewords) he employed on his
last courier mission in Turkey. Shortly thereafter, Aiman sent Yaacoub to
Amsterdam, where he retrieved a cell phone, two SIM cards, and an unknown
object wrapped in newspapers, and he brought them back to Aiman in Lebanon.
Then, in December 2011 and again in January 2012, Aiman sent Yaacoub back to
Cyprus "to create a cover story" as a merchant interested in importing to
Lebanon juices from a specific local company in Cyprus. He was also tasked
with collecting information about renting a warehouse in Cyprus. "I did all
these things after receiving clear instructions from Hizb Allah, so to have
Cyprus as a basis [sic] and be able to serve the organization," he said.
Yaacoub maintained he did not know why Hizb Allah wanted this base of
operations, but speculated "perhaps they would commit a criminal act or
store firearms and explosives."
For all of his European travels on behalf of Hizb Allah, Yaacoub used his
Swedish passport, which he had renewed for this purpose. Once his basic
training was complete, Yaacoub became a salaried Hizb Allah operative,
earning $600 a month since 2010.
Yaacoub's next interview with Cypriot police occurred on July 16, 2012, in
the late evening. His first words were: "My operational name, that is my
nickname within Hizb Allah, is Wael." Yaacoub offered more details about
Hizb Allah's operational security protocols, such as the need to answer a
coded question each time he was picked up in Beirut for military training
out of town. Aiman provided the updated passwords each time, and then
different passwords would be provided by each instructor.
Yaacoub now admitted that his December 2011 visit to Cyprus actually
involved several separate missions. First, Aiman tasked Yaacoub with
gathering details on a parking lot behind the Limassol Old Hospital and near
the police and traffic departments. Aiman wanted Yaacoub to take pictures
and be able to draw a schematic of the area on his return. Yaacoub was to
specifically look for security cameras, if payment was required on entry, if
car keys were left with a parking attendant, if there was a security guard,
among other observations. Yaacoub was also told to find internet cafes in
Limassol and Nicosia, which he marked on a map for Aiman, and to purchase
three SIM cards for mobile phones from different vendors on different days,
which he did. He also found good meeting places, such as at a zoo in
Limassol and outside a castle in Larnaca. In the event a meeting was
necessary, Yaacoub would receive a text message. A text about the weather
meant to go to the Finikoudes promenade in Larnaca that day at 6 PM. If no
one showed up, Yaacoub was to return the following day at 2:00 PM, and then
again the next day at 10:30 AM. Aiman also wanted Yaacoub "to spot Israeli
restaurants in Limassol, where Jews eat 'kosher,'" but an internet search
indicated there were none. Later, in January 2012, Yaacoub was instructed to
check out the Golden Arches hotel in Limassol, collect brochures and
reconnoiter the area (he did survey the area, but the hotel was being
renovated).
"Hizb Allah knows Cyprus very well," Yaacoub told police, adding he thought
his taskings were intended to update the group's files "and create a
database."
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He insisted that he was not part of any plot "to hit any target in Cyprus
with firearms or explosives," adding that he would have had the right to
refuse the mission if asked to execute such an act.
Five days passed before Yaacoub's final police interview, which took place
midday on July 22, 2012. Yaacoub conceded he was "aware of the ideology and
the objectives of [the] Hizb Allah organization," adding this was limited to
protecting Lebanese territory "with all legal means," which he noted
included "armed struggle, military operations, and the political way." He
opposed terrorism, he stressed, saying it was different from war. Yaacoub
expressed support for "the armed struggle for the liberation of Lebanon from
Israel," but was "not in favor of the terrorist attacks against innocent
people."
Then, he added: "I don't believe that the missions I executed in Cyprus were
connected with the preparation of a terrorist attack in Cyprus. It was just
collecting information about the Jews, and this is what my organization is
doing everywhere in the world."
On March 21, 2013, a Cypriot criminal court convicted Yaacoub of helping to
plan attacks against Israeli tourists on the island last July. In their
80-page decision, the judges rejected Yaacoub's defense that he collected
information for Hizb Allah but did not know for what it would be used. There
could be no "innocent explanation" of Yaacoub's actions, the court
determined, adding that he "should have logically known" his surveillance
was linked to a criminal act.38
Reason for Concern
Taken together, the Bulgarian and Cypriot cases present compelling evidence
of Hizb Allah's return to traditional tradecraft. As the Yaacoub case makes
clear, several years before the Qods Force instructed Hizb Allah to
rejuvenate its IJO terrorist wing in January 2010, the group had already
been recruiting operatives with foreign passports, and providing new
recruits with military training and surveillance skills. Yaacoub was
recruited in 2007, while Mughniyyeh was still
38 Menelaos Hadjicostis, "Cyprus Court Convicts Hezbollah Member,"
Associated Press, March 21, 2013.alive. Indeed, while Mughniyyeh's
assassination prompted the group to resume international operations in a way
they had not since before 9/11, Hizb Allah never stopped identifying and
recruiting new operatives for a variety of different types of missions at
home and around the world.
There is no question, however, that the operational failures that followed
Mughniyyeh's assassination demonstrated that the group's foreign operational
capabilities had weakened over time. When Mughniyyeh was killed, and later
when Iran wanted Hizb Allah to play a role in its "shadow war" with the
West, Hizb Allah was not yet fully prepared to do so. Yet the Bulgaria and
Cyprus cases suggest that this may no longer be the case. Yaacoub was no
anomaly, as the Burgas attacks made clear. Like Yaacoub and the Burgas
operatives, some of those new recruits are Western citizens. During one of
his training sessions, Yaacoub heard another trainee speaking fluent Arabic
with some English words mixed in. According to Yaacoub, the trainee spoke
with a distinctly American accent.39
Dr. Matthew Levitt is a senior fellow at The Washington Institute for Near
East Policy where he directs the Institute's Stein Program on
Counterterrorism and Intelligence. Previously, Dr. Levitt served in the
senior executive service as the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Intelligence
and Analysis at the U.S. Department of the Treasury and before that as an
FBI counterterrorism analyst, including work on the Millennial and September
11th plots. He also served as a State Department counterterrorism adviser to
General James L. Jones, the special envoy for Middle East regional security
(SEMERS). Dr. Levitt is the author of the forthcoming book Hezbollah: The
Global Footprint of Lebanon's Party of God (Georgetown University Press,
2013).
39 Depositions of Hossam Taleb Yaacoub (some spelled Yaakoub), Criminal
Number Σ/860/12, File Page 187, by interviewing police officer Sergeant
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The principle of "Fair Use" was established as law by Section 107 of The
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if the purposes of display include "criticism, comment, news reporting,
teaching, scholarship, and research." Section 107 establishes four criteria
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criteria to qualify as an instance of "fair use". Rather, "fair use" is
determined by the overall extent to which the cited work does or does not
substantially satisfy the criteria in their totality. If you wish to use
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must obtain permission from the copyright owner. For more information go to:
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