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People inspect the aftermath of Wednesday's Israeli airstrikes that targeted southern Beirut's al-Rihab neighborhood, April 9. T

Folks examine the aftermath of Wednesday’s Israeli airstrikes that focused southern Beirut’s al-Rihab neighborhood, April 9.

AFP/through Getty Photos


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AFP/through Getty Photos

BEIRUT, Lebanon — It was too harmful to satisfy in particular person.

Israel has been searching him and his comrades, selecting them off by airstrike and drone, in shock assaults that always kill civilians alongside them.

In a 40-minute cellphone name late Thursday, a Hezbollah area commander advised NPR how he was wounded in Israel’s huge bombardment of Beirut a day earlier, which killed greater than 350 folks, in response to Lebanese authorities. An Israeli missile exploded on the street subsequent to a constructing within the capital’s southern suburbs, the place he was sheltering. Flying glass and particles injured him within the legs and arms, the commander says. Two folks, he mentioned, died subsequent to him.

The subsequent day, as he spoke to NPR, he was again on his ft.

“I’ve an enemy occupying my land,” he mentioned. “The place am I purported to be?”

He gave solely his nom de guerre, Jihad, out of concern Israel would monitor and kill him. He additionally gave his age: 62. He is been a member of Hezbollah’s navy wing since 2001, and his present rank is “the equal of a two-star,” he mentioned, although declined to offer his actual job title, which may additionally establish him. He mentioned he commutes backwards and forwards between Beirut’s southern suburbs, the place Hezbollah has workplaces, and southern Lebanon, the place he instructions troops engaged in fight with Israel.

“Let’s simply say my experience is these issues that fly,” he laughs. He means rockets, which Hezbollah has been firing into northern Israel by the hundreds.

After the US and Israel attacked Iran on Feb. 28, Iranian-backed Hezbollah militants retaliated on March 2 by firing rockets south from Lebanon. They briefly halted assaults this week, on information of a ceasefire between the US and Iran, which Hezbollah says it believed would cowl Lebanon. However after Israel insisted it did not, and launched its largest assault on Lebanon because the begin of renewed conflict, Hezbollah says it is resumed firing rockets.

“We’re combating an enemy that has the newest weapons, all of the know-how, however we’re holding our floor,” Jihad says. “If you happen to’re expert, you let him get nearer. What sort of nerves do you’ve got, and what sort of steadfastness?”

“That is the place the battle occurs,” he provides.

NPR spoke to Jihad to get a uncommon glimpse into his secretive Shia Muslim militia’s continued capabilities, its new command construction, and contemporary techniques the group is utilizing to evade Israeli surveillance. He cited “errors” his group made in 2024, which led to Israel’s killing of Hezbollah’s then-leader, Hassan Nasrallah, and described how the group has rearmed since then.

America, Israel and plenty of different international locations think about Hezbollah a terrorist group. The group has navy and political wings, and 14 of its lawmakers sit in Lebanon’s parliament.

The group has mentioned it opposes talks deliberate for Tuesday in Washington between the Israeli and Lebanese ambassadors, which characterize the 2 international locations’ first official negotiations since 1983.

Passing notes on the battlefield 

NPR spoke to Jihad by cellphone, however he was not on his personal machine.

Hezbollah largely eschewed cell telephones and different know-how after a September 2024 Israeli assault through which hundreds of pagers and walkie-talkies utilized by Hezbollah exploded near-simultaneously, killing dozens of individuals. Israeli intelligence brokers have described their decade-long plot to embed explosives in batteries within the gadgets, which had been offered to Hezbollah by a faux firm in Europe.

Since then, Jihad says the group now not imports any electronics. “We do not belief something anymore,” he says. He makes use of an old school walkie-talkie himself. “Every thing we’ve is previous,” he says, mentioning old-school Motorola gadgets and radio transmitters.

Some battlefield orders even come through handwritten notes, carried by couriers on motorbikes, he says.

Hezbollah has a brand new org chart

Hezbollah has gone again to fundamentals since that pager assault, and Israel’s killing later that very same month of Nasrallah, Jihad says. One other founding member, Naim Qassem, has changed him.

Qassem has “modified the entire strategy,” Jihad says, adopting a decentralized command construction first pioneered by Imad Mughniyeh, a Hezbollah chief killed in a 2008 automobile bombing in Syria. He cut up fighters into semi-autonomous models that do not talk for safety causes.

“One focuses on taking pictures, one other watches the street. One other may even specialise in wrapping sandwiches [for the fighters]!” he says. “You execute your individual particular duties, with no understanding of what we as a complete are doing.”

Beneath Qassem, Jihad says he believes Hezbollah is each nearer to Iran, and in addition extra compartmentalized. He tries to match the command construction to one thing NPR is perhaps extra aware of.

“For instance, in journalism, you do that and he does that. Your job displays what you’ve got studied and what your expertise is,” he says. “It is like that. We’ve got programs and {qualifications}, relying on the skilled monitor you are on.”

How Hezbollah rearmed after 2024

This Israeli invasion has reignited a long-running battle that was purported to have paused with a November 2024 ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon, through which Lebanon’s Military promised to disarm Hezbollah within the nation’s south. The United Nations says Israel violated that ceasefire hundreds of occasions between late 2024 and early this 12 months, with continued airstrikes which have killed greater than 100 civilians.

Whereas Hezbollah held its hearth throughout that interval, Jihad says they by no means disarmed. He says they pointed Lebanese troopers to disused, defunct or broken previous stockpiles they now not wanted, and allow them to confiscate these. However Hezbollah’s actual arsenal was largely untouched, he says.

“They did not confiscate something! We gave them empty packing containers, or just a few previous objects to go blow up,” he explains.

He says Hezbollah’s weapons weren’t as depleted by the 2024 conflict as Israel believed, and that the group has re-armed since then — with a mixture of imported weapons and domestically manufactured ones.

“Today, on the web, you possibly can discover ways to manufacture something,” Jihad says.

He would not say the place the meeting of weapons occurs. However Hezbollah is thought to function a community of underground tunnels and caverns. Among the entrances had been destroyed by Israel in 2024, however specialists say lots of the constructions stay intact and in use.

Hezbollah historically obtained most of its weapons from Iran, through Syria. However after the autumn of its ally, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, in December 2024, Qassem lamented that his group’s provide route had been severed.

Jihad says that ended up not being the case.

“There’s nothing that may’t be smuggled by way of Syria — Kornets, Konkurs,” he mentioned, naming Russian-made anti-tank weapons.

An abrupt ending 

After 40 minutes, Jihad mentioned he needed to go. He sounded nervous. NPR may hear Israeli drones buzzing behind him, and warplanes flying low.

“We have to change our place,” he mentioned.

After which he hung up.

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