Twenty-one years ago this
week, just a few minutes short of 11 p.m. on September 17, 1992,
Hezbollah and Iranian operatives opened fire with some 30 gunshots at a
Berlin restaurant, brutally ending what had been a quiet dinner. A
German court would later determine that Abdolraham Banihashemi and Abbas
Rhayel carried out the assassination plot at Iran's behest, killing
three members of the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan, the largest
Iranian-Kurdish opposition to the regime in Tehran. The two gunslingers
were assisted by other Hezbollah members, including Kazem Darabi, “the
boss of Hezbollah in Berlin.” Darabi and Rhayel were given life
sentences, but were released in a 2007 prisoner exchange. Youseff Amin,
another co-conspirator, and Mohammad Atris, a document forger who
assisted the attackers, were given terms of eleven years and about five
years, respectively. Banihashemi, on the other hand, fled the country
and made his way back to Iran where he was rewarded with a Mercedes 230
and profitable businesses for his role in the successful operation.
Unfortunately, his case is more the rule than the exception.
Truth
be told, cases in which Hezbollah operatives have been captured and
imprisoned for their crimes are far and few between. Recently, law
enforcement and intelligence successes have yielded a series of
Hezbollah arrests (Hezbollah operatives are now standing trial in Nigeria and Thailand) and one conviction (Hussam Yacoub was sentenced to
four years in prison by a Cypriot court). But even discounting the many
Hezbollah operatives never even to be indicted for their crimes, there
is a disturbing number of wanted Hezbollah fugitives—like Banihashem—who
continue to evade justice.
More
often than not, wanted Hezbollah operatives evade capture by fleeing to
Iran or just staying in Lebanon. That appears to be the case now with
Hassan El Hajj Hassan and Meliad Farah, the two surviving members of the
terrorist squad that perpetrated a deadly attack on Israeli tourists in
Burgas, Bulgaria, in July 2012 and who were both recently added to the
list of the FBI's most wanted terrorists. Both reportedly escaped back
to Lebanon after the bus bombing in Bulgaria last summer and are
allegedly hiding in Southern Lebanon. Bulgarian authorities recently
announced their plans to try these fugitives next year, in absentia if
necessary.
If recent history is any indicator,
finding and arresting the Burgas bombers so they can stand trial in
person will prove difficult. Four Hezbollah members believed to be
hiding in Lebanon are wanted by the U.N.'s Special Tribunal for Lebanon
(STL), where they have been indicted on charges of carrying out the
assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri. The most
prominent of the four wanted individuals, Mustafa Badreddine, has
apparently not allowed his status as an international fugitive to hinder
his activities. Following the 2008 assassination of Imad
Mughniyah—himself wanted by Interpol before his demise—Baddreddine was
promoted to the top militant commander in Hezbollah. In this capacity,
the U.S. Treasury revealed, he is believed to be providing support to
Hezbollah's "terrorist activities in the Middle East and around the
world." The STL plans to try the four defendants, whether or not they
are in the country.
In 2009 Argentina issued an
arrest warrant for Lebanese-Colombian dual-national Samuel El Reda.
Described by Argentinean authorities as “the coordinator of [Hezbollah]
sleeper cells” in Buenos Aires and the Tri-Border Area in South America
in the period leading up to the 1994 bombing of the AMIA Jewish
community center, El Reda is also believed to be evading capture by
hiding in Lebanon.
Ahmed Al Mughassil and Hussein
Mohamed Al Nasser are wanted for the 1996 bombing of the Khobar
Towers military complex in Saudi Arabia that killed 19 US Air Force
personnel, wounded 372 other Americans as well as killing an unknown
number of Saudi citizens who were unfortunate to be in the vicinity of
the complex. Al Mughassil and Al Nasser are believed to be in Iran.
There
are some rare exceptions, however, including one in which the FBI
penetrated a Hezbollah criminal enterprise with nodes in North America
and Europe that was raising (dirty) money and procuring weapons for the
group's operatives in Lebanon. A sophisticated FBI dragnet—a story right
out of Hollywood—led to the arrest of several senior operatives who
ventured out of Lebanon. Others, including one Hezbollah operative
nicknamed "Mr. Lebanon" for his refusal to venture beyond Lebanon's
borders, within which he knows he is safe from capture or arrest, remain
fugitives. This investigation led to the November 2009 arrest of Dani
Tarraf, a German-Lebanese arms procurement agent for Hezbollah who
maintained homes in Lebanon and Slovakia and had significant business
interests in China and Lebanon. A few months later, in June 2010,
another Hezbollah operative tied to this case, Moussa Ali Hamdan, was
taken into custody by Paraguayan officials in Asuncion. Hamdan escaped
arrest by fleeing the United States for Lebanon, but calculated he could
travel to the Paraguayan side of South America's Tri-Border area
without risking arrest, given Hezbollah’s strong presence in the area.
But in February 2011 Hamdan was extradited to the US and made his first
court appearance; in July 2013, he received an eleven-year sentence.
Mohammad
Ali Hamadi is still wanted by U.S. authorities for his role in one of
Hezbollah’s earliest terrorist acts. In June, 1985, Hamadi and another
Hezbollah operative hijacked TWA Flight 847. For 15 days the story
dominated headlines as the plane crisscrossed the Middle East, making
Hezbollah a household name. Hamadi is believed to be the one who shot
U.S. Navy diver Robert Stetham in the head and tossed his body onto the
tarmac. That November, Hamadi was indicted by the U.S. government for
his role in the hijacking and Stethem's murder. In 1987, German
authorities arrested Hamadi at Frankfurt airport and found liquid
explosives in his luggage. He was imprisoned in Germany until 2005, when
he was released on parole and returned to Lebanon.
Today,
Hezbollah is in deep trouble. The self-described "resistance"
organization pledged to Israel's destruction is tied down in a brutal
sectarian war in Syria where it is "resisting" fellow Muslims, including
fellow Lebanese citizens. Hezbollah's role in the Syrian war has cost
it tremendous grassroots and political support at home, where the
sectarian fighting is bleeding across the border and risking renewed
civil war. But Hezbollah is also suffering from a series of arrests and
prosecutions that are peeling away the organization's "resistance"
facade and exposing the group as the terrorist network and criminal
enterprise that it is. And as Hezbollah's standing in Lebanon continues
to implode, perhaps in time the country might not be the comfortable and
guaranteed safe-haven for Hezbollah fugitives it has been for decades.
Matthew
Levitt directs the Stein program on counterterrorism and intelligence
at The Washington Institute for Near East Policy and is the author of Hezbollah: The Global Footprint of Lebanon's Party of God.Source of article
http://www.newrepublic.com/article/114831/hezbollah-terrorists-still-find-refuge-lebanon

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