SPECIAL: Hezbollah and Al Aqsa Flood

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[Picture: Al Manar]

A calculated battle is raging on the border between northern occupied Palestine and southern Lebanon. In a pre-emptive strike the Lebanese resistance movement Hezbollah struck the occupation entity on October 8th, the day after their brothers in the Palestinian resistance launched the historic Al Aqsa Flood operation – shaking the settler colonial entity.

Hezbollah’s intervention meant the splitting of the Israeli occupation forces and their resources as they had to deal with three battlefronts. That is Gaza, the West Bank and northern occupied Palestine. They also had to divert military equipment to the colony of Eilat due to the resistance operations of Yemen’s Ansarullah movement.

Now learning from the 2006 Lebanese war – a turning point for Arabs and the resistance in the Middle East…the moment that singled the end of an era of defeats and the start of an era of victories.

Hezbollah’s first operations in Al Aqsa Flood was to blind the Israeli enemy forces. It struck Israel spy and espionage equipment along the border and then moved on to hitting military outposts and gathering of soldiers. But the highlight of operations came when Hezbollah fighters struck Israel’s primary air surveillance and war command centre in the north.

The Meron base, which is located on Mount Jarmaq, the highest peak in the occupied lands. A message from Hezbollah that no part of Israeli occupied Palestine is too high or far for the resistance to strike.

Guest: Dr Ibrahim al-Moussawi – a member of the Loyalty to the Resistance parliamentary bloc in Lebanon.

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