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Podcast: Breaking Hezbollah's Golden Rule Season 2
- Season 2 Trailer
- Episode 1: Risky Business in South America
- Episode 2: Terror in Bangkok, Then and Now
- Episode 3: "A Jumble of Overlapping Plots" in Baku
- Episode 4: Blood Diamonds, Picassos, and Illicit Financing in Africa
- Episode 5: Hezbollah's Digital Footprint
- Episode 6: Sleeper Cells and Surveillance in the U.S.
- Episode 7: Operations and Illicit Finance in the Gulf
- Episode 8: Hezbollah Assassinations Unit 121
Listen to the new season of a podcast series shining a bright light on the global terrorist and criminal activities that Lebanese Hezbollah would rather keep hidden from view.
Lebanese Hezbollah goes to great lengths to publicize its overt, social, and political activities and to conceal its covert terrorist, militant, and criminal pursuits. In the words of one operative, Hezbollah's "Golden Rule" is this: The Less You Know, the Better.
In this podcast, terrorism scholar Matthew Levitt sets out to break this rule by shining a bright spotlight on Hezbollah's global terrorist and criminal activities. Levitt has been following Lebanese Hezbollah for almost three decades in and out of government. He's written books, given expert testimony, and literally mapped Hezbollah's worldwide illicit activities in an online interactive map and timeline.
Listen as Levitt tracks Hezbollah's evolution over the years and its operations across the globe from Thailand to Azerbaijan, West Africa to the Gulf, then on to the U.S. and back to Lebanon. This season will explore new locations, dive deeper into the group’s modus operandi, examine Hezbollah’s digital footprint, and expose the group’s assassination unit – responsible for the murder of Lebanese, politicians, security officials, and intellectuals. Along the way, Levitt will speak with law enforcement officers, intelligence agents, government officials, and world-class experts from around the globe, each of whom has first-person experience confronting Hezbollah and uncovering things the group would much prefer nobody ever heard about.
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Season 2 Trailer
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Trailer 2
Preview Season 2 of Breaking Hezbollah's Golden Rule, a podcast series devoted to shining a bright light on the global terrorist and criminal activities that Lebanese Hezbollah would much prefer to keep quiet. Coming soon to your favorite podcatcher.
Episode 1: Risky Business in South America
Earlier this month, the U.S. Treasury Department designated Hezbollah operative Amer Mohamed Akil Rada for coordinating the activities of various commercial enterprises for Hezbollah, including charcoal exports from Colombia to Lebanon. Rada previously helped case targets for Hezbollah around South America and was a member of the Hezbollah operational squad that carried out the 1994 bombing of the AMIA Jewish community center in Buenos Aires. Here’s the backstory on Rada, recorded prior to the Treasury designation, and more on Hezbollah’s use of front companies to hide its criminal and terrorist activities in the Western Hemisphere.
Download a transcript of this episode.
Guests
Armando Cortez is Director of the Anti-Terrorist Unit within the Argentinian Attorney General’s Office. Cortez served as team leader of the 1994 AMIA Jewish community center bombing investigation.
Aurora Ortega is a U.S. government professional who has served in various positions within the U.S. Departments of Defense and the Treasury. She is a Ph.D. candidate at George Mason University, and the author of the Institute report Hezbollah in Colombia: Past and Present Modus Operandi and the Need for Greater Security.
Show Notes
Reference Documents
- U.S. Treasury Department: The Foreign Narcotics Kingpin Designation Act
- CIA Memo 1992: "Lebanon's Hizballah: Testing Political Waters, Keeping Militant Agenda"
- Treasury Designation 2004: Assad Ahmad Barakat
- 2006 U.S. Diplomatic Cable: Warning of Hezbollah Activity in Chile
- Treasury Designation 2006: Barkat Network, Farouk Omairi, Galeria Page
- 2015: Alberto Nisman Case Ruling
- 2018 Infobae Report: Interpol detects illicit activities of Hezbollah in Colombia
- 2020 Atlantic Council Report: The Maduro-Hezbollah Nexus: How Iran-backed Networks Prop up the Venezuelan Regime
- Mossad Report: Iran-Lebanon/Hezbollah/ESO/”Islamic Jihad” – Attack on the Israeli Embassy (Final Report)
- Mossad Report: Iran-Lebanon/Hezbollah/ESO/”Islamic Jihad” AMIA Attack (Final Report)
- 2023: Israel Seizes $1.7 Million in Cryptocurrency from Iran and Hezbollah
- Treasury Designation 2023: Amer Mohamed Akil Rada, Samer Akil Rada, Mahdy Akil Helbawi, Zanga S.A.S
Lebanese Hezbollah Interactive Map
- José Salman El Reda and His Uncle Form a Hezbollah Cell in Maicao, Colombia
- Hassan Abu Abbas Opens the Sandobad Comercio Company in Sao Paulo
- Jose Salman El-Reda Arrested in Rosario, Argentina
- Hussein Ali Gharib and Ghaleb Hassan Hamdar Arrested at Beirut Airport
- Piloto Turismo Provides Counterfeit Documentation
- Casa Apollo Raided by Police
- Samer Akil Rada Caught Smuggling Cocaine
- ESO Operative Amer Mohamed Akil Rada Establishes Tucan Trading S.A.R.L.
- Hassan Mohsen Mansour Uses His Business to Ship Disguised Cocaine
- Abdala Rada Ramel Deported for Drug Trafficking and Money Laundering
- Zanga S.A.S. Reports Unladen Shipments at Port Everglades
- Hezbollah Members Illegally Acquire Authentic Colombian Citizenship
Relevant Reading
- Chapter 4 of Hezbollah: The Global Footprint of Lebanon’s Party of God by Matthew Levitt
- Hezbollah in Colombia: Past and Present Modus Operandi and the Need for Greater Scrutiny by Aurora Ortega
- Hezbollah's Criminal Networks: Useful Idiots, Henchmen, and Organized Criminal Facilitators by Matthew Levitt
- Iranian and Hezbollah Operations in South America: Then and Now by Matthew Levitt
- Iran and Hezbollah Remain Hyperactive in Latin America by Matthew Levitt
- Hizbullah Narco-Terrorism: A Growing Cross-Border Threat by Matthew Levitt
- Hezbollah Finances: Funding the Party of God by Matthew Levitt
Audio Sources
Episode 2: Terror in Bangkok, Then and Now
An innocent looking hit-and-run accident in downtown Bangkok in 1994 uncovered a sophisticated Hezbollah network in Thailand, an attempt to target the Israeli embassy there, and a decomposing body hidden in a vat full of chemical explosives. Two decades later, a new string of Hezbollah and Iranian-directed plots in Thailand cropped up, this time involving operatives hiding explosives in bags marked as “cat litter,” signing up for flower arrangement classes as cover for travel to Bangkok, and bulk buying bottles of nail polish remover for reasons having nothing to do with makeup.
Download a transcript of this episode.
Guests
Oded Ailam served in the Mossad for over twenty-two years, most recently as Deputy Head of Global Operations. He also served as chief of Mossad’s counterterrorism center.
Sakdawut “Josh” Smanbut is a police colonel and superintendent in the Royal Thai Police’s Special Branch. He was involved in the investigations into Hezbollah operatives plotting attacks in Thailand in 2012 and 2014.
Show Notes
Reference Documents
- 2000 Filipino intelligence report: Hezbollah activities in SE Asia
- 2015 State Designation: Hussein Atris
- 2016 Treasury Designation: Yosef Ayad
- New York Times: “Iran Frees British-Australian Scholar in Prisoner Swap”
- Director of National Intelligence: TATP
Lebanese Hezbollah Interactive Map
- Pandu Yudhawinata and Abu al-Ful Obtain Passports in Philippines
- Pandu Yudhawinata Meets Operatives at Bangkok Safe House
- Pandu Yudhawinata Meets Abu al-Ful in Kuala Lumpur
- “Tony” Conducts Preoperational Surveillance near Israeli Embassy in Bangkok
- Hezbollah Attempts Bombing of Israeli Embassy in Bangkok
- Mouhandes Travels for “Five Contingency Attacks”
- Pandu Yudhawinata and Abu al-Ful Obtain Fake Identification
- Plot Targeting Israel Intercepted
- Pandu Yudhawinata Arrested for Drug Possession
- Yousuf Aljouni and Abu al-Ful Arrested for Weapons Smuggling
- Hussein Atris Arrested for Hezbollah Ties and Possession of Explosive Materials
- Daoud Farhat and Yosef Ayad Arrested for Plotting Passover Attack
Relevant Reading
- Chapter 5 of Hezbollah: The Global Footprint of Lebanon’s Party of God by Matthew Levitt
- Long Reach of Hezbollah Makes It a Threat Close to Home by Matthew Levitt
- Hizballah Poised to Strike in Southeast Asia by Matthew Levitt
Audio Sources
Episode 3: "A Jumble of Overlapping Plots" in Baku
In 2008, Azerbaijani authorities thwarted a Hezbollah plot to target an Israeli Independence Day celebration and kidnap the Israeli ambassador in Baku. Two Hezbollah operatives were arrested, tried, and convicted, but the group was not deterred by this setback. By 2011, Hezbollah and Iran had formulated “a jumble of overlapping plots” that officials discovered to be part of a coordinated campaign to assassinate foreign diplomats in at least seven countries, including in Azerbaijan.
Download a transcript of this episode.
Guests
Ambassador Arthur Lenk served as Israeli Ambassador to Azerbaijan from 2005-2009, and Israeli Ambassador to South Africa, Lesotho, and Eswatini (formally Swaziland) from 2013-2017. Ambassador Lenk also served as Director of the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ Department of International Law. He currently serves as Principal at Lenk International Consulting Ltd.
Mahammad Mammadov is a Research Fellow at the Topchubashov Center, an independent think tank in Baku, Azerbaijan. He is an adjunct lecturer at Khazar University. In 2020, he obtained his double MA degree in Russian, Central and East European, and Eurasian Studies from the University of Glasgow and the University of Tartu. Mammadov specializes in foreign policy analysis and international relations theories. His research interests include energy, connectivity, as well as geopolitical and transitional developments in the post-Soviet space with a specific focus on Azerbaijani foreign policy. He is the co-author of From the Street to the Border: Iran’s Growing Paranoia Toward Azerbaijan, published by the Middle East Institute in 2023.
Zohar Palti is the Viterbi International Fellow at The Washington Institute. He previously served as head of the Policy & Political-Military Bureau at Israel's Ministry of Defense, where his responsibilities included directing defense and security relationships with foreign countries. Prior to that, he led the Mossad Intelligence Directorate and served as Counterterrorism Chief in the organization. He also served in the IDF for 26 years in the IDF Intelligence Corps at the rank of colonel. He has also held several research positions, including senior research fellow at Harvard’s Belfer Center (2016-2017) and visiting military fellow with The Washington Institute (2004). Palti holds a BA and an Executive MA in Middle Eastern studies from Tel Aviv University, with distinction. He is a graduate of the U.S. National Defense University's advanced management program. In March 2022, he was awarded the U.S Department of Defense Medal for Distinguished Public Service for his major contribution to bolstering U.S-Israel strategic defense relations.
Joby Warrick has been a reporter at the Washington Post since 1996. He has served with the Post’s investigative and national security teams, and currently writes about the Middle East, terrorism, and weapons proliferation. He is the author of three nonfiction books, including his 2021 book Red Line: The Unraveling of Syria and America's Race to Destroy the Most Dangerous Arsenal in the World, the 2016 Pulitzer Prize winning Black Flags: The Rise of ISIS, and The Triple Agent.
Show Notes
Reference Documents
- "Azerbaijan arrests alleged spies – who are the Iranian Revolutionary Guards?" Elizabeth Flock, The Washington Post, March 2012
- "U.S. officials among the targets of Iran-linked assassination plots," Joby Warrick, The Washington Post, May 2012
- “92 Flights From Israeli Base Reveal Arms Exports to Azerbaijan,” Avi Scharf and Oded Yaron, Ha’aretz, March 2023
- “Azerbaijan to open embassy in Israel today,” Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs, March 2023
- July 2023 Press Statement: Azerbaijan State Security Service
Lebanese Hezbollah Interactive Map
- Suspected Operatives Arrested on Azerbaijan-Iran Border
- Hassan Nasrallah Warns of “Open War”
- Ali Karaki, Ali Najem Aladine, and Four Others Arrested for Plotting Embassy Attacks
- Attack Targeting Israeli Tourists Fails
- Hezbollah and Iranian Plotters Arrested in Turkey
Relevant Reading
- Chapter 1 p. 1-3 & Chapter 12 p. 359-364 Hezbollah: The Global Footprint of Lebanon’s Party of God by Matthew Levitt
- Hizballah and the Qods Force in Iran's Shadow War with the West by Matthew Levitt
- From the Streets to the Border: Iran’s Growing Paranoia Toward Azerbaijan by Mahammad Mammadov
Audio Sources
Episode 4: Blood Diamonds, Picassos, and Illicit Financing in Africa
Diamonds are an excellent way to smuggle and launder money - they’re very liquid, can’t be sniffed out by dogs, don’t set off metal detectors, and are easy to conceal. Similarly, illicit funds can be laundered and stored by investing in artwork. These luxury items link Hezbollah headquarters in Beirut to the blood diamond trade in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, art galleries in Côte d’Ivoire, and illicit business activities in South Africa.
Correction: Iman Kobeissi was arrested in a DEA sting operation, not during the course of an FBI investigation. Please see here for the 2015 DOJ press release.
Download a transcript of this episode.
Guest
Joseph Palazzo is the Deputy Chief of the Special Financial Investigations Unit within the U.S. Department of Justice’s Money Laundering and Asset Recovery Section (MLARS).
Show Notes
Reference Documents
- “Iran Steps Up Arming Hizbullah Against Israel,” Col. (ret.) Dr. Jaques Neriah, Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, January 2011.
- Treasury Designation 2010: Ali Tajideen and Husayn Tajideen.
- Treasury Designation 2018: Mohammad Ibrahim Bazzi.
- 2023 Indictment: Mohammad Ibrahim Bazzi.
- Rewards for Justice: Ali Saade.
- “Shadow Diplomats: 14 Honorary Consuls Embroiled in Controversy,” International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, November 2022.
- Treasury Designation 2022: Ali Saade and Ibrahim Taher.
- “These Documents Reveal Abuses and Breakdowns in Rogue System of Global Diplomacy,” Debbie Cenziper of ProPublica and Will Fitzgibbon of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, January 2023.
- State Department: Tenth Meeting of the Law Enforcement Coordination Group Focuses on Countering Hizballah in Africa.
Lebanese Hezbollah Interactive Map
- Air Afrique Flight 56 Hijacked
- Hezbollah Operative Attempts Assassination of Salman Rushdie
- Sheikh Ali Damush Killed in UTA Flight 141 Crash
- Treasury Department Designates Kassim Tajideen
- Kassim Tajideen Arrested for Sanctions Evasion
- Mohammad Bazzi Appointed Honorary Consul by The Gambia
- Mohammad Bazzi Charged with Money Laundering Conspiracy
- International Consortium of Investigative Journalists Exposes Hezbollah’s Use of Honorary Consuls
- State Department Announces up to $10 Million Reward for Ali Saade and Ibrahim Taher
- Treasury Department Designated Nazem Said Ahmad and Affiliated Entities
Relevant Reading
- Chapter 9 of Hezbollah: The Global Footprint of Lebanon’s Party of God by Matthew Levitt.
- Hizbullah Narco-Terrorism: A Growing Cross-Border Threat by Matthew Levitt.
- Hezbollah’s Criminal Networks: Useful Idiots, Henchmen, and Organized Criminal Facilitators by Mattew Levitt, in Beyond Convergence: World Without Order.
- Tehran’s International Targets: Assessing Iranian Terror Sponsorship by Nathan Sales.
Audio Sources
- DW
- 60 Minutes
- Associated Press
- Al Jazeera
- U.S. Department of State
- ProPublica
- Sawt Beirut International
- VOA
- U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
Episode 5: Hezbollah's Digital Footprint
40 years ago this week, Hezbollah blew up the barracks of U.S. Marine and French military peacekeepers in Beirut, killing about 300 people. The group continues to carry out attacks, but has developed the means to complement and support these real-life operations through online activities. Hezbollah was one of the first non-state actors to build up a digital presence to conduct cyber operations against its enemies. The group also uses some unconventional means to recruit and radicalize followers and engages in cyber attacks and sleuthing targeting its enemies. Today, Hezbollah even produces its own first-person shooter video games in which gamers kill Israeli soldiers to promote its vision of the world to impressionable youth. This week, we shine our spotlight on Hezbollah’s digital footprint.
Download a transcript of this episode.
Guests
Dr. Alma Keshavarz is currently with U.S. Cyber Command. She previously served on the Secretary of State’s Policy Planning Staff at the Department of State, and is the author of The Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps: Defining Iran’s Military Doctrine. The views expressed are those of the speaker and do not reflect the official position of the Department of Defense or United States Government.
Galen Lamphere-Englund is a senior research and strategic communications consultant at the nexus of violent extremism, conflict, and tech issues. Galen co-founded the Extremism and Gaming Research Network (EGRN) and serves as a Preventing & Countering Violent Extremism (P/CVE) advisor to a range of clients, including governments, UN agencies, and tech platforms. He has produced over 200 analytical outputs for prominent institutions, including RUSI, USIP, Hedayah, and GIFCT. He has written extensively on online extremism, including recently co-authoring The Online Gaming Ecosystem: Assessing Digital Socialisation, Extremism Risks and Harms Mitigation Efforts.
Douglas London is a retired, decorated, 34-year veteran of the Central Intelligence Agency’s Clandestine Service. London has served as Senior Operations Officer, Chief of Station and CIA’s Counterterrorism Chief for South and Southwest Asia. He served primarily in the Middle East, South and Central Asia, and Africa, with senior management positions for the Near East, Counterterrorism, Counterintelligence, Iran and Cyber operations. He is also a Non-resident fellow at the Middle East Institute, and is author of the book, The Recruiter: Spying and the Lost Art of American Intelligence, concerning the CIA’s post 9/11 transformation.
Show Notes
Reference Documents
- “How Hizballah Hijacks the Internet,” Hilarity Hylton/Austin, Time, August 2006
- 2010 Senate Foreign Relations Committee Hearing: Assessing the Strength of Hezbollah
- 2018: U.S. Department of State Designates Jawad Nasrallah
- “Hezbollah’s “Virtual Entrepreneurs:” How Hezbollah is Using the Internet to Incite Violence in Israel,” Michael Shkolnik and Alexander Corbeil, CTC Sentinel, October 2019
- “Exclusive: Inside Hizbollah's fake news training camps sowing instability across the Middle East,” Wil Crisp and Suadad al-Salhy, The Telegraph, August 2020
- “‘Lebanese Cedar’ APT,” ClearSky Cyber Security, January 2021
Lebanese Hezbollah Interactive Map
- Hezbollah Trains “Electronic Armies”
- Muhammad Zaghloul Cell's Plot Targeting IDF Foiled
- Czech Security Intelligence Service Disrupts Hezbollah Hacking Operation
- Hezbollah Tied to Lebanese Cedar Hacking Group Computer Breaches
- Intelligence Report Notes Hezbollah Attempt to Influence U.S. Election
Relevant Reading
- "Hezbollah's West Bank Terror Network" by Matthew Levitt
- Hezbollah’s Regional Activities in Support of Iran’s Proxy Networks by Matthew Levitt, pp. 18
Audio Sources
Episode 6: Sleeper Cells and Surveillance in the U.S.
In 2017, two Hezbollah operatives were arrested on the same day for conducting independent surveillance operations on U.S. targets across the country. A third was arrested in July 2019 for taking pictures of a number of high-profile U.S. landmarks and communicating this information back to Beirut through his Hezbollah handlers. These three cases received a lot of media attention. A fourth didn’t, despite one operative’s efforts to stockpile bomb-making materials…in Houston, Texas.
Download a transcript of this episode.
Guests
Russell Rosenthal served in the Federal Bureau of Investigation for over twenty-five years, most recently as the unit chief responsible for Asian Operations in the International Operations Division. From 2019 to 2022, he served as the FBI Legal Attaché and senior representative to Israel. Rosenthal was most recently Vice President of Security and Law Enforcement at the Anti-Defamation League. In this role, he led ADL’s efforts to enhance partnerships and engagement with federal, state and local law enforcement across the country, and additionally oversaw the security of ADL staff and physical offices.
Seamus Hughes is a senior research faculty member at University of Nebraska Omaha’s National Counterterrorism Innovation, Technology, and Education Center (NCITE). He is an expert on terrorism, homegrown violent extremism, and countering violent extremism (CVE). Hughes has authored numerous academic reports on extremism in America and published a critically acclaimed book, Homegrown: ISIS in America. Hughes previously worked at the National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC), serving as a lead staffer on U.S. government efforts to implement a national terrorism prevention strategy. Prior to NCTC, Hughes served as the Senior Counterterrorism Advisor for the U.S. Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.
Show Notes
Reference Documents
- Treasury Designation 2016: Muhammad Ghaleb Hamdar
- Robert Assaf facts, indictment, plea agreement, and sentencing documents
- Ali Kourani arrest, conviction, sentencing, appeal documents
- Samir el-Debek complaint and arrest documents
- U.S. Department of State: Briefing on U.S. Efforts to Counter Hizballah, Nicholas Rasmussen, October 2017
- “Iran-linked terrorists caught stockpiling explosives in north-west London,” Ben Riley-Smith, The Telegraph, June 2019
- “Die explosive Spur führt zur Hisbollah,” Daniel-Dylan Böhmer, Die Welt, August 2020
- Hezbollah’s Operations and Networks in the United States: Two Decades in Review, Anyssia S. Kokinos, Nakissa P. Jahanbani, Jon Lewis, and Devorah Margolin, The George Washington University Program on Extremism, June 2022
- Alexei Saab complaint, indictment, and Department of Justice sentencing press release
Lebanese Hezbollah Interactive Map
- FBI Report Notes Hezbollah Leader in Texas
- Alexei Saab Conducts Preoperational Surveillance in Boston
- Alexei Saab Attempts Assassination of “Israeli Spy” during Training
- Ali Kourani Conducts Preoperational Surveillance in New York City
- Hezbollah Receives Ammonium Nitrate from Iran (July 2013)
- Stockpile of Ammonium Nitrate Ice Packs Seized
- Robert Assaf Purchases 300 Pounds of Ammonium Nitrate
- Robert Assaf Pleads Guilty to Providing False Statement to a U.S. Agency
- Ali Kourani Arrested on Terrorism, Sanctions Violation and Immigration Charges
- Samer El Debek Arrested for Firearms Possession and Receiving Hezbollah Training
- Alexei Saab Convicted for Receiving Military-Type Training from Hezbollah, Marriage Fraud, and Making False Statements
Relevant Reading
- Chapter 11 of Hezbollah: The Global Footprint of Lebanon’s Party of God by Matthew Levitt
- "Hezbollah Isn’t Just in Beirut. It’s in New York," Too by Matthew Levitt
- "Inside Hezbollah's American Sleeper Cells: Waiting for Iran's Signal to Strike U.S. and Israeli Targets" by Matthew Levitt
- Breaking Hezbollah’s Golden Rule: Season 1, Episode 4, “Hezbollah Support Networks in America” by Matthew Levitt
Audio Sources
Episode 7: Operations and Illicit Finance in the Gulf
Two Hezbollah financiers based in Qatar secretly raised tens of millions of dollars for Hezbollah through banks and cash couriers. The operatives leveraged family connections and utilized a complex web of bank accounts and real estate projects across several Gulf countries to funnel large sums of money back to Lebanon. Hezbollah has a long history of carrying out attacks in the Gulf, but it also sees the region as a lucrative place for raising illicit funds to finance the group. Gulf states have taken notice, and more recently taken action targeting Hezbollah financing in the region.
Download a transcript of this episode.
Guests
Ambassador Nathan Sales served as Ambassador-at-Large and Coordinator for Counterterrorism at the U.S. Department of State from 2017-2021. In this position, he led diplomatic engagements to persuade a dozen key partners in Europe and the Americas to designate Hezbollah as a terrorist organization in its entirety. Concurrently, Ambassador Sales served as acting Under Secretary of State for Civilian Security, Democracy, and Human Rights. Formerly a tenured law professor, Ambassador Sales previously was Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy at the Department of Homeland Security. He also worked on counterterrorism policy in the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Policy. Today, Ambassador Sales is the founder and principal of the consulting firm Fillmore Global Strategies, and a nonresident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council.
Marshall Billingslea served as the special presidential envoy for arms control at the U.S. Department of State, holding the rank of ambassador in 2020. In this capacity, he led arms control negotiations and worked with partners and allies in Europe and Asia on the development and deployment of defensive capabilities. Before joining the State Department, Billingslea served as the assistant secretary for terrorist financing at the U.S. Department of the Treasury, where he built international coalitions and led U.S. efforts to counter illicit financial activities around the globe. In 2018, he was selected as president of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF)—the global anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing body—and co-chaired the global Counter-ISIS Finance Group. Today, he is a senior fellow at Hudson Institute, focusing on illicit finance and arms control with the Kleptocracy Initiative.
Douglas London is a retired, decorated, 34-year veteran of the Central Intelligence Agency’s Clandestine Service. London has served as Senior Operations Officer, Chief of Station and CIA’s Counterterrorism Chief for South and Southwest Asia. He served primarily in the Middle East, South and Central Asia, and Africa, with senior management positions for the Near East, Counterterrorism, Counterintelligence, Iran and Cyber operations. He is also a Non-resident fellow at the Middle East Institute, and is author of the book The Recruiter: Spying and the Lost Art of American Intelligence, concerning the CIA’s post 9/11 transformation.
Show Notes
Reference Documents
- CIA Terrorism Review (December 1983): Risk of further Iranian terror operations
- CIA Terrorism Review (March 1986): Hezbollah links to Dawa
- CIA Terrorism Review (December 1987): Training camp in Janta, Lebanon
- CIA Terrorism Review (May 1997): Bahraini Hezbollah safe house in Kuwait
- Ahmed Ibrahim al-Mughassil: State Department Rewards for Justice, State Department Designation, Superseding Indictment
- U.S. Department of Defense: Annual Report on the Military Power of Iran (2010)
- U.S. Treasury Department Designation: Ali Mussa Daqduq al-Musawi (November 2012)
- U.S. Treasury Department Designation: Khalil Harb (August 2013)
- U.S. Treasury Department: Treasury and the Terrorist Financing Targeting Center Partner Together to Sanction Hizballah’s Senior Leadership (May 2018)
- U.S. Treasury Department: Treasury Sanctions Network Financing Houthi Aggression and Instability in Yemen (June 2021)
- Bahrain Designates Sixteen Hezbollah Associates as Terrorists (August 2021)
- U.S. Treasury Department: Treasury Sanctions International Financial Networks Supporting Terrorism (September 2021)
- U.S. Treasury Department: The United States and Qatar Take Coordinated Action Against Hizballah Financiers (September 2021)
- U.S. Treasury Department: Treasury Sanctions Oil Shipping Network Supporting IRGC-QF and Hizballah (November 2022)
Lebanese Hezbollah Interactive Map
- Six Kuwait Sites Bombed
- Saudi Embassy in Beirut Attacked
- Hezbollah Attempts Assassination of Kuwaiti Emir
- Hezbollah Members Arrested in Bahraini Crackdown
- Khobar Towers Bombed
- Thirteen Bahrainis and Two Iraqis Arrested for Suspected Ties to Terrorism
- Manama Sites Bombed
- United Arab Emirates Hezbollah Cell Arrested
- Ahmed Ibrahim al-Mughassil Arrested and Extradited
- Bahraini Hezbollah Cell Arrested for Plotting a "Series of Dangerous Bombings"
- Gulf Cooperation Council Designates Hezbollah as a Terrorist Organization
- Bahrain Designates Sixteen Hezbollah Associates as Terrorists
- Hezbollah Cell Arrested in Kuwait
Relevant Reading
- Chapter 7 & Chapter 10 of Hezbollah: The Global Footprint of Lebanon’s Party of God by Matthew Levitt
- "Hezbollah’s Regional Activity in Support of Iran’s Proxy Networks" by Matthew Levitt
- "The Evolution of Shi’a Insurgency in Bahrain" by Michael Knights and Matthew Levitt
- "Hezbollah’s Pivot Toward the Gulf" by Matthew Levitt
- "Anatomy of a Bombing" by Matthew Levitt
- "Iranian and Hezbollah Threats to Saudi Arabia: Past Precedents" by Matthew Levitt
- "Hezbollah in Iraq: A Little Help Can Go a Long Way" by Matthew Levitt and Nadav Pollak
Audio Sources
Episode 8: Hezbollah Assassinations Unit 121
Hezbollah buys grassroots support in Lebanon where and when it can, but the group turns to intimidation and even murder when a vocal opponent can’t be bought. Hezbollah’s elite, highly-secretive Unit 121 is the group’s death squad, which carries out assassinations of Lebanese politicians, military and law enforcement officers, and intellectuals who oppose the group’s illicit activities. This is no rogue unit–officials say Unit 121 operates under the direct orders of senior Hezbollah leadership.
Download a transcript of this episode.
Guests
Monika Borgmann is a German-Lebanese award-winning documentary filmmaker and Co-Director of UMAM Documentation and Research, a Lebanon-based nonprofit cultural organization that archives and publicizes documents, books, films, magazines, newspapers, and other material from Lebanese history. Borgmann directed documentary films Tadmor (2016) and Massacre (2005). She is the widow of Lebanese anti-Hezbollah activist and filmmaker Lokman Slim, who was assassinated in 2021.
Joby Warrick has been a reporter at the Washington Post since 1996. He has served with the Post’s investigative and national security teams, and currently writes about the Middle East, terrorism, and weapons proliferation. He is the author of three nonfiction books, including his 2021 book Red Line: The Unraveling of Syria and America's Race to Destroy the Most Dangerous Arsenal in the World, the 2016 Pulitzer Prize winning Black Flags: The Rise of ISIS, and The Triple Agent.
David Schenker is the Taube Senior Fellow at The Washington Institute and director of the Linda and Tony Rubin Program on Arab Politics. Confirmed by the Senate on June 5, 2019, he served as Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs through January 2021. From 2006-2019, Schenker was director of the Program on Arab Politics at The Washington Institute. From 2002 to 2006, Schenker served in the Office of the Secretary of Defense as Levant country director, the Pentagon's top policy aide on the Arab nations of the Levant. He is the author of the 2017 Institute study, Beyond Islamists and Autocrats: Prospects for Political Reform Post Arab Spring and 2013 study No Good Outcome: How Israel Could be Drawn into the Syrian Conflict.
Show Notes
Reference Documents
- Washington Post: "Man convicted in 2005 assassination of former Lebanese prime minister was part of a Hezbollah hit squad, officials say"
- Special Tribunal for Lebanon: Sentencing Judgment for Hassan Habib Merhi and Hussin Hassan Obeissi
- New York Times: "Prominent Lebanese Critic of Hezbollah is Killed"
- Human Rights Watch: Lebanon: "Flawed Investigations of Politically-Sensitive Murders"
Lebanese Hezbollah Interactive Map
- Rafik Hariri Assassinated
- Salim Ayyash and Four Others Indicted for Hariri Assassination
- Francois al-Hajj Assassinated
- Hezbollah Seizes Control of West Beirut
- New Zealand Designated Hezbollah’s Military Wing as a Terrorist Organization
- Wissam al-Hassan Assassinated
- Mohamad Chatah Killed in VBIED Attack
- Hezbollah Critic Lokman Slim Found Shot Dead in Hezbollah-Controlled Southern City
- Wissam Eid Assassinated
Relevant Reading
- Chapters 1 and 12 of Hezbollah: The Global Footprint of Lebanon’s Party of God by Matthew Levitt
- "Saad’s Sad Goodbye: Hariri Leaves Lebanese Politics" by David Schenker
- "The Lebanon Human Rights Report: Punting on Accountability?" by David Schenker
- Middle East Matters, Episode One: "The Murder of Lokman Slim: Justice Delayed in Lebanon" by Hanin Ghaddar
- "Trends in Iranian External Assassination, Surveillance, and Abduction Plots" by Matthew Levitt
Audio Sources