• Why Doesn't the EU Call Hezbollah a Terror Group?

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Mon Aug 21 19:02:25 2023
    XPost: soc.history.war.misc, sci.military.naval, alt.law-enforcement
    XPost: or.politics

    from https://www.newsweek.com/why-doesnt-eu-call-hezbollah-terror-group-opinion-1818655

    Why Doesn't the EU Call Hezbollah a Terror Group? | Opinion
    ARSEN OSTROVSKY AND MATTHIJS SCHÜSSLER
    ON 8/10/23 AT 7:12 AM EDT
    CONTINUE
    Play

    Unmute
    Current Time 0:00
    /
    Duration 0:47


    Quality
    Fullscreen

    Israel Sends Message to Iran and Hezbollah in First-Ever US Army Drill
    Share
    Share on Facebook
    Share on Twitter
    Share on LinkedIn
    Share on Reddit
    Share on Flipboard
    Share via Email
    Comments
    OPINION
    HEZBOLLAH
    IRAN
    EUROPEAN UNION
    TERRORISM

    During a debate on the crisis situation in Lebanon last month, the
    European Parliament, for the first time, adopted a resolution calling
    for the European Union to add the whole of Hezbollah to its list of
    banned terrorist organizations.

    This welcome call came almost 10 years to the day after the EU added Hezbollah's so-called "military wing" to its terror list. That came in
    the wake of the group's 2012 suicide bus bombing in Burgas, Bulgaria,
    which killed five Israeli tourists and a Bulgarian driver.

    In the period since, several European countries, including Germany, the
    United Kingdom, the Czech Republic, Austria, among others, have taken
    the principled decision to ban Hezbollah in its entirety. The Arab
    League and Gulf Cooperation Council have done the same. The United
    States has also proscribed Hezbollah in full, and a recent bipartisan resolution reiterated a long-standing call on the EU to designate the
    whole group as a terrorist organization.

    Hezbollah Supporters
    Shiite Muslim supporters of Hezbollah attend a gathering to commemorate
    Ashura, a 10-day period during the Islamic month of Muharram to remember
    and mourn the seventh century killing of Prophet Mohammed's grandson
    Imam Hussein, in the southern suburbs of Beirut on July 29.
    ANWAR AMRO/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
    SUBSCRIBE NOW FROM JUST $1 >
    So, why does the EU still maintain an artificial distinction between Hezbollah's so-called "military" and "political" wings, allowing the
    group to continue operating virtually unfettered across Europe?

    In case one needs a refresher, Hezbollah is a Lebanese-based jihadist
    terrorist organization, funded, armed, and serving entirely at the best
    of the Islamic Republic of Iran, which provides the group with some $700 million per year in funding.

    Hezbollah's primary goal is not only the elimination of the State of
    Israel, but of Jews worldwide. Only a few days ago, Hezbollah
    Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah reiterated that the entire Middle
    East will not rest until the "cancerous gland" that is Israel is removed.

    However, Hezbollah is not only a direct threat to Israel, but also a
    very real threat to the EU as well. There is a long history of terror
    and terror-related activities carried out against European targets. In
    addition to the Burgas bus bombing, in recent years, Hezbollah has
    carried out operations in Greece, Cyprus, Belgium, France, Italy, and
    Germany.

    SIGN UP FOR NEWSWEEK’S EMAIL UPDATES >
    READ MORE
    If Iranians Are Nostalgic, It Isn't for the Shah's Brutality
    America's Awkward History With Coups
    The U.S. and Russia Test Each Other in Syria
    To help underwrite their terrorist activities, Hezbollah operates an
    extensive global narco-terrorism network, spanning from Latin American
    to Europe. According to Europol's June 2022 European Union Terrorism
    Situation and Trend Report, "Hezbollah has been using the EU as a base
    for fundraising, recruitment and criminal activities from which they
    obtain significant profits."

    Hezbollah is now sending fighters to support Russia, in its relentless
    war of aggression against Ukraine, and since the conclusion of the 2006
    war with Israel, Hezbollah is estimated to have amassed more than
    150,000 mostly Iranian-made rockets, aimed at the heart of the Jewish
    state, in flagrant violation of UN Security Council Resolution 1701.

    In addition, Hezbollah has also become a major backer of the Assad
    regime in Syria, where they have sent fighters and have used as a base
    to receive weapons from the IRGC in Iran, contrary to UN and EU policy
    and regulations. In this regard, it should also be noteworthy, that last month's European Parliament resolution that called to designate
    Hezbollah in full as a terrorist entity, also called to add the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps to its list of banned terrorist organizations.

    In its 2019 decision to add Hezbollah's "political wing" to its list of proscribed terrorist organizations, Britain's Home Secretary Sajid Javid
    said the UK came to a realization that "we are no longer able to
    distinguish between their already banned military wing and the political party."

    As far back as 2004, when Netherlands became the first country in Europe
    to designate Hezbollah as a terrorist group in its entirety, Dutch
    intelligence determined that "Hezbollah's political and terrorist wings
    are controlled by one coordinating council," and "this means that there
    is indeed a link between these parts of the organization."

    In case Brussels has any doubts, they need only listen to Hezbollah
    leadership itself, with Naim Qassem, Hezbollah's deputy leader,
    reaffirming "Hezbollah has a single leadership," reinforcing that "the
    same leadership that directs the parliamentary and government work also
    leads jihad actions in the struggle against Israel."

    The EU's intransigent refusal to designate Hezbollah a terrorist
    organization in full essentially boils down to the preposterous argument
    that doing so would somehow destabilize the domestic situation within
    Lebanon. France is leading this position because of its historical
    connection to the country.

    But here is a newsflash: Lebanon is already an economic basket case,
    where the majority of people live in abject poverty, in large part due
    to the rampant corruption and the omnipresence of Hezbollah, which is effectively running a parallel state within a state.

    According to a June 2023 report by the International Monetary Fund, in
    the four years since the beginning of the economic meltdown, the
    Lebanese economy has contracted by about 40 percent, the lira has lost
    98 percent of its value and inflation has been in triple digits.
    Meanwhile, Hezbollah continues to profit from Lebanon's financial crisis
    making it, according to Forbes, the richest terror organization in the
    world, amassing a fortune of more than $1 billion.

    In short, the EU's ongoing refusal has only further emboldened
    Hezbollah, providing the whole group legitimacy, while giving Iran a
    stronger foothold in Europe. Hezbollah is a genocidal terrorist group,
    not a rational actor that has Lebanon's best interests at heart. It is
    not only naïve, but foolish and reckless to believe they can be reasoned
    with.

    It is long past time the EU designates the entire group as a terrorist organization. Doing so will make Europe, Lebanon, and the Middle East
    safer, plus deliver a major blow against Iran's malign influence in the
    region and Europe.

    Arsen Ostrovskyis a human rights attorney and CEO of The International
    Legal Forum, a global network of lawyers and activists combating
    antisemitism and terror in the legal arena. You can follow him on
    Twitter at: @Ostrov_A.

    Matthijs Schüssler is the Executive Director of ELNET EU & NATO, a non-partisan policy organization dedicated to strengthening relations
    between Europe and Israel. You can follow ELNET on Twitter at @elnetwork_eu.

    The views expressed in this article are the writers' own.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)