Middle East

Hezbollah Chief Says Any Attack on Iran Also Targets Group

Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem said on Monday that any attack on the group’s backer Tehran would also be an attack on the militants, and warned that any new war on Iran would ignite the region.

Last week, President Donald Trump said a US “armada” was heading toward the Gulf and that Washington was watching Iran closely after a bloody crackdown on protesters.

He had appeared to step back from military intervention, but has insisted it remains an option.

Speaking in a televised address to supporters at a solidarity rally for Iran, Qassem said Hezbollah and its backer were facing an “aggression that does not distinguish between us.”

“A war on Iran this time will ignite the region,” he warned.

“We will choose at that time how to act… but we are not neutral,” he said, adding that “on how we act, these are details that the battle determines, and we will decide according to the interests at stake.”

Iran is Hezbollah’s main supporter, providing it with funding and weapons since its creation in the 1980s.

Qassem said in the past two months, his party had received via mediators “a clear and explicit question” about whether Hezbollah would intervene if the US and Israel went to war with Iran.

He said they sought a “pledge from the party that it would not intervene.”

More than a year of hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah, which largely ended with a November 2024 ceasefire, badly weakened the group, and the Lebanese government has begun implementing a plan to disarm it starting in the south.

New Israeli Strikes

Hezbollah had called on supporters to gather on Monday in its strongholds across Lebanon to express support for Iran “in the face of American-Zionist sabotage and threats.”

Some supporters in Beirut’s southern suburbs held pictures of Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei as well as Hezbollah and Iran flags, while also chanting “death to America.”

Qassem also warned against any attempt to assassinate Khamenei, after Iran and the US both threatened war if their respective leaders were killed.

Any killing of Khamenei would be an “assassination of stability in the region and the world”, Qassem said, adding that Hezbollah considered such a threat “directed at us as well.”

Despite the ceasefire, Israel has kept up regular strikes on what it says are Hezbollah targets and has maintained troops in five south Lebanon locations it deems strategic.

Lebanon’s health ministry said three people were killed on Monday in Israeli strikes — one in the southern city of Tyre and two later in Kfar Rumman near the city of Nabatiyeh.

Hezbollah’s Al-Manar television said the Tyre strike killed Sheikh Ali Noureddine, “who previously worked at Al-Manar channel as a presenter of religious programs.”

Hezbollah’s media office said in a statement that Noureddine was also the imam of Al-Hawsh, in the suburbs of Tyre, calling his killing a “treacherous assassination.”

Lebanese Information Minister Paul Morcos condemned the strike, saying Israeli attacks “do not spare press and media personnel.”

The Israeli army accused Noureddine of having served “as head of an artillery squad” for Hezbollah in the area, and said the other two killed were also Hezbollah operatives.

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