حسن نصرالله

Hassan Nasrallah: The Deception of Resistance and the Sectarian Truth

Hassan Nasrallah: The Deception of Resistance and the Sectarian Truth

Vile sectarianism and empty slogans

To avoid any confusion, we kindly ask that you first read: The definition of sectarianism and sectarian leaders.ـ We are not against any sect or religion, but against those who trade in blood in the name of religion. Read also: Modern Inquisition Tribunals.

Hassan Nasrallah, a Shiite leader, has served as the Secretary-General of Hezbollah since the 1990s. He participated in the resistance against the Israeli occupation in Lebanon. However, he lost all of his resistance history when he joined in killing the Syrian people alongside Russia, Iran, and the regime's army, suppressing the people's revolution and solidifying the tyrannical rule of Bashar al-Assad.

Read also: The sectarian monkeys succeeded in taking control of Syria, but what about the goats?

Birth and upbringing:

Hassan Nasrallah Abdul Karim Nasrallah was born in the southern town of Bazouriya, near the city of Tyre, in 1960. Due to financial hardship and poverty, he moved with his father to Beirut, where he grew up and was raised. Because of the civil war at the time, he returned to his hometown during his secondary school years. He was raised with Marxist ideas due to the orientation of most of the people in his town, but later joined the Shiite Amal movement founded by Musa al-Sadr. Afterward, he began contacting Abbas al-Mousawi, who would later co-found Hezbollah with him. Al-Mousawi then introduced him to Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr, one of the most important Shiite religious scholars, and Nasrallah studied under him, quickly graduating in 1978.

Read also: An overview of criminalizing sectarianism. It is the most important national work in Syria over the past quarter century.

Claims of Resistance.

In 1982, during Nasrallah’s first political experience with the Amal Movement, the Israeli invasion of Lebanon occurred, leading to internal conflicts within the movement. It eventually split into two factions, one of which was more fundamentalist and led by Nasrallah and Mousawi. The splinter group contacted others and established Hezbollah. Initially, Nasrallah had no official position, but was responsible for organizing resistance cells. Over time, he began rising through the ranks of Hezbollah, eventually becoming the executive head in Beirut. He then traveled to Tehran, received support, and returned to continue his work with Hezbollah, eventually becoming the Secretary-General after Mousawi's assassination in 1992. Hezbollah participated in the parliamentary elections, winning some seats in the south. In 2000, Hezbollah's resistance against Israel continued, and the party succeeded in liberating most of the occupied territories by Israel. Following this, Israel withdrew from southern Lebanon, prompting Lebanese voices to call for the disarmament of Hezbollah’s militia. However, Nasrallah strongly opposed and rejected this demand. In 2006, after an attempt to capture Israeli soldiers to free Samir Kuntar, Israel launched an attack on southern Lebanon, leading to heavy bombing. The war continued from July 12, 2006, to August 14 of the same year. During this time, Hezbollah received significant Arab and Islamic support against the occupation, and protests erupted in many Arab capitals in support of Hezbollah’s war against Israel. The war ended with a ceasefire decision (UN Security Council Resolution 1701), which called for Israel’s withdrawal to the Blue Line, the deployment of 15,000 peacekeeping forces, and the cessation of hostilities between the two sides.

Read about the making of stakes in the article: "Burj Al Arab": Scandals andWatch and Hidden Secrets and Symbols.

Revelation of the truth.

After the Lebanon War and the rise in popularity of Nasrallah and his party, along with the admiration and respect they received from various Arab and Islamic circles, the Arab Spring revolutions erupted. The Syrian revolution against the dictator Bashar al-Assad began, and with the regime's violent repression and the daily killing of hundreds of protesters, Hassan Nasrallah and Hezbollah announced their support for the regime's forces against the Syrian revolution. In doing so, Nasrallah personally undermined all the slogans of resistance and struggle, revealing his sectarian face as an agent for the Iranians in Lebanon, helping his ally Bashar al-Assad stay in power to serve Iran's sectarian interests in the region. This shift led all Arab and Islamic circles to turn against Hezbollah and Nasrallah, labeling him a deceiver, a devil, and a supporter of Iranian sectarian interests wearing the mask of resistance.

Read also: هل زيارة البابا للإمارات هي استمرار لأساسيات وسياسات الحروب الصليبية الغربية

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