Nicholas Blanford
Lebanon’s main Islamist party has undergone a profound transformation over the past three decades. Once associated with suicide bombings and hostage-taking, Hezbollah has steadily evolved from an underground movement in 1982 to the dominant political player in Lebanon in 2015. Yet even though Hezbollah was stronger militarily and politically by 2015, it also faced greater challenges than ever before. They ranged from the party’s massive expansion since 2006 to the rising domestic discontent over its refusal to abandon its weapons, which altered the geostrategic balance in the Middle East.
 Hezbollah’s role in the region has been particularly controversial.  The most powerful regional militia, Hezbollah used its vast arsenal to  fight Israel for thirty-four days in 2006. The conflict was Israel’s  longest Middle East war and left no clear winner, although Hezbollah  chief Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah emerged afterwards at the top of  popularity polls across the region. But its armed intervention in Syria,  beginning in 2013, on behalf of President Bashar al Assad deeply  tarnished its image among Sunnis across the region as a champion of  anti-Israel resistance. By 2015, the party’s has expansion in manpower,  military capabilities and funding also produced looser internal controls  and made it more susceptible to corruption and penetration by Israel.
Hezbollah’s role in the region has been particularly controversial.  The most powerful regional militia, Hezbollah used its vast arsenal to  fight Israel for thirty-four days in 2006. The conflict was Israel’s  longest Middle East war and left no clear winner, although Hezbollah  chief Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah emerged afterwards at the top of  popularity polls across the region. But its armed intervention in Syria,  beginning in 2013, on behalf of President Bashar al Assad deeply  tarnished its image among Sunnis across the region as a champion of  anti-Israel resistance. By 2015, the party’s has expansion in manpower,  military capabilities and funding also produced looser internal controls  and made it more susceptible to corruption and penetration by Israel.The movement, created under Iran’s auspices and aid after Israel’s  1982 invasion, reflects the dynamic Shiite dimension of Islamist  politics in the Arab world. Hezbollah was inspired by the teachings of  Iranian revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. It subscribes  to a doctrine known as the velayat-e faqih—or, in Arabic, the wali al-faqih—Khomeini’s  theory of Islamic governance, which bestows guardianship of government  on a senior religious scholar. Iran remains Hezbollah’s chief  ideological, financial, and military supporter. Syria is also a close  ally.
Hezbollah’s core ideological goals are resisting Israel, establishing  an Islamic state in Lebanon, and offering obedience to Iran’s supreme  leader. But Hezbollah has developed a keen sense of realpolitik that  helped shape its political agenda and allowed it to sidestep challenges  to its armed status. It long ago accepted, for example, that an Islamic  state is not appropriate for Lebanon, and it has considered alternative  systems of government.
 Over three decades, Hezbollah's deepening political engagement has  transformed it into the main representative of Lebanon’s Shiites,  the largest of the country’s seventeen recognized sects. In turn, the  movement now needs continued support of the community to ensure its own  survival. Yet the interests of its constituents do not always correspond  to the agenda of Iran’s leaders, to whom Hezbollah is ideologically  beholden. Balancing these rival obligations is a paradox that Hezbollah  is finding ever more difficult to reconcile.
The Beginning
Hezbollah emerged in the wake of Israel’s 1982 invasion of Lebanon,  but its genesis lay in the Shiite religious seminaries of Najaf in  southern Iraq. In the 1960s and 1970s, Lebanese clerical students were  influenced by leading Shiite ideologues such as Mohammed Baqr al Sadr  and Ruhollah Khomeini. Sadr, a founder of the Party of the Islamic Call,  or Hizb al Dawa al Islamiyya, promoted Islamic values as a  counterweight to secularism and the leftist ideologies then attracting  Arab youth. Khomeini achieved prominence with his doctrine of velayat-e faqih.
Lebanese students and teachers in Iraqi seminaries were forced to  return home after President Saddam Hussein cracked down on the Shiite  clerics in the late 1970s. Some then began to preach the ideas of  Khomeini and Sadr to a domestic audience.
By the end of the 1970s, three developments helped create fertile  ground for the eventual emergence of Hezbollah. One factor was the  creation of Amal, the first strong Shiite movement. Amal’s founder was  Musa Sadr, a charismatic Iranian-born cleric who tapped into rising  anger among Shiites over their repression by other Lebanese sects,  particularly Christians and Sunni Muslims. But in 1978, Sadr vanished  during a trip to Libya. After his disappearance, Amal drifted in a more  secular direction under new leadership, to the dismay of the movement’s  Islamists.
The second event was Israel’s first invasion of Lebanon in 1978 in a  bid to expel the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). Israel  installed a security cordon along the border inside Lebanon, which was  controlled by an Israeli-backed militia. It was the first time many  southern Lebanese lived under occupation.
 The third crucial event was the Iranian Revolution in 1979, when the  first modern theocracy replaced the dynastic rule that had prevailed in  Iran for more than 2,500 years. The revolution had an electrifying  effect on Lebanese Shiites in general and on the clerical followers of  Khomeini in particular. Iranian leaders and Lebanese clerics held  lengthy discussions about importing the revolution to Lebanon and  building an armed anti-Israel movement. Among the Lebanese clerics were  Sheikh Sobhi Tufayli, who later became Hezbollah’s first  secretary general, and Abbas Musawi, a preacher from the Bekaa Valley  village of Nabi Sheet. The idea was delayed by an Iranian power struggle  and the beginning of the eight-year war between Iran and Iraq in 1980.
The third crucial event was the Iranian Revolution in 1979, when the  first modern theocracy replaced the dynastic rule that had prevailed in  Iran for more than 2,500 years. The revolution had an electrifying  effect on Lebanese Shiites in general and on the clerical followers of  Khomeini in particular. Iranian leaders and Lebanese clerics held  lengthy discussions about importing the revolution to Lebanon and  building an armed anti-Israel movement. Among the Lebanese clerics were  Sheikh Sobhi Tufayli, who later became Hezbollah’s first  secretary general, and Abbas Musawi, a preacher from the Bekaa Valley  village of Nabi Sheet. The idea was delayed by an Iranian power struggle  and the beginning of the eight-year war between Iran and Iraq in 1980.Then Israel invaded Lebanon in June 1982 to drive the PLO out of  Lebanon. Iran immediately offered assistance, dispatching 5,000  Revolutionary Guards to Syria for deployment in Lebanon. But the main  fighting soon ended, and most of the Iranians returned home. Aided by  Syria, a smaller contingent of Iranians moved into the northern Bekaa  Valley to begin mobilizing and recruiting Shiites into a new anti-Israel  force that was the basis of what became Hezbollah.
By  1983, the nascent Hezbollah’s influence was seeping from the Bekaa  Valley into Beirut’s Shiite suburbs and from there further south toward  the front line of the Israeli occupation. By 1985, Israel, exhausted by  the intensifying resistance campaign, withdrew to a security belt along  the Lebanon-Israel border. Hezbollah—along with Amal and secular local  resistance groups, which played smaller roles—had more success in  pressuring Israel in two years than had the PLO in a decade. Hezbollah  won additional support by providing social welfare services to  lower-class Shiites.
In 1985, Hezbollah formally declared its existence in its “Open  Letter,” a manifesto outlining its identity and agenda. The goals  included driving Israeli forces from south Lebanon as a precursor to the  destruction of the Jewish state and the liberation of Jerusalem.  Hezbollah confirmed that it abided by the orders of “a single wise and  just command” represented by Ayatollah Khomeini, the “rightly guided  imam.”
Hezbollah also rejected Lebanon’s sectarian political system and  instead advocated creation of an Islamic state. At the same time, the  party was careful to emphasize that it did not wish to impose Islam as a  religion on anyone and that other Lebanese should be free to pick their  preferred system of governance.
In formally declaring its existence and goals, Hezbollah emerged from  the shadows and demonstrated that it was not a fleeting aberration of  the civil war but a force determined to endure.
First Phase: Underground
Hezbollah’s evolution falls into five distinct phases. The first was  from 1982 to 1990 and coincided with the chaotic 1975–90 civil war,  during which the Lebanese state had little control. Lebanon was instead  carved into competing fiefdoms dominated by militias and occupying  armies. These were Hezbollah’s wild days, when it could do as it pleased  under Iran’s guidance and Syria’s watchful eye.
The movement became synonymous with extremist attacks, including two  on U.S. embassies in 1983 and 1984. Its deadliest attacks were the  simultaneous truck bombings of the U.S. Marine barracks and the nearby  French Paratroop headquarters, which killed 241 American servicemen and  sixty-eight French soldiers. From 1984, more than 100 foreigners in  Lebanon were kidnapped. Hezbollah denied responsibility, although some  of its members were later linked with the attacks.
After 1986, Hezbollah dominated the resistance against Israel’s  occupation in south Lebanon. But the party’s growing influence in the  south also brought it into conflict with the rival Amal movement. In  1988, the two factions fought the first in a series of bloody  internecine battles that over the next two years resulted in thousands  of dead and generated an animosity that lingered a quarter-century  later.
Second Phase: Running for Parliament
The second phase was from 1991 to 2000, following the end of  Lebanon’s civil war in 1990. The restoration of state control sparked a  debate within Hezbollah over its future course of action. Hardliners,  represented by Sheikh Tufayli, argued that Hezbollah should not  compromise its ideological agenda regardless of the nation’s changed  circumstances. Others countered that Hezbollah had to adapt to the new  situation to protect its “resistance priority”—the right to confront  Israel’s continued occupation of the south.
 The debate played out over whether Hezbollah should run in the 1992  parliamentary election, the first in twenty years. Joining parliament  would strengthen Hezbollah’s standing in Lebanon, but it would also  flout its 1985 manifesto that rejected a sectarian political system.  Pragmatists won after receiving the blessing of Ayatollah Ali Khameini,  Iran’s supreme leader, to participate in the elections. Hezbollah won  eight parliamentary seats.
 Hezbollah also went through a leadership change. A few months before  the 1992 election, Hezbollah secretary general Sayyed Abbas Musawi was  assassinated in an Israeli helicopter ambush. He was replaced by his  protégé, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, a 32-year-old cleric.
 Under  Nasrallah, Hezbollah reorganized, adding new bodies to handle its  military, political, and social work. It expanded its social welfare  activities nationwide to sustain its popular support within the Shiite  community. It also launched a television station, Al Manar, as the  flagship of its propaganda arm, and opened a media relations office.  Hezbollah even began a dialogue with other factions and religious  representatives, including Christians.
 Hezbollah’s newfound pragmatism did not represent an ideological  softening or a decision to exchange Islamic militancy for a share of  Lebanon’s political space. Hezbollah was instead adapting to postwar  circumstances to safeguard the resistance. Shortly after the 1992  election, Nasrallah explained, “Our participation in the elections and  entry into [parliament] do not alter the fact that we are a resistance  party.”
 Hezbollah’s resistance efforts actually intensified after 1992. Its  hit-and-run guerrilla tactics claimed ever-higher Israeli casualties. In  1993 and 1996, Israel responded with air and artillery blitzes against  Lebanon in failed attempts to dent Hezbollah’s campaign.
 The late 1990s were Hezbollah’s “golden years.” Hezbollah’s military  exploits won it admirers across the Arab and Islamic worlds and earned  the respect of all Lebanese, even those inclined to view the Shiite  party with suspicion. Under growing pressure from Hezbollah, Israel  finally ended its occupation in May 2000, the first time that the Jewish  state had ceded occupied territory through force of Arab arms.
Third Phase: Confrontation
 The third phase was from 2000 to 2005. With Israel’s withdrawal,  Hezbollah’s reputation had never been higher. But its victory was  Pyrrhic. A growing number of Lebanese began questioning why Hezbollah  needed to keep arms. Hezbollah countered by citing minor territorial  disputes and the number of Lebanese still detained in Israeli prisons.  It claimed its weapons were a vital part of Lebanon’s defense. Hezbollah  had to make sure that the Israelis did not come back. Many Lebanese  accused Hezbollah of serving an Iranian—rather than Lebanese—agenda. But  Hezbollah still enjoyed the political cover afforded by Syria, which  continued to endorse the party’s armed status.
The third phase was from 2000 to 2005. With Israel’s withdrawal,  Hezbollah’s reputation had never been higher. But its victory was  Pyrrhic. A growing number of Lebanese began questioning why Hezbollah  needed to keep arms. Hezbollah countered by citing minor territorial  disputes and the number of Lebanese still detained in Israeli prisons.  It claimed its weapons were a vital part of Lebanon’s defense. Hezbollah  had to make sure that the Israelis did not come back. Many Lebanese  accused Hezbollah of serving an Iranian—rather than Lebanese—agenda. But  Hezbollah still enjoyed the political cover afforded by Syria, which  continued to endorse the party’s armed status.In February 2005, Rafik Hariri, a former prime minister of Lebanon,  was assassinated in a truck bomb explosion. Many Lebanese blamed  Damascus, and roughly one-quarter of the country’s population took to  the streets in protest. Three months later, Syria pulled its troops out  of Lebanon, ending three decades of military occupation.
The sudden loss of Syrian cover compelled Hezbollah to take another  step deeper into Lebanese politics to defend its “resistance priority.”  It agreed to an alliance with its longtime Amal rival and with the Free  Patriotic Movement, a Christian party led by former General Michel Aoun.
After the 2005 parliamentary election, Hezbollah joined the  government for the first time. Yet its participation did not defuse the  core issue. Over the following months, Lebanese politics grew  increasingly rancorous over Hezbollah’s arms. It was the single most  divisive national issue.
Fourth Phase: War and Rebuilding
The fourth phase ran from 2006 to 2012  and included Hezbollah’s  biggest military gamble. On July 12, 2006, its militia abducted two  Israeli soldiers along the border. The audacious act triggered a  devastating month-long war with Israel. Hezbollah fought the Israeli  army to a standstill in south Lebanon and declared a “divine  victory”—but at a high cost.
 More than 1,100 Lebanese died in the war, which also caused billions  of dollars of damage. In the face of intense domestic criticism,  Hezbollah walked out of the Lebanese cabinet in November 2006. A month  later, Hezbollah tried to force the government to resign by organizing a  mass protest in central Beirut. The government stood its ground, but  political paralysis gripped Lebanon.
Tensions between Hezbollah and the central government continued. In  2008, the government of Prime Minister Fouad Siniora—son of the slain  leader—announced it intended to shut down Hezbollah’s private  telecommunications network. Hezbollah reacted by staging a brief  takeover of west Beirut, triggering a week of clashes that left more  than 100 people dead and brought the country to the edge of civil war.  The crisis ended with the formation of a new government and the  long-delayed election of a president, Michel Suleiman.
In 2009, Lebanon faced a new crisis when a United Nations  investigation obtained evidence implicating Hezbollah in the  assassination of Rafik Hariri four years earlier. Hezbollah denied the  allegations and claimed that the Dutch-based tribunal investigating the  case was serving the political interests of the United States and  Israel.
The Hariri government refused to abandon its support for the  tribunal. In January 2011, as the tribunal was preparing to issue its  first set of indictments, Hezbollah and its political allies forced a  vote of no confidence in the government. The new government was composed  of Hezbollah and its allies; it was led by Prime Minister Najib Mikati,  a billionaire businessman and political moderate.
Fifth Phase: The Syria Intervention
The fifth phase began in response to turmoil in Syria. In March 2011,  a popular uprising was launched against the Assad regime as the Arab  Spring rippled across the Middle East. Hezbollah initially expected it  to blow over quickly. But by the end of 2011, the uprising had morphed  into a civil war. Within months, Hezbollah began covertly dispatching  fighters to assist the Syrian army against nascent rebel groups.
 In May 2013, Nasrallah admitted that Hezbollah was fully engaged in  the Syria war. He argued that the Syrian opposition was composed of  radical Sunni groups would take their war to Lebanon after defeating  Assad. Many Lebanese were dismayed at the unprecedented military  intervention; it breached the Baabda Declaration of 2012, when Lebanese  leaders agreed to immunize Lebanon from the conflict tearing apart its  larger neighbor.
In May 2013, Nasrallah admitted that Hezbollah was fully engaged in  the Syria war. He argued that the Syrian opposition was composed of  radical Sunni groups would take their war to Lebanon after defeating  Assad. Many Lebanese were dismayed at the unprecedented military  intervention; it breached the Baabda Declaration of 2012, when Lebanese  leaders agreed to immunize Lebanon from the conflict tearing apart its  larger neighbor.Syria’s conflict spilled over into Lebanon too, deepening political  tensions. It contributed to the resignation of Prime Minister Najib  Mikati’s government in March 2013. Tammam Salam, scion of a notable  Beirut family, was appointed prime minister in April 2013, but it took a  tortuous ten months for him to form a cabinet. Lebanon faced another  political stalemate when its parliament repeatedly failed to elect a new  president after Suleiman’s term ended in May 2014. In November 2014,  parliament then voted to extend its term for a second time, putting off  elections for two years, seven months.
Meanwhile, Hezbollah’s intervention in Syria enraged Sunnis across  the region—and produced a backlash. In 2013 and 2014, Sunni radical  groups carried out more than a dozen car bombings, most of them suicide  attacks, in Shiite areas of Lebanon. Almost 100 people were killed, some  900 were wounded. The emergence of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria  and other brutal Sunni militias dampened some of the criticism directed  at Hezbollah. Shiites and some other Lebanese minorities viewed the  party as a protector against Sunni extremists. 
Still, by 2015 the rate of Hezbollah casualties was the highest in  the party’s history--with no end to the Syrian war in sight. The looming  question was how long Hezbollah could afford to remain so heavily  engaged in Syria.
Chief Allies
Iran was Hezbollah’s main financial, military, and logistical  supplier, and Iran’s supreme leader was the party’s ultimate source of  authority. Under the late President Hafez al Assad, Syria was  Hezbollah’s protector and supervisor. Since Assad’s son Bashar al Assad  took over in 2000, Syria became an even closer strategic ally. Syria was  the vital geostrategic linchpin connecting Iran to Hezbollah. It  provided strategic depth and a conduit for the transfer of arms, which  explained the heavy effort by Iran and Hezbollah to preserve Assad’s  regime.
   The Palestinian Hamas movement and Palestinian Islamic Jihad have  been allies of Hezbollah since the early 1990s. Both groups benefited  from Iranian financial and material patronage. But Hamas, a Sunni  movement, did not share the Shiite ideology of Iran and Hezbollah,  making Hamas and Hezbollah uncomfortable bedfellows beyond a shared  hostility toward Israel.
Amal and the Free Patriotic Movement, both secular Lebanese political  entities, have been allied with Hezbollah since 2005 and 2006,  respectively. Hezbollah also maintained alliances with smaller  pro-Syrian factions and individuals, Islamist groups, and Palestinian  groups.
The Future
As of early 2015, Hezbollah was arguably the most formidable  non-state military actor in the world. It was also the most powerful  political force in Lebanon through the force majeure of its armed wing.  It had two seats in Salam’s government.
Yet down the road, Hezbollah also faces grave challenges that derive  from its sometimes conflicting roles as Iran’s surrogate and, at the  same time, the chief representative of Lebanon’s Shiites. Iran has  helped transform Hezbollah into a robust and unique military force that  serves as a component of Iranian deterrence. Hezbollah is also, however,  answerable to the needs and interests of its domestic constituency. The  paradox is increasingly hard to reconcile, as shown by Hezbollah’s  involvement in the Syria war.
By 2015, Hezbollah’s public standing had also declined somewhat since  the heady days of the 1990s. Hezbollah’s refusal to disarm was at the  heart of Lebanon’s festering political divide. Over the years, Hezbollah  has been sucked ever deeper into the political mire. It considered its  shift into the fractious world of Lebanese politics an unfortunate  necessity to better defend its “resistance priority.”
The Arab Spring presented another set of difficulties for Hezbollah.  It supported uprisings that toppled the leaders of Tunisia, Egypt, and  Libya, but it was caught off guard by the nationwide Syrian protests.  Its belated intervention in Syria to aid the Assad regime eroded the  party’s popularity among Sunnis, who make up the bulk of the Syrian  opposition, and in the Arab world as the regional tensions increased  between Shiite Iran and the Sunni Arab states led by Saudi Arabia.
Internally, Hezbollah is grappling with the new – and insidious –  threat of corruption. Hezbollah has grown extensively since 2006,  militarily, financially and politically, which has resulted in a  sprawling bureaucracy with looser internal control mechanisms and a  reduced sense of personal security among the cadres compared to two  decades ago. That has opened the door not only to embezzlement and theft  within the party but also made it vulnerable to penetration by Israeli  intelligence agencies. Hezbollah has amassed armaments, communications  technology and combat capabilities that pose a genuine challenge to  Israel in the event of a future war. But the emergence of corrupt  practices and the evident difficulty the party’s leadership has in  curbing the phenomenon represents the single gravest danger to Hezbollah  in the long-term.
For now, however, Hezbollah will remain a powerful political player  on the Lebanese scene for the foreseeable future regardless of  developments in Syria. But the challenge for Hezbollah of balancing its  ideological and logistical obligations to Iran and its political and  social duties to Lebanon’s Shiite community is a paradox that will only  grow more difficult in the years ahead.
Nicholas Blanford is the Beirut correspondent  for The Christian Science Monitor and a defense and security analyst for  IHS-Jane’s. He is the author of  Killing Mr. Lebanon: The  Assassination of Rafik Hariri and Its Impact on the Middle East (2006)  and Warriors of God: Inside Hezbollah’s Thirty-Year Struggle against  Israel (2011).
This article is an excerpt from "The Islamists Are Coming: Who They Really Are." Click here for the full article.
Photo credits: Nasrallah via leader.ir; Khamenei and Khoemeini via Khamenei.ir; Hezbollah logo via Wikimedia Commons
