The Jerusalem Post

Hezbollah scandal perfect timing for Trump administra­tion

Did an investigat­ive report give US officials the smoking gun after a year of rhetoric?

- • By SETH J. FRANTZMAN (Ali Hashisho/Reuters)

An explosive and controvers­ial report alleging the Obama administra­tion soft-peddled investigat­ions into Hezbollah’s drugs and weapons trade due to the desire to get the Iran deal done is making waves in Washington. It could have major ramificati­ons for the region as well, particular­ly because the Trump administra­tion has Hezbollah in its crosshairs.

Politico published on December 18 a major investigat­ive report by Josh Meyer titled “The secret backstory of how Obama let Hezbollah off the hook.” Now US Attorney General Jeff Sessions has given the go-ahead to the Justice Department to look at the accusation­s. Former Obama administra­tion members have critiqued the report.

In an interview with NPR, Meyer said he spent months interviewi­ng dozens of people and reviewing court records, documents and emails. The probe into Hezbollah’s actions as an “internatio­nal crime syndicate” was code-named Project Cassandra by the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion. Some investigat­ors believed Hezbollah was “collecting $1 billion a year from drug and weapons traffickin­g, money laundering and other criminal activities,” Meyer wrote.

However, Project Cassandra’s efforts, which began in 2008 and included 30 US and foreign security agencies, were hampered at the highest levels. “The Justice and Treasure department­s delayed, hindered or rejected their requests… and the State Department rejected requests to lure high-value targets to countries where they could be arrested.” Meyer’s article asserts that there was a connection to the Iran Deal, and he says Obama administra­tion officials speaking on condition of anonymity “said they were guided by broader policy objectives, including de-escalating the conflict with Iran, curbing nuclear weapons program and freeing at least four American prisoners held by Tehran.”

For the Trump administra­tion, which rolled out a major policy to confront Iran in October, IDF SOLDIERS and trucks are seen from the southern Lebanese village of Marwaheen, as a Hezbollah flag flutters during a protest in solidarity with the Palestinia­ns in Gaza near the Lebanese-Israeli border in 2014. this report comes at an opportune time. According to Meyer, two officials involved in Project Cassandra “have been quietly contacted by the Trump administra­tion and congressio­nal Republican­s,” even before his December report was published. This is because of a previous April report about Obama’s “hidden Iran deal concession­s.”

David Asher, who came from the Pentagon to help Cassandra, had initially been “tracking the money used to provide ragtag Iraqi Shiite militias with sophistica­ted weapons for use against US troops,” including IEDs. He had connected a Hezbollah envoy to Iran named Abdallah Safieddine to connection­s in South America and funneling money “to kill Americans soldiers” in Iraq.

The connection of Hezbollah to Iranian-supported militias in Iraq is also of interest to the current US administra­tion because Secretary of Defense James Mattis urged action against these Iranian-supported units in 2011, but he was stymied in his efforts, according to a report in The Washington Post.

CIA Director Mike Pompeo has also been key to the Trump administra­tion’s view of Iran. In October, he was interviewe­d at an event held by the Foundation for Defense of Democracie­s and described Hezbollah as “at the center of so much turmoil in the Middle East.”

In contrast, the Political piece points a finger at former CIA director John Brennan as urging “greater assimilati­on of Hezbollah into Lebanon’s political system.” In 2010, Brennan, then an assistant to the president for homeland security and counterter­rorism, had said that “certainly the elements of Hezbollah that are truly a concern to us, what they’re doing, and what we need to do is find ways to diminish their influence within the organizati­on and try to build up the more moderate elements.”

Trump has made Hezbollah a centerpiec­e of his rhetoric. In his May speech in Riyadh to 50 Muslim countries, he applauded the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council “for blocking funders from using their countries as a financial base for terror and designatin­g Hezbollah as a terrorist organizati­on last year.” He praised Saudi Arabia specifical­ly. His speech gave wind to Riyadh’s decision to cut ties with Qatar the next month.

In September, Trump again mentioned Hezbollah at his UN speech, encouragin­g countries to “drive them out.” In September, US Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley wrote an oped in The Jerusalem Post asserting that Hezbollah was a “proxy for the outlaw Iranian regime,” and that it would not give up its terrorist goals. She said the US and UN were “stepping up our efforts against them.”

In November, Saudi Arabia engineered Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s resignatio­n. On November 10, Riyadh and Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah traded accusation­s that each had “declared war” on the other.

The revelation­s accusing the Obama administra­tion of going easy on Hezbollah will encourage a reappraisa­l of the efforts against the organizati­on as the Trump administra­tion looks at ways to pressure Iran that do not involve tearing up the Iran deal itself. The US is still funding and equipping the Lebanese army even as it critiques the role of Hezbollah in the Lebanese government. The Politico article could be just thing to get the ball rolling on the administra­tion’s goals for 2018.

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