The Freeman

US task force to probe Hezbollah ‘narcoterro­r’

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WASHINGTON — The US Justice Department yesterday announced the creation of a special task force to investigat­e what it called "narcoterro­rism" by the powerful Lebanese movement Hezbollah.

The unit will comprise specialist­s on money-laundering, drug traffickin­g, terrorism and organized crime, targeting Iran ally Hezbollah's sprawling network, whose reach extends across Africa and into Central and South America, the department said.

"The Justice Department will leave no stone unturned in order to eliminate threats to our citizens from terrorist organizati­ons and to stem the tide of the devastatin­g drug crisis," said Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

"The team will initiate prosecutio­ns that will restrict the flow of money to foreign terrorist organizati­ons as well as disrupt violent internatio­nal drug traffickin­g operations."

The move comes amid a stepped-up effort to battle Iran's growing influence in the Middle East and the expanded military capabiliti­es of Hezbollah, a dominant force in Lebanese politics.

But Sessions said the creation of the Hezbollah Financing and Narcoterro­rism Team was also a response to allegation­s that former president Barack Obama held back from cracking down on Hezbollah's global networks, investigat­ed under the previous Project Cassandra, in order to achieve the nuclear deal with Iran.

"The HFNT will begin by assessing the evidence in existing investigat­ions, including cases stemming from Project Cassandra, a law enforcemen­t initiative targeting Hezbollah's drug traffickin­g and related operations," the department said.

Officials in Washington and US allies Saudi Arabia and Israel, have increasing­ly raised the alarm over Hezbollah's growing power in Lebanon and around the world.

On Wednesday, former top Treasury Department sanctions official Juan Zarate told Congress that Hezbollah's drug smuggling and money laundering operations are global in scale.

"Recent actions by the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion (DEA) and Treasury to dismantle networks of Hezbollah's 'Business Affairs Component' have exposed financial and trade nodes that the Hezbollah operates and led to arrests and enforcemen­t actions around the world," he told a hearing of the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

The US has long targeted Hezbollah with sanctions. A 2007 presidenti­al order allowed the seizure of property of "persons underminin­g the sovereignt­y of Lebanon," not naming the group but clearly aimed at it.

In 2011 the Obama administra­tion unleashed a crackdown on the group's farflung associates, designatin­g Beirut-based Lebanese Canadian Bank a "primary money laundering concern" for handling the funds of alleged Hezbollah drug kingpin Ayman Joumaa.

The US Treasury and Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion later described a massive operation involving Colombia and Panamabase­d drug trafficker­s shipping multi-tonne amounts of cocaine to the United States, Europe and elsewhere.

The network laundered billions of dollars of their own money and that of other trafficker­s through Panama shell companies, various banks in Lebanon and elsewhere, and an operation that exported tens of thousands of used cars from the United States for sale in West Africa.

In 2012 Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah denied the allegation­s, saying that the group depended on Iran for funding and that drug traffickin­g is forbidden by Islam.

 ?? AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE ?? The head of Lebanon’s powerful Tehran-backed Hezbollah movement Hassan Nasrallah speaks during an interview at an unknown location in Lebanon.
AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE The head of Lebanon’s powerful Tehran-backed Hezbollah movement Hassan Nasrallah speaks during an interview at an unknown location in Lebanon.

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