The Lebanese government on Aug. 5 authorized its army to draw up a plan to restrict weapons across the country to six official security agencies by year’s end, a move that would effectively dismantle Hezbollah, the Iran-backed Shiite Muslim terrorist group that operates independently of the state.
The Aug. 5 decision followed a July visit to Lebanon by U.S. envoy Tom Barrack, who has called for disarming the Iran-backed group.
“The Hezbollah disarmament agreement is something that is so internal,” he said.
“Remember America has Hezbollah as a foreign terrorist organization. So we have no skin in the game in discussing anything with Hezbollah. That’s not where we’re at. We’re discussing with the nation state, your government, how we can help.”
“[The group was] estimated in 2024 to have up to 50,000 armed combatants, divided between full-time and reserve personnel,” the CIA stated.
The State Department designated it as a terrorist group in 2014.
The group and its allies hold nearly half the seats in Lebanon’s parliament. The group has also held Cabinet positions since 2005.
In a televised speech on Aug. 5, Hezbollah leader Naim Kassem rejected calls for his group to lay down its weapons.
“We don’t accept the U.S. demands, and we don’t accept any timeline for disarmament,” he said.
Wahbi, the IDF stated, was a terrorist “responsible for intelligence in Hezbollah’s ‘Radwan Force’ Battalion” who was killed near Mahrouna in southern Lebanon.

“The terrorist was involved in efforts to rebuild Hezbollah and weapons transfers,” the IDF stated. “These activities constitute a blatant violation of the understandings between Israel and Lebanon.”
“[Hammoudi was] responsible for Hezbollah’s anti-tank missile array in the Bint Jbeil sector,” directing multiple anti-tank missile attacks toward Israel, it stated. He was killed near Kounine, Lebanon.
The attacks killed 39 people and wounded more than 3,400. Many lost fingers or hands, had eye injuries, or suffered severe wounds to their abdomens.
The two main theories initially put forward by analysts were that threat actors exploited a flaw in the batteries for the pagers or that they planted and then triggered explosive charges added to these devices.
“Netanyahu confirmed [on Nov. 10] that he greenlighted the pager operation in Lebanon,” the prime minister’s spokesperson, Omer Dostri, said on Nov. 11.







