Why Hezbollah Is At the Center of Mideast Fighting

Supporters hold placards at a broadcast of a speech by Hassan Nasrallah, leader of Hezbollah, in Beirut in November.Photographer: Francesca Volpi/Bloomberg

Since Hamas launched a new war with Israel on Oct. 7, the Lebanese militia Hezbollah has expressed solidarity with the Islamist Palestinian group through military action. It has fired missiles, mortars, rockets and explosive drones into northern Israel almost daily, prompting Israel to respond with its own fire. The fighting escalated in late September. Israeli forces assassinated Hezbollah’s long-time leader, Hassan Nasrallah, in an air strike on Beirut Sept. 27.

Shiite Muslims in Lebanon formed what would become Hezbollah — “party of God” — in 1982, in reaction to Israel’s occupation of the country’s south. The movement was inspired by the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Shiite-majority Iran, and Hezbollah is supported and heavily influenced by Iran’s elite Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. (Shiite Muslims and Sunni Muslims each comprise about 30% of Lebanon’s population.) Because it is separate from Lebanon’s military, Hezbollah can attack targets without provoking the reaction such a move by a state would precipitate. Still, Israel and Hezbollah have fought repeated battles, including a war in 2006. Like Hamas, Hezbollah is designated by the US as a terrorist organization. The group is thought to have been behind a number of major attacks on US targets in the 1980s.