News ID: 221279
Publish Date: 15 February 2014 - 08:38
On the 6th anniversary of the martyrdom of Hajj Radwan

Who was Imad Moghnieh

Navideshahed- It is six years now since the assassination of top Hezbollah operative Imad Moghnieh in Damascus. Moghnieh was a key member of Jihad, an earlier, rougher incarnation of Hezbollah which pushed Western forces out of civil-war Lebanon in the 80s. He then became a founding member of Hezbollah and took part in its campaign to drive out the Israeli occupation from most of the south by 2000.

Imad Fayez Moghnieh known as al-Hajj Radwan was a senior member of Lebanon’s Hezbollah and a principal leader and operative for a number of years within Hezbollah’s military, intelligence, and security apparatuses. He died martyr at the age of 45, on the 12th of February, 2008. His martyrdom became a beacon to the resistance fighters, just as his life, biography and deeds were.
Imad was brought up by modest and spiritual parents; their religiosity and love of Ahl-Albait was passed onto him from a young age.
From his childhood through youth to his martyrdom, Imad was a special person, known for his religiosity and piety, jovialness and love for others. His great sense of tolerance and humility with the pious was contrasted with an intense and rugged arrogance and condescension to the enemies of God, the enemies of His Messenger and the enemies of the believers.
Due to difficult living conditions, Fayez Moghnieh’s family moved along with Imad and his brothers to the southern suburbs of Beirut to settle in the town of Shiah, a suburb which became a source for a great number of martyrs and cadres of resistance.
Imad went to Shiah school until the beginning of 1975 when the civil war began in Lebanon. He joined the ranks of Fatah movement at the time to defend the Palestinian resistance and protect his people in the wake of attacks and killings by forces loyal to Israelis. Imad enrolled in one of the elite units of the Fatah movement, soon to rise rapidly in its ranks, although he was the youngest among his peers at the time. He received a great deal of training and combat skills in the ranks of this unit. When he was later put in charge of one of Fatah’s centers, he drew a large number of young people to the unit, who rallied around him and acted under his orders though they were mostly older than him at the time.
Despite his responsibilities in the Fatah movement, and despite the war and its almost daily battles, Imad clung to his religious commitment and was a regular attendant at Shiah mosque and a committed listener to the sermons of its preachers and classes of its teachers, among them Ayatollah Mohammad Hussein Fadlallah, who came to the area from al-Naba’a locality in East Beirut, in the wake Phalange Party attacks on its people.
Imad headed a cell of faithful people that provided protection and escort for Ayatollah Fadlallah, after the failed assassination attempt on his life in 1980, until the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982, when he, along with a number of his brethren were among the first to confront the advancing Israeli Army in Khaldeh area.
He remained in Beirut during its siege and the period that followed, when the Israeli Army moved into a number of Beirut’s neighborhoods. He was among the Mujahideen who silently worked against the Israelis, inflicting them with heavy losses and casualties which they had to carry with them as they were forced to retreat out of Beirut.
Not settling for its withdrawal from Beirut, Imad pursued the Israeli forces into the south and was among the initial founders of resistance action against Israel. He moved with his friends to join the ranks of the resistance since its founding beginnings in 1982, when Hajj Radwan-known as a commander, planner, military and security engineer- was responsible for the planning and execution of many jihad operations against the occupying Israelis.
Martyr Hajj Radwan was a forerunner among brothers and martyrs who achieved many resistance victories in southern Lebanon throughout the years of Israeli occupation. He was the victor and the Israelis lost in the many confrontation rounds he engaged them in. He developed a resistance combat school that was to become a model, whether by planning, implementation, equipage, or knowledge of and work on enemy capabilities and weaknesses.
The Americans accused Hajj Radwan of masterminding their humiliating exit from Lebanon, along with the French forces, which invaded Lebanon in the framework of a multinational force to replace the Israeli occupation forces in Beirut. According to U.S. intelligence, Hajj Radwan was behind the bombings against the Americans in Lebanon, including the simultaneous bombing of the Marines in 1983, which killed 241 Americans, and the French paratroopers Camp that killed at least 63 French paratroopers.
This led to the collapse of the U.S. plan in Lebanon, as the Americans were forced to retreat from the Lebanese arena.
Thus, strength-building was conducive to the goal of victory. This led eventually to victory in the year 2000; at the time, he was the field commander against a first time ever retreat by the Israeli Forces from Lebanon, the first unconditional Israeli retreat from Arab land since the establishment of Zionist entity.
He also commandeered the July 2006 war victory, a heroic epic that totally transformed modern warfare doctrine; a war victory studied in depth by friends and foes alike, who are still working on understanding it, in order to either emulate it or to find ways to confront it.
After his martyrdom, Hajj Radwan deserved the exceptional title of “Leader of the Two Victories”? given to him by Hizbullah Secretary General Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, the May 2000 and the July 2006 victories.
Israel assassinated Hajj Imad Moghnieh at forty five years of age, after many years of jihad achievements and victories during which the Israelis were given a taste of humiliation, disgrace and defeat.
Two brothers preceded Martyr Hajj Radwan to the afterlife, covered with their blood of martyrdom. The first is Jihad, martyred in 1984 and the second is Martyr Hajj Fouad, assassinated in 1995 by an explosive device that targeted him in Sfeir area, in the southern suburbs.

Imad Fayez Moghnieh known as al-Hajj Radwan was a senior member of Lebanon’s Hezbollah and a principal leader and operative for a number of years within Hezbollah’s military, intelligence, and security apparatuses. He died martyr at the age of 45, on the 12th of February, 2008. His martyrdom became a beacon to the resistance fighters, just as his life, biography and deeds were. Imad was brought up by modest and spiritual parents; their religiosity and love of Ahl-Albait was passed onto him from a young age. From his childhood through youth to his martyrdom, Imad was a special person, known for his religiosity and piety, jovialness and love for others. His great sense of tolerance and humility with the pious was contrasted with an intense and rugged arrogance and condescension to the enemies of God, the enemies of His Messenger and the enemies of the believers. Due to difficult living conditions, Fayez Moghnieh’s family moved along with Imad and his brothers to the southern suburbs of Beirut to settle in the town of Shiah, a suburb which became a source for a great number of martyrs and cadres of resistance. Imad went to Shiah school until the beginning of 1975 when the civil war began in Lebanon. He joined the ranks of Fatah movement at the time to defend the Palestinian resistance and protect his people in the wake of attacks and killings by forces loyal to Israelis. Imad enrolled in one of the elite units of the Fatah movement, soon to rise rapidly in its ranks, although he was the youngest among his peers at the time. He received a great deal of training and combat skills in the ranks of this unit. When he was later put in charge of one of Fatah’s centers, he drew a large number of young people to the unit, who rallied around him and acted under his orders though they were mostly older than him at the time. Despite his responsibilities in the Fatah movement, and despite the war and its almost daily battles, Imad clung to his religious commitment and was a regular attendant at Shiah mosque and a committed listener to the sermons of its preachers and classes of its teachers, among them Ayatollah Mohammad Hussein Fadlallah, who came to the area from al-Naba’a locality in East Beirut, in the wake Phalange Party attacks on its people. Imad headed a cell of faithful people that provided protection and escort for Ayatollah Fadlallah, after the failed assassination attempt on his life in 1980, until the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982, when he, along with a number of his brethren were among the first to confront the advancing Israeli Army in Khaldeh area. He remained in Beirut during its siege and the period that followed, when the Israeli Army moved into a number of Beirut’s neighborhoods. He was among the Mujahideen who silently worked against the Israelis, inflicting them with heavy losses and casualties which they had to carry with them as they were forced to retreat out of Beirut. Not settling for its withdrawal from Beirut, Imad pursued the Israeli forces into the south and was among the initial founders of resistance action against Israel. He moved with his friends to join the ranks of the resistance since its founding beginnings in 1982, when Hajj Radwan-known as a commander, planner, military and security engineer- was responsible for the planning and execution of many jihad operations against the occupying Israelis. Martyr Hajj Radwan was a forerunner among brothers and martyrs who achieved many resistance victories in southern Lebanon throughout the years of Israeli occupation. He was the victor and the Israelis lost in the many confrontation rounds he engaged them in. He developed a resistance combat school that was to become a model, whether by planning, implementation, equipage, or knowledge of and work on enemy capabilities and weaknesses. The Americans accused Hajj Radwan of masterminding their humiliating exit from Lebanon, along with the French forces, which invaded Lebanon in the framework of a multinational force to replace the Israeli occupation forces in Beirut. According to U.S. intelligence, Hajj Radwan was behind the bombings against the Americans in Lebanon, including the simultaneous bombing of the Marines in 1983, which killed 241 Americans, and the French paratroopers Camp that killed at least 63 French paratroopers. This led to the collapse of the U.S. plan in Lebanon, as the Americans were forced to retreat from the Lebanese arena. Thus, strength-building was conducive to the goal of victory. This led eventually to victory in the year 2000; at the time, he was the field commander against a first time ever retreat by the Israeli Forces from Lebanon, the first unconditional Israeli retreat from Arab land since the establishment of Zionist entity. He also commandeered the July 2006 war victory, a heroic epic that totally transformed modern warfare doctrine; a war victory studied in depth by friends and foes alike, who are still working on understanding it, in order to either emulate it or to find ways to confront it. After his martyrdom, Hajj Radwan deserved the exceptional title of “Leader of the Two Victories”? given to him by Hizbullah Secretary General Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, the May 2000 and the July 2006 victories. Israel assassinated Hajj Imad Moghnieh at forty five years of age, after many years of jihad achievements and victories during which the Israelis were given a taste of humiliation, disgrace and defeat. Two brothers preceded Martyr Hajj Radwan to the afterlife, covered with their blood of martyrdom. The first is Jihad, martyred in 1984 and the second is Martyr Hajj Fouad, assassinated in 1995 by an explosive device that targeted him in Sfeir area, in the southern suburbs.
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