NOVANEWS
1. Factions whose existence is known to Lebanese security agencies but are holed up in areas off-limits to the Lebanese state because of international and regional factors.
- Haytham Mahmoud Mustafa, a Palestinian nicknamed “the popular Haytham.” He is allied with Naim Ismail Qassem, deputy secretary-general of Hezbollah. Lebanese security agencies consider Mustafa’s faction to be the most dangerous because of its ties to AQ.
- Toufic Taha and Ousama al-Shihabi lead a faction composed of remnants of the Ziad al-Jarrah Battalions. Theirs is considered one of the most prominent of the five factions due to its size, somewhere between 65 and 80 members, as well as the quality of its training. Information points to Shihabi having close ties to Abu Mahmoud al-Joulani, the emir of Jabhat al-Nusra in Syria, and to his being the non-declared leader of al-Nusra in Lebanon.
- Majed al-Majed, a Saudi whose whereabouts are unknown but who has close ties to Shihabi’s faction
- Bilal Darrar Badr, a 27-year-old Palestinian
- Ziad Abu al-Naaj, another Palestinian
Altogether, these factions comprise between 200 and 300 members, most of them Palestinians and Arabs from the Gulf states, Egypt and Morocco. In late June, the five factions had tried to come to the assistance of the group led by the Salafi Sheikh Ahmed al-Assir during their battle against the Lebanese Army in Sidon, adjacent to Ain al-Hilweh, during which Assir lost his strongholds in the city. The army targeted the the factions with artillery shots as a warning and informed them that the army would storm their area if they attempted to aid Assir militarily. Mediation efforts by Palestinian factions resulted in an undeclared compromise between the five factions and the army, according to which a joint Fatah-Hamas force would deploy to Taamir to keep the factions under control and prevent them from carrying out security operations outside of their areas of influence. Implementation of the agreement continues to be the subject of Lebanese-Palestinian negotiations.
These are mostly located in Tripoli, Akkar, Wadi Khaled and Arsal, in northern Lebanon. The following are the most prominent and dangerous among them. The Wadi Khaled faction is led by Bilal Abd’ul-Jabbar al-Hassian, a former inmate at Roumieh Prison accused of belonging to Fatah al-Islam. Hassian was recruited by the Libyan Salafi nicknamed “al-Bashti,” who has ties to AQ. Hassian was active in the areas between Lebanon’s Wadi Khaled and Tal Kalakh and Qusair in Syria prior to the Syrian regime seizing control of these cities.
Their identities are not precisely known, but their activities have begun as evidenced by the Jun 9 bombing in Bir el-Abed, a Beirut southern suburb, and a few launchings of rockets in May. The first week in August, a house was discovered in the Lebanese town of Daraya, in Kharroub province, that was being used to store and prepare explosive charges in Lebanon against a multitude of targets. Despite Lebanese security agencies closely following the movements of sleeper cells inside the country, information about them remains scarce. An official security source who requested anonymitytold us:
The most dangerous aspect of these cells is that their members engage in misdirection operations aimed at drawing the attention of security agencies away from them. For example, members of these cells might frequent nightclubs and wear Western clothes that do not give away the possibility of them espousing extremist religious beliefs.
[[[In short, Lebanon is living in fear that Takfiri terrorism might have infiltrated its society in the form of sleeper cells augmented by other openly known factions. As a result, security agencies are currently in an undeclared state of alert in Lebanon, tasked with suppressing what seems to be a great terrorist wave heading its way in the not too distant future.]]]]
[ed notes;also see..PressTV – How are Takfiris, Zionists alike?