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Anshel Pfeffer

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Anshel Pfeffer,

Anshel Pfeffer

Analysis

Assassination in Beirut leads to demonstrations in Lebanon

Hizbollah takes Syria bloodshed over the border

October 25, 2012 23:30
1 min read

Major General Wissam al-Hassan was a marked man years before he was assassinated by a massive car bomb in Beirut last Friday.

In Lebanon, military and security services are split by allegiances to different parties and ethnic groups. Al-Hassan’s loyalties were to the anti-Syrian March 14 coalition and the Hariri clan.

But his murder was not just a settling of accounts for the campaign he waged in the Internal Security Forces against Hizbollah and other pro-Syrian elements. It was also a signal from Syria’s direction that despite the turmoil of civil war, it has not lost its power to influence events across the border, using explosives when the need arises.

The assassination has led to violent demonstrations on the streets of Beirut, Tripoli and other Lebanese cities and towns, and calls for the resignation of the government of prime minister Najib Miqati, over which Hizbollah maintains control.