The twin bombings that killed at least five people outside of an Iranian
cultural center recently were a particularly pointed assault on the Shiite
party Hezbollah and Iran, both key allies of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's
regime.
"They're essentially going after [Hezbollah's]
boss," said Phillip Smyth, who researches Hezbollah at the University of
Maryland. "You don't get any more direct than that."
But if the attack was aimed at driving Hezbollah out
of Syria's civil war, Smyth suggested that the Iranian-supported militia is
unlikely to relinquish its role. "I seriously doubt that," he told
The WorldPost, saying that Hezbollah leadership had recently "doubled
down" on its statements in support of fighting in Syria.
The bombings Wednesday were the sixth such attack to
hit Lebanon this year and the first since the country announced a new
government on Saturday. Many of the attacks have targeted majority-Shiite areas
in south Beirut and the town of Hermel near the Syrian border, in what is
widely seen as an effort to pressure Hezbollah.
The group has sent thousands of fighters to Syria to
boost the Assad regime's military strength, and Iran has lent vital support to
both Hezbollah and the Syrian government, including diplomatic backing and
military aid.
The Abdullah Azzam Brigades, an al-Qaeda linked
jihadi group that claimed responsibility on Twitter for the attacks,
called the bombings a "response to the killings of the Iranian party
[Hezbollah] alongside the criminal Syrian regime" and said it would
continue launching attacks until Hezbollah withdraws.
The group also claimed
responsibility for an attack in November at the Iranian embassy, which sparked
a string of increasingly frequent bombings in Lebanon.
At the scene of the bombings, Hezbollah politician
Ali Ammar insisted that his party would stay in Syria
regardless of the attacks, telling reporters that Hezbollah would "not
withdraw from a strategic battle."
In a speech in Beirut earlier, Hezbollah chief
Hasrallah expressed the same sentiment, saying
the deaths and damage caused by recent bombings
would not drive his party out of Syria.
"This blood and wounds and patience and
perseverance are part of the battle," Nasrallah said. "And yes, it is
worth it so that we do not lose our land, so that our children are not
slaughtered and our property stolen."



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