Deir Ezzor drug shipment: Nasrallah’s card to finance Hezbollah activities

Syrian media outlets have revealed the
volume of drug trade carried out by the Lebanese Hezbollah in Syria in order to
finance and diversify its financial sources in light of the US sanctions on
Iran, the terrorist group’s primary financier, as well as heavy sanctions
against Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah’s men.
Syrian media reported that shipments
loaded with narcotics had arrived in the eastern countryside of Deir Ezzor
coming from Hezbollah strongholds in Lebanon.
The Euphrates Post network said that
three trucks entered the city of Abu Kamal, east of Deir Ezzor, on Monday
morning, carrying pills and narcotics, as well as fruits and vegetables.
Activists explained that the drugs were
carried by three trucks that came from Lebanese territory and then entered the
countryside of Homs to be smuggled with vegetables and fruits to militia
elements in the Deir Ezzor countryside.
The drugs are being sold to the Iraqi
militia Kata’ib Hezbollah, and there are quantities that are also smuggled into
Iraq and Jordan.
The website noted that Iranian militia
leader Abu Turab al-Saadi is one of the most prominent leaders supervising the smuggling
operations and the protection of trucks, while soldiers at the checkpoints
receive huge sums in exchange for allowing them to pass through the
checkpoints.
Media sources talked about the seizure
of a huge shipment of drugs in the city of Al-Qusayr in the southwestern
countryside of Homs, and indications point to Hezbollah being behind these
shipments, in cooperation with the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad,
especially the Syrian army’s Fourth Division.
It is also known that the Lebanese
Hezbollah, which is classified on the US and Gulf terrorist lists, is imposing
its control over most of the mountainous border areas between Lebanon and
Syria, in partnership with the Fourth Division, while the drug and weapons
trade is active in the region, supervised by Hezbollah leaders.
Hezbollah's activities were not only
limited to their areas of influence, but reached many countries, which have
announced the seizure of massive drug shipments, including the Gulf states,
Greece, Italy, and other countries. Authorities in these countries spoke about
thwarting several drug smuggling operations coming from areas controlled by
militias backed by the Syrian regime and Iran.
In July, the Italian authorities
announced the seizure of 15.4 tons of Captagon pills made in Syria, which has
become the largest producer and exporter of the drug.
The value of the seized Captagon
pills, amounting to 15.4 tons, is estimated at $1.3 billion.
The seized drugs were kept so
carefully that airport scanners failed to detect them, according to Domenico
Napolitano, a police official in Naples, Italy.
Also in July, the Greek authorities
confiscated a large shipment of Captagon pills coming from Syria, worth more
than half a billion dollars.
Earlier, in April, the Russian police
seized a shipment of drugs worth more than $200,000 in the town of Ma'riba in
the Damascus countryside. The drugs belonged to a leader of Hezbollah and were
equipped for sale in the Syrian markets.
In fact, drug trafficking and money
laundering are among Hezbollah’s main sources of funding, especially in recent
years, as the militia aims to secure its necessary financing after the decline
in Iranian financial support due to the deteriorating economic situation that
Tehran suffers from as a result of the international sanctions imposed on it.
A report by the German website Auditor
Online concluded that Syria has become a hotspot for drug production and a
platform for its export to other countries, including the West.
It attributed the reason to Iran and
Hezbollah exploiting Syrian lands in criminal activities, most notably the
manufacture and export of drugs.
“Iran is financially troubled, and
Hezbollah is in desperate need of money after the US sanctions hit Tehran,” the
website said.
Recently, a Lebanese citizen named
Ghassan Diab was extradited from Cyprus to the United States after he was accused
of laundering drug money for Hezbollah.
According to the US Department of
Justice, Diab was accused of “conspiring to launder drug money to support the
global network of Hezbollah.”
The US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), which is in charge of the Justice Department’s Counterterrorism Operations Center of the Special Operations Division, started about thirty years ago to follow up on Hezbollah's activity related to drug trafficking and money laundering used to finance its terrorist operations. The agency had stopped the sale of tons of cocaine shipments, which were carried out by Hezbollah's partners in cooperation with the Colombian drug cartel La Oficina de Envigado.