Hezbollah member convicted in US for planning attacks

A US federal court in New York on Thursday convicted
a man of charges that he bought weapons and plotted attacks on behalf of the
Lebanese group Hezbollah.
Ali Kourani, a 34-year-old American of Lebanese
descent, was convicted of eight allegations including conspiracy to use weapons
in a violent crime, which is punishable by life in prison.
“Kourani’s chilling mission was to help procure
weapons and gather intelligence about potential targets in the US for future
Hezbollah terrorist attacks,” US attorney Geoffrey Berman said in a statement,
using an alternate spelling for the group.
The targets Kourani surveyed include the JFK
International Airport and a federal building in Manhattan.
“Today, Kourani has fittingly been convicted for his
crimes in a courthouse that stands in the shadow of one of his potential
targets,” Berman said.
Born in Lebanon but naturalized by the US in 2009,
Kourani attended several Hezbollah training camps in his country of birth and
took orders from agents of the Iran-backed organization after his 2003 arrival
in the US.
He is now set to be sentenced on September 27.
Another man who was taken into custody in Michigan on the same day Kourani was
arrested in 2017, Samer El Debek, is still awaiting trial. He is also accused
of belonging to Hezbollah.
Washington considers Hezbollah, which was created by
Iran in the early 1980s, a terrorist organization.
The group has been blamed for attacks in France,
Lebanon, and Bulgaria, and is one of the main allies of Syria’s government
against the country’s rebels.