Hezbollah flaunts American equipment in Syria parade

Hezbollah flaunts American equipment in Syria parade
US-made M113 APCs spotted in large military parade held Friday in Syria’s Qusayr, Hezbollah’s first on foreign soil
Image of Hezbollah military parade held in Syria’s Qusayr on November 11, 2016. (Twitter)
Image of Hezbollah military parade held in Syria’s Qusayr on November 11, 2016. (Twitter)

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In its first-ever military parade on foreign soil, Lebanon’s Hezbollah flaunted a sizeable fleet of heavy weaponry in the Syrian city of Qusayr Friday, according to news reports and photos circulated by social media accounts close to the organization.

Among the arms and vehicles on display were Soviet-made T-72 tanks and KS-12A anti-aircraft cannons; Russian Kornet anti-tank missiles (mounted, in some cases, on quad bikes); dune buggy-mounted machine guns; and off-road motorbikes. Significantly, the parade also featured American-manufactured M113 armored personnel carriers (APCs), of the type provided by the United States to the Lebanese army (LAF), prompting concerns among security analysts that Hezbollah may potentially have procured them from the LAF, which continues to receive American military aid.

Hezbollah has previously seized M113s from the now-defunct Israeli-backed South Lebanon Army. It’s possible they also captured some from a Syrian jihadist faction, Jabhat al-Nusra, which itself won a number off the LAF during an August 2014 battle in the border town of Arsal.

Friday’s parade also reportedly featured a speech by Hezbollah’s Executive Council head Hashem Safieddine. Its occasion was the annual ‘Martyr’s Day’ celebrated every November 11th by the organization, marking the anniversary of a 1982 suicide bombing by 17-year-old Ahmad Qasir targeting an Israeli military headquarters in south Lebanon’s Tyre.

Qusayr was a symbolic choice of venue for Friday’s parade. It was the first city taken off Free Syrian Army hands by incoming Hezbollah militants, after a bloody battle in the spring of 2013 that marked a turning point for the rebels’ fortunes in the broader province surrounding Homs, then known as the ‘capital of the revolution.’ Later that year, a Wall Street Journal reporter who visited the city wrote that, “Today, Hezbollah independently runs Qusayr […] The Lebanese militia has established an operations base in the town’s northern section that is off-limits to most Syrian civilians.”