Times: Lebanese Hezbollah has more troops than the British army.
The British newspaper wrote in a report, referring to the recent remarks of the Secretary General of Hezbollah in Lebanon about the number of 100,000 members of the movement, that the number of Hezbollah in Lebanon is more than the British army.
Seyed Hassan Nasrallah, Secretary General of Hezbollah in Lebanon, stated in a recent speech that the number of Hezbollah forces in Lebanon is 100,000.
In a report referring to the number of Lebanese Hezbollah forces, the British Times wrote that if the words of Hezbollah Secretary General Seyed Hassan Nasrallah about the number of troops he announced were accurate, that is, the number of Hezbollah forces from the Lebanese army and even More than the British Army.
The publication wrote that some experts have said that the 100,000 troops proposed by the Lebanese Hezbollah secretary general include reserve forces and even those who have no experience in the field of war and have not completed training courses.
But Mohannad Haj, an expert at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said the figure was reasonable because it included all reserve forces, and those who had already been trained, but included those with no war experience or training. Is not.
“There is no doubt that Hezbollah in Lebanon has created great power with the support of Iran and that other Lebanese groups, including the Lebanese army, are not equal in number and equipment to Hezbollah,” the Times wrote.
“Hezbollah in Lebanon, while insisting that its forces are defending all Lebanese tribes against Israel, is in fact a major obstacle to the Lebanese government because it is a group that dominates the country,” the British publication continued. “He has and has gained a great deal of war experience during the Syrian war.”
According to the report, the Lebanese army, which is being trained by the United States, Britain and France, officially has less than 85,000 troops, and due to the economic crisis that Lebanon is facing, the payment of this number has been accompanied by problems. .
Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, secretary general of the Lebanese Hezbollah movement, said in a speech a few days ago examining developments in Lebanon and the region and the role of the Lebanese Al-Qawat al-Qawat party in the recent Beirut crime: Because the military structure of Hezbollah includes 100,000 forces … We announced the number of our fighting forces for the first time; Not to threaten, but to prevent civil war … Hezbollah is a positive factor for Christians and not a threat to them … and I must say to the chief of forces that your calculations are wrong. “As in your other wars, you made mistakes and lost.”
Recently, the commander of the Zionist regime’s internal front, Avery Gordin, warned in an interview that if one day Israel clashed with Hezbollah in Lebanon, it should be expected to be targeted with 2,000 missiles a day.