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Hezbollah's chief of staff makes overtures to Saudi Arabia in order to front against Israel

Naim Qassem, the Hezbollah leader, urged Saudi Arabia on Friday to "turn a new page" and put aside past disputes in order to create a united front against Israel. This comes after years of hostility which strained Riyadh’s ties to Lebanon.

Saudi Arabia and the other Gulf States designated Shi'ite Hezbollah as a terrorist organization in 2016. Riyadh, Washington, and Hezbollah rivals in Lebanon have been pressing the Lebanese Government to disarm Hezbollah, which has been severely weakened since last year's conflict with Israel.

Qassem, in a Friday televised speech, said that regional power should view Israel and not Hezbollah as the primary threat to the Middle East, and suggested "mending relationships" with Riyadh.

Qassem stated: "We assure that the weapons of resistance (Hezbollah), are aimed at the Israeli enemy and not Lebanon, Saudi Arabia or any other entity or place in the world."

He said that dialogue will "freeze disagreements from the past at least during this extraordinary phase so that we can face Israel and curb it" and that pressing Hezbollah is "a net gain for Israel."

Saudi Arabia spent billions of dollars in Lebanon in 2006, helping to rebuild the south following a war between Hezbollah & Israel. But the group grew more powerful with the help of Iran.

In 2021, the relationship deteriorated dramatically when Sunni Saudi Arabia expelled the Lebanese Ambassador, recalled their own envoy, and banned Lebanese Imports. In a statement published in Saudi state-run media, it was claimed that Hezbollah controlled Lebanon's decision making processes.

Hassan Nasrallah, then Hezbollah secretary general, called Saudi Arabian crown prince Mohammad bin Salman "a terrorist" and criticised Saudi Arabia's role against Yemen repeatedly.

In recent months, the political landscape in the Middle East has changed dramatically. Israel destroyed Hezbollah in 2014 and killed Nasrallah. Rebels then toppled Bashar al Assad, the group's Syrian partner. Reporting by Laila Basam and Maya Gebeily, Writing by Enas alashray, Editing by Alex Richardson and Aidan Lewis

(source: Reuters)