Khalid Bazzi

Khalid Bazzi
Nickname(s)al-Hajj Qasim
BornMarch 15, 1969
Bint Jbeil, Lebanon
DiedJuly 29, 2006 (aged 37)
Bint Jbeil
Buried
Allegiance Hezbollah
Service / branchThe Islamic Resistance in Lebanon
Years of service1986-2006
RankCommander (Arabic: قائد, qa’id)
CommandsChief of Operations, Bint Jbeil sector
Battles / wars

Khalid Ahmad Bazzi (Arabic: خالد أحمد بزي, March 15, 1969 - July 29, 2006) was a Lebanese military commander who was the commander of Hezbollah's military wing, the Islamic Resistance in Lebanon. In the 2006 Lebanon War, he was commanding officer in the battles of Maroun ar-Ras and Bint Jbeil. The heavy Israeli casualties and lack of progress of its army in these two battles is widely seen as the main cause of the Israeli failure in the war.

Early life

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Bazzi was born in the town of Bint Jbeil in South Lebanon. He joined Hezbollah as a teenager, and fought against the Israelis in the South Lebanon conflict (1985-2000) in Israeli-occupied southern Lebanon.

Bazzi was thirteen years old in 1982 when the 1982 Lebanon War broke out and his hometown was occupied by Israel for the third time in his lifetime (Bint Jbeil was occupied in Operation Cauldron 4 Extended in 1972 and Operation Litani in 1978). This time the Israelis would occupy the area for 18 years. The Shiite population of Southern Lebanon had suffered during the years of fighting between the Palestinian guerrillas and Israeli military since the 1970s. Many residents of South Lebanon felt an initial relief after the Palestinian guerrillas where pushed back from the area. This feeling soon turned sour when it became clear that the Israelis were there to stay. An armed resistance developed, this time among the Shiite population of South Lebanon that constituted the majority population in the area.

Bazzi thus grew up under the Israeli occupation. Some of his relatives had previously been active in the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). Bazzi and his friends soon became sympathetic or even active in the emerging Islamic Resistance.

In 1985, Israel withdrew from most of south Lebanon but continued to control a security zone, comprising about 10 per cent of the area of Lebanon. The IDF launched purges in the Shiite villages remaining under occupation, arresting people suspected of being involved in the resistance. Several of Bazzi’s friends were arrested and taken to the notorious Khiam detention center. Bazzi himself fled his home one night and slipped out of the security zone. He went to Beirut and started studying at the university. He soon dropped out of school and became a full-time activist in the resistance.

Military career

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During his more than 20 years of resistance activity he participated in many operations, such as the famous Bra'shit operation in 1987, where Hezbollah fighters stormed and conquered a South Lebanon Army (SLA) outpost in the security zone. A number of the outpost's defenders were killed or taken prisoner and the Hezbollah flag was raised on top of it. A Sherman tank was destroyed and a M113 armoured personnel carrier was captured and driven triumphantly all the way to Beirut.[1]

Bazzi was involved in the planting of deadly road side bombs, such as in the villages of Houla, Markaba and al-Abbad in the 1990s. He took part in the attempted assassination Brig. Gen. Eli Amitai, the head of the Israel Defense Forces liaison unit in southern Lebanon and thus the effective commander of the security zone.[2] December 14, 1996, Amitai was injured when the IDF convoy he was travelling in was ambushed in the eastern sector of the security zone.[3] Less than a week later, Amitai was again injured when Hezbollah unleashed a mortar barrage on an SLA position near Bra'shit when Amitai invited Maj. Gen. Amiram Levin, head of the IDF's Northern Command, to the area.[4]

He also took part in the assassination of several high-ranking South Lebanon Army (SLA) officers, whom Hezbollah considered traitors, including Aql Hashem, the SLA Second-in Command, who was killed by a remote-controlled bomb in January 2000.[2][5] The pursuit and assassination of Hashem was documented step by step, and the footage was broadcast on Hezbollah's TV channel al-Manar. The operation and the way it was presented in media dealt a devastating blow to the morale in the SLA.[6]

After 2000

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Israeli withdrawal from the security zone in the spring of 2000 precipitated a virtual collapse of the Israel-controlled South Lebanon Army. On May 26, 2000, Hezbollah General-Secretary Hassan Nasrallah held his famous victory speech in Bint Jbeil, where he compared the power of Israel to that of a spider's web.[7] Nasrallah's speech infuriated many Israeli officers. This anger explains to a large extent why Bint Jbeil was targeted in 2006.

After the Israeli withdrawal from South Lebanon, Khalid Bazzi returned to his hometown, Bint Jbeil, and continued his involvement with military activities. He was made responsible for commanding Hezbollah's operations. He took part in the Ghajar raid in 2005, when four Hezbollah fighters were killed in a attempt to abduct an Israeli soldier. Bazzi organized the 2006 Hezbollah cross-border raid, in which eight Israeli soldiers were killed and two were abducted, which ultimately triggered the 2006 Lebanon War.

After the abduction of the two soldiers, Bazzi returned to his post as Chief of Operations in the Bint Jbeil area, comprising the towns of Bint Jbeil and Aynata and the villages of Maroun ar-Ras and Aytaroun. He commanded a force of approximately 140 fighters, spread out in the area.

Bazzi participated in the Battle of Maroun al-Ras. The Israeli army eventually conquered most of the village after 10 days of fighting. The Hezbollah defenders eventually withdrew causing heavy casualties to the Israelis, including two IDF officers and six other soldiers killed. Due to Bazzi's reluctance to use two-way radios, contact was lost with him several times during the battle and at one time it was feared that he had been killed.[2] He emerged however unscathed and continued to lead the defense from Bint Jbeil. According to Hezbollah only seven of the 17 defenders of Maroun ar-Ras were killed in that battle.[8]

On July 23, the Israeli army launched Operation Webs of Steel 2 which was designed as a pincer movement, attacking Bint Jbeil simultaneously from the east and the west. The aim was to conquer the town and purge it of Hezbollah fighters and infrastructure. Israel failed to occupy the town and suffered heavy casualties.

After several days of fighting the Israeli forces unexpectedly withdrew.[9] Bint Jbeil was however largely destroyed by intensive bombardment from the Israeli Air Force and artillery.

Death

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On July 29, Bazzi was killed in an Israeli drone strike on a house in the Old Town of Bint Jbeil. The house collapsed, killing him, as well as fellow Hezbollah commander Sayyid Abu Taam and a third fighter. Their bodies could not be retrieved until several days after the cease-fire.[2]

There are suggestions that Bazzi earlier had refused to obey orders to withdraw from the town saying that he would "only leave as a martyr".[10] Hezbollah commanders who spoke to Lebanese al-Akhbar a year after the war did not confirm this version of events. According to them the proper place for a commander was with the fighters on the battlefield. Bazzi and Abu Taam however were criticized for violating military regulations by being at the same place during a battle.[2]

Bazzi was succeeded as sector commander by Muhammad Qanso, a Hezbollah special forces commander who himself would be killed in an Israeli airstrike 10 days later. The Israeli army made a second attempt to capture Bint Jbeil August 6–8, which was unsuccessful like the first.

Legacy

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The battles led by Khalid Bazzi were considered the most crucial in the Lebanon War of 2006.

First Maroun ar-Ras and later Bint Jbeil was attacked by four Israeli elite divisions, while it was only defended by a company-sized force (100-140 men) of mainly local militia. Yet, the IDF failed repeatedly to conquer the town, in spite of suffering heavy casualties. 25 IDF soldiers, including seven officers, were killed in these two battles.

The Israeli leaders primarily responsible for the conduct of the war, Prime minister Olmert, Defense minister Peretz and Chief of Staff Halutz, were all in agreement in their testimony to the Winograd Commission. The 2006 Lebanon War would have been a "clear achievement for Israel had the initial limited ground operations in Maroun ar-Ras and Bint Jbeil been successful".[11]

Hezbollah is a very secretive organization and members in the military wing are always kept anonymous. Apart from Bazzi’s friends, relatives and neighbours, few Lebanese would have heard of his name before the war of 2006. To his associates in the resistance movement he was known by his nom-de-guerre as al-Hajj Qasim, that members of the Islamic Resistance use inside the movement. Only with his death did his identity become widely known in Lebanon.

Hezbollah secretary-general Hassan Nasrallah noted in an interview with Al Jadeed shortly after the war (August 27, 2006) that none of the first or second level of the party officials had martyred but that three third level leaders had died in the war. Among them was "an operations officer in the Bint Jbeil axis". Although not mentioned by name, this was an obvious reference to Bazzi.[12] The other two commanders Nasrallah referred to were Muhammad Qanso and Muhammad Wahbi Surour.[13]

On the first anniversary of his death in 2007, Lebanese newspaper al-Akhbar revealed that Bazzi both took part in the cross-border operation and that he died as commander in the battle of Bint Jbeil.[2][5]

Surprisingly, Israel seemed long to have been unaware of the significant role, Bazzi played both in the abduction of the two Israeli soldiers and in the battle of Bint Jbeil and of his death in this battle. When a captured Hezbollah fighter, who participated in the abduction operation, told his captors that he had been commissioned his tasks by "al-Hajj Qasim" (Bazzi's nom de guerre), his interrogators only responded: "which Qasim?".[14] According to Robert Baer, the former CIA case officer in Lebanon, the Americans and the Israelis never knew the identities of Hezbollah's field commanders.[15]

Israeli newspapers did not notice his existence until six years after in was made public in Lebanon. In July 2013, Haaretz reported that Hezbollah "for the first time" revealed the identity of Khalid Bazzi as the commander of the abduction unit and that he was subsequently killed in the war.[16]

Khalid Bazzi was buried in the Martyrs’ cemetery in Bint Jbeil. A monument was erected in the town celebrating him and five other commanders or fighters from Bint Jbeil, who died in the 2006 war or in previous wars. He was survived by his wife and three children, Zaynab, Muhammad and Ali. His family has reportedly had to change homes 14 times in the past 18 years due to security considerations.[10]

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References

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  1. ^ Blanford, Nicholas, Warriors of God - Inside Hezbollah's Thirty-Year Struggle Against Israel, Random House, New York, 2011, pp. 85-86
  2. ^ a b c d e f Kamil Jabir (2007-07-29). "خالد بزي (قاسم) يكتب ملحمة بنت جبيل (Khalid Bazzi (Qasim) writes the Bint Jbeil epic)". al-Akhbar. Retrieved Jan 3, 2012.
  3. ^ Naomi Segal (December 16, 1996). "Fighting Erupts in Lebanon After Rockets Hit Jewish State". JTA. Retrieved 2011-11-10.
  4. ^ Naomi Segal (December 20, 1996). "Senior IDF Officer Wounded on Visit to Southern Lebanon". JTA. Retrieved 2011-11-10.
  5. ^ a b Blanford, pp. 243-244
  6. ^ Harb, Zahera, Channels of Resistance in Lebanon - Liberation Propaganda, Hizbullah and the Media, I.B. Tauris, London-New York, 2011, pp.214-216
  7. ^ Noe, Nicholas, Voice of Hizbullah, the statements of Sayed Hassan Nasrallah, Verso, London and New York, 2007, pp. 232-43
  8. ^ US Embassy Beirut (2006-07-26). "Cable 06BEIRUT2474". Retrieved Aug 1, 2012.
  9. ^ Bilal Y. Saab and Nicholas Blanford (August 2011). "THE NEXT WAR: How Another Conflict between Hizballah and Israel Could Look and How Both Sides are Preparing for It" (PDF). The Saban Center at Brookings ANALYSIS PAPER Number 24. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-12-03. Retrieved Aug 1, 2012.
  10. ^ a b "خالد بزي.. أمثاله لا يموتون إلا شهداء (Khalid Bazzi, The likes of him only die as martyrs)". as-Safir. 5 Sep 2007. Retrieved 2011-11-10.
  11. ^ Ron Ben-Yishai (5 October 2007). "Halutz failed to deliver". Haaretz. Retrieved 1 August 2012.
  12. ^ Noe, Nicholas, Voice of Hezbollah, the statements of Sayed Hassan Nasrallah, Verso, London and New York, 2007, p. 398-99
  13. ^ "عروج الفرسان الثلاثة : القائد الشهيد الحاج محمد قانصوه "ساجد الدوير" (The Ascendance of the Three Knights: Martyr Commander Al-Hajj Muhammad Qanso "Sajid ad-Duwayr")". al-Intiqad. 17 August 2007. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
  14. ^ "War in Lebanon: Israeli Interrogation of Hezbollah Terrorist". Retrieved August 13, 2013.
  15. ^ Baer, Robert, The Devil We Know - Dealing with the New Iranian Superpower, (2008, Crown), p.56
  16. ^ Jack Khoury (2013-07-21). "Hezbollah releases video of preparations to kidnap Israeli soldiers in 2006". Haaretz. Retrieved August 13, 2013.