In his first speech since the ceasefire between Israel and Gaza-based terror groups, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah appeared pale and coughed repeatedly throughout his speech on Tuesday, sparking speculation about his health on social media.
“Nasrallah..is having great difficulty breathing [during his speech],” wrote Haaretz reporter Jack Khoury. “He’s speaking in short sentences and in a hoarse voice. It’s not clear why but as someone who has listened to dozens of his speeches, his breathing should make the headlines.”
Nasrallah said Gaza’s terror groups have proved that no one can sit idle when Israel attacks the holy sites or tries to undermine the Palestinians’ right to the city and any violations of Jerusalem and the sites holy to Muslims and Christians would lead to a regional war.
Even from besieged Gaza and with limited capabilities and homemade rockets, Hamas and other groups responded to what he called Israeli violations and attacks outside of territory it controlled, Nasrallah said. He described it as a great victory that paralyzed the Israeli state.
“The Israelis must understand that breaching the holy city and al-Aqsa mosque and sanctuaries won’t stop at Gaza resistance,” Nasrallah said during his 100-minute speech.
Nasrallah was speaking on the 21st anniversary of Israel’s withdrawal from southern Lebanon after a protracted war, characterized by roadside bombs and sniper attacks.
Hezbollah’s shadow loomed large during Israel and Hamas’ 11-day battle in Gaza, with the possibility it could unleash its arsenal of missiles — far more powerful than Hamas’ — in support of the Palestinians. But the Iran-backed group remained on the sidelines.
Daily protests, including by members of Hezbollah and Palestinians in Lebanon, took place along the frontier with Israel in solidarity with Gaza. One Hezbollah member was killed when Israel opened fire to push back against protesters who tried to break through the volatile frontier.
Nasrallah added: “Jerusalem means a regional war. All the resistance movements cannot stand by and watch this happening if the holy city is in real, grave danger.”
(YWN Israel Desk – Jerusalem & AP)
4 Responses
Hope and pray he dies a Slowwwww death! Amen
Allan, I appreciate your sentiments, but I think the correct tefilah is that he should be removed from this world suddenly. The “malshinim” brocha says “k’regah tovaid” — the he wicked should be destroyed in an instant. Amen.
Allan, I appreciate your sentiments, but I think the correct tefilah is that he should be removed from this world suddenly. The “malshinim” brocha says “k’regah tovaid” — that he wicked should be destroyed in an instant. Amen.
…editor: please use this spelling correction
Allan, I appreciate your sentiments, but I think the correct tefilah is that he should be removed from this world suddenly. The “malshinim” brocha says “k’regah tovaid” — that the wicked should be destroyed in an instant. Amen.
…editor: please use this spelling correction