Els: MBN360 News
AGerman court has sentenced a Lebanese national to six and a half years in prison for belonging to Hezbollah and procuring equipment for its drone program.
The Celle regional court’s verdict shows the increasing European concern about covert networks supplying armed groups in the Middle East.
The 35-year-old defendant, identified as Fadel Z, was also convicted of aiding attempted murder and violating European Union sanctions. Judges stated that his actions “enabled the acquisition and transport of components later used in explosive drones deployed by Hezbollah.”
Prosecutors described him as a long-standing member who spent years securing critical technical parts for Hezbollah’s aerial operations. Trial evidence showed Fadel Z joined Hezbollah about a decade ago and later assumed logistics and procurement roles.
Investigators reported that he purchased approximately €1.4 million (about $1.5 million) in drone-related materials, including over 2,000 motors and more than 600 propellers. These components were essential for drones used in reconnaissance and for carrying explosives.
German media reported that Fadel Z admitted arranging shipments, though his defense claimed he did not fully understand their intended use.
Prosecutors argued the scale and organization of the purchases clearly indicated the components were for Hezbollah’s military operations. “He was not simply buying spare parts,” prosecutors said, adding, “He was helping sustain an operational capability that posed a real threat.”
Hezbollah, a Lebanese Shiite Islamist organization, began as a resistance movement against Israeli occupation in southern Lebanon.
It has since become a significant political, military, and social force, maintaining an extensive armed wing alongside its political activities.
Hezbollah is designated as a terrorist organization by several countries, including the United States, Germany, and the European Union, due to its involvement in attacks outside Lebanon and its links to Iran.
The group is known for advanced military capabilities, including rockets, missiles, and increasingly, unmanned aerial systems. Hezbollah has used these in regional conflicts, notably in Syria and against Israel.
The court case only add up to the numerous reactions of countries against the Hezbollah. The First Trump Administration, sanctioned some of Hezbollah’s members in Parliament as part of its “maximum pressure” campaign against Iran.
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While Trump’s approach disrupted Iran’s economy, analysts say the country’s increasingly self-sufficient proxies have weathered the worst of the sanctions. President Joe Biden’s administration continued sanctioning individuals connected to Hezbollah’s financing network, including Ibrahim Ali Daher, head of the group’s Central Finance Unit.
European Unions multinational police agency, Europol, and the United States also created a joint group to counter Hezbollah’s terrorist activities in Europe.
In recent years, several European countries have taken a stronger stance. The United Kingdom deemed Hezbollah a terrorist group in 2019, followed by the German government in 2020 leading to the trail and persecution of the Lebanese National.
Hezbollah’s Expanding Drone Program Raises Concerns
The Celle case highlights Hezbollah’s increasing use of drones in regional conflicts.
Germany’s Federal Prosecutor’s Office previously described the group’s drone program as extensive and emphasized its evolving role in Hezbollah’s military strategy.
Following the 7 October 2023 Hamas attack on Israel, Hezbollah had “systematically fired rockets and explosive-laden drones at both military and civilian targets in Israel.”
Maintaining such operations requires steady access to specialized components, such as advanced electronic circuits and precision mechanical parts, many of these can be legally purchased for civilian purposes.
Hezbollah relies on operatives abroad to covertly obtain these parts and ship them to Lebanon using complex, multi-leg routes to evade detection. They exploit legal loopholes, dual-use technology markets, and complex shipping routes to avoid detection.
These networks often span continents, with operatives sourcing parts in Europe or Asia, shipping them through intermediaries, and assembling drones in conflict zones such as the Middle East and they are difficult to detect and disrupt because they often intersect with legitimate commercial supply chains, making shipments appear routine until repurposed for military use.
The threat associated with the drones is multifaceted, drones extend militant groups’ operational reach without exposing personnel to combat, enabling remote surveillance and attacks on infrastructure, civilians, and military forces and their adaptability enables a range of payloads, from explosives to surveillance equipment and chemical sensors.
The implications are particularly concerning for politically unstable regions. Groups like Hezbollah and Hamas can sustain prolonged military campaigns and adapt tactics and use drones in asymmetric warfare to target high-value assets and disrupt logistics, creating psychological effects on civilian populations.
Even small-scale drone attacks can overwhelm conventional defenses, forcing states to divert resources to counter-drone measures and straining security forces.