“We
have on several times affirmed that there does not exist, in any form,
cooperation between Hezbollah and the Al-Qaeda network, neither in
logistical matters, training nor any other domain,” said Sheikh
Hassan Ezzedine, head of Hezbollah’s information department.
“The
accusations and allegations spread by the American intelligence
inscribed in the program means to trick world opinion and raise it
against Hezbollah, to serve the goals of the Zionist enemy and cover
up the crimes committed against the Palestinian people,” he added.
The
Post article, which cited unnamed U.S. and European
intelligence officials and terrorism experts, said cooperation between
the two groups was expanding.
One
unnamed official stated there is “no doubt at all” that Hezbollah
and Al-Qaeda have communicated on logistical matters.
The
new cooperation, according to the Post, which is ad hoc and
tactical, involves mid- and low-level operatives, muting years of
rivalry between Hezbollah and Al Qaeda.
The
two organizations coordinate explosives and tactics training, money
laundering, weapons smuggling and the acquisition of forged documents,
according to the daily.
Intelligence
experts are concerned that assets of Hezbollah’s formidable military
wing will enable the embattled Al-Qaeda network to increase its
ability to launch attacks against U.S. targets, the paper said.
It
said the new partnership illustrated an evolving pattern of
decentralized alliances between groups that want to force the United
States out of the Middle East, and Israel out of Palestinian
territories.
Hezbollah
ousted Israel from south Lebanon in May 2000, ending 22 years of
occupation.
The
organization, founded by Lebanese clerics in 1982, has two wings. One
is political and social, holding nine seats in the Lebanese
parliament. The other is military.
The
United States placed Hezbollah on its terrorist list in 1997, the Post
reported.
U.S.
officials believe that when Al-Qaeda was driven out of Afghanistan,
its leader, Osama bin Laden, allowed his operatives to ally themselves
with helpful Islamic groups, the Post said.
The
paper reports that Bin Laden, or top associates, used the internet,
especially chat rooms, to convey the message.