
Israel had already eliminated most of Iran-backed Hezbollah's leadership during a war that raged between October 2023 and November 2024.
The Israeli military on Sunday killed Hezbollah's top military official, Haytham Ali Tabatabai, in a strike on the outskirts of the Lebanese capital that came despite a year-long ceasefire.
His killing was announced by Israel's military. Hezbollah has not commented on his fate, although Lebanese security sources confirmed he was the target of Israel's strike.
Israel had already eliminated most of Iran-backed Hezbollah's leadership during a war that raged between October 2023 and November 2024, when a US-brokered truce was agreed.
But Tabatabai, who was appointed as the group's chief of staff after its recent war with Israel, was killed in a rare post-ceasefire operation against a senior Hezbollah figure.
Military leader rose through Hezbollah's ranks
Tabatabai was born in Lebanon to a father with Iranian roots and a Lebanese mother, according to a senior Lebanese security source.
He was not a founding member of Hezbollah but was part of its "second generation," deploying with the group to fight alongside its allies in Syria and Yemen, the source said.
Israel's military said Tabatabai joined Hezbollah in the 1980s and held several senior posts, including in its Radwan Force, an elite fighting unit. Israel killed most Radwan figures last year ahead of its ground invasion into Lebanon.
During last year's war, Tabatabai led Hezbollah's operations division and rose in rank as other top commanders were eliminated, the Israeli military's statement said.
Once the ceasefire came into force, Tabatabai was appointed chief of staff and "worked extensively to restore their readiness for war with Israel," according to the statement.
The Lebanese security source confirmed Tabatabai was swiftly promoted as other top Hezbollah officials were killed, and had been appointed chief of staff over the last year.
The Alma Center, a security research and teaching organization in Israel, said Tabatabai had survived other Israeli attacks both in Syria and during the war in Lebanon.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Don’t let food poisoning crash your Thanksgiving dinner - 2
Venezuelan President Maduro arrives in New York following U.S. capture: Full coverage - 3
Impact of NIH funding reductions felt in cancer and infectious disease trials - 4
Apartment Turned Into Nightmare 'Ice Castle' After Tenant Shut Off Heat Causing Pipes to Burst: VIDEO - 5
Watch interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS speed away from the sun in free telescope livestream on Nov. 16
7 Delightful Ferris Wheels, Do You Like Them?
World leaders, rights groups react to COP30 climate deal
Newly Built Sichuan Hydropower Bridge Collapses Into River Months After Opening
Storm Goretti sweeps United Kingdom, France with winds over 120 mph
The German series proving subtitles can be sexy — and wildly addictive
Hubble Space Telescope spies dusty debris from two cosmic collisions
10 Picturesque Campgrounds That Will Raise Your Outside Involvement with American
Sea level doesn’t rise at the same rate everywhere – we mapped where Antarctica’s ice melt would have the biggest impact
Virtual National Science Foundation internships aren’t just a pandemic stopgap – they can open up opportunities for more STEM students













