How Hezbollah Spent Two Years Hunting a Mossad Officer Who Was Hunting Them Back
In September 2003, a Hezbollah team traveled to Nicosia, Cyprus, to carry out what they believed was a carefully planned operation against a Mossad officer known only as Aleph. For two years they had tracked his pattern across three cities, studying every move. What they did not know: their source inside Greek intelligence had been working for the other side since 1999 — and every piece of information they received had been filtered and pointed exactly where their target needed them to go. A two-year deception, a team that never knew it was already inside a trap, and a four-hour conversation that was never written down. In this video: How Mossad turned a Hezbollah intelligence asset four years before the operation began Why a separate Iranian intelligence officer was embedded inside the team without Hezbollah's knowledge The moment the operation collapsed — and how both exit routes were shut down simultaneously What happened in the four-hour interrogation that was never officially recorded How a single operation dismantled sixty percent of Hezbollah's European network within eighteen months