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Militant was an elusive figure

Imad Mughniyah of Hezbollah had been on U.S., Israeli and other most-wanted lists for two decades.

THE WORLD

February 14, 2008|Josh Meyer, Times Staff Writer

WASHINGTON — For more than two decades, Imad Mughniyah was among the most wanted terrorists on Earth, a top Hezbollah commander with close ties to Iranian intelligence, pursued by the United States, Israel and other nations for attacks that killed hundreds of their civilians and soldiers.

Known as the Fox, Mughniyah was a frustratingly elusive figure to his pursuers -- accused of many acts of terrorism, convicted of none.


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Mughniyah was believed to have orchestrated strikes by the Shiite militant group on a U.S. Marine barracks, the U.S. Embassy and other American targets in Lebanon, which led President Reagan to order the withdrawal of U.S. troops from the troubled Middle East nation in 1984.

Attacks on an Israeli Embassy and Jewish community center in Argentina in the 1990s that killed 115 people were also attributed to Mughniyah, and for that, Interpol last year issued a "Red Letter" arrest warrant for him and five Iranians.

The Lebanese militant was believed to have amassed his own small army of loyal Hezbollah soldiers, as well as an arsenal of missiles stockpiled in southern Lebanon numbering in the thousands and able to strike several of Israel's most populous cities.

In 2006, Mughniyah was suspected of being involved in the capture of Israeli soldiers that led to a war between Hezbollah and Israel. He may also have spent time in Iraq as part of an alleged effort by Iran to destabilize its neighbor and support a Shiite uprising.

And his prolific use of truck bombs is said to have so impressed Osama bin Laden when the two met in the mid-1990s that the Al Qaeda leader used them as the blueprint for attacks by his own fledgling organization.

Through it all, Mughniyah remained a ghost-like figure. Current and former intelligence officials from the United States, Israel and some other countries said Wednesday that they were never sure what the chief of international and military activities for Hezbollah, the Party of God, was up to.

Former CIA agent Robert Baer said Mughniyah eliminated every piece of paperwork about himself, including the passport photo in Lebanese government files. "He erased his past," Baer said.

Mughniyah changed his radio frequency every day, never took the same route twice and met only in buildings with more than one exit, Baer said.

"In terms of terrorism he was the best there was, truly a professional. I chased him for 15 years, but saying I chased him implies that I actually got close to him. And I'm not sure that I ever did."

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