
Mohammad Raad
Head of Hezbollah's Loyalty to the Resistance parliamentary bloc since 2000.
Last refreshed: 10 April 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Reported dead, then found alive: is Raad's survival reshaping Hezbollah's political strategy?
Timeline for Mohammad Raad
Struck back at Israel's Ramat Airbase hours after Lebanon's cabinet ban
Iran Conflict 2026: Hezbollah fires rockets hours after banMentioned in: Hezbollah intel chief reported killed
Iran Conflict 2026Mentioned in: Israel names Hezbollah chief as target
Iran Conflict 2026Mentioned in: Israel mobilises for Lebanon offensive
Iran Conflict 2026Targeted under Israel's 'no immunity' policy for Hezbollah politicians
Iran Conflict 2026: Israel: no Hezbollah figure has immunityWho is Mohammad Raad?
Was Mohammad Raad killed in the Israeli strikes on Beirut?
What is the Loyalty to the Resistance Bloc?
Background
Mohammad Raad, Born in Beirut in 1955, is one of Hezbollah's most senior political figures: a founding member, its first newspaper editor-in-chief, and a holder of a philosophy degree from Lebanese University. He has represented south Lebanon's Nabatieh district in Parliament continuously since 1992 and is regarded as one of the movement's principal ideologists.
Raad leads the Loyalty to the Resistance Bloc, Hezbollah's parliamentary faction, a post he has held since 2000. Israel's declared policy of targeting Hezbollah's political leadership placed him directly in the kill zone, and on 2 March 2026 he was widely reported killed in an Israeli airstrike on Beirut's southern suburbs, a claim subsequently found to be inaccurate.
His survival keeps him at the centre of Lebanon's most acute political tension. Nawaf Salam's government has demanded Hezbollah surrender its weapons and cease all military activity, while Hezbollah continues to fire rockets and defy the ban, leaving Raad as the parliamentary face of an organisation at war with its own government's policy.