Israel named Hezbollah Secretary-General Naim Qassem as a target for elimination. If killed, Qassem would be the third Hezbollah leader lost in approximately eighteen months — following Hassan Nasrallah, killed in an Israeli airstrike in Beirut in September 2024, and Hashem Safieddine, Nasrallah's designated successor, reportedly killed weeks later in October 2024.
Qassem served as Hezbollah's deputy secretary-general for more than three decades before his unplanned ascent. He is the group's foremost ideological voice and the author of Hezbollah: The Story from Within. His elimination would remove the last senior figure with direct institutional memory of Hezbollah's founding in 1982 and its formative relationship with Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
Israel's targeting doctrine has expanded well beyond military commanders. The IDF declared that "no immunity" would extend to "any politician or military figure in Hezbollah, even supporters" — language that erases the distinction between combatant and political actor. The killing of Mohammad Raad, head of Hezbollah's parliamentary bloc and an elected member of Lebanon's parliament , fits this expanded framework.
Israel's record with Hezbollah decapitation operations is mixed on its own terms. The assassination of Secretary-General Abbas al-Musawi by helicopter gunship in February 1992 brought Nasrallah to power — a leader who built Hezbollah into the most capable non-state military force in the Middle East, with a missile arsenal that eventually exceeded 150,000 projectiles. The killing of Imad Mughniyeh in Damascus in February 2008, attributed to a joint CIA-Mossad operation, removed Hezbollah's most effective military planner but did not degrade the group's operational capacity in subsequent years.
The question is whether the current pace — three leaders in under two years, combined with sustained strikes on military infrastructure — crosses a threshold that earlier, isolated assassinations did not. Hezbollah's command structure was designed to absorb leadership losses. Whether it can absorb them at this rate, under simultaneous bombardment, with its principal state sponsor under direct military attack and its own chain of command severed , has no precedent to draw on.
