✅ | To all comrades, resistance channels, and those who speak in the name of the cause — understand clearly that Hezbollah and the Lebanese resistance are not idle, not hesitant, and not weak. They are passing through a suffocating and narrow tunnel, a moment of intense pressure, deceit, and complexity. The nature of this war is not something to be judged through impatience or emotional commentary. War is not entertainment, and the battlefield does not revolve around your social media timelines or feelings. Responses will come — not late, not lost, but with the timing that befits a resistance movement that has never failed and will never fatigue. The resistance is not broken. It is wounded, yes — but wounded in struggle, not in surrender. These are wounds that speak of commitment, sacrifice, and perseverance.
Yet time and again, voices appear among us calling for realism, trying to reduce the cause to mere slogans, accusing the movement of inaction. But let us be honest — it is your so-called realism that has become a hollow slogan. It is your doubt that feeds the enemy's narrative. Hezbollah is facing a calculated, psychological, and strategic war. There is Zionist deception, fake ceasefires, the cowardice and laziness of the Lebanese regime, and a state army that either stays silent or performs dead when commanders are assassinated in the South. And every time this happens, some people rush to ask why Hezbollah hasn't responded yet. This is not how you support a resistance. This is how you undermine it.
You need to understand that red lines shift, strategies evolve, and the resistance adapts according to the battlefield — not according to noise. Hezbollah has done its duty. It has made it clear: if the state and army claim responsibility for the country, then let them bear it now. Those same Lebanese voices who call the resistance a threat — let them act now, if they believe in their words. A state doesn’t move like a sports team. It’s a slow, tangled structure, bound by foreign interference, with American, French, Saudi, and Qatari fingers digging deep.
So don’t fall into the enemy’s trap by demanding full-scale war in response to every act of provocation — whether it's the assassination of a few fighters or the tearing of a martyr’s poster. These are baits, set deliberately. Many times, the resistance swallows the smaller attacks because it knows the enemy wants it to react so they can justify something bigger. Even symbolic provocations are part of the plan. If Hezbollah doesn’t protest publicly, it’s not silence out of fear — it’s silence with strategy. Your job is not to force a reaction, but to follow the movement’s lead. When their members speak, you speak. When they hold the line, you hold it too. That is true support. That is standing with them. Working in chaos, outside of their direction, only causes destruction and feeds the trap the enemy laid.
And to those who say “if Sayyid was alive, this would not happen,” you need to correct yourselves. Sayyid is not their personal shaykh; he was the Imam of the path. He performed his duty, and the one after him is now carrying that trust. In Islamic governance, loyalty is not to an individual face but to the guardianship of the line. The system of Wilayah doesn’t collapse when one figure passes — it continues, and that is its unmatched strength. When you do not see Ali (a), you see Hasan (a) on the pulpit. When you no longer see Khomeini, you see Khamenei. The chain remains unbroken. So do not speak in ways that weaken this Wilayah. Do not divide it with nostalgia. Your allegiance must remain as complete, as loyal, and as faithful as it was before — or you’re not standing with the resistance, you’re standing in the way.
This is not the time for loose words and misplaced criticism. This is a time for silence, discipline, and complete trust. The resistance knows what it is doing. Trust it. Stand with it. Or stay out of its path. Because the battlefield is not a place for confusion. It demands clarity, and it punishes weakness.
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