Hezbollah sought $2 billion a year from Iran, settled for half – Kan News
Lebanon's Hezbollah supporters gather to attend a ceremony to honour fighters killed in the recent escalation with Israel, on the day of Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah address, in Beirut's southern suburbs, Lebanon, November 3, 2023
Israeli public broadcaster Kan News reported on Monday that Hezbollah requested approximately $2 billion in annual funding from Iran to rebuild after the war, but Tehran agreed to transfer only about $1 billion.
Kan’s Arab affairs correspondent Roey Kais said the funds arrive regularly, mainly by air and that Hezbollah members continue to receive high salaries by Lebanese standards, but rebuilding the arsenal destroyed in the conflict remains costly.
“In recent months, Hezbollah’s top leaders and the Iranian Quds Force sat down to negotiate how much money Tehran would transfer this year to Hezbollah,” Kais said.
“To this day, there are still complaints within Hezbollah’s ranks that the money arriving from the Iranians is insufficient for the organization’s needs, but despite that, it must be emphasized that everything agreed upon with the Iranians arrives precisely and regularly,” he added in a post on X.
The report comes amid scrutiny of Iran’s financial support for Hezbollah, which a US official said has totaled around $1 billion so far this year despite heavy sanctions on Tehran.
US officials targeted what they describe as Hezbollah’s “cash network,” last month, sanctioning alleged financiers who move Iranian funds through exchange houses and front companies to help the group rebuild its military infrastructure and pay fighters.
United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) policy director Jason Brodsky seized on the Kan report as further evidence that sanctions are biting, saying pressure remains a useful tool.
“The next time you hear arguments that sanctions and pressure don’t work, remember this thread. If there were no sanctions, Iran would be providing Hezbollah with more,” Brodsky posted on X.
Hezbollah has been trying to restore its capabilities after a bruising confrontation with Israel, which killed thousands of people and severely damaged the group’s command structure and arsenal.
Lebanese leaders, under international pressure, have meanwhile floated plans to disarm militias and extend state authority in the south, but Hezbollah has resisted efforts to curb its arsenal, arguing that its weapons remain essential to deter Israel.
Confusion rippled through Tehran on Monday after an IRGC-aligned news agency reported missile tests over several Iranian cities, only for state television to later deny that any launches had taken place.
The semi‑official Fars News Agency, citing field observations and public reports, said missile tests were observed in multiple locations, including Tehran, Isfahan, Mashhad, Khorramabad and Mahabad.
The semi‑official outlet Nournews published videos that appeared to show missile launches, without specifying the exact locations, while other reports also pointed to launches in Tehran, Isfahan and Mashhad.
Iran's state broadcaster, however, denied those reports a few hours later, citing “informed sources.
The images circulating “is not related to a missile test,” it said. “No missile test was conducted today."
Israel's prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu was asked about the reports in a press conference on Monday. "We are aware that Iran is conducting military exercises," he said, "We are making the necessary preparations."
Defense and security expert Farzin Nadimi told Iran International that the reported drills could be read as a signal.
“The Revolutionary Guard is sending the message that it has the capability to fire missiles simultaneously from several points across different parts of Iran’s territory,” Nadimi said.
“It is more of a reaction to the messages coming out of Israel, with the IRGC trying to strengthen its deterrence by creating an atmosphere.”
Credibility warning
The dispute comes less than two weeks after IRIB chief Peyman Jebeli admitted a false June report on downing an Israeli F‑35 fighter jet had damaged the broadcaster’s credibility, saying state TV had simply relayed what it was told by an “official military authority” before later conceding the story was wrong.
Moderate outlet Rouydad24 argued that the episode underscored the credibility damage already acknowledged by state TV’s own management.
“The latest clash with Fars News Agency risks further eroding public trust in state TV’s handling of sensitive military claims, with critics saying repeated walk‑backs over security stories have turned IRIB into a symbol of institutional unreliability,” Rouydad24 wrote.
Earlier in the day, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei rejected any discussion of Iran’s military capabilities, saying the country’s missile program had been developed solely to defend Iran’s sovereignty and was not subject to negotiation.
“Iran’s defensive capabilities are by no means an issue that can be discussed,” he said, defending what officials describe as a deterrent built to dissuade potential attacks on Iran.
Being born in Iran—not just entering from there—is now affecting even Iranians already living in the United States in how immigration cases are being handled, attorney Ali Rahnama told Iran International.
“For the first time, one of the first times in American history, what we’re seeing here is they’re not talking about only Iranian citizenship,” Rahnama said appearing on Eye for Iran podcast.
“What they’re including in there is being born in Iran.”
Rahnama said the change is being felt by non-citizens already inside the United States who are pursuing legal immigration pathways, including green cards, citizenship, asylum, and work authorization.
He stressed that the shift does not stem from the passage of a new immigration law, but from how existing immigration processes are now being applied.
“What has happened the last month from the last one policy is that the people who are inside the country who have applications pending… those applications are going to be halted now,” he said.
Iran remains among the countries subject to a full suspension of entry for both immigrant and non-immigrant visas. The proclamation is formally written to apply to foreign nationals outside the United States who do not already hold valid visas and does not revoke visas issued before its effective date.
The Trump administration has defended the expanded restrictions as a national security measure, citing concerns about weak vetting, unreliable records, and corruption in some countries.
The measures are being described by authorities as a pause rather than a denial, but Rahnama warned that for many people, the distinction offers little comfort.
“What’s happening is a pause,” he said. “Basically, your application is not being processed and just sitting in there.”
He said the consequences are particularly acute for Iranians living in the United States on temporary visas, where delays can directly jeopardize legal status.
“If you are on a visa, you probably wouldn’t be able to renew that visa,” Rahnama said. “That simply means that you have to leave the country.”
'Running out of time'
Rahnama also said the pause is not limited to early-stage cases. Some applications that were already approved, or close to completion, have been reopened or frozen.
“Some of these cases that have already been either approved or in the process of an approval are being revisited,” he said, describing instances in which applicants were removed from naturalization oath ceremonies despite having passed interviews and background checks.
Concerns over immigration processing inside the United States have also drawn scrutiny on Capitol Hill. More than 100 Democratic lawmakers have sent a letter to the Department of Homeland Security and US Citizenship and Immigration Services condemning the cancellation of naturalization ceremonies and the halting of immigration applications for nationals of countries covered by the travel ban.
The lawmakers cited cases in which individuals were pulled out of oath ceremonies moments before becoming US citizens and demanded transparency about the scope and duration of the pause.
Rahnama said prolonged delays can function as de facto denials for people already living in the United States, even without a formal rejection.
“For some people, that just basically means they’re going to run out of time to be legally present in the US,” he said. “That looks like denial… it would effectively feel like it.”
He added that the broader impact now extends beyond asylum seekers or people attempting to enter the country, increasingly affecting families and individuals who have built their lives in the United States under existing immigration rules.
“Not only the asylum seekers this time are going to be affected,” Rahnama said. “The people inside are going to be heavily affected.”
Israel’s prime minister warned Iran on Monday that any hostile move would draw a sharp response, amid reports from Tehran that missile drills were under way in several cities.
“We are aware that Iran is conducting military exercises. We are making the necessary preparations,” Benjamin Netanyahu said when asked about the reported drills at a joint news conference with his counterparts from Greece and Cyprus.
“I want to make it clear to Tehran that any action will be met with a very sharp response.”
Iranian state media reported missile exercises on Monday in what officials described as a defensive show of force.
The IRGC-linked Fars News agency, citing field observations and public reports, said drills were observed in Tehran, Isfahan, Mashhad, Khorramabad and Mahabad. Iran’s state broadcaster published videos that it later denied were missiles.
Netanyahu also said he planned to discuss Iran’s nuclear activities and broader regional threats with US President Donald Trump during an upcoming visit to the United States, adding that both countries’ “basic expectations” of Tehran had not changed.
The Israeli prime minister is scheduled to meet Trump on December 29 at the former president’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.
Axios reported on Monday that Israel had warned the United States that Iran’s missile drills could be used as cover for preparations for a surprise attack. US officials told the outlet, however, that Washington currently sees no indication of an imminent Iranian strike.
Tehran rejected any suggestion that the drills were provocative.
“Iran’s defensive capabilities are by no means an issue that can be discussed,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei said, adding that Iran’s missile program was strictly defensive.
The renewed tensions come against the backdrop of the brief but intense June conflict, during which Iran relied almost exclusively on missile strikes after Israeli attacks degraded its air defenses and senior military command.
US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee said Iran appears not to have fully absorbed the message of Washington’s strike on the Fordow nuclear facility during the Israel–Iran war in June.
“I don’t know that (Iran) ever took (US President Donald Trump) seriously until the night that the B-2 bombers went to Fordow,” Huckabee said in an interview at a conference hosted by the Israeli security and foreign policy think tank Institute for National Security Studies.
Addressing reports that Iran is attempting to rebuild Fordow, Huckabee said the apparent reconstruction efforts suggest the warning was insufficient.
“I hope they got the message, but apparently they didn’t get the full message because, as you mentioned, they appear to be trying to reconstitute and find a new way to dig the hole deeper and secure it more,” he said.
Israel launched strikes on Iranian nuclear and military targets on June 13, accusing Tehran of pursuing a covert nuclear weapons program — a charge Iran denies.
The attacks were followed by 12 days of hostilities, with the United States joining with a one-off strike on Iranian nuclear facilities on June 22. Iran responded with missile strikes on a US air base in Qatar, saying it did not seek further escalation.
'Threat to Europe'
Asked whether Washington would authorize another Israeli strike on Iran if Israel concluded such action was required, Huckabee referred to Trump’s repeated public position on Iran’s nuclear program.
“All I can do is point you to what (Trump) has said repeatedly, and he consistently has said Iran is never going to enrich uranium, and they’re not going to have a nuclear weapon,” Huckabee said.
Huckabee said any renewed effort by Iran to restore its nuclear or ballistic missile programs would have broader consequences beyond the region.
“It presents a real threat to all of Europe,” he said.
“And if the Europeans don’t understand this, then they’re even dumber than I sometimes think they are,” Huckabee added.
IAEA push for inspection
Huckabee’s remarks come as International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Rafael Grossi said last week that the agency remains unable to access several of the country’s most sensitive nuclear sites following the June strikes.
Grossi said the IAEA is “only allowed to access sites that were not hit” during the June war.
“These other three sites—Natanz, Isfahan and Fordow—are even more significant, since they still contain substantial amounts of nuclear material and equipment, and we need to return there,” Grossi said.
Huckabee warned that Tehran poses a threat to the United States as well.
“The president has made it clear this isn’t only about Israel,” he said. “Iran’s ultimate objective is the United States.”
Iranian state media reported missile drills in several cities on Monday, as Tehran said its missile program was strictly defensive against the backdrop of rising regional tensions and warnings from Israel.
The semi-official Fars news agency, citing field observations and public reports, said missile tests were observed in multiple locations, including Tehran, Isfahan, Mashhad, Khorramabad and Mahabad.
Iran’s state broadcaster and the semi-official Nournews published videos that appeared to show missile launches, without specifying the exact locations. Other reports said launches took place in Tehran, Isfahan and Mashhad.
Earlier in the day, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei rejected any discussion of Iran’s military capabilities, saying the country’s missile program had been developed solely to defend Iran’s sovereignty and was not subject to negotiation.
“Iran’s defensive capabilities are by no means an issue that can be discussed,” he said.
The reports came a day after Axios said Israel had warned the United States that recent Iranian missile drills could be used as cover for preparations for a surprise attack, citing Israeli officials.
US officials told Axios, however, that Washington currently saw no indication of an imminent Iranian strike.