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d-23350House OversightOther

Bulgarian Interior Minister Links Hezbollah Military Wing to 2012 Burgas Bus Bombing

The passage provides a concrete claim by a foreign minister that the perpetrators belonged to Hezbollah's military formation, which could prompt further investigation into terrorist financing, EU desi Bulgarian interior minister publicly attributes the July 2012 Burgas bus bombing to Hezbollah's mili The statement has sparked debate within the EU about designating Hezbollah (or parts of it) as a t

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #028695
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage provides a concrete claim by a foreign minister that the perpetrators belonged to Hezbollah's military formation, which could prompt further investigation into terrorist financing, EU desi Bulgarian interior minister publicly attributes the July 2012 Burgas bus bombing to Hezbollah's mili The statement has sparked debate within the EU about designating Hezbollah (or parts of it) as a t

Tags

legal-exposure-eu-terrorist-lihezbollaheu-sanctionsbulgariaburgas-bombingpolitical-influenceforeign-policyhouse-oversightforeign-terrorist-involvementterrorism

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
February 12, 2013 -- Bulgaria's interior minister announced on Feb. 5 the result of his country's investigation into the July 2012 bombing of a bus filled with Israeli tourists in the city of Burgas, which killed five Israelis and the vehicle's Bulgarian driver. Two of the individuals who carried out the terrorist attack, he said, "belonged to the military formation of Hezbollah." It was not by chance that his statement fingered only the military wing of Hezbollah, not the group as a whole. Within the European Union, the findings of the Bulgarian investigation have kicked off a firestorm over whether to add the Lebanese militant organization -- in whole, or perhaps just its military or terrorist wings -- to the EU's list of banned terrorist groups. But are there in fact distinct wings within the self-styled "Party of God"? Hezbollah is many things. It is one of the dominant political parties in Lebanon, as well as a social and religious movement catering first and foremost -- though not exclusively -- to Lebanon's Shiite community. Hezbollah is also Lebanon's largest militia, the only one to keep its weapons and rebrand its armed elements as an "Islamic resistance" in response to the terms of the 1989 Taif Accord, which ended the Lebanese Civil War. While the group's various elements are intended to complement one another, the

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