Here’s What We Know About Hezbollah’s Elite Unit, Radwan Force
The specialists in Radwan appear to be far more capable than the average Hezbollah fighter, with training provided by the Sabeerin Commandos, a battalion within Iran’s Al Quds Force, a branch of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
(DEFENCE SECURITY ASIA) — Previously a relatively unknown military unit of Hezbollah, the Radwan Force has gained renewed attention in recent months.
Israel has demanded that the elite unit withdraw more than 30 kilometres from the Lebanese-Israel border, threatening to remove it by force if Hezbollah does not do so voluntarily.
Rumours of the unit’s deployment in the Syrian Golan Heights have circulated, with analysts positing the deployment’s implications for Hezbollah opening a new front with Israel.
The military unit, however, is not new.
The special forces unit is trained to conduct small raids in Israel and has existed since at least 2006, when it carried out the capture of Israeli soldiers – the catalyst for the July 2006 war between Israel and Hezbollah.

Previously called the “rapid intervention unit,” the group was re-named in 2008 after the killing of Imad Mughniyeh, who had the nom de guerre of “Hajj Radwan”.
After Hezbollah intervened in favour of the Syrian regime in the Syrian civil war, Radwan Forces began to fight alongside the Syrian military and its allied militias.
The unit was reportedly deployed in southern and northern Syria to fight rebel elements, as well as in Quneitra in the Syrian Golan Heights, where Iranian-linked elements have maintained a presence for years.
Analysts have suggested that the unit’s time-fighting in Syria has made its ranks battle-hardened and increased its ability to fight as a commando force, as opposed to other more guerrilla-style units of Hezbollah.
Meanwhile The New York Times in its report said Radwan has taken the lead in Hezbollah’s long-running conflict with Israel, and in the cross-border attacks that have escalated in the months that Israel and Hamas have been at war.
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