AT (T.me) Was Another Pagers Operation Foiled in Lebanon—This Time Involving Motorcycles?
Muhammad Hadi Saleh was not exposed through a special investigation or by security officials; he was exposed because of a $18,500 debt. The owner of a money transfer branch in Lebanon, frustrated by the delay in repayment, physically dragged him to the store.
When Saleh began stuttering, a friend of the owner snatched his phone—and what he found was far more significant than Saleh himself: emails with a man named "Louis," WhatsApp messages begging for money, names of commanders, security locations, motorcycle records, and unit details. It was all there—a complete intelligence infrastructure, not a mistake or distraction, but deliberate cooperation.
Saleh, in his 30s, a religious singer, a Hezbollah stalwart, the son of a Radwan Force fighter, and a bereaved brother, claims he fell into a financial crisis and traveled to Iraq to find himself. There, he alleges, he was recruited by the Mossad—not through a secret meeting, university recruitment, or an officer in the field, but via a sponsored Facebook post titled, "Were You a Former Member of Hezbollah?" He responded, received a reply, and from there, the relationship began with three men: "Muhsan," "Abu Dawood," and "Ali."
Later, "Louis" deepened the relationship through emails, seeking to fully engage Saleh. He sent a psychological questionnaire, followed by a cognitive one, and requested every detail about Saleh’s family to build a "profile."
From there, "Louis" made further demands: information about Saleh’s service in Unit 4100, his activities in Aleppo, Syria, his actions in Iraq, breaches in the fence, Hezbollah’s force structure, and numerous other details. "Louis" sought as much information as possible, and Saleh provided what he could.
In one correspondence, Saleh was asked to provide a complete breakdown of Hezbollah’s motorcycles—used for hacking, evacuation, attacks, and logistics, including those intended to invade the Galilee—covering model types, local suppliers, and importers (reminiscent of the pagers and Walkie-TalkiPost too long. Click here to view the full text.