Lebanon’s Hezbollah has dismissed the latest ceasefire proposal, sources confirm, as the Royal Navy deploys additional patrols to the Gulf. The militant group’s rejection comes amid escalating tensions, with uncovered documents suggesting a direct link to Iranian financing networks.
According to a senior intelligence source, the ceasefire was brokered by the UN but collapsed within hours. Hezbollah’s leadership, sources say, fears a loss of strategic leverage. The group’s latest statement, released through Al-Manar TV, accused Israel of violating prior agreements. But behind the rhetoric lies a trail of money: laundered through Beirut’s banks, funnelled from Tehran’s Revolutionary Guard.
Meanwhile, the Royal Navy’s HMS Defender and HMS Lancaster have joined US warships in the Gulf. A Ministry of Defence spokesperson claimed the patrols are to 'ensure freedom of navigation.' But our sources reveal a darker purpose: interdicting arms shipments bound for Hezbollah’s precision-guided missile programme. The Treasury’s financial intelligence unit has flagged three Dubai-based shell companies tied to the procurement network.
The timing is no coincidence. Hezbollah’s cash flow is drying up: US sanctions on Iran have squeezed remittances, and European banks are finally freezing accounts. But the group is fighting back. Last week, a Hezbollah-linked money changer in Beirut’s Hamra district was raided by Lebanese security forces. Our sources say they found ledgers showing payments to political figures in parliament.
The Royal Navy’s presence is a projection of power, but the real war is in the ledgers, not the waves. Unaccountable power, whether in Tehran or Beirut, thrives on the shadows. We’re watching the money. The bodies will follow.







