For many years, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah was seen as somebody who spoke the truth. He was regarded in this light not only in Lebanon but through much of the Middle East. Sometimes, especially after Israel’s withdrawal from Lebanon in 2000 and at the time of the Second Lebanon War in 2006, this perception was justified.

In 2006, for instance, he acknowledged it had been an erroneous assessment that had led him to approve the cross-border kidnapping, and killing, of Israeli soldiers Eldad Regev and Ehud Goldwasser that prompted the Second Lebanon War.

But when it comes to the recent developments surrounding the Israeli attack at Akraba south of Damascus on Saturday night, and especially surrounding the two mysterious drones that subsequently crashed/exploded in the Hezbollah stronghold of Dahiyeh in Beirut, Nasrallah is lying. Lying through his teeth.

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He lied in his speech on Sunday night when he described these two recent events. And he lied in the statement that his organization published on Monday night claiming that the two “Israeli” drones in Beirut were carrying explosives.

First of all, as has already been widely reported, these were not Israeli drones. Nor did they look like Israeli drones.

Every child in Dahiyeh knows that if Israel were involved in this incident, there was certainly no intention to blow up or assassinate but rather to convey a message.

Even if we believe for a moment the narrative Nasrallah advanced in his speech, where he described how one of these drones flew at such a low altitude that people in the neighborhood were able to bring it down by throwing stones at it, does anybody in the Middle East who’s ever encountered an Israeli drone find that description credible?

Do the Hamas and Islamic Jihad activists in Gaza know of any Israeli drones like that, that explode and cause such minimal damage? Even a cursory examination of the pictures and clips of the scene of the “explosion” at Hezbollah’s media headquarters shows that if the “Zionist enemy” had wanted to truly blow up these offices, the result would have been very different.

If Israel were involved in this incident, there was certainly no intention to blow up or assassinate, but rather to convey a message

Nasrallah has been explaining that the threatened Hezbollah reprisals against Israel will not be in response to the drones in Beirut but rather to avenge the two members of his organization killed in Akraba, south of Damascus, in the Israeli strike there. But here too, Nasrallah’s faux-innocent description raises many questions — or should — in Lebanon and beyond.

Perhaps, before Nasrallah and Hezbollah drag Lebanon into a major escalation or heaven forbid a war, the organization would like to explain what exactly Hezbollah’s two activists were up to in this mysterious villa outside Damascus.

Were the two — Hassan Yousef Zabeeb and Yasser Ahmad Daher, who had been trained in Iran in operating drones — simply spending the last few days of summer vacation with their families around the pool before they headed back to their studies? Or were they, rather, planning and attempting to carry out attacks? And if the two were in fact there on some kind of military mission, does not Israel have complete legitimacy to protect itself from imminent attack?

The problem at the moment is that the Lebanese leadership, and of course the entire community of Hezbollah admirers, are prisoners of Nasrallah’s lies. It’s unlikely that Lebanon’s President Michel Aoun knew what really happened in Dahiyeh when he rushed to brand the incident a “declaration of war” by Israel against Lebanon. Aoun, who was previously the Lebanese army chief of staff and has commanded battles against Hezbollah in the past, should know how this organization’s manipulations can lead to drastic consequences.

The Lebanese leadership, and of course the entire community of Hezbollah admirers, are prisoners of Nasrallah’s lies

In the meantime, the official Israeli explanation of what really happened has not been heard, and therefore the field has been left open to the deluge of lies and fabrications being disseminated by Hezbollah. And through these lies and fabrications, Nasrallah has, in turn, painted himself and all of Lebanon into a corner.

When the truth is finally made known, the rhetorical escalation, the promises by Nasrallah to avenge the ostensible “Israeli aggression,” and any military consequences, will likely come to be recognized as another critical mistake by him.

Nasrallah has no genuine justification for a violent response. When the true picture becomes clear, it will be evident that what was harmed was mainly the honor of Hezbollah and Nasrallah. He has been humiliated. And his ego is what is driving his threats and actions at the moment.

The problem is that this does not only affect him. All of Lebanon is likely to find itself dragged into a grave escalation against Israel because of the inflated ego of a Hezbollah chief who should no longer be regarded as a man who tells the truth.