The leader of Lebanon's Iran-backed Hizballah militia claims his group is stronger than ever despite U.S. sanctions and expects to "very soon" celebrate victory in the long war in Syria, where its fighters have battled alongside Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's forces.
In a televised speech in Beirut on August 14, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah said "the resistance in Lebanon today, in its possession of weapons and equipment and capabilities and members and cadres and ability and expertise and experience, and also of faith and determination and courage and will, is stronger than at any time since its launch in the region."
Iran has backed Hizballah financially and militarily since the militant group was established in 1982.
Nasrallah claimed U.S. efforts to ratchet up sanctions this year against his group and Iran were not working and will not lead to a popular revolt against the Islamist leaders in Tehran -- something U.S. President Donald Trump has appeared to encourage in Twitter posts.
"They are building dreams...that Iran will head toward chaos and the regime will fall. This is illusion, this is imagination and has nothing to do with reality," Nasrallah said.
"Iran has been facing sanctions since the victory of the Islamic Revolution in 1979," he said. "[Trump] is strengthening the sanctions, but they have been there since 1979 and Iran stayed and will celebrate the 40th anniversary of the victory of its revolution."
Iranian and Hizballah forces have accompanied Syrian troops in fighting across the country that in the last year has seen the government regain control over most of Syria's territory after seven years of war that has left more than 400,000 people dead and millions more without homes.
As Assad has reasserted his control over territory once held by rebels, including reclaiming Syria's border with Israel in the last month, Tel Aviv has repeatedly warned that it will not allow Iran and Hizballah to maintain a permanent presence in the neighboring country.
Israel's air force has conducted numerous deadly raids this year on facilities in Syria used by Hizballah and Iranian forces.
"Let no one threaten us with wars," Nasrallah said. "If anyone wants to launch a war, they are welcome to do so. We are ready for it and we will win," he said.
Israel launched a 33-day war against Hizballah in 2006, with battles taking place across Lebanon.
The two sides have maintained an uneasy cease-fire since then, despite raids by Israeli fighter jets from time to time claiming to have stopped weapons transfers from Syria to Hizballah.
Israel has claimed Iran is not only supplying weapons to Hizballah but has plans to build weapons factories in Syria and Lebanon as it consolidates and augments its presence in the region.
Fears that Iran may be building up such forces near its borders have prompted Israeli leaders to demand that all Iranian forces must leave Syria as part of any settlement ending the civil war there.