Alsumaria News / Baghdad , the 
Times newspaper published in its edition on Tuesday, a report Port Deng said from Washington that the former US President, the administration of Barack Obama , "obstructed an investigation into " allegations about the involvement of the party of God in the smuggling of drugs and weapons, and missed the chance arrest of suspects, In order to "facilitate an agreement with Iran " on its nuclear project, pointing out that this prevented the capture of the "stealth", the most important elements required, which is believed to be in Beirut, and accused of supplying chemical weapons to Bashar al-Assad , in Syria .




" The US Drug Enforcement Agency has found evidence that Hezbollah has become a prominent player in organized crime and is helping to bring cocaine into the United States from Latin America across the Middle East," he says. 

The report quoted Politeko's website as saying that the agency led a process to track Hezbollah's activities and activities abroad and reached a party agent named "The Stealth", one of the world's biggest cocaine smugglers, who is also accused of smuggling arms to Syria. 

He referred to allegations that the Obama administration "blocked an 8-year investigation into Hezbollah's activities" to achieve the president's first goal at the time: to persuade Iran to agree to freeze its nuclear program.

The operation, known as Cassandra, began in 2008 and "traced Hezbollah's drug and arms trafficking activities." The investigation took eight years, arresting a number of prominent agents and imposing sanctions on party members. 

According to the report, he believes that the obstacles set by the Obama administration "wasted" on the agency officials the opportunity to put their hands on the "ghost," the most important elements required in the investigation, which they believe in Beirut, accusing him of providing chemical weapons to President Bashar al-Assad in Syria, To the smuggling of drugs and other weapons. 

Jack O'Keeley, director of Cassandra's campaign at the US Drug Enforcement Agency, said the agency would have been able to arrest these people if they had received the green light from the Obama administration, which said it had "neglected to ask for help" from the agency.