On Friday, August 8th, 2025, as news spread of two Palestinian fighters killed in an Israeli airstrike on Lebanese soil, an extraordinary display of solidarity emerged across ideologically disparate resistance movements.
The assassination of Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine’s (PFLP) senior leader and General Central Committee member Muhammad Khalil Wishah, aka “Abu Khalil” Wishah, alongside field commander Mufid Hassan Hussein, prompted condolence statements that revealed how sustained conflict has forged unprecedented unity between communist, Islamist and nationalist organisations across the region.
An Israeli airstrike killed the PFLP leader and Mr Hussein on the Masnaa Road in the Bekaa Valley in Lebanon on Thursday, the left-wing organisation announced. Mr Wishah became one of the high-profile resistance targets the Israelis have assassinated in recent months.
For the PFLP, Mr Wishah is also one of the top leaders to fall prey to Israeli attacks in the current phase of the conflict.
The unity of the resistance demonstrated that shared struggle against Israeli operations, now approaching two years in Gaza and one year in Lebanon, has created bonds that transcend traditional ideological boundaries....
The PFLP, in its August 8th statement, mourned the killing of Mr Wishah and Mr Hussein, hailing their roles in the resistance struggle against Israel.
“Abu Khalil” Wishah, born in Gaza in 1954, joined the PFLP in 1973 during its most active period of international operations. The organisation described him as someone who “stood tall in the face of all storms, never compromising on the fundamentals of the cause, nor retreating from his principles.”
The communist leader’s biography reflects the PFLP’s particular approach to resistance, not confined within the boundaries of Palestine but spread across the region.
“He participated in the battles to defend the revolution and the invasion of Lebanon in 1982. He participated in the Mountain War in Lebanon in 1983,” the PFLP said about Mr Wishah.
The PFLP portrayed Mr Wishah as embodying their vision of complete liberation, saying, “The martyr was the son of the true Palestine, which he had always imagined as complete and united, from its river to its sea, from Naqoura to Rafah.”
Field commander Mufid Hassan Hussein, born in 1973 in the Yarmouk Camp, represented a younger generation shaped by decades of displacement.
The PFLP noted that “he firmly believed that the homeland deserves to be sacrificed for it with all that is precious and dear.” His trajectory from refugee camp to senior commander illustrated how the organisation continues recruiting from Palestinian diaspora communities.
While highlighting the supreme sacrifices made by Mr Wishah and Mr Hussein, the PFLP pledged to continue the struggle, saying, “We pledge, by their pure blood, that we will remain faithful to their pledge, continuing in their footsteps until the return, victory, and complete liberation of Palestine from its river to its sea are achieved.”
As the PFLP mourned Mr Wishah and Mr Hussein, it found the entire resistance family, in Palestine and Lebanon, joining it...
The Palestinian People’s Party in Lebanon, representing the leftist secular tradition, condemned what they termed “this heinous Zionist crime”.
“We affirm that targeting leaders and fighters will only strengthen our people’s resolve to adhere to the option of struggle and resistance, and to maintain national unity in defence of their dignity and their legitimate rights to freedom, return, and independence,” the organisation stated.
“What we learned about the two martyred comrades, their lives and stances, embody the image of sincere fighters committed to the causes of their people. We, the Palestinian People’s Party, offer our deepest condolences to you, to the families of the two martyrs, and to all our comrades in the Popular Front. We pledge to remain loyal to the blood of the martyrs and to adhere to the principles for which they were martyred, until our people achieve their goals of freedom, independence, and return,” it further added.
Similarly, the Central Follow-up Committee of Palestinian Popular Committees in Lebanon described the victims as “ever-shining torches on the path of freedom and liberation” while pledging to “continue on this path until we achieve our people’s goals of building an independent state with Jerusalem as its capital.”
The PFLP-General Command, despite organisational separation from the mainstream PFLP years ago, offered condolences that emphasised shared revolutionary commitment: “History bears witness that our people have presented inspiring models of the meaning of sacrifice and martyrdom, especially as they face the most heinous and brutal massacre known to history.”
“We pledge to continue the revolution, and together we will achieve victory on the path to liberating the land and the people,” the PFLP-GC added...
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