A global cyberfront is rising—united not by borders, but by belief. From Beirut to Moscow, from Islamabad to Jakarta, dozens of ideologically fused groups now operate under a single digital banner: the Holy League. Their tactics blend religious fervor with cyber precision. Their propaganda fuses Shiʿite martyrdom, Russian nationalism, and anti-Western rage into coordinated psychological and technical warfare. At the heart of it stand Cyber Fattah and Liwaa Mohammad—operating as both threat actors and ideological architects. This is not a random swarm of hackers. This is structured insurgency, narrated in code, scripture, and fire. The report exposes how Telegram becomes a battlefield, how hashtags wage jihad, and how martyrdom meets malware. Every defacement, every leak, every chant echoes from the Beqaa to Kaliningrad. Read on to understand the strategy behind the chaos, the propaganda behind the payloads, and the future of cyberwarfare shaped not by tools alone, but by theology, vengeance, and digital unity.
