Lebanese TV station
al-Mayadeen earlier reported he was killed in an Israeli attack, Israel
declined to comment.
Hizbollah, which is listed
as a terrorist group by the US, has been very active in Syria helping Assad's
war against Sunni rebels.
Badreddine was known for
masterminding military operations against Israel from Lebanon and overseas.
The senior Hizbollah
military commander Mustafa Badreddine has been killed in an attack in Syria.
The 55-year-old died in an
explosion targeting one of the Shia militant group's bases near Damascus
airport.
Badreddine led Hizbollah's
intervention in Syria supporting President Bashar al-Assad - and his killing is
seen as a significant blow to the regime.
The Lebanon-based group
said: "According to preliminary reports, a large explosion targeted one of
our positions near Damascus international airport killing brother commander
Mustafa Badreddine and wounding other people.
"He said months ago
that he would not return from Syria except as a martyr or carrying the flag of
victory."
It is not known whether
Badreddine was killed by an air raid, missile attack or artillery shelling - or
who launched the assault.
He was once dubbed by a
prosecutor of the International Criminal Court as an "untraceable
ghost".
The militant commander was
one of four figures from the organisation accused of the assassination of Rafic
Hariri, the former prime minister of Lebanon, in February 2005.
The trial began in his
absence last year at The Hague in the Netherlands.
Badreddine was also
suspected of involvement in the 1983 bombings of the US and French embassies in
Kuwait and was sentenced to death, but escaped from prison after Saddam
Hussein's Iraqi forces invaded the country in 1990.
His killing is the biggest
blow to the militant group since the 2008 assassination of his predecessor,
Imad Mughniyeh, who died in a bomb attack in Damascus.
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