Lebanon's senior Hezbollah official Sheikh Qawouq leads prayer with Hezbollah parliament member Ammar around coffins of victims killed during suicide bombings that occurred on Tuesday near Iran's embassy compound in BeirutBy Stephen Kalin BEIRUT (Reuters) – A Hezbollah leader appealed for calm on Wednesday and an easing of sectarian tensions in Lebanon, a day after twin suicide bombings struck the Iranian embassy in Beirut. "The technique to this confrontation begins politically," the Shi'ite Muslim crew's deputy leader, Sheikh Naim Qassem, stated on Lebanese radio, calling for harmony. The remarks by way of Qassem, essentially the most senior Hezbollah respectable to speak publicly about Tuesday's bombings, advised a restrained response from Hezbollah, which is funded by Iran and has sent warring parties to Syria to reinforce President Bashar al-Assad. Hezbollah's armed forces function in Syria has helped to inflame sectarian stress there and in Lebanon.