TEL AVIV, Israel
More than a year after Hamas’ devastating October 7 attacks on Israel, the country’s military said Thursday it had killed the man it considers to have been the chief architect of that cross-border massacre – raising questions about the future of the war and of the militant group itself, which has faced blow after blow in recent months.
The death of Hamas
leader Yahya
Sinwar could pose a rare
opportunity to strike a ceasefire, US officials say – with Israel
having killed several other top Hamas commanders including Ismail
Haniyeh, the group’s former political leader, as well as leaders
of militant group Hezbollah in Lebanon.
Hamas and Hezbollah are both
part of an axis of militant groups backed by Iran.
In a recorded video message
Thursday, Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sinwar’s death marked “the beginning
of the day after Hamas,” but “the task before us is not yet complete.”
Hamas is yet to comment on the
reports of its leader’s death.
Here’s what you need to know.
Since the October 7 attacks,
Israel has poured their resources into a fierce manhunt for Sinwar, declaring
him as the most-wanted man in Gaza and a “dead man walking.” At one point, an
Israeli military spokesperson said their hunt “will not stop until he is
captured, dead or alive.”
And, US officials believe, the
Israeli military got close a few times, at one point even obtaining a video
that purportedly showed Sinwar with several family members inside a Gaza tunnel
– but he continued slipping away. The Israeli military previously surrounded
Sinwar’s house and carried out an intensive assault on his hometown of Khan
Younis, but could not find him.
That year-long search finally
came to an unexpected end on Wednesday in Rafah, southern Gaza. Israeli forces
had been in the area during a routine military operation when they came under
fire near a building, according to two Israeli sources familiar with the
matter.
The troops returned fire with
a tank, then flew a drone into the heavily damaged building, according to the
Israeli military. The video, shared by the military, shows what seem to be
Sinwar’s final moments: he sits alone in a chair, surrounded by dust and
rubble, appearing to look directly at the camera. He holds a piece of wood in
his hand, and throws it at the drone before the video ends.
It was only then, and when
troops inspected the rubble, that they realized Sinwar was among the bodies,
according to the Israeli military.
Dental records and other
biometrics helped Israel identify the Hamas leader, according to a US
official and former official familiar with the matter.
Sinwar had been trying to
escape to the north when he was killed, said another Israeli military
spokesperson on Thursday. He was found with a gun and more than $10,000 in
Israeli shekels, the spokesperson said.
Sinwar had long been a
key player in Hamas, joining the militant group in the late 1980s and
quickly rising through the ranks.
He was born in a refugee camp
in Gaza, after his family was displaced from the Palestinian village of
Al-Majdal – now part of the Israeli city Ashkelon – during the Arab-Israeli
war.
As a student, Sinwar became an
anti-occupation activist, but he was imprisoned in Israel on several life
sentences after being accused of orchestrating murder. He served 23 years
before being released as part of a prisoner swap in 2011.
Sinwar returned to Gaza and quickly established his name in Hamas. He founded the group’s feared international intelligence security branch, the Majd, and was known for employing brutal violence against anyone suspected of collaborating with Israel.
He was also viewed as a
pragmatic political leader by some: in 2017, Hamas elected Sinwar as the
political chief of the Politburo, its main decision-making body in Gaza.
Sinwar was designated a global
terrorist by the US Department of State and the European Union in 2015, and was
sanctioned by the United Kingdom and France in recent years.
But he rose to greater
prominence after the October 7 attacks as one of Israel’s key targets. Israeli
officials have called him the “face of evil” and “the butcher from Khan
Younis.”
He became one of Hamas’ most
senior leaders in August after Ismail
Haniyeh was assassinated in Iran. Sinwar had not been seen since the
October 7 attacks, likely surviving Israel’s siege of Gaza by bunkering in a
vast network of underground tunnels.
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