Architect of Oct 7 attacks: Who is Hamas chief Yahya Sinwar, the intelligence operator said to be killed by Israel?

Architect of Oct 7 attacks: Who is Hamas chief Yahya Sinwar, the intelligence operator said to be killed by Israel?


TEHRAN, Oct 18 — After a career in the shadows, spent in Israeli prisons and the internal security apparatus of Hamas, Yahya Sinwar emerged as the leader of the Palestinian group after igniting a war that has engulfed the region.

Chief architect of the October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, the deadliest in its history, Sinwar was killed during an operation in Gaza, Israel’s military said on Thursday.

Hamas has yet to confirm his death.

Sinwar was the head of Hamas in Gaza during the October 7 attack, and rose to become the group’s overall leader in August after the killing of political chief Ismail Haniyeh.

The killing of Haniyeh in Tehran on July 31 has been widely blamed on Israel, which has never claimed the assassination.

Also in July, Israel said it killed Hamas military leader Mohammed Deif, but the group never confirmed his death.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hailed Sinwar’s death on Thursday, saying “his elimination is an important landmark in the decline of the evil rule of Hamas”.

“Today evil has suffered a heavy blow,” he added.

Punishing collaborators

The Hamas attack resulted in the deaths of 1,206 people in Israel, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli official figures that include hostages killed in captivity.

Israel’s retaliatory campaign in Gaza has killed 42,438 people, the majority civilians, according to data from the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory.

According to Abu Abdallah, a Hamas member who spent years alongside him in Israeli jails, Sinwar was a security operator “par excellence”.

“He makes decisions in the utmost calm, but is intractable when it comes to defending the interests of Hamas,” Abu Abdallah told AFP in 2017, after his former co-detainee was elected Hamas’s leader in Gaza.

Born in the Khan Yunis refugee camp in southern Gaza, Sinwar joined Hamas when Sheikh Ahmad Yassin founded the group around the time the first Palestinian intifada, or uprising, began in 1987.

Sinwar set up the group’s internal security apparatus the following year and went on to head an intelligence unit dedicated to flushing out and mercilessly punishing—sometimes killing—Palestinians accused of providing information to Israel.

According to a transcript of an interrogation with security officials published in Israeli media, Sinwar professed to have strangled an alleged collaborator with a keffiyeh scarf in a Khan Yunis cemetery.

A graduate of the Islamic University in Gaza, he learned perfect Hebrew during his 23 years in Israeli jails and was said to have a deep understanding of Israeli culture and society.

‘Radical and pragmatic’

He was serving four life terms for the killing of two Israeli soldiers when he became the most senior of 1,027 Palestinians released in exchange for Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit in 2011.

Sinwar later became a senior commander in the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, the military wing of Hamas, before taking overall leadership of the movement in Gaza.

While his predecessor, Haniyeh, had encouraged efforts by Hamas to present a moderate face to the world, Sinwar preferred to force the Palestinian issue to the fore by more violent means.

Sinwar was said to have strived for a single Palestinian state bringing together the Gaza Strip, the occupied West Bank—controlled by Mahmud Abbas’s Fatah party—and annexed east Jerusalem.

According to US think-tank the Council on Foreign Relations, he has vowed to punish anyone obstructing reconciliation with Fatah, the rival political movement with which Hamas engaged in factional fighting after elections in 2006.

With Fatah much weakened over years of decline, the prisoner releases resulting from the brief November truce agreement with Israel saw Hamas’s popularity soar in the West Bank.

Sinwar pursued a path of being “radical in military planning and pragmatic in politics”, said Leila Seurat of the Arab Centre for Research and Political Studies in Paris.

“He doesn’t advocate force for force’s sake, but to bring about negotiations” with Israel, she said.

The Hamas chief was added to the US list of the most wanted “international terrorists” in 2015.

In his statement on Thursday, Netanyahu said the war in Gaza had not ended with Sinwar’s killing.

“The war… is not over yet. And it is difficult, and it exacts heavy prices from us,” he said, adding in a message to Palestinians in Gaza: “Whoever lays down his weapon and returns our hostages—we will allow him to go on living.” — AFP



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