IDF strikes Hamas military leader Mohammad Deif, fate unclear
Commander of Hamas's Khan Yunis Brigade, Rafa Salama, was likely killed in the same strike, and no hostages were killed.
The IDF targeted Hamas’s supreme military commander Mohammad Deif on Saturday in the al-Muwasi humanitarian zone near Khan Yunis in southern Gaza. He has been one of the terrorist group’s leading military figures for years.
A senior source noted that there was a high likelihood that Deif was killed in the strike, but that confirmation was, as of yet, forthcoming, Israeli state broadcaster KAN reported.
In a joint IDF and ISA activity, the IDF's Southern Command and the Israeli air force struck an area where two senior Hamas terrorists and additional terrorists were hiding among civilians, the IDF later reported. The location of the strike was an open area surrounded by trees, several buildings, and sheds.
Since the current war started, Deif has emerged as Hamas’s No. 2 in command; if he had been killed, he would be by far the most important Hamas leader to have been eliminated since the start of the war.
Previously, the IDF killed Deif’s deputy Marwan Issa and Saleh al-Arouri, the deputy of Hamas’s leader outside of Gaza, Ismail Haniyeh.
Israeli media reported that Rafa Salama, the commander of Hamas's Khan Yunis Brigade, was also a target of the Israeli strike. The Saudi news outlet, Al Hadath, later reported that Salama had been killed. The following day, Saudi media reported a Hamas official confirmed Salama had indeed been killed.
The location of the strike was an open area surrounded by trees, several buildings, low sheds, and with tunnels not far away, but not in the immediate vicinity.
It is unclear if Deif was hit in the strike, and his current status is unknown. Still, the IDF told Army Radio that lots of preparation had gone into the strike, and that the strike itself was very precise.
Further, IDF intelligence provided opened a window of opportunity mere hours beforehand.
Army Radio correspondent Doron Kadosh reported that a security source noted that, as far as was known, no hostages were held at the scene of the strike. An additional two security sources reportedly stated that the attempted elimination of Deif occurred while the Hamas leader was above ground, as opposed to inside a tunnel.
The military also believes that Salama spent more time at the location with it being one of his primary areas of operation, whereas Deif likely arrived at the location on Saturday on a more transient basis.
Army Radio correspondent Doron Kadosh reported that a security source noted that, as far as was known, no hostages were held at the scene of the strike. An additional two security sources reportedly stated that the attempted elimination of Deif occurred while the Hamas leader was above ground, as opposed to being inside a tunnel.
Army Radio added that Deif and Salama had been hiding in a building near tents of displaced persons in the area.
Reports of civilian casualties
Dozens to 90 Palestinians were killed in the strike, with the IDF estimating that most of those killed were Hamas terrorists, but not denying the possibility that some not insignificant minority of them could have been civilians.
The Prime Minister’s Office released a short statement about the attempted elimination, confirming that “the prime minister gave a standing directive at the beginning of the war to eliminate senior Hamas officials. He was updated on all developments during the night and continues to receive regular updates. The prime minister will conduct a situational assessment today with all the security forces and the National Security Council to discuss the next developments and steps.”
On Saturday evening, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gave a press conference on the event, saying, “We still do not have confirmation that he was killed, but we have accurate information that tells us that no hostages were in the area of the strike.”
Earlier, a senior Hamas official said an Israeli Army Radio report that a strike on Gaza’s Khan Yunis on Saturday had targeted Hamas military chief Mohammed Deif was “nonsense.”
“All the martyrs are civilians, and what happened was a grave escalation of the war of genocide, backed by the American support and world silence,” Abu Zuhri told Reuters, adding that the attack showed Israel was not interested in reaching a ceasefire agreement.
However, if Deif was killed, it would be a major morale blow to Hamas, which would have strong reasons to cover it up.
Absent proof of life from Deif, Israel’s narrative that he may be dead will likely gain momentum over a period of weeks.
In the wake of the strike, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, IDF Chief of Staff Herzi Halevi, and Shin Bet head Ronen Bar convened an operational situation assessment.
Rotem Mai-Tal, the CEO of Asgard Systems, which develops military technology for defense industries, said that the aerial munitions used in the assassination were likely the advanced Joint Direct Attack Munition (JDAM) bombs made in the US, which were the bombs Washington had been withholding a few months ago, Maariv reported.
“These are sophisticated kits that convert standard aerial munitions into advanced bombs guided by a laser and/or GPS-guided advanced seeker head based on advanced sensing and artificial intelligence technology produced by the USA and Israel,” Mai-Tal told Maariv.
Following the attack on Deif, as well as IAF strikes on Hezbollah operatives in Lebanon, the Lebanese-based terrorist group fired dozens of rockets at the Galilee.
One IDF soldier was seriously wounded, another was moderately wounded, and two more were lightly wounded as the result of debris from rocket interceptions in the area of Kiryat Shmona, the military reported Saturday night. The soldiers were evacuated to a hospital for medical treatment, and their families have been informed.
The foreign ministries of Jordan and Egypt condemned the Israeli attack in Gaza. Jordan claimed that “the tents of the displaced persons in Khan Yunis, an area that Israel had already classified as safe,” were attacked, and called on “the international community to act to provide protection for Palestinians, hospitals, and aid organizations operating in Gaza.”
Egypt announced that it “strongly condemns the Israeli attack in the Al-Mawasi area, which resulted in the deaths and injuries of dozens of Palestinians. Egypt demands that Israel stop harming civilian lives.”
Who is Mohammad Deif?
Deif was born Mohammad Masri in 1965 in the Khan Yunis Refugee Camp, a short distance from where Israel conducted the strike to eliminate the senior Hamas figure. He later became known as Mohammed Deif after joining Hamas during the first Intifada in 1987.
Jacob Eriksson, a specialist in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict at the University of York, told France24 that “Deif” translates to “guest” and refers to his constant travel – a tactic used to survive Israeli attacks. However, the Washington Post suggested in 2014 that he took his name from a character he played during a university production.
Only two years after joining the terror group, Deif was arrested but spent only 16 months in detention, a Hamas source told Reuters.
Deif developed the group’s network of terror tunnels as well as his bomb-making expertise.
During the war, IDF intelligence found videos of Deif confirming that he had lost an eye and sustained serious wounds in one leg in previous assassination attempts, though he was not as crippled as they had thought.
Having escaped numerous assassination attempts, Gazan fans dubbed him “the man with nine lives,” a play on the common saying that cats have nine lives.
Deif masterminded the military tactics of Hamas’s October 7 attack on southern Israel, in which terrorists murdered at least 1,200 people and abducted over 250.
Deif has been considered an international terrorist by the US since 2015.
This is a developing story.
Jerusalem Post Staff and Reuters contributed to this report.
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