Israel's military says Gaza strike kills Hamas armed wing leader Haddad

Palestinians walk at the site of an Israeli airstrike on a residential building on Friday, in Gaza City. Israel's military on Saturday said it had killed the chief of Hamas' military wing.

Palestinians walk at the site of an Israeli airstrike on a residential building on Friday, in Gaza City. Israel's military on Saturday said it had killed the chief of Hamas' military wing. (Dawoud Abu Alkas, Reuters)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Israel's military claims it killed Hamas military chief Izz al-Din al-Haddad in Gaza.
  • Haddad, nicknamed "the Ghost," was targeted for past attacks on Israeli civilians.
  • Since the October ceasefire, Israeli strikes have killed 850 Palestinians, raising tensions.

CAIRO — Israel's military on Saturday said it had killed the chief of Hamas' military wing in an air ​strike on Gaza the previous day, the most senior Hamas official killed by Israel since an October U.S.-backed ceasefire agreement that was meant to halt fighting.

A senior Hamas official, speaking on ‌the condition of anonymity, confirmed Izz al-Din al-Haddad, who was born in 1970, was killed in the attack. Hamas Gaza spokesperson Hazem Qassem ⁠later said in a video statement published on ​Facebook that Haddad had died, without giving further details.

At ⁠Al Aqsa Martyrs Mosque in central Gaza, a joint funeral was held on Saturday for Haddad, his ‌wife and their 19-year-old daughter. ‌It was not immediately clear how they died.

Israel carried out at least two attacks on ⁠Gaza on Friday, killing seven Palestinians, including three women and ⁠one child, according to local medics. A Palestinian source said Haddad was killed in an Israeli strike on an apartment building.

Israel's military said that Haddad was killed in what it described as a precise strike on Gaza City. Israel has repeatedly carried out strikes on Gaza since the ceasefire started.

Casualties mount despite ceasefire

Some 850 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli strikes since the October ceasefire, according to ‌figures that do not distinguish between combatants and civilians. Four Israeli soldiers ​were killed by militants during the same period. Hamas does not disclose figures for casualties among its fighters.

In a joint statement with his defense minister on Friday, announcing the military had targeted Haddad, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Haddad was an architect of the October 7, 2023, attacks that precipitated Israel's ongoing assault on Gaza.

Haddad, who became the group's military chief in Gaza after Israel's killing of Mohammad Sinwar in May 2025, "was responsible for the murder, abduction, and harm inflicted on thousands of ​Israeli civilians (and) soldiers," they said.

Nicknamed 'the Ghost,' Haddad had survived multiple assassination attempts by Israel, according to Hamas sources. Israel's military says ‌that he was ‌one of Hamas' ⁠longest-serving commanders, rising through the ranks from the group's early establishment in the 1980s to hold several senior positions.

Israel and Hamas remain deadlocked in indirect talks to advance President Donald Trump's post-war plan for Gaza that is meant to end more than two years of fighting.

Israel has escalated its attacks in Gaza in the ‌weeks since halting its joint ​bombing with the U.S. in Iran, redirecting its fire back on ‌the ruined Palestinian territory, where ⁠the military says that ​Hamas fighters are tightening their grip.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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Nidal al-Mughrabi and Alexander Cornwell

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