Gallant: 'There have been successes, including in recent days'

Netanyahu says Israel coming for Hamas leaders amid speculation senior terrorist killed

PM threatens: ‘We already eliminated number four in Hamas. Three, two, and one are on the way,’ as Israel and Hamas both look into fate of Marwan Issa, said targeted in Gaza strike

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu makes a video statement on March 11, 2024 (Screenshot, used in accordance with Clause 27a of the Copyright Law)
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu makes a video statement on March 11, 2024 (Screenshot, used in accordance with Clause 27a of the Copyright Law)

Israel has killed Hamas’s “number four,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a short video statement on Monday, apparently confirming that Israel was behind the assassination of the terror group’s deputy political leader, Saleh al-Arouri, two months ago, while vowing that the military would soon reach the other top commanders.

The remarks came as Israel was investigating the fate of the terror group’s number three, Marwan Issa, one of the key figures involved in planning Hamas’s brutal October 7 massacre in southern Israel, who was reportedly targeted in an airstrike early Sunday.

“We are on the way to total victory. On the way to this victory, we already eliminated number four in Hamas. Three, two and one are on the way,” Netanyahu said in the 13-second video. “They are all dead men, we will reach them all.”

Defense Minister Yoav Gallant also appeared to hint at an Israeli strike on Issa, in remarks released by the Defense Ministry following a meeting with IDF Chief Herzi Halevi and the army’s general staff.

Left: Marwan Issa, the deputy head of Hamas’s military wing, circled in a photo circulated on social media in 2015. The photo or its source could not be immediately verified. Right: An IDF strike early March 10 on a tunnel where Issa was believed to be hiding. (Social media; Israel Defense Forces)

“There have been successes, including in recent days, and there will be more successes, the operations are persistent and headed in the right direction,” the defense minister said. “Alongside that, we need to take into account that we may have more challenges in front of us, primarily in the north, with all its significance.”

Hamas has yet to acknowledge whether Issa was among five people reportedly killed in a strike overnight between Saturday and Sunday in the Nuseirat camp in central Gaza where the terror leader was said to be hiding since October 7.

Nicknamed “Shadow Man’ for his ability to stay off Israel’s radar, Issa is also believed to have been directing Hamas’s military operations since October 7.

Al-Arouri was killed in an airstrike on Beirut in early January, for which Israel never officially took responsibility.

Hamas deputy leader Saleh al-Arouri at his desk in Beirut with an M16 rifle laid in front of him, August 27, 2023 (Shehab News)

He was regarded as close to Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah and as Hamas’s prime orchestrator of West Bank terrorism.

On Monday evening, Channel 12 aired footage apparently showing Palestinians inspecting the aftermath of the Nuseirat strike.

 

The New York Times reported in January that the US Central Intelligence Agency had set up a task force in the wake of the October 7 assault to gather intelligence on the location of senior Hamas leaders and share the information with Israel.

The unconfirmed report, which cited US officials, said that the US was already transferring information on the location of senior leaders, though it was unclear how effective the intelligence had been as none of the major leaders in Gaza have yet been killed or captured.

The report noted that the US did not give Israel information leading to al-Arouri’s killing in Beirut.

It also noted that even if information has been given to Israel on the location of top leaders like Yahya Sinwar, or Hamas’s shadowy military chief Mohammed Deif — likely number one and number two on the list — Israel may not be able to immediately act on the information.

Hamas leaders Muhammad Deif (L) and Yahya Sinwar (HO / AFP, MAHMUD HAMS / AFP)

Hamas political bureau chief Ismail Haniyeh has lived in Qatar since Sinwar replaced him as Gaza chief in 2017, and is likely also in Israel’s sights.

Meanwhile Monday, the IDF said troops of the 7th Armored Brigade located Hamas tunnels in the Hamad Town residential complex in southern Gaza’s Khan Younis, adding that one of the tunnel shafts led to an underground route where food and weapons were found.

Another tunnel shaft contained weapons manufacturing equipment and concrete production machinery used by Hamas to build tunnels, the IDF said. The tunnels were destroyed in an airstrike.

The IDF said the brigade raided several more Hamas sites in the Hamad area, seizing sniper rifles, explosive devices, military equipment, and intelligence documents.

Troops of the 7th Armored Brigade operate in the Hamad Town residential complex in Khan Younis, in a handout image published March 11, 2024. (Israel Defense Forces)

Alongside the Military Intelligence Directorate’s Unit 504 and Shin Bet, dozens of terror operatives attempting to flee with evacuating civilians from the Hamad area were captured by troops, and hundreds more suspects were detained for questioning, the IDF added.

The war in Gaza erupted with Hamas’s October 7 massacre, which saw some 3,000 terrorists burst across the border by land, air and sea, killing some 1,200 people and seizing 253 hostages, mostly civilians, amid wholesale acts of brutality and sexual abuse.

In response, Israel launched a wide-scale offensive in Gaza aimed at destroying Hamas’s military and governance capabilities and releasing the hostages.

Agencies contributed to this report.

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