Israel claims responsibility for killing Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh for first time in ominous warning

Staff Writers
Reuters
Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh was killed by an Israeli bomb in Iran in July.
Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh was killed by an Israeli bomb in Iran in July. Credit: Arif Hudaverdi Yaman/Anadolu via Getty Images

Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz has admitted for the first time publicly to Israel’s killing of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Iran in July, further risking tensions between Tehran and its arch-enemy Israel in a region shaken by Israel’s war in Gaza and the conflict in Lebanon.

“These days, when the Houthi terrorist organisation is firing missiles at Israel, I want to convey a clear message to them at the beginning of my remarks,” Katz said on Monday.

“We have defeated Hamas, we have defeated Hezbollah, we have blinded Iran’s defence systems and damaged the production systems, we have toppled the Assad regime in Syria, we have dealt a severe blow to the axis of evil, and we will also deal a severe blow to the Houthi terrorist organisation in Yemen, which remains the last to stand.”

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Katz said Israel will “damage their strategic infrastructure, and we will behead their leaders — just as we did to Haniyeh, Sinwar and Nasrallah in Tehran, Gaza and Lebanon — we will do it in Hodeidah and Sana’a” during an evening honouring defence ministry personnel.

The Iran-backed group in Yemen has been attacking commercial shipping in the Red Sea for more than a year to try to enforce a naval blockade on Israel, saying they are acting in solidarity with Palestinians in Israel’s year-long war in Gaza.

In late July, the political leader of the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, Haniyeh was killed in Tehran in an assassination blamed on Israel by Iranian authorities. There was no direct claim of responsibility by Israel for Haniyeh’s death at the time.

Haniyeh, normally based in Qatar, had been the face of Hamas’ international diplomacy as the war set off by the Hamas-led attack on Israel on October 7 has raged in Gaza. He had been taking part in internationally brokered indirect talks on reaching a ceasefire in the Palestinian enclave.

Months after, Israeli forces in Gaza killed Yahya Sinwar, Haniyeh’s successor and the mastermind of the October 7, 2023, attack that triggered the latest bloodshed in the decades-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

In September, the Isreli military claimed it killed Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah in an airstrike on the group’s central headquarters in the southern suburbs of Beirut, Lebenon.

An army spokesman said the military had “eliminated” Nasrallah and, in a separate statement to X, wrote: “Hassan Nasrallah will no longer be able to terrorise the world.”

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