A senior Israeli official has told Sky News it is “probable” Sinwar has been killed.
If his death is confirmed, it will mean Israel has eliminated its main target since it began strikes and ground invasions in Gaza in response to the Hamas incursion last year.
“During IDF operations in Gaza, three terrorists were eliminated,” the Israeli military said in a statement today.
“The IDF and ISA are checking the possibility that one of the terrorists was Yahya Sinwar. At this stage, the identity of the terrorists cannot be confirmed.
“In the building where the terrorists were eliminated, there were no signs of hostages in the area.
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“The forces that are operating in the area are continuing to operate with required caution.”
Hamas has not yet commented on the reports its leader may have been killed.
Photographs circulating on social media claimed to show Sinwar’s dead body in the hours before the Israeli military released its statement.
The images have not been independently verified.
Israel is waiting for DNA test results to come back before it can confirm if the body is him, a senior official in the country has said.
They added that it may take a couple of hours for the results to come through.
Sinwar took over full leadership of Hamas after the killing of Ismail Haniyeh, who was the political leader of the group, in Iran in July.
He is believed to have been hiding in the network of tunnels beneath Gaza since the militant group’s on Israel attack last year.
Sinwar’s death could mark the collapse of any remaining Hamas resistance in Gaza
If Sinwar’s death is confirmed it would be a very, very significant moment in the war.
I think it will have significant consequences. You have two aspects to it. Firstly, there’s still fighting on the ground itself between Israeli forces and what remains of Hamas in Gaza on a daily basis.
Currently it is mainly focused on northern Gaza.
You would assume that if Sinwar is confirmed to have been killed, given that so many other senior commanders have been killed over recent months, that what me might see is a collapse of any remaining Hamas resistance in Gaza.
And then in relation to the hostages captured by Hamas on 7 October last year, Sinwar had become the point man on Hamas’ side for any hostage negotiations.
Any developments in hostage negotiations had to go through him, through quite a long-winded route, because he was, we assume, spending so much time underground, he would have been very aware of the security surrounding any communications he had with the outside world.
But events, discussions, negotiations that have been going on in Cairo, in Doha or elsewhere would ultimately have to lead back to Sinwar and it was the working assumption of late that he was not willing to enter into a ceasefire deal and a hostage release deal with Israel.
Many people blame Sinwar for why there is 101 hostages still in Gaza and there has been no hostage deal.
If he has been eliminated, it’s hard to say whether that will bring about some acceleration in the hostage negotiations. It’s really hard to say, because I don’t know who the negotiators would now speak to.
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