close Video Gazans react to the killings of
Hamas terror leaders Interviews with Gazans expressing frustration with
Hamas leadership after
Israel’s killing of senior commanders, as many residents say civilians — not
Hamas leaders — have paid the price of the war (Credit: Jusoor News) NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Hören Sie sich diesen Artikel an 5 Min Just before celebrations for
Eid al-Adha, a major Muslim holiday, began in Gaza, an Israeli airstrike hit a building in
Gaza City, killing
Mohammed Odeh, the newly appointed head of
Hamas’ military wing, according to Israeli officials and later confirmed by
Hamas. Reports from regional media said members of Odeh’s family were also killed in the strike. Two hours later, Gaza’s markets were full. Fox News Digital reviewed video filmed in Gaza showing crowded Eid streets, children shopping and families gathering, with little visible reaction to the killing of the
Hamas commander
Israel described as one of the architects of the
Israel" class="entity-link entity-event" data-entity-id="136566" data-entity-type="event">Oct. 7, 2023, attacks on
Israel. The contrast underscored what many Gazans and analysts describe as a growing disconnect between
Hamas leaders and civilians exhausted by nearly three years of war, which has killed more than 70,000 Palestinians, according to the
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Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry — figures that do not distinguish between civilians and combatants — and displaced most of Gaza’s population.
Israel ANNOUNCES IT KILLED ONE OF THE ARCHITECTS OF THE OCT. 7 ATTACKS Palestinians shop at a crowded
Eid al-Adha market in Gaza hours after
Israel announced the killing of
Mohammed Odeh, the newly appointed head of
Hamas’ military wing, in an airstrike in Gaza. (Jusoor News)
Hadeel Oueis, editor-in-chief of Jusoor News, told Fox News Digital the assassinations are creating "a clear vacuum" inside
Hamas and weakening coordination between leaders in Gaza and abroad. "With the deaths of its leaders and the collapse of strong centralized command,
Hamas is turning into a smaller militia competing with other armed groups operating in Gaza," Oueis said. "
Hamas is now fighting for survival." In a joint statement issued Tuesday, Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister
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Israel Katz said Odeh, who had replaced senior commander
Izz al-Din al-Haddad only days earlier, was "one of the architects of the October 7 massacre." "Sooner or later,
Israel will reach all of them," Netanyahu and Katz said. Palestinian
Hamas terrorists stand guard in Rafah in the southern
Gaza Strip on Feb. 22, 2025, during the handover of hostages held since the Oct. 7, 2023, attack as part of a ceasefire and hostage-prisoner swap deal with
Israel. (Hatem Khaled/Reuters) Inside Gaza, several residents interviewed by Jusoor News said they no longer viewed the deaths of
Hamas leaders as personal losses. "Of course we didn’t feel anything when Haddad, Sinwar, or others were killed," one Gazan activist and former political prisoner told Jusoor News in an on-camera interview, speaking with his face blurred for safety reasons. The activist was referring to
Izz al-Din al-Haddad, the
Hamas military commander
Israel said it killed earlier in May, and Yahya Sinwar, the former
Hamas leader and chief architect of the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks, who was killed by Israeli forces in southern Gaza in October 2024. "Ordinary people are the ones who paid the price, not the leaders who made reckless decisions without thinking," the activist said. "As a result, Gaza today is almost completely destroyed," the activist said. "There are families who have lost everything, while the remaining leaders abroad and inside continue to gamble with our lives constantly." GRASSROOTS PUSH FOR FREEDOM GROWS IN GAZA AS
Hamas TIGHTENS ITS DEADLY GRIP Palestinians shop at a crowded
Eid al-Adha market in Gaza hours after
Israel announced the killing of
Mohammed Odeh, the newly appointed head of
Hamas’ military wing, in an airstrike in Gaza. (Credit: Jusoor News) A Gaza-based journalist echoed the frustration. "When we heard about the killing of Izz al-Din Haddad or others, we were not affected," the journalist said. "What is even more painful is that the children of the leaders live outside Gaza, in Turkey and Qatar, driving luxury cars and living comfortable lives, while people here have almost gone back to the Stone Age." Another Gaza journalist and human rights advocate told Jusoor
Hamas had harmed Palestinians as much as Israelis. "I do not see the deaths of the leaders as losses for the Palestinians, because we ordinary people are the ones who paid the price," the advocate said. "Honestly,
Hamas did not only hurt the Israelis — they hurt us as well." At the same time, Israeli analysts caution that the repeated assassinations do not necessarily mean
Hamas is close to collapse. Michael Milshtein, an expert on the Palestinian arena, told Fox News Digital that
Hamas unquestionably has suffered severe damage since Oct. 7, 2023, particularly with the deaths of veteran commanders who helped build the organization’s military structure and doctrine.
Israel,
Hamas CEASEFIRE DEAL COULD ENABLE REARMING OF GAZA TERRORISTS Palestinians shop at a crowded
Eid al-Adha market in Gaza. (Jusoor News) "Almost nobody remains from the core group that planned and led the October 7 attack," he said. But he noted that Odeh himself had been viewed largely as a second-tier figure before the war rather than an obvious successor to
Hamas’ historic military leadership. "The people replacing them are far less experienced, less capable and far less charismatic," Milshtein said. Still, he argued,
Hamas continues to maintain functioning chains of command and ideological cohesion despite the losses. Video "People know they are likely going to die, and they still compete for these leadership positions," he said. The debate over
Hamas’ future comes as international efforts to shape a postwar political framework for Gaza accelerate. TRUMP-BACKED BOARD OF PEACE,
Israel 'WILL TAKE ACTION' IF
Hamas REMAINS OUT OF COMPLIANCE: NETANYAHU ADVISOR
Hamas militants carried coffins believed to contain the bodies of four Israeli hostages during a handover to the Red Cross in Khan Yunis, Gaza, on Feb. 20, 2025. (Eyad Baba/AFP) Nickolay Mladenov, who was appointed High Representative for Gaza under the Board of Peace initiative, published the core elements of a proposed 15-point "Roadmap to Complete the Implementation of President Trump’s Gaza Comprehensive Peace Plan." The proposal includes a phased
Hamas disarmament process, internationally supervised security reforms and the establishment of "one authority, one law, one weapon" inside Gaza. "Gaza cannot recover while armed groups simultaneously operate as governing authorities," Mladenov wrote while outlining the proposal on social media. Displaced Palestinians, including families and children, wait in line to receive hot meals distributed by charities ahead of iftar in Khan Yunis, Gaza. (Abed Rahim Khatib/Anadolu) For many Gazans exhausted by years of war, displacement and destruction, the deaths of
Hamas leaders now appear to carry less emotional weight than the hope that the conflict itself could finally end. "Gaza cannot remain hostage to the idea of permanent war while civilians alone pay the entire price," one activist said. Efrat Lachter is a reporter for Fox News Digital covering international affairs and the United Nations. Follow her on X @efratlachter. Stories can be sent to efrat.lachter@fox.com.