‘Sinwar Insists’: Hamas Leader Reportedly Wants Guarantee in Gaza Ceasefire Deal He Won’t Be Assassinated
Error: Contact form not found.
by Jack Elbaum

Hamas leader and Oct. 7 pogrom mastermind Yahya Sinwar addressing a rally in Gaza. Photo: Reuters/braheem Abu Mustafa
Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar wants a guarantee he won’t be assassinated by Israel included in a hostage and ceasefire deal, even as he sacrifices Palestinian civilians in Gaza, according to reports.
A senior Egyptian official told Ynet that Sinwar, the mastermind of Hamas’s Oct. 7 massacre across southern Israel, wants to be protected from the prospect of an Israeli assassination as a condition of agreeing to a deal that would return Israeli hostages who Hamas kidnapped on Oct. 7 and implement a ceasefire in Gaza.
“Sinwar insists on guarantees for his safety and life,” the official said.
In recent months, Israel has taken out numerous top Hamas and Hezbollah officials in Gaza and Lebanon. The other two top Hamas leaders prior to Oct. 7 — Ismail Haniyeh on the political side and Mohammed Deif on the military side — were both recently killed.
Deif was killed in a large-scale Israeli airstrike in the Gaza Strip. Haniyeh was killed in an explosion in the room in which he was sleeping while visiting Tehran for the new Iranian president’s inauguration. Israel has neither confirmed nor denied it was behind the explosion.
Sinwar, who had been Hamas’ chief in Gaza, was picked to succeed Haniyeh as the terrorist group’s overall leader
The second highest-ranking member of Hezbollah, Fuad Shukr, was also killed last month. He played an instrumental role in the murder of about 300 American and French soldiers in Beirut, Lebanon, in 1983.
Amid these high-profile assassinations, Sinwar likely sensed he was a target and made efforts to secure his own safety — efforts he has not made for the people of Gaza.
In June, The Wall Street Journal reported that central to Sinwar’s political calculations in the war has been the fact that Palestinian civilian casualties help Hamas and its war effort. “These are necessary sacrifices,” he reportedly said.
Sinwar has appeared to recognize that as war between Israel and Hamas drags on, Western perceptions of the Jewish state tend to plummet. In 2018, he told the Hebrew daily Yedioth Ahronoth that, in a war, “For [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu, a victory would be even worse than a defeat.” The reason was that it may result in the occupation of 2 million people who live in the enclave.
Meanwhile, throughout the current war, which began when Hamas killed 1,200 people and took another 251 hostages during an invasion of southern Israel on Oct. 7, Hamas has embedded its terrorists within Gaza’s civilian population and commandeered civilian facilities like hospitals, schools, and mosques to run operations and direct attacks.
Additionally, Hamas has used humanitarian aid to help it prop up rockets, and its fighters are usually wearing civilian clothing in the propaganda videos it releases to the public.
Lebanon Announces Partial Ceasefire Between Israel, Hezbollah but Attacks Continue
Barcelona Sauna Apologizes After Jewish American Women Denied Entry Over Star of David Necklaces
Terror-Tied Group to Host ‘Assembly of Militants’ in Toronto to Mark Oct. 7 Attack Anniversary
French Far-Left Leader, Presidential Candidate Under Fire for Antisemitism Threatens Israel With Military Force
France Bans Israel From Major Weapons Show, Jerusalem Slams ‘Disgraceful Decision’
NYPD Implements ‘Most Extensive Security Plan Ever’ for Israel Day Parade Without Mamdani
Far-Left, Pro-Hamas Streamer Hasan Piker Banned From UK, Forced to Miss Appearance at SXSW London Festival
Ceasefire Very Likely to End if Israeli Attacks on Hezbollah Persist, Iranian TV Says
Israel’s Netanyahu Orders Attacks on Hezbollah in Beirut’s Southern Suburbs





What the Book of Genesis Can Teach Us about AI
Will the Art of a Deal Happen in Iran?
Israel’s Netanyahu Orders Attacks on Hezbollah in Beirut’s Southern Suburbs
The Media Keeps Getting the Story Wrong on Israel and Gaza’s Schools
Israel Is Losing Public Support Because It Has Completely Lost the Narrative



