Published On 14 Dec 2025
Hamas has confirmed the killing of its senior commander Raed Saad in an Israeli attack in Gaza in the highest-profile assassination of a senior figure in the Palestinian group since the October ceasefire deal.
The Israeli military had said on Saturday it had killed Saad in an attack near Gaza City. At least 25 people were wounded in the latest Israeli attack in Gaza.
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list of 1 itemend of listConfirming Saad’s killing in a video statement on Sunday, Hamas’s Gaza chief Khalil al-Hayya accused Israel of violating the ceasefire, agreed in October.
“In the wake of Israel’s continued violations, including the latest assassination of a Hamas commander just yesterday, we call on the mediators and especially the US administration and US President Donald Trump as the main guarantor of the agreement, to force the occupation [Israel] to respect the ceasefire deal and to implement it,” he said.
Since the ceasefire started in October, Israel has continued to attack Gaza daily – reaching nearly 800 times and killing at least 386 people – in a clear breach of the agreement, according to authorities in Gaza.
Moreover, Israel has refused to allow free flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza, in violation of the truce’s terms, as hundreds of thousands of people are suffering the brunt of Storm Byron that flooded 27,000 tent shelters.
The United Nations General Assembly last week overwhelmingly backed a resolution demanding that Israel open unrestricted humanitarian access to the Gaza Strip, stop attacking UN facilities, and comply with international law, in line with its obligations as an occupying power.
“Our priority is to continue with the steps to end the war and especially to complete phase one which includes allowing aid and needed equipment to enter to rehabilitate hospitals and medical centres and the infrastructure,” al-Hayya said, adding that this must include opening the Rafah crossing “in two directions” and advancing to phase two to secure “full withdrawal of the occupation”.
The October truce calls for the disarmament of Hamas and deployment of an International Stabilisation Force (ISF) proposed by President Trump. But al-Hayya said the role of any International Peace Force should be strictly limited.
“The mission of the International Peace Force must be limited to maintaining (or keeping) the ceasefire and to separate between the two sides on the borders of the Gaza Strip,” he said, adding that Hamas and other Palestinian factions remain committed to the agreement, but reject any form of guardianship imposed on Gaza or its people.
Phase two of the agreement
In a post on Telegram, the Israeli army alleged that Saad had been operating to re-establish Hamas’s capabilities, which have been severely depleted by more than two years of Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza. It described him as one of the architects of the October 7, 2023, attacks on Israel.
An Israeli defence official told the Reuters news agency that Saad had been targeted in the attack, describing him as the head of Hamas’s weapons manufacturing force. Hamas sources have also described him as the second-in-command of the group’s armed wing, after Izz al-Din al-Haddad.
The latest Israeli killings comes as Hamas and Israel are expected to move toward the phase two agreement of the ceasefire which will address Israeli Israeli withdrawal, Palestinian disarmament and the formal end to the war.
The head of Hamas abroad, Khaled Meshaal, is trying to convince the United States administration to follow the Palestinian group’s own “vision” on how to deal with disarmament and its military arsenal, a major sticking point in the second phase of the group’s two-month ceasefire with Israel.
Speaking on Al Jazeera Arabic’s Mawazine programme on Wednesday, Meshaal said Hamas aims to “create a situation with guarantees that war does not return between Gaza and the Israeli occupation”, which included the group potentially handing over its weapons, though it wants input on the process.
Earlier this month, senior Hamas official Basem Naim said that the US draft of the phase two agreement required “a lot of clarifications”. While the group was ready to discuss “freezing or storing” weapons during the ongoing truce, he said it would not accept that an international stabilisation force take charge of disarmament.
“We are welcoming a [United Nations] force to be near the borders, supervising the ceasefire agreement, reporting about violations, preventing any kind of escalations,” he said, adding that Hamas would not accept the force having “any kind of mandates” on Palestinian territory.

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