Hunt for Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar heats up after video emerges
KHAN YOUNIS, Gaza — The video shows a woman in a hijab walking down a tunnel, followed by a young girl and two boys. One of the boys holds a light against the gloom. And then a man with white hair and prominent ears enters the frame, his back to the camera.
Israel’s military says it is Yahya Sinwar, the Hamas leader who was in charge of the day-to-day governance in Gaza before Oct. 7 and the man they accuse of being the architect of the terrorist attack that day.
Filmed three days after the assault, the grainy footage shows the 61-year-old Sinwar and his family fleeing into a tunnel in southern Gaza, an Israel Defense Forces spokesperson said Tuesday.
Michael Koubi, a former Israeli intelligence officer who spent more than 150 hours interrogating Sinwar during the 13 years he was imprisoned in Israel, told NBC News last week he had “no doubt in my mind that’s him” because he recognized the militant leader’s gait and distinctive ears.
But the 42-second clip is the only alleged sighting of Sinwar since his Hamas fighters burst through multiple points of the Gaza border fence more than four months ago, killing around 1,200 people and kidnapping 240 more. Around 100 hostages remain in Hamas’ captivity after scores were released in late November as part of an exchange for Palestinian prisoners, but Israel says 28 of them have died in captivity, three of whom were mistakenly shot by the IDF.
The Israeli military says the operation it launched in response to the attacks has destroyed more than half of Hamas’ fighting units in Gaza. The enclave’s health ministry says more than 28,000 people, the majority women and children, have been killed in the operation.
Throughout the bloodshed, Sinwar has managed to stay one step ahead of the Israeli forces pursuing him.
Every day he remains at large is an act of defiance, and the Israeli military has vowed there won’t be many more of them.
“The hunt will not stop until we capture him, dead or alive,” Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari, an IDF spokesman, said in a televised statement Tuesday.
The search has taken them underground into the vast labyrinth of tunnels underneath Gaza used by Hamas to conceal weapons, fighters and hostages, and where its leaders like Sinwar are believed to be hiding.
NBC News joined an Israeli unit this month in a tunnel below Khan Younis, the city in southern Gaza that abuts the refugee camp where Sinwar was born in 1962 and raised.
After entering the shaft through the remains of what was once a house, the air became hot and damp below ground.
But after several minutes, the tunnel opened into a wider space with tiled walls, a kitchen and fixtures for televisions.
Brig. Gen. Dan Goldfus, commander of Israeli forces in Khan Younis, said the space had been recently used by Sinwar and other Hamas leaders. The presence of beds indicated that senior figures had been there, he said.
Off the tunnel was an improvised cage with metal bars and a door that locked from the outside. The IDF said inside the cage they found the DNA of three young hostages — Sahar Kalderon, 16, Or Ya’akov, 16, and Sapir Cohen 29. All three were kidnapped from kibbutz Nir Oz on Oct. 7 and released in the prisoner exchange in late November.
Asked why Sinwar remained at large after four months, Goldfus did not answer but was definitive about the end result of Israeli efforts to capture him.
“We’ll kill him,” he said. “He’s putting the civilians, the population, between him and us. He’s running. He’s on the go. We’ll reach him.”
Sinwar has been captured before. In 1988 he was sentenced to life in prison for planning to murder two Israeli soldiers as well as the killing of four Palestinians he suspected of collaborating with Israel.
Koubi, the former intelligence officer with the Shin Bet, Israel’s domestic security agency, said he had dozens of conversations with Sinwar in Arabic after he was detained.
“He’s very charismatic,” Koubi said. “He’s very clever.” He added that Sinwar was “really fanatical, radical, religious.”
Contrary to the assessment of some of his fellow officers, Koubi said he did not believe Sinwar was a psychopath and he had watched as he quickly became a leader among the Palestinian prisoners.
Sinwar also studied his enemy in prison, learning to speak fluent Hebrew. “He read all the books about the Israeli leaders, about the history, about the geography, about everything that he can read on Israel. He even translates books from Hebrew to Arabic,” Koubi said.
Released in 2011 as one of more than 1,000 Palestinian prisoners freed in exchange for Gilad Shalit, an Israeli…
Read More: Hunt for Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar heats up after video emerges