Izz al-Din al-Haddad

Senior Hamas commander From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Izz al-Din al-Haddad (Arabic: عز الدين الحداد, romanized: ʻIzz al-Dīn al-Ḥaddād, 1970 – 15 May 2026), also known by his nom de guerre Abu Suhaib (Arabic: أبو صهيب), was a Palestinian politician and militant who has served as the leader and commander of the Al-Qassam Brigades since May 2025. He has also served as the fourth Hamas leader in the Gaza Strip since May 2025. He held both positions following the assassination of his predecessor, Mohammed Sinwar.[2] He also co-currently[clarification needed] served as the head of the Gaza Brigade and oversees the northern sector of the Gaza Strip.

Preceded byMohammed Sinwar
Succeeded byVacant
Preceded byMohammed Sinwar
Succeeded byVacant
Quick facts 4th Leader of Hamas in the Gaza Strip, Preceded by ...
Izz al-Din al-Haddad
عز الدين الحداد
4th Leader of Hamas in the Gaza Strip
In office
13 May 2025  15 May 2026
Preceded byMohammed Sinwar
Succeeded byVacant
8th Commander of the Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades
In office
13 May 2025  15 May 2026
Preceded byMohammed Sinwar
Succeeded byVacant
Personal details
BornIzz ad-Din al-Haddad
1970 (age 5556)
Died15 May 2026
Nickname(s)Abu Suhaib (kunya)
The Ghost of the Gaza Strip[1]
Military service
Allegiance Hamas
BranchAl-Qassam Brigades
Years of service
1987–present
RankCommander
Battles/wars
Close

Al-Haddad was a member of Hamas's General Military Council and has been instrumental in planning and executing the group's operations.[3] He is known as the "Ghost of al-Qassam" in Gaza.[3]

Early life and career

Al-Haddad was born in Gaza in 1970[4] and joined Hamas at a young age, aligning with the movement since its inception in 1987. He began his career as an operative in the Gaza Brigade and rose through the ranks to become a platoon commander, then a battalion commander, eventually leading the brigade itself.[5]

Later career

During the 2008–2009 Gaza War, al-Haddad took command of the eastern Gaza City battalion. He was promoted to commander of Al-Qassam Brigades' southern Gaza brigade during the 2012 Gaza War,[6] and assumed control of its Gaza City brigade during the 2021 Israel–Palestine crisis, after the assassination of his predecessor, Bassem Issa.[1][7] Before the October 7 attacks in 2023, he was responsible for the production of Al-Yassin 105 missiles.[6] In November 2023, he took command of Hamas's northern Gaza brigade,[2] and became the overall commander of northern Gaza by June 2024. He had commanded at least six battalions and a special forces unit.[1]

Al-Haddad also had a senior role in Hamas's internal security unit, Al-Majd, which engaged in efforts to uncover spies and collaborators with Israel.[8] He was close to Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, and the pair are thought to have discussed internal security and counterintelligence operations.[1]

Al-Haddad is known for his operational secrecy and rarely appears in public, earning him the nickname the "Ghost of al-Qassam".[8] However, in May 2022, he was seen in a video threatening Israel, and in January 2025, he gave an interview to Al Jazeera, discussing his role in planning the October 7 attack.[9]

Gaza war

Role in the October 7 attacks

On 6 October 2023, al-Haddad convened his battalion commanders and distributed written orders for the planned attack on Israel, later known as Operation Al-Aqsa Flood. The orders emphasized the importance of abducting Israeli soldiers and transporting them into Gaza,[1] as well as "live broadcasting and the takedown of Israeli communities".[10] The following day, Hamas launched a surprise attack, resulting in significant casualties and the abduction of Israeli civilians and soldiers. During the attacks, al-Haddad managed the initial incursion into Israeli territory. His instructions led to some of the deadliest attacks during the incursion, particularly the Nahal Oz attack.[11][10]

Activities during the Gaza war

In November 2023, Israeli authorities offered US$750,000 for information on al-Haddad leading to his capture or death.[1]

During the Gaza war, al-Haddad oversaw efforts to reconstruct infrastructure during ceasefires. He also oversaw handovers of Israeli hostages.[10]

Following the killing of Yahya Sinwar, The Wall Street Journal reported that al-Haddad took command of two regional commands and 14 battalions, practically sharing control of Hamas with Mohammed Sinwar.[1] In 2025, he helped push Mohammed Sinwar to accept the Gaza war ceasefire with Israel, and tried to convince him to release additional hostages before the ceasefire collapsed in March.[12]

Accounts from hostages who met al-Haddad

A former Israeli hostage told The Wall Street Journal that they had met al-Haddad five times, and occasionally slept in the same apartment as him. The former hostage said that during their initial encounter in March 2024, al-Haddad insisted on speaking to hostages in Hebrew and asked them if they had any needs. He once insisted his fighters recover a book that the hostage had left behind. The hostage said that al-Haddad's demeanor had become "more negative" during a later meeting in January 2025. The meeting took place shortly after his son was killed in an airstrike that month.[12]

In December 2025, Eitan Mor told Israeli newspaper Makor Rishon that shortly he was taken hostage by Hamas during the Nova music festival massacre, al-Haddad met him and told Mor in Hebrew that he would be released in two weeks. Al-Haddad met with Mor several other times before his release in October 2025.[13]

In a January 2026 interview with Channel 12, Romi Gonen recounted speaking to al-Haddad over a landline phone during the end of the November 2023 ceasefire in Gaza. Al-Haddad told her that the attacker would be found,[14] and she would be prioritized for release as long as she did not tell anyone that her captors sexually assaulted her. Later, she and fellow hostage Emily Damari were taken to al-Haddad's tunnel in eastern Gaza City. During Gonen's release on 19 January 2025, al-Haddad approached the vehicle she was in and asked her "Do you remember our promise? Here, you're going out first … Do you remember your promise to me? I hope you fulfill it." Gonen told him "I'll fulfill the promise", before she was driven to be handed off to the Red Cross.[15][16]

Leadership

In May 2025, al-Haddad became Hamas's leader after Mohammed Sinwar was assassinated in an Israeli airstrike.[8]

As of May 2025, al-Haddad continues to lead Hamas's military wing's operations in the northern Gaza Strip and is involved in rebuilding the group's capabilities following significant losses during the ongoing conflict.[17] As the leader of Hamas in the Gaza Strip, he has veto power over any ceasefire or hostage deal in the Gaza war.[2] According to Arab officials, he is more open to hostage deals and Israeli demands for Hamas to disarm, but believes that all of the hostages should not be released until the end of the war and an Israeli withdrawal from Gaza.[12][8]

According to a Middle Eastern official, al-Haddad views the Chechen fight against Russia during the First Chechen War as a model that Hamas should follow in Gaza.[18]

He viewed the Gaza war peace plan in October 2025 with scrutiny, seeing it as "designed to finish Hamas".[19]

Israeli targeting and assassination attempts

Al-Haddad has survived multiple Israeli assassination attempts, reportedly six,[2] and is considered one of the most wanted Hamas commanders by Israel. He ranks first on Israel's most-wanted list of al-Qassam leaders, after the deaths of Marwan Issa, Mohammed Sinwar, and Ra'ad Sa'ad.[5]

Al-Haddad's eldest son and grandson were killed in an airstrike in Gaza City on 17 January 2025.[12] His second son was killed in an airstrike later in April of the same year.[10][1]

May 2026 assassination attempt

On 15 May 2026, al-Haddad was targeted by an Israeli strike on a residential building in Rimal, Gaza City and a vehicle on a street in its vicinity.[20][21] Reports from Gaza said that at least seven people including three ​women and a child were killed and at least 50 others were wounded.[22] He was reportedly tracked by Israeli intelligence for over a week before the strike was authorized upon receiving sufficient certainty on his location.[23] The strike, consisting of three fighter jets and 13 munitions, hit an apartment were al-Haddad was likely hiding, along with a car that left the area at the same time.[24]

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and defense minister Israel Katz confirmed that he was the target, describing him as an architect of the 7 October attacks who rejected the October 2025 Gaza peace plan and Hamas's disarmament. Israeli officials said there were "initial indications" that al-Haddad was killed.[23]

Hamas confirmed his death on 16 May 2026.[25][26][27][28] It is rumored that a new leader of Gaza will be appointed by the Hamas on the 17 May 2026.[29]

References

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