Welcome back to Foreign Policy’s SitRep.
Here’s what’s on tap for the day: Israel says it has killed Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky alleges North Korean troops are joining Moscow’s war effort, and India does damage control in Washington amid further claims by Canada that Indian officials were involved in assassinating a Sikh separatist in the country.
‘Justice Has Been Delivered’
Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, one of the masterminds of the Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel, was killed in an Israeli military operation in the Gaza Strip on Wednesday in the most significant blow to the militant group since the start of the war.
The Israeli military confirmed in a post on X on Thursday that Sinwar had been “eliminated.” “Justice has been delivered. Every single terrorist who harms Israelis will pay the price,” Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs wrote on X.
Sinwar was a singular figure who shaped Hamas in his image, and he will not be easily replaced, experts said. His death could have profound reverberations for the course of the war and the future of the militant group.
“Sinwar had very unique attributes,” said Ghaith al-Omari, a former Palestinian Authority negotiator and a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. “He was someone who had very strong standing in both the political and military wing[s]” of the organization.
Cold-blooded and calculating. As Hamas’s leader inside Gaza since 2017, Sinwar had long dominated the group’s military wing, and he was one of the principal architects of the bloody Oct. 7 attack on southern Israel alongside Hamas military chief Mohammed Deif, who was reportedly killed in an Israeli airstrike in July.
Sinwar took over leadership of the group’s political wing as well following the assassination of its former leader, Ismail Haniyeh, in July, further consolidating his power. U.S. officials have said in briefings with reporters that they believed that Sinwar had long had the final say on the group’s position on a potential cease-fire and hostage release deal.
Widely regarded to be cold-blooded and calculating, Sinwar formerly served as the chief of Hamas’s internal security unit, which was responsible for identifying and often killing Palestinians suspected of collaborating with Israel and those who violated Islamic morality laws.
Sinwar had not been seen in public since Oct. 7, 2023, and was believed to have been hiding in underground tunnels in Gaza.
Succession crisis. Who succeeds Sinwar could have a profound impact on the group’s direction and the prospect for reviving negotiations with Israel. From the military side, a likely contender would be Sinwar’s younger brother, Mohammed Sinwar, Omari said. The junior Sinwar is thought to be as ruthless as his older brother, Omari added, but he lacks his heft and may struggle to unite the military wing, which has been heavily degraded during the war.
Potential options from the political wing include Khalil al-Hayya, a member of Hamas’s Political Bureau and one of the group’s senior negotiators in Doha, and Khaled Mashal, a longtime senior Hamas official. Both Hayya and Mashal were seen as front-runners to replace Haniyeh as political leader following his assassination, though Sinwar ultimately got the job.
Mashal, who has not lived in the Palestinian territories since he was 11 years old and splits his time between Doha and Cairo, is thought to be more susceptible to external pressure than Sinwar, which could provide an opening for negotiations. Yet it’s unclear how that would translate in Gaza, where he does not have control over fighters, said Khaled Elgindy, a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute and an expert on Palestinian politics.
Hamas’s relationship with Iran, its key backer, could be complicated if Mashal were to become the new leader. Mashal supported a Sunni-led uprising against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in 2011, alienating him from Tehran.
“Mashal has long wanted to basically move Hamas away from the Iranian axis to the Arab axis,” Omari said.
A complicated victory. While Sinwar’s death will undoubtedly be celebrated as a major victory in Israel, chaos unleashed by the leadership vacuum in Gaza could prompt the group to lash out by launching rockets at Israel or killing hostages, analysts said.
“It’s very likely that Sinwar has a series of scenarios put in place for his eventual death,” said Ahmed Fouad Alkhatib, a senior fellow with the Atlantic Council’s Middle East programs.
“This is a critical, time-sensitive development as it relates to the hostages,” Orna and Ronen Neutra, whose son Omer is being held in Gaza, said in a statement on Thursday. “Their lives are in great danger now more than ever.”
Many in Gaza will likely also welcome Sinwar’s death, Alkhatib said, as he was reviled for his callous disregard of Palestinian civilians’ lives. “He’s largely viewed as a psychopath who has taken Hamas not only in a more extreme direction but has made decisions during his tenure that have worsened prospects for Gaza’s development,” he said.
Analysts initially thought that Sinwar’s death could provide Israel an off-ramp to declare victory in Gaza, noting that the Biden administration would likely urge Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to do so.
“This moment gives us an opportunity to finally end the war in Gaza,” U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris said during a campaign visit to Milwaukee. “It is time for the day after to begin.”
But in a speech on Thursday, Netanyahu vowed to continue with “full force” until the hostages are returned. Almost 100 hostages remain in Gaza, and Israeli officials estimate that around one-third may be already dead.
“I don’t think we can even assume Netanyahu even wants an off-ramp at this stage,” Elgindy said. “I think it is as likely or even more likely that he will see this as an opportunity to quote ‘finish the job.’”
Let’s Get Personnel
Melissa Zelikoff is returning to the National Security Council as a special advisor on Sudan, our friends at Politico’s NatSec Daily report.
Giant Pandas Bao Li and Qing Bao arrived at the National Zoo in Washington on Tuesday, having been flown in from China on a custom-decaled Boeing 777F dubbed “FedEx Panda Express.”
Andrew Overton joined the U.S. Export-Import Bank as press secretary.
Politico has the inside scoop on who won’t be getting jobs in any future Trump administration as his transition team compiles a black list of undesirables, including people linked to the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025 and former officials who resigned in protest at Trump’s response to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.
On the Button
What should be high on your radar, if it isn’t already.
Friends like these. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky alleged this week that North Korea has dispatched military personnel to aid Russia in its war effort against Ukraine. Their role in the war remains unclear, with both the Wall Street Journal and CNN reporting that a small number of people from the country had been dispatched to assist the Russian military with engineering, while the BBC reports that Russia is forming a unit of some 3,000 North Korean troops, citing a Ukrainian intelligence source. As FP’s Keith Johnson has reported, North Korea has already become one of Moscow’s most critical suppliers of artillery shells used in Ukraine.
A sternly worded letter. The Biden administration sent a letter to Israeli officials on Sunday warning that U.S. weapons shipments to the country could be subject to review if they did not take steps to improve the dire humanitarian situation in Gaza. A copy of the letter obtained by Axios notes that the amount of aid that entered the strip in September was the lowest of any month over the past year. No aid entered northern Gaza during the first two weeks of the month. On Wednesday, Israel allowed some 50 trucks to pass into the north from Jordan.
India’s North American balancing act. The Indian government did some damage control in Washington this week, where an enquiry committee from New Delhi met with U.S. officials to discuss allegations made by the U.S. Justice Department last November that an unnamed Indian official directed a failed plot to assassinate a Sikh separatist on U.S. soil. State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller told reporters that the meeting was “productive” and that the Biden administration was “satisfied with the cooperation.”
The same can’t be said for Canada, where similar allegations of Indian government involvement in an assassination led to a diplomatic blowout that saw Canada and India expel each other’s top diplomats and senior embassy officials. Read more on India’s contrasting approach to both allegations in Amy’s and Rishi Iyengar’s story here.
The Victory Plan. Zelensky presented his “victory plan” to the Ukrainian parliament on Wednesday in the first public preview of the proposal that has already been presented to partners in the United States and Europe. The five-point plan, which Zelensky said also has three secret annexes, builds on Kyiv’s long-standing requests to its Western partners, calling for, among other things, Ukrainian membership in NATO and the rapid delivery of more weapons to be used against Russia without restriction.
The plan also proposes the deployment of a “non-nuclear strategic deterrence” package on Ukrainian soil—something so substantial that it would force Moscow to the negotiating table. It’s unclear what this could look like, although it has reportedly been discussed with U.S. and European leaders. The London Times has a good rundown of what the potential options could be.
Snapshot
Further Reading
While serving multiple life sentences in an Israeli prison for his role in orchestrating the murder of Palestinian informers, Sinwar’s life was saved when Israeli doctors operated to remove an aggressive brain tumor that would have killed him.
Yuval Bitton, a prison dentist who first raised the alarm about Sinwar’s health, later developed an unlikely relationship with the militant leader, who was eventually released from prison in 2011 after serving 22 years as part of a prisoner exchange for captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit. As a dentist and later a prison intelligence official, Bitton spent hundreds of hours talking to Sinwar and studying his behavior. Read about what he learned in this extensive New York Times piece from May.