IDF eliminates 3 top terror operatives, disputes Hamas death figures

Head of terror group's aerial unit reportedly among dead in attack; Hamas claims at least 40 civilian deaths but revises number down by more than half after army challenges claim

Craters after Israeli strike on Khan Younis, Gaza Strip

Three senior Hamas operatives were killed in a targeted Israeli airstrike in the Khan Younis humanitarian zone, the IDF confirmed Tuesday.
Hamas claims the strike also resulted in at least 40 civilian deaths and 60 injuries, though the military accused the terrorist group of inflating casualty numbers. "Hamas' media office in Gaza has been caught lying before, and their figures do not match our intelligence," the army said. The Hamas-controlled health ministry in Gaza later revised the death toll down to 19.
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מכתש שנוצר בחאן יונס אחרי התקיפה
מכתש שנוצר בחאן יונס אחרי התקיפה
Craters after Israeli strike on Khan Younis, Gaza Strip
(Photo: REUTERS/Mohammed Salem)
The army said that the strike, which was directed by intelligence from the Shin Bet security agency, Military Intelligence and the Southern Command, targeted senior Hamas operatives in the humanitarian zone, including Samer Abu Daqqa, head of Hamas' aerial unit; Osama Tabesh, head of the terror group’s surveillance and targeting division, and Ayman Mabhouh. Qatar-based Al Jazeera reported that all three were killed.
According to the IDF, all three were directly involved in the October 7 attack and had been planning further operations against Israeli forces.
The military noted that extensive measures were taken to minimize civilian casualties, including the use of precision munitions and real-time aerial surveillance.
3 View gallery
מכתש שנוצר בחאן יונס אחרי התקיפה
מכתש שנוצר בחאן יונס אחרי התקיפה
(Photo: REUTERS/Mohammed Salem)
The Civil Defense, first responders operating under the Hamas-run government, reported dozens of casualties, claiming the strike hit a camp for civilians displaced by the war in Khan Younis' Muwasi which has been designated a humanitarian zone by Israel.
A Hamas spokesperson told Palestinian news agency Shehab that over 200 tents were in the area, with 20 to 40 completely destroyed. He described the aftermath as "massive craters" and alleged entire families were buried in what he called a "massacre." Rescue efforts, he said, are hindered by severe shortages of equipment and resources.
An Associated Press camera operator at the scene reported seeing three large craters, with first responders and displaced residents digging through the rubble with their hands and garden tools by the light of mobile phones. "They pulled body parts from the sand," the photographer told AP.
In response to the strike, Hamas issued a statement denying the presence of its operatives in the area, calling the IDF’s claims "blatant lies" intended to justify what it termed "heinous crimes." The group reiterated that it does not use civilian areas for military purposes and called on the international community to intervene, accusing Israel of genocide.
This is the second major Israeli airstrike in Gaza in recent weeks. Last month, Israeli jets struck a Hamas command center concealed within a school in Gaza City, killing at least 20 people, according to local reports. Israeli officials said the facility had been used by Hamas terrorists to plan and carry out attacks.
Health authorities in Gaza reported additional casualties from recent Israeli airstrikes, claiming 28 people were killed in one day, including a set of quadruplets. In a separate incident early Sunday, a woman and her six children were reportedly killed in an airstrike on a home in Deir al-Balah, central Gaza, according to the al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital.
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