BEIRUT — Ismail Haniyeh was the international face of Hamas, its top leader in exile who kept up the militant group's ties with allies around the region. At the head of its political hierarchy, he had little military role – but Israel marked him for death after the surprise Oct. 7 attacks.
The 62-year-old Haniyeh was killed in an airstrike Wednesday during a visit to one of Hamas' most crucial allies, Iran, after attending the inauguration of its new president. Iran and Hamas both accused Israel, which has not commented on the strike.
The assassination would make him the highest-level Hamas official killed by Israel since the Hamas-led Oct. 7 attacks, when militants killed 1,200 people and took about 250 hostages. The Israel-Hamas war that followed has become the deadliest and longest in the Arab-Israeli conflict. More than 39,000 Palestinians have been killed, according to health officials in Gaza.
Haniyeh, the head of Hamas's political bureau, had been in self-imposed exile from Gaza since 2019 and was often seen as a relative moderate in the group. He was one of the few Hamas leaders who said the group, while it rejects recognizing Israel, doesn't oppose a two-state solution. Based in Qatar and often moving around the region, he didn't have a direct hand in the group's military wing, known as the Qassam Brigades, but often coordinated between it and political branches.
It is not known what he knew about the military wing's plan to break out of tightly closed Gaza and attack surrounding communities in southern Israel. The plan was masterminded inside Gaza, likely by Hamas' leader on the ground Yahya Sinwar and the head of the military wing Mohammed Deif. A Hamas official told the AP only a handful of its commanders on the ground knew about the ''zero hour.''
But after the carnage caught Israeli military and intelligence by surprise, Haniyeh embraced the attack, praising it as a humiliating blow to Israel's aura of invincibility. Within hours, he appeared in a video leading prayers with other Hamas officials thanking God for the attack's success.
''The Al-Aqsa flood was an earthquake that struck the heart of the Zionist entity and has made major changes at the world level,'' Haniyeh said in a speech in Iran during the funeral of late Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi in May. ''Al-Aqsa flood'' was Hamas' code name for the Oct. 7 attack.
''We will continue the resistance against this enemy until we liberate our land, all our land,'' Haniyeh said.