Gaza City — Israel claimed that its military assassinated Abu Obeida, the longtime spokesperson of Hamas’s Qassam Brigades, in an airstrike on a residential building in Gaza City. The announcement, however, has been met with skepticism and outright rejection from Palestinian resistance groups, leaving his fate uncertain.
The Israeli army declared it was “optimistic” about the strike’s outcome, but notably stopped short of offering evidence to substantiate its claim. Israeli officials provided no visual confirmation, no body, and no proof of identity, a pattern critics say reflects Tel Aviv’s long history of fabricating victories in the absence of real achievements on the battlefield.
Abu Obeida, a central figure in Hamas’s wartime messaging, has for years served as the masked voice of the resistance, issuing fiery statements that shaped both morale inside Gaza and perceptions abroad. His public appearances, though rare, became symbols of Palestinian defiance against Israel’s siege and its ongoing genocide of Palestinians in Gaza. For Israel, eliminating him would mark a symbolic win in its brutal war, even as the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza deepens.
Yet Palestinian sources quickly dismissed the claim. Hamas-linked outlets reported that the “resistance rejects Israeli propaganda,” describing the announcement as psychological warfare intended to mask Israel’s failures in Gaza. Analysts argue that targeting high-profile figures has been a long-running tactic of the Israeli regime, but one that rarely alters the strategic reality on the ground.
The uncertainty surrounding Abu Obeida’s status reflects the fog of war that has gripped Gaza since the October 7 Hamas attack on Israel. While Israel touts its operations as surgical strikes against militants, the overwhelming toll has fallen on civilians, with hospitals, schools, and refugee camps turned into rubble. In this context, Israel’s unverified claim is seen by many Palestinians as yet another attempt to distract from the devastation it has unleashed.
International observers also noted that Israel’s inability to confirm the outcome undermines its narrative of military superiority. By declaring success without evidence, Tel Aviv risks deepening distrust abroad and further isolating itself as global outrage mounts over the ongoing genocide of Palestinians in Gaza.
According to Mehr News, Israeli officials publicly asserted that Abu Obeida had been killed, though Hamas factions flatly denied the claim and insisted he remains alive. It highlights how the Israeli regime’s narrative has once again collided with competing accounts from Palestinian sources, leaving the truth unresolved.