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Hamas says Israel’s killing of senior commander threatens ceasefire

By Reuters
December 15, 2025
Mourners carry bodies during the funeral of Hamass senior commander Raed Saed and his aides, who were killed in an Israeli strike a day earlier, in Gaza City, December 14, 2025. —Reuters
Mourners carry bodies during the funeral of Hamas's senior commander Raed Saed and his aides, who were killed in an Israeli strike a day earlier, in Gaza City, December 14, 2025. —Reuters

CAIRO/GAZA CITY: Israel’s assassination of a senior Hamas commander threatens the viability of the Gaza ceasefire, the chief negotiator of the group said on Sunday, calling on US President Donald Trump to demand Israel comply with the terms of the truce.

In a televised address, Hamas chief negotiator Khalil al-Hayya, who lives in exile, confirmed the killing of Saed, the highest-profile assassination of a senior Hamas figure since the truce.

“The continued Israeli violations of the ceasefire agreement... and latest assassinations that targeted Saed and others threaten the viability of the agreement,” Hayya said.

“We call on mediators, and especially the main guarantor, the US administration and President Donald Trump, to work on obliging Israel to respect the ceasefire and commit to it.”

The Hamas armed wing said later on Sunday it has chosen a replacement for Saed, who it said had been in charge of “military manufacturing.” His assassination would not deter the group from pursuing the “path of Jihad”, it said.

Hamas sources have described Saed as the second-in-command of the group’s armed wing, after Izzeldeen Al-Hadad. Israel says Saed was one of the key architects of the October 7, 2023 attack on Israel that triggered the war.

Hamas has not identified an overall chief since Israel killed the group’s head, Yehya Al-Sinwar, in 2024. Instead, the group has since been led by a five-man high leadership council, of which Hayya is a member.

Since the ceasefire, Israeli forces remain in control of the depopulated eastern half of Gaza, while the militant group has reasserted its control over the western half, where nearly all of the enclave’s more than 2 million people live in the ruins.

The warring sides have yet to agree on next steps. Israel demands Hamas disarm and be barred from any future administration of Gaza.