Hamas deputy military commander Marwan Issa was killed in an Israeli strike earlier this month, Israel’s military spokesman has said.
There was no immediate comment from Hamas, the Palestinian group that governs the Gaza Strip.
“We have checked all the intelligence,” Israel’s Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari said in a televised statement on Tuesday.
“Marwan Issa was eliminated in the strike we carried out around two weeks ago,” he said.
The United States announced last week that Issa had been killed in an Israeli strike, but Israel had not confirmed his death until now.
The Israeli military had previously said they had targeted Issa in an air strike on an underground compound in central Gaza on March 9-10.
Issa was a deputy to Mohammed Deif, the longtime leader of Hamas’s military wing the Qassam Brigades.
Hamas’s top leader in Gaza, and the alleged mastermind of the October 7 attack that triggered Israel’s latest assault on Gaza, is Yahya Sinwar.
Both Sinwar and Deif are believed to be alive and in hiding in Gaza, and Israel has vowed to kill them.
Israel says it has killed more than 13,000 Hamas fighters since the start of the war, but has not provided any evidence to support its claims.
‘Producing more and more leaders’
Al Jazeera’s Hamdah Salhut, reporting from occupied East Jerusalem, said Israeli officials have been saying since the beginning of their offensive that they are going to “find and kill all Hamas leadership and every single Hamas fighter on the ground”.
“It wasn’t just going to be in Gaza. It was going to be all over the world and countries like Lebanon, Turkey and Qatar as well,” Salhut said.
The Israeli claim comes a day after the United Nations Security Council passed a resolution demanding an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, and amid growing calls for Israel to halt its nearly six-month assault on the besieged enclave, which Palestinian health officials say has killed more than 32,000 people.
More than 90 percent of Gaza’s 2.3 million residents have been internally displaced, while Israel’s severe restrictions on food, water and other aid supplies have pushed the enclave to the brink of famine, according to the UN.
If the Israeli claim is accurate, Issa would be the highest-ranking Hamas leader to have been killed in Gaza since the start of the Israeli assault in October.
Israel has killed several senior leaders of Hamas over the years, only to see them quickly replaced, with little apparent impact on the group’s operations.
Al Jazeera’s senior political analyst Marwan Bishara said every time Israel “declared victory by assassinating one Hamas leader, dozens stepped up to take his place”.
“The idea of declaring victory because one or two, or several Hamas leaders were killed, has proven to be more of a facade,” Bishara said.
“Killing these leaders might be claimed to be a tactical or strategic victory. But at the end of the day, Hamas has proven more than capable of producing more and more leaders,” he added.
Source: Al Jazeera and news agencies