The Boston Globe

Sinwar helped start war in Gaza, and is key to its endgame

- By Patrick Kingsley, Julian Barnes, and Adam Rasgon

JERUSALEM — after Hamas attacked israel in October, igniting the war in the gaza strip, israeli leaders described the group’s most senior official in the territory, Yehia sinwar, as a “dead man walking.” considerin­g him an architect of the raid, israel has portrayed sinwar’s assassinat­ion as a major goal of its devastatin­g counteratt­ack.

seven months later, sinwar’s survival is emblematic of the failures of israel’s war, which has ravaged much of gaza but left Hamas’s top leadership largely intact and failed to free most of the captives taken during the October attack.

Even as israeli officials seek his killing, they have been forced to negotiate with him, albeit indirectly, to free the remaining hostages. sinwar has emerged not only as a strongwill­ed commander but as a shrewd negotiator who has staved off an israeli battlefiel­d victory while engaging israeli envoys at the negotiatin­g table, according to officials from Hamas, israel and the united states.

While the talks are mediated in Egypt and Qatar, it is sinwar — believed to be hiding in a tunnel network beneath gaza — whose consent is required by Hamas’s negotiator­s before they agree to any concession­s, according to some officials.

Hamas officials insist that sinwar does not have the final say in the group’s decisions. But although sinwar does not technicall­y have authority over the entire Hamas movement, his leadership role in gaza and his forceful personalit­y have given him outsize importance in how Hamas operates, according to allies and foes alike.

“there’s no decision that can be made without consulting sinwar,” said salah al-Din alawawdeh, a Hamas member and political analyst who befriended sinwar while they were both jailed in israel during the 1990s and 2000s. “sinwar isn’t an ordinary leader; he’s a powerful person and an architect of events. He’s not some sort of manager or director, he’s a leader,” al-awawdeh added.

sinwar has rarely been heard from since the start of the war, unlike Hamas officials based outside gaza, including ismail Haniyeh, the movement’s most senior civilian official. although he is nominally junior to Haniyeh, sinwar has been central to Hamas’s behindthe-scenes decision to hold out for a permanent cease-fire.

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