Israel Declares War After Hamas Attacks. UPDATE: Israel Ends Ceasefire, Begins Bombing Gaza

Hamas's re-establishment of security services
  • Deployment of police forces: Shortly after Israeli troops withdrew from some areas, Hamas deployed hundreds of police officers to enforce law and order, direct traffic, and manage markets. These officers had largely stayed out of sight during the earlier Israeli military offensive to avoid being targeted.
  • Role of internal security: The internal security wing of Hamas, which operates under the Interior Ministry, issued calls for residents to report "wanted individuals," including alleged collaborators with Israel. The force has been used to crack down on dissent and political opposition.
  • Violent crackdown on rivals: The resurgence of Hamas has led to clashes with rival armed gangs and Palestinian clans in Gaza. During this crackdown, Hamas was reported to have carried out public executions.
  • U.S. reaction: In a controversial move, President Donald Trump stated that the U.S. had given Hamas "approval for a period of time" to conduct internal security operations to prevent lawlessness. This contradicts the wider U.S. peace plan, which aimed to remove Hamas from any governing role in Gaza.
  • Stance on disarmament: A senior Hamas official told Reuters in mid-October 2025 that the group intends to maintain security control and will not commit to disarming. The official noted that the group is willing to coexist with a technocratic civil administration in the interim.
 

Hamas deploys armed fighters and police across parts of Gaza​

Group targets ‘collaborators and traitors’ in move that raises concerns for disarmament considered crucial to ceasefire deal​

Soldier in a camel coloured balaclava with a semi-automatic rifle stands next to some children. He has a Palestine flag sown on his uniform

Hamas has started deploying armed fighters and police across parts of Gaza in an apparent attempt to reassert authority in the devastated Palestinian territory after the ceasefire deal agreed with Israel last week.

Images showed dozens of Hamas fighters at a hospital in southern Gaza during the release of Israeli hostages on Monday morning and there were reports of shootings and executions elsewhere in the territory. Telegram channels associated with Hamas said “collaborators and traitors” had been targeted, a reference to Israel-backed militia in the territory, while Hamas gunmen also engaged in bloody clashes with a powerful local family in Gaza City over the weekend.

The violence is unlikely to immediately threaten the current ceasefire agreement with Israel but raises significant concerns over the disarmament of Hamas, a key though ill-defined provision of the deal, and the challenges that will confront the new stabilisation force of regional troops that is to be deployed to Gaza.

Asked by a journalist on Air Force One about reports that Hamas was moving against rivals to regain control in parts of Gaza, the US president, Donald Trump, suggested the militant Islamist organisation was acting within the parameters of the ceasefire deal.

“They do want to stop the problems and they’ve been open about it, and we gave them approval for a period of time … You have close to 2 million people going back to buildings that have been demolished, and a lot of bad things can happen. So we want it to be – we want it to be safe. I think it’s going to be fine. Who knows for sure,” Trump said.

On Monday, the first steps of the first phase of the new agreement were completed with the release by Hamas and transfer to Israel of 20 living hostages. Simultaneously, Israeli authorities began freeing about 2,000 prisoners, including 250 serving lengthy sentences.

Huge crowds welcome freed Palestinian prisoners in Ramallah – video
Hundreds of trucks of aid and commercial goods have entered Gaza since Sunday, sending prices in markets tumbling. Famine was declared in parts of the territory in August and aid agencies say much greater quantities of supplies are needed urgently.

Looting by organised gangs or desperate communities made distribution of aid in Gaza extremely difficult for major humanitarian organisation, which were also hampered by Israeli restrictions and ongoing combat operations.

The Israel Defense Forces have already withdrawn to new positions and currently control just over half of Gaza.

Much of the territory is in ruins, with the population now concentrated along the coastal zone of al-Mawasi, the badly damaged towns of the centre and Gaza City. Hamas exerted a significant degree of control over these three areas even if the group maintained a low profile, Israeli military officials and senior aid workers said last month.

But the militant group has suffered significant losses during the two-year conflict with Israel, with most of its senior or middle-ranking military commanders and thousands of lower-ranking fighters killed. Police officers were targeted by Israel and prisons destroyed along with a lot of other infrastructure. Law and order has collapsed across much of Gaza, with armed families, clans, gangs, looters and militia growing more powerful.

At the weekend, Hossam al-Astal, the leader of a new militia aligned with Israel, was defiant.

“To all the Hamas rats, your tunnels are destroyed, your rights don’t exist any more. Repent before it is too late – there is no Hamas from today onward,” he said in a social media post.

Al-Astal was unwilling to talk when contacted on Monday.

Also now vulnerable is Yasser Abu Shabab, the leader of the so-called Popular Forces, an Israel-backed militia based in the south of Gaza. There are unconfirmed reports of punishment beatings and shootings of members of his faction.

One Hamas security official said a hunt was under way for Abu Shabab, adding that one of the fugitive leader’s aides had been “liquidated” in recent days.

“The security campaign is continuing and escalating until this issue is completely over, and no party will be allowed to violate the law,” he said.

In a statement, the Ministry of Interior in Gaza, which has been controlled by Hamas since the group seized power in 2007, said it was making efforts to restore “security and stability” in the territory, but that “the gate for repentance and general amnesty” was open for all those who joined “gangs” but were not involved in any murders.

“All concerned individuals must surrender to security services within a week to settle their legal and security status and permanently close their files”, the ministry said.

Only one of the fighters seen escorting hostages to Red Cross vehicles on Monday appeared to be wearing Hamas insignia: a shoulder patch showed him to be a member of an elite unit of Hamas’s military wing, the Izz al-Din al-Qassam brigades.

Hamas flags and headbands were absent, a marked contrast to the elaborately staged hostage handovers earlier this year that Israel cited as a justification for its decision to break the short-lived ceasefire.
 
Hamas showing they don’t need an international peace keeping team

Just needs Israel to leave them the fuck alone
 

Hamas reappears on Gaza’s streets, and two of three militias that fought it go quiet​

For now, the terror group's reappearance is relatively limited, but reports are mounting of it pursuing those who have resisted it. And many Gazans fear a return of terror rule​

By Nurit Yohanan
Hamas reappears on Gaza’s streets, and two of three militias that fought it go quiet

Masked men — some in uniform but most in civilian clothes — have been seen out and about on Gaza’s streets in recent days, some handing out sweets, others simply standing guard.

Footage to this effect, published by Hamas-linked media less than 24 hours after the ceasefire took effect on Friday, has been accompanied by announcements from Hamas’s police and interior ministry claiming that security forces had redeployed across the Strip.


Over the weekend, Gaza networks also circulated footage of an armed, masked man shooting a resident in the leg — a practice Hamas employed throughout the war against suspected collaborators with Israel or those accused of stealing humanitarian aid.

Not everyone is convinced. Hussam al-Astal,who leads a militia that fought Hamas in Khan Younis in recent months and receives support from Israel under the wider framework of Yasser Abu Shabab’s organization, told The Times of Israel: “If Hamas were truly present, if they had real power, they wouldn’t be out in civilian clothes and masks.


“They’re afraid. Five or ten people show up in one spot, film it, and pretend they’re there. Why? Because they’re finished, and they know it,” he claimed.

But others who spoke to The Times of Israel confirmed that Hamas is returning to the streets of Gaza, albeit in a limited capacity, and expressed fears of a return to the rule of terror.

Hamas reappears on Gaza’s streets, and two of three militias that fought it go quiet
Still from footage circulated by Gaza networks after the start of the October 10, 2025, ceasefire, showing an armed, masked man shooting a Gaza resident in the leg. (X screenshot, used in accordance with clause 27a of the copyright law)

The first stage of the ceasefire deal makes no mention of who will govern Gaza once the war is over. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has declared he will not allow either Hamas or the Palestinian Authority to play a role on “the day after.” Hamas, for its part, has said it would accept a Palestinian technocratic body emerging from internal dialogue with the PA. Several Hamas spokespeople, however, have declared that the terror group will not lay down its arms.

The fact is that Hamas police have been seen on patrol in recent days, while Gaza municipalities — still formally under Hamas’s control — have begun clearing rubble and reopening roads for civilian movement.

Hamas reappears on Gaza’s streets, and two of three militias that fought it go quiet
Members of the internal security forces loyal to the Palestinian group Hamas, man a checkpoint in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip, on October 12, 2025. (Eyad BABA / AFP)

One Hamas officer, who spoke anonymously to Qatar’s Al-Araby TV while patrolling the streets of Gaza City on Saturday, said: “The basic mission is to restore control until the Gaza resident feels protected — protected from hardship, from blocked roads, from anyone who seeks to harm him.”




He added that Hamas’s tasks now include confiscating weapons from “fugitives” –apparently referring to militia members who have fought against it — delivering messages to families of the dead and mediating disputes.

The officer claimed that Hamas’s redeployment extends through much of the Strip, in all areas vacated by Israeli forces, “even in places close to the soldiers themselves.” The Israeli pullback leaves the IDF in control of some 53% of the Strip.

Operatives belonging to Hamas’s internal security apparatus, tasked with maintaining order within the Strip, seen in the streets of Gaza following the announcement of a ceasefire hostage-release deal, October 10, 2025. (Screen capture: Telegram, used in accordance with Clause 27a of the Copyright Law)

Clashes between Hamas and militias​

On the eve of the Thursday ceasefire agreement, several militias were battling Hamas inside Gaza. Two of them operated with Israeli assistance in the south — one in eastern Rafah led by Yasser Abu Shabab, and another in Khan Younis under Hussam al-Astal.

In recent weeks, footage circulating online suggested a third militia was active in Jabaliya and Beit Lahiya, in northern Gaza, reportedly led by Ashraf al-Mansi, a Gaza City resident.


While its ties to Israel remain unclear, a senior figure in Abu Shabab’s group confirmed to The Times of Israel last week that al-Mansi’s faction is indeed operating in northern Gaza as part of the “Popular Forces,” modeled along similar lines to al-Astal’s group in Khan Younis.

Just days before the ceasefire, al-Astal’s fighters openly clashed with Hamas in the al-Mawasi area of western Khan Younis, with the help of the IDF. It was their first such confrontation in public.


husam-3-e1758473521106.jpg

Hossam al-Astal (center) is seen surrounded by armed members of his group, ‘Strike Force Against Terror,’ in an undated picture from the Gaza Strip posted on Facebook. (Courtesy: Hossam al-Astal via Facebook)
The return of Hamas operatives to Gaza’s streets now threatens these militias.

Even before the truce, Hamas was hunting them down. With the IDF withdrawing from some areas, Hamas has greater freedom to operate openly.

The Saudi daily Asharq Al-Awsat reported on Saturday that Hamas security forces — including its internal security and the intelligence wing of its military arm — have redeployed in Jabaliya and the Jabaliya refugee camp, areas from which Israel withdrew under the ceasefire.

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According to the report, Hamas fighters have pursued, arrested and even killed militia members there, apparently targeting al-Mansi’s group.

A Hamas-affiliated Telegram channel, Imsak Aamil (“Catch a Collaborator”), also claimed on Saturday that Hamas clashed with militias in Jabaliya.

However, al-Astal denied in a video sent to The Times of Israel that Hamas had recently detained or killed leaders of anti-Hamas militias.

abu-2.png

Yasser Abu Shabab (right) and members of his gang in Gaza are seen in an undated video posted by the group. (screen capture: Facebook, 27a clause of the copyright law)

Fate unknown after further IDF Withdrawal​

Al-Astal insisted that his battle continues: ‘We will fight Hamas until Hamas is finished, not us,” he told The Times of Israel, calling on Gazans not to fear Hamas: “There will not be a Hamas 2.0.” He also claimed that Hamas fighters visible in the streets today are merely the “remnants” of the movement.

Al-Astal is currently operating from the abandoned village of Kizan an-Najjar, south of Khan Younis. He said the IDF remains nearby, as the area lies along the new frontline set by the ceasefire’s first stage.

However, discrepancies exist between the official IDF withdrawal maps and actual troop positions, raising the possibility that soldiers are withdrawn closer to the border publicly indicated.


Meanwhile, Abu Shabab’s militia in eastern Rafah continues to operate in territory still fully under IDF control.

The fate of both militias — if the army withdraws further and Hamas advances into their areas — remains uncertain. Renewed clashes seem likely, and the outcome is impossible to predict.

For now, al-Astal is the only militia leader speaking out.

Abu Shabab’s faction has gone silent, declining to respond to The Times of Israel in recent days. Its Facebook page — active for months — has made no mention of the ceasefire, only posting a tribute to a local schoolteacher in the first hours after news of the truce broke. Likewise, al-Mansi has not updated his Facebook pagesince the agreement.

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abu-2.png

The militia of Ashraf al-Mansi in the northern Gaza Strip, October 4, 2025. (Screenshot: Facebook, clause 27a of the copyright law)

“There is no one else to rule”​

Gazans who openly opposed Hamas during the war told The Times of Israel in recent days that they feared the group’s swift reappearance in the streets following the ceasefire.

Izz al-Din Shihab, a resident of Jabaliya who left the city three months ago and is now in southern Gaza, said: “People are afraid. They don’t know if Hamas will give up power or not. Hamas is an ideological and very extreme organization, and everyone is scared.”

“Yes, people are somewhat happy about the ceasefire,” he added. “But after that? What comes next?”

Referring to the reemergence of Hamas police, he added: “It’s a problem. They will hold on to power at any cost. Me, what do I have to do with it? More than once we protested against them, but no one listened. They imprisoned us and shot at us.”

Muein Hilu, a Gaza City resident now in central Gaza after leaving a month ago, told The Times of Israel on Sunday: “They (Hamas) are here, you can’t deny it. Who will organize the city? There’s no one else. There’s no one else to arrange things, to regulate movement.”

Hilu, who speaks Hebrew, noted he was not surprised to see Hamas back in force, saying he read in Israeli media that the ceasefire agreement does not require Hamas to disarm. (That requirement applies to the next phase of the Trump plan.)

“There is no other authority, no one else on the ground. But their numbers are small, not large,” he said, adding that he saw Hamas operatives on Sunday morning in central Gaza directing traffic and organizing markets.

Hilu said the future is simply uncertain: “Today or tomorrow they will release some of the hostages. Let’s see what happens after that, what the next stage will be. I don’t think the war will return, but exactly what they’ll agree on, I don’t know.”
 
Risky gamble, but the potential attention could be exponential.
right… I was thinking you was going to break the seize during a war so IDF confiscating vessel was understandable but the war is over

Israel dictating what or who can enter Palestine should be over (even tho that won’t be the case)
 
That was the plan all along.....declare a so called truce and peace deal to get the hostages back.
And once that is done.....get back to bombing every inch of Gaza into dust.

When they finish with Gaza....they will do the same to the West Bank.
I'm mad we breath the same air as these demons and anyone who supports or dismisses these atrocities.
 
That was the plan all along.....declare a so called truce and peace deal to get the hostages back.
And once that is done.....get back to bombing every inch of Gaza into dust.

When they finish with Gaza....they will do the same to the West Bank.


Yep I don’t think they will level that westbank. They just gonna annex it.

The funny part about this, the only way Israel been able to do anything is thru negotiations.
Them
Using force haven’t really amount to none of their goals.

Ceasefire got hostages back not the IDF, hell they actually killed many of their own hostages

Ceasefire with Lebanon help the folks that lived in northern Palestine to return to their homes. Fighting with Lebanon didn’t achieve that.

edit: using force they haven’t been about to defeat Hamas either. Some reports stated the resistance have more fighter now than they had on Oct 7
 
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That was the plan all along.....declare a so called truce and peace deal to get the hostages back.
And once that is done.....get back to bombing every inch of Gaza into dust.

When they finish with Gaza....they will do the same to the West Bank.
they'll annex the west bank first - because they wont ever be finished with Gaza.... Bibi created their very own tar baby
IDF took heavy casualties daily while occupying Gaza
it will take biological weapons to clear those tunnels
 
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@gogumagal6 days ago
we could have this 2 years ago but Israel either reject the resolution or violate the ceasefire.


 
Hamas takin the traitors out but Washington gonna use that as a reason to use force against Hamas

The fact that Hamas maintains its control over Gaza is a major problem for the US and Israel cuz the ultimate goal for those Palestinians coons was to create chaos, having the Gaza Strip becoming a lil’ Syria.

Now that the Hamas and Palestinians groups are merking those coons (and seizing all that money that Israelis gave to them :lol:) the situation gets tricky Israel’s defeat becomes clearer by the day and if militant groups establish a total control over the strip, Israelis will eventually witness what they’ll hate the most -> an orderly reconstruction !

Edit:

 
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The fact that Hamas maintains its control over Gaza is a major problem for the US and Israel cuz the ultimate goal for those Palestinians coons was to create chaos, having the Gaza Strip becoming a lil’ Syria.

Now that the Hamas and Palestinians groups are merking those coons (and seizing all that money that Israelis gave to them :lol:) the situation gets tricky Israel’s defeat becomes clearer by the day and if militant groups establish a total control over the strip, Israelis will eventually witness what they’ll hate the most -> an orderly reconstruction !

Edit:




Exactly Hamas showed organizational strength minutes after the ceasefire which ain’t a good look

 
This something that NetInYahoo definitely didn’t want and the actions of today showing this. Withdrawal from Gaza is something he refuse to do


Ceasefire’s second phase​

Hamas said talks with mediators to start the ceasefire’s second phase have begun.

The next stages of the ceasefire are expected to focus on disarming Hamas, Israeli withdrawal from additional areas it controls in Gaza, and future governance of the devastated territory.

Hazem Kassem, a Hamas spokesman, said late Saturday that the second phase of negotiations “requires national consensus.” He said Hamas has begun discussions to “solidify its positions,” without giving details.

According to the U.S. plan, the negotiations will include disarming Hamas and the establishment of an internationally backed authority to run Gaza.

Kassem reiterated that the group won’t be part of the ruling authority in a postwar Gaza. He called for the prompt establishment of a body of Palestinian technocrats to run day-to-day affairs.

For now, “government agencies in Gaza continue to perform their duties, as the vacuum is very dangerous, and this will continue until an administrative committee is formed and agreed upon by all Palestinian factions,” he said.
 
@peter.parker1 Oct 7 happened come January if they would’ve took the deal, this language would not exist. The longer this conflict went on the more folks paid attention to the wrong doings of oppressors


 
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