Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

IDF strikes in Gaza, kills at least six Hamas terrorists

If the Islamist group does not give up its weapons voluntarily, it “will be disarmed one way or another,” a top Israeli official vowed.

The Israel Defense Forces carried out strikes across the Gaza Strip, killing several Hamas terrorists, among them Ahmad Thabet and Kamal Abd al-Rahman Muhammad Awad, on Jan. 8, 2025. Credit: IDF.
The Israel Defense Forces carried out strikes across the Gaza Strip, killing several Hamas terrorists, among them Ahmad Thabet and Kamal Abd al-Rahman Muhammad Awad, on Jan. 8, 2026. Credit: IDF.

The Israel Defense Forces carried out strikes across the Gaza Strip on Thursday in response to a failed projectile launch from the Gaza City area, the military said.

The IDF named several terrorists from Hamas who were targeted in the operation, two of whose deaths were confirmed.

The army said that it killed Kamal Abd al-Rahman Muhammad Awad, head of Hamas’s anti-tank missile array, and Ahmad Thabet, head of a workshop within a Hamas department and as a key source of knowledge in weapons manufacture.

Ahmad Abd al-Fattah Saeed Maghdalawi, a Nukhba Force terrorist in Hamas’s Nuseirat Battalion who took part in the Oct. 7, 2023, massacre, including in the attack on the Supernova music festival, was also targeted. The IDF said it could not confirm whether he was killed.

In a strike in northern Gaza, the IDF eliminated four Hamas terrorists who operated from a command-and-control compound. “The terrorists operating from the site were planning to carry out an imminent terror attack against IDF forces operating in the northern Gaza Strip,” the army said.

In addition, the military struck eight launch-tunnel shafts, two weapon production facilities and three weapon storage facilities belonging to Hamas.

Terrorist targets of other terrorist organizations were also struck throughout Gaza, the IDF said.

“The elimination of these terrorists constitutes a significant degradation of Hamas’s and additional terrorist organizations’ operational capabilities and abilities to execute terror attacks against Israeli civilians and IDF troops,” the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit said.

In a separate incident on Thursday, IDF troops operating in the Jabalia area located a launcher with two loaded rockets that were ready to be fired toward the State of Israel, the military said.

Meanwhile, an Israeli official told JNS that “Hamas has no choice but to disarm, and it will happen either the easy way or the hard way. The terror group committed to President Trump’s plan, which includes laying down their weapons. The policy is clear: The terror group will be disarmed one way or another.”

The official was referencing Donald Trump’s 20-point peace plan, according to which Hamas is supposed to renounce its ruling power over the Strip and disarm.

The IDF holds about 54% of the Strip, deployed to the east of the so-called Yellow Line that runs north-south through the enclave.

See more from JNS Staff
The tankers created a bottleneck at the airport due to a shortage of room to park planes.
“This isn’t just an inconvenience—it would affect daily life and halachic practice for a large segment of the population,” Rabbi Yaakov Menken of the Coalition for Jewish Values told JNS.
The justices intervened a day after the Knesset passed the legislation by a vote of 58-54.
Sarah Mittelman, a former chair of the Clark County Democratic Women, told JNS that she was motivated by Jew-hatred in the Democratic Party.
The Arab Israeli party previously expressed support for the killer, who murdered an IDF soldier in 1980.
Organizers face accusations of discrimination against citizens of Israel, where military service is mandatory.