Hamas perpetrated a massacre on October 7, provoking strong reactions from Israel and its allies. The leaders of Hamas, including Yahya Sinwar, aimed to bring the Palestinian cause to the forefront. The incident is viewed as a manifestation of antisemitism and an unresolved political struggle.
What Hamas did on 7 October is difficult or impossible to justify not because Israelis were killed as Israelis or Jews killed as Jews. It is, rather, because human beings were killed in an unresolved political struggle, writes @samuelmoyn. https://t.co/ie6usmVmO1
Hamas leaders have made it very clear, including in interviews with @NYTBen, that their objective with October 7 was to bring the Palestinian cause to the forefront and to provoke a strong reaction from Israel and itโs allies. Their decision to release this unfathomably cruelโฆ https://t.co/hH8LGsmc3o https://t.co/qVruDQyRXu
"The leaders of [Israel] should know October 7th was just a rehearsal." -- said Yahya Sinwar, the leader of Hamas, who uses Palestinians and their children in Gaza as dispensable human shields, who was released from Israeli prison during a hostage exchange, who was cured ofโฆ https://t.co/pCoKMkpJ1s
"The leaders of [Israel] should know October 7th was just a rehearsal." -- said Yahya Sinwar, the leader of Hamas, who lives lavishly in Qatar while he uses Palestinians and their children in Gaza as dispensable human shields, who was released from Israeli prison during aโฆ
OPINION: The widespread denial and distortion of the scope and nature of the massacre perpetrated by Hamas on October 7 represents a rapidly evolving manifestation of antisemitism that must be urgently addressed and refuted. #HamasTerrorrists | #Israel https://t.co/wqoqviBfRV