In a significant disclosure, Hamas’s military wing, the Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades, has formally announced the death of its long-serving, anonymous spokesman and introduced his successor. The new spokesperson, whose identity remains concealed, revealed in a prerecorded address broadcast on Arab media that his predecessor, known by the nom de guerre Abu Obeida, was killed in an Israeli airstrike on Gaza City in August. He was identified as Huthaifa Samir al-Kahlout.
This announcement marks the first official confirmation of Kahlout’s identity after two decades of public service during which he never revealed his face, always appearing masked in a red keffiyeh. The new spokesman has assumed the same pseudonym, continuing the legacy.
The eulogy delivered by the new Abu Obeida honored Kahlout as “the great leader” and “the thunderous voice of the nation” who for twenty years led the group’s media operations, “frustrating the enemies and uplifting the hearts of the believers.”
In the same statement, the Brigades confirmed the deaths of several other high-ranking commanders. Mohammed al-Sinwar, a former commander, was reported killed by Israeli forces in May, and Raed Saad, another senior leader, was confirmed dead from a strike earlier this month.
Kahlout, a iconic and revered figure across the Arab world, was best known for his televised speeches that provided battlefield updates, celebrated Hamas’s military actions, and taunted Israel. His distinctive masked appearance was frequently replicated at protests, and his name was immortalized in songs. His public profile skyrocketed following Hamas’s October 2023 attack on Israel and the subsequent war.
Little is known about his personal life. A 2005 interview suggested his family was displaced during the 1948 Nakba, resettling in a Gaza camp, and that he was likely born in the mid-1980s. Hamas sources stated that only a handful of individuals knew his true identity before his death.
He adopted the Abu Obeida alias during the Second Intifada (2000-2005), a name paying homage to a revered companion of the Prophet Muhammad. His first press conference as spokesman was in 2004. He was central to announcing major events, including the capture of Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit in 2006 and Shaul Aron in 2014.
His rhetoric sometimes extended beyond immediate conflict. In 2022, he vowed to secure the release of re-arrested Palestinian prisoners. A particularly impactful speech in October 2023 criticized Arab leaders for inaction, coining the “God forbid” phrase that became a widespread slogan of frustration.
Israel had targeted him in multiple assassination attempts over 20 years, including two since last October. In April 2024, the U.S. Treasury Department sanctioned him as Hamas’s ‘information warfare chief,’ accusing him of leading the Brigades’ cyber influence efforts.
