With Sinwar and Haniyeh written out does Mossad now speak for Hamas?
Israeli moles stripped from bogeymen cast

Given the apparent ease with which politicians in the United States, United Kingdom and globally have found it to turn a blind eye to Israel’s campaign of genocide in Gaza and war-mongering in the Middle East, it’s surprising Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud regime felt the need to orchestrate such a ludicrous cover story for the year-long ethnic-cleansing mission it began after the 7 October false-flag farce that has allowed its acolytes in the world’s corridors of power to play the self-defence “get-out-of-jail” card to condone its terrorism.
But perhaps it wasn’t the politicians it needed to convince as most of them are firm “friends” of the Israeli state anyway, it was probably more for the mainstream media’s benefit so organisations such as the BBC, CNN, Fox, The New York Times and Daily Mail had a narrative to fall back on to convince the masses that Israel is not a terrorist monster that too many governments around the globe will do anything to appease – even condone and aid in its slaughter of hundreds of thousands of women and children and the complete devastation of Gaza.
Sadly for Israel though there are better informed people in the world who’ve switched off the media brainwashing and are no longer susceptible to having the wool pulled over their eyes by the creative scriptwriters at the Institute for Intelligence and Special Operations (Mossad). They know who the terrorists are and are under no illusions that the inaccurately-named Israel Defence Forces (IDF) are doing anything other than ethnic cleansing in Gaza, with the campaign of genocide spreading to Lebanon, Iran and Yemen now, with even United Nations’ peacekeepers not safe from Netanyahu’s thugs.
However the Hamas card seems to still have an important part to play in Israel’s narrative to justify the complete destruction of Gaza and acts of terrorism in the West Bank. The tracking down and alleged death of Hamas kingpin Yahya Sinwar, the scapegoat for the 7 October shaggy-dog story, last week playing a pivotal part in the propaganda that bolsters Israel’s brazen disregard for international law.
But factor in the assassination of Ismail Haniyeh, the head of the Hamas bureau in Qatar, in Iran in July and strangely the two most high-profile moles in Israel’s “underground” network of operatives have now been removed from the script.
It’s quite ironic that “Yahya the Mole” disappeared down the Israeli-built tunnels under Gaza following the 7 October false-flag attack then mysteriously popped up again a year on with two bodyguards last week, no Israeli hostages anywhere to be found, and was taken out during a routine patrol by the IDF’s 828th Bislamach Brigade.
Conveniently “Sinwar” was caught on camera waving a stick at the drone that was initially thought to have taken him out but given the clarity of the images it could have been “Piers Morgan” or some other Israeli puppet in control of the stick during that chance encounter in Rafah on Wednesday night last week.
But the following morning the 828th Bislamach Brigade returned to inspect the scene of the previous night’s terrorism in Tal al-Sultan and found one of the bodies bore a striking resemblance to the Hamas leader, despite having suffered “catastrophic head wounds”.
According to a BBC report the corpse “remained in situ due to suspected booby traps” and part of a finger was removed and sent to Israel for testing.
“None of the hostages Sinwar was believed to be using as a human shield were present and his small retinue suggests either he was trying to move unnoticed or had lost many of those protecting him,” the BBC report said, adding that by the end of the day DNA tests confirmed Sinwar had been eliminated, strangely though it was also widely reported by other sources as being due to a match with his dental records. But just semantics though, Israel has confirmed it was him… so must be true, nothing left to add.
Some pictures also emerged later of a “corpse” amongst the rubble which could have been Sinwar, although they didn’t appear to indicate catastrophic head wounds. Did they show an effigy made of wax? Who knows? Could have been!
According to The New York Times, the director of Israel’s national forensic institute Dr Chen Kugel said Sinwar was killed by a long-range gunshot wound to the head during a firefight and, after his autopsy was completed, the body was handed over to the Israeli military. Never to be seen again?
So, I must confess, I don’t know whether Sinwar is still alive or dead… he could even be sitting on a beach in Guam for all I know. But the assassination of Israel’s other Hamas mole in July in Tehran was more persuasive, simply because the body was reportedly returned to Qatar for burial at a cemetery in Lusail, a city north of Doha.
According to Hamas reports, 61-year-old Haniyeh was killed in an air strike after participating in the inauguration of Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian, who won a snap election following the death of Ebrahim Raisi in a plane “crash” in May.
The Fars news agency, affiliated with the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), reported that Haniyeh was staying at a residence for veterans in northern Tehran and was killed by an “air-launched guided projectile”… although other reports suggest the explosion was the result of a remotely-detonated bomb covertly smuggled into the guesthouse two months earlier.
Part of a large compound known as Neshat, the guesthouse is run and protected by the IRGC, with newspaper sources suggesting the bomb was detonated remotely after it was confirmed he was inside his room, the explosion shattering some windows and causing the partial collapse of an exterior wall.
According to The New York Times report US officials, who requested anonymity, confirmed Israel was responsible for the assassination, although it was not publicly acknowledged by the terrorist state.
The leader of Hamas in Gaza until 2017, Haniyeh was replaced by Sinwar and went on to become head of its political wing based in Qatar, where he was allegedly a key player in “hostage negotiations” through intermediaries.
Haniyeh had emerged as the leader of Hamas in the run-up to the 2006 elections in Gaza following the erasure of the organisation’s founder Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, who was liquidated by Israeli gunships in March 2004, setting the scene for the infiltration of the party by Israel, who funded its victory at the polls.
The last time Israel allowed elections to take place in the enclave, Hamas claimed 44 per cent of the vote compared to the "more moderate" Fatah’s 41 per cent. But, given the electoral system in place at the time, it produced a strong majority of seats for Hamas (74 to 45).
However with neither party willing to co-operate with the other fighting broke out before a united government was finally formed in June 2007… Hamas breaking that deal by murdering Fatah members and, in the end, taking total control of Gaza with opposition leaders forced to flee to the West Bank. The regions have been split ever since.
In its formative years Hamas, according to some former Israeli officials, was seen as a counterweight to the Palestine Liberation Organisation so Israel supported it as a way to break the PLO’s hold on the region because its leader Yasser Arafat had come around to the concept of a peaceful solution... which really didn’t fit in with Israel’s plans at all.
Retired Israeli official Avner Cohen, who worked in Gaza in the 1990s, was even quoted in 2009 as saying: “Hamas, to my great regret, is Israel’s creation."
So Israel created it, supported it to an election victory in 2006 and has prevented the people of Palestine having any further say on the matter since.
And without its Hamas bogeymen in place how could it continue its campaign of ethnic cleansing in Gaza? It simply couldn’t. So, be in no doubt, Israel’s Hamas puppets are there for one reason, and one reason only, to provide the justification for Israeli genocide and offer no real threat to Netanyahu’s Likud government in Jerusalem whatsoever.
But how can that be, you ask? How could Israel control an entire opposition force? Quite simply it doesn’t need to, it just needs to hold a pervasive influence over those who call the shots in the organisation. Now how it came to exert that influence over Haniyeh and Sinwar is anybody’s guess… “plausible deniability” making it very unlikely the truth about the relationship will ever be revealed.
Nonsense you say… and perhaps it is, but if you doubt Israel’s ability to pull off such a coup I suggest you tune into Netflix and watch Sacha Baron Cohen's portrayal of top Mossad agent Eli Cohen in The Spy… a reality-based espionage thriller about his infiltration of the Syrian government in the 1960s.
And, if you’re as much of a TV and cinema freak as I am, you’ve no doubt seen other classics such as Donnie Brasco, The Departed, Serpico and Bethlehem… so have some idea of how important a part undercover work plays in espionage and crime-fighting scenarios.
Just stories, you say, dreamed up by scriptwriters with creative imaginations... but that’s the primary role of the mainstream media. All the companies who make these distractions are part of that select group of mainstream conglomerates there to shape our perception of the world and churn out “predictive programming” to validate orchestrated narratives.
If you see it as a dramatisation it’s much easier to dismiss it as fiction, which is exactly the reason these productions are released. Watch They Live, the 1988 thriller written and directed by John Carpenter; Stargate, the science-fiction franchise based on the film directed by Roland Emmerich; or Capricorn One, Peter Hyams' tale about a faked manned-mission to Mars.
Now I’m not saying they are factually based with the same conviction I believe Haniyeh and Sinwar were Israeli puppets, but I certainly believe cinema, TV and computer games have become key components to mould human perceptions.
We’ve now got a generation of adults brought up on Call Of Duty, Halo, Max Payne, Turok, Duke Nukem, Tomb Raider and Resident Evil sat at desks in charge of Israeli, US and UK drones targeting “military” targets in Sudan, Gaza, Lebanon and Iran… blowing up infrastructure and massacring targets like they’ve done since they were impressionable teens. It’s called dehumanisation and it’s worked a treat.
So back to Haniyeh and Sinwar and why Israel has written them out of the script now? Perhaps it’s an attempt to prove sceptics like myself wrong about the Hamas kingpins? Perhaps it’s because they’d served their usefulness or Israel had somehow lost its hold over them? Too many possibilities to say with any conviction but it's sure as hell going to leave a vacuum in the propaganda pipeline… or is it?
You’d think Israel would require new puppets to fill the void and keep the bogeymen in play as the pantomime villains... and if I was a betting man I’d have my money on a Hamas spokesman filling the role. Perhaps someone with his hands on a keyboard at the Palestinian Information Centre, a news website that has “taken the lead to speak up for Palestinians’ dream to liberate their motherland and restore their infringed rights”?
But given the deaths, disarray and destruction caused by Israel in Gaza, and the confusion it has created, how the Palestinian Information Centre or any other media outlet covering the genocide in the region manages to find a Hamas spokesman is a real mystery to me. Perhaps that’s why Haniyeh and Sinwar became expendable? Mossad is now all that's required to serve as Hamas’ spokesman!
About the Creator
Steve Harrison
From Covid to the Ukraine and Gaza... nothing is as it seems in the world. Don't just accept the mainstream brainwashing, open your eyes to the bigger picture at the heart of these globalist agendas.
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