Israeli Strike in Gaza City Kills Two Hamas Brigade Commanders
An Israeli strike in Gaza City on the evening of May 27 eliminated two senior Hamas military commanders, including the deputy commander of the Gaza Brigade and the commander of Hamas's Northern Brigade, Gazan journalists reported.

At least two senior Hamas military commanders were killed in an Israeli strike in Gaza City on the evening of May 27, 2026, according to reporting by Gazan journalists with knowledge of the incident.
The dead include Imad Aslim, also known as Abu Hassan, the deputy commander of Hamas's Gaza Brigade and the commander of the Zeitoun Battalion, and Ezz al-Din al-Biq, using the nom de guerre Amshawi, who served as commander of Hamas's Northern Brigade in the Gaza Strip. Both were identified by Gazan journalists affiliated with Hamas as having been eliminated in the strike. The IDF has not yet issued a formal statement on the operation.
The attack struck a building in Gaza City as evening fell on May 27. By the morning of May 28, Gazan sources reported that the fire was still burning and the death toll had risen to seven, with the number of casualties expected to fluctuate as rescue teams worked through the wreckage.
The simultaneous elimination of two brigade-level commanders represents a significant disruption to Hamas's military command structure in the Gaza Strip. The Northern Brigade and the Gaza Brigade are among the group's primary combat formations, and their respective commanders held operational responsibility for large portions of the strip's northern and central territory. That both figures were reportedly struck in a single strike suggests either co-location at the time of the attack or intelligence indicating a planned meeting.
The strike follows a period in which Israeli forces have continued targeted operations against Hamas military leadership even as broader ceasefire negotiations remain deadlocked. The deaths of Aslim and al-Biq will require the group to promote or redistribute authority across surviving commanders, a process that typically creates friction within militant organisations and can temporarily degrade operational coherence.
Israeli security officials have long argued that degrading Hamas's military command is essential to preventing the group from reconstituting its offensive capabilities. Critics of that approach note that prior rounds of targeted killings have not prevented the group from continuing to function, and that each disruption generates new martyrs that serve the organisation's propaganda machinery. Neither side contests the military logic of the strikes; the disagreement centres on whether the strategic gains are durable.
The sources do not specify whether civilian casualties occurred in addition to the seven confirmed dead, nor do Israeli or Hamas-affiliated sources agree on whether additional militants were present at the target site. The IDF has not published its assessment of the strike's collateral effects as of publication.
What is clear is that the strike narrows the pool of experienced Hamas commanders available to direct operations in the northern and central Gaza Strip. Whether that gap materially changes the trajectory of the conflict — or simply redistributes authority to figures who are less operationally seasoned — will become apparent in the coming weeks.
This publication's coverage prioritises reporting from Gazan journalists and Israeli official sources. Western wire services had not published detailed accounts of the strike as of this article's deadline.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/englishabuali/20260528T055800
- https://t.me/englishabuali/20260528T055700
- https://t.me/abualiexpress/20260528T055300
- https://t.me/englishabuali/20260528T054100