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One of Hamas’ October 7 aims was to block Israel-Saudi peace, documents show

Yahya Sinwar saw peace talks between Jerusalem and Riyadh as detrimental to the terror group

May 18, 2025 12:22
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Recovered documents from a Hamas tunnel reveal that one of Yahya Sinwar's motivations for the October 7 attack was to disrupt Israel-Saudi peace talks. (Getty Images)
1 min read

One of the motivations behind Hamas’ deadly attack on October 7, 2023, was to torpedo efforts to normalise relations between Israel and Saudi-Arabia, according to minutes of a high-level meeting recovered by Israeli troops from a tunnel in Gaza.

In the documents salvaged from a hidden Hamas tunnel in the Strip are minutes from a meeting on October 2, 2023, where the late Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar told senior commanders that only an “extraordinary act” would derail the fast‑evolving deal. “There is no doubt that the Saudi-Zionist normalisation agreement is progressing significantly,” he said.

If a deal was brokered between Israeli and Saudi-Arabi, “most Arab and Muslim governments would line up behind it,” he warned, side-lining Hamas and its “resistance project”.

This page shows some of the Hamas members present at the meeting (Credit: IDF)This page shows some of the Hamas members present at the meeting (Credit: IDF)[Missing Credit]

The documents say the coordinated attack, in which around 6,000 terrorists stormed the southern border of Israel, killing 1,200 and taking 251 hostage, had been under preparation for two years. The assault was part of a broader campaign to engineer a “strategic shift” in the region, bringing together other members of the so‑called Axis of Resistance into the fight against Israel.