For months, Hamas leaders have defended the militant group’s decision to launch the October 7, 2023, attack on Israel, despite the devastating Israeli offensive that followed, killing tens of thousands of Palestinians and leaving Gaza in ruins.

While Hamas has declared "victory" and vowed to carry out similar attacks in the future, one of its top officials is now expressing reservations. Mousa Abu Marzouk, head of Hamas’s foreign relations office in Qatar, told The New York Times that he would not have supported the attack had he known the extent of the destruction it would bring to Gaza. “If it was expected that what happened would happen, there wouldn’t have been October 7,” he said.

Abu Marzouk, 74, who was not informed of the specific plans but supported Hamas’s broader military strategy, also hinted at a willingness to negotiate the future of Hamas’s weapons in Gaza—an issue Israel has insisted must be addressed. His comments suggest internal divisions within Hamas over the attack and its consequences.

Comparisons have been drawn between his remarks and those of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, who admitted after the 2006 war with Israel that he would not have provoked the conflict had he foreseen the scale of Israel’s response.... Read More: Arutz-7