“Fantazma” which drives Hamas/ Mohammed Deif, the most wanted man for Israeli intelligence services

There's only one picture on the grid, and it's often given the ghost nickname, but Mohammed Deif is the most wanted man in Israeli intelligence services. All of this since he is believed to be the person who stands as the military mastermind following the October 7th attack carried out by Hamas' forces against Israel. [...]
There's only one picture on the grid, and it's often given the ghost nickname, but Mohammed Deif is the most wanted man in Israeli intelligence services. All of this since he is believed to be the person who stands as the military mastermind following the October 7th attack carried out by Hamas' forces against Israel.
He was born in 1960 and was a “child” of the Han Younis refugee camp. His father and uncle had participated in the 1950 raids among armed Palestinians. It was 1980 when Mohammed Deif joined Hamas and, like many, spent most of his life in prisons. Those who have known him call him a quiet man who is not interested in the internal rivalries of Palestinian factions, but is developing his tactics.
From the beginning of his life in Hamas, he was focused on the military road.
Deif is not convinced that the Israeli-Arab conflict will be resolved by violence, just as others in Hamas see the Oslo Agreement, which in the late 1990s promised a peace settlement, as a betrayal of Palestinian resistance. His military nickname is “Mysphire, or otherwise stated, visitor “, referring to the custom of Palestinian illegals to spend every night in a different house to avoid Israeli intelligence.
In 2014, after an Israeli air strike, Diet lost his arm and leg in wheelchairs, but he still manages to evade the Israelites and plan operations. Israel holds him responsible for the death of dozens of people in suicide attacks. As for the conflict between Israel and Palestine, he believes that there will now be no “truce with Israel, but “only revenge”.
During his last two years at the helm of Hamas, El Deif with his movements tried to convince Israel that the focus of this grouping was on Gaza's domestic affairs, though the truth was quite the opposite, since for at least two years this militant group was planning a revenge attack.












