HomeNewsOpinionHamas has already lost the war of images

Hamas has already lost the war of images

The Hamas videos of captured women drew widespread revulsion and reprobation. Because of the videos, Hamas lost any right to claim the attack was a manifestation of 'legitimate resistance'. Instead, the group was exposed before the horrified world as the terrorist organisation it has always been

October 12, 2023 / 12:43 IST
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Israel vs Hamas War
Rather than demonstrate patriotic resistance by brave Palestinian fighters, the images invited comparisons with the brutal terrorists of the Islamic State. (Source: AFP)

Two videos capture how Hamas lost the war of images last Saturday.

In the first, a young woman, stripped nearly naked,  lies in the back of a pick-up truck. Her face is turned away from the camera. Two men sit behind the woman; one is holding a rocket-propelled grenade launcher and has a leg casually draped over her, the other seems to be clutching a fistful of her braided hair. Two other men are standing farther back, one of them waving an assault rifle in the air. All four men are cheering, “Allahu akbar!” as are those gathered around the vehicle. As the truck pulls away, one man leans in to spit on the supine woman.

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In the second video, an elderly woman in a tan-colored T-shirt and wrapped in what appears to be a pink, patterned tablecloth sits in a golf cart, looking alternatively defiant and bemused. Behind her is a man in black, holding aloft an assault rifle. On a motorcycle ahead of the buggy, the pillion rider is also brandishing a weapon. As this small convoy moves slowly forward, celebratory ululations are heard off camera.

When these scenes were being videotaped, presumably in Gaza, the celebrants were exulting what they may have regarded as Hamas’s greatest victory: a brazen assault in which its fighters killed more than 1,000 Israelis, the largest single-day death toll in the country’s history, injured thousands more and took at least 150 hostage. Within hours of the attack, Hamas was posting videos to show off its stunning “success.” As with the kinetic operations, it was keen to draw first blood in the war of images, to inspire its supporters and demoralise its enemy.