Israel’s military faces backlash over AI ‘Ghibli-style’ social media posts

Israel’s military faces backlash over AI ‘Ghibli-style’ social media posts
The Israel Defense Forces posted four images depicting different branches of its military in the Ghibli style. (IDF/X)
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Updated 04 April 2025

Israel’s military faces backlash over AI ‘Ghibli-style’ social media posts

Israel’s military faces backlash over AI ‘Ghibli-style’ social media posts
  • Attempt to jump on trend of posting AI-generated images in style of famed Japanese animation studio

LONDON: An attempt by the Israeli military to jump on the bandwagon of a social media trend that uses AI-generated images in the style of a legendary Japanese animation studio has spectacularly backfired.

The internet has been flooded by images in the style of Studio Ghibli after ChatGPT maker OpenAI launched a new image generator last week.

The craze has intensified debate over the extent to which artificial intelligence models breach copyright of artists. It also contrasts the painstaking work that goes into meticulously crafting the beautiful hand-drawn films produced by Studio Ghibli with the instant gratification culture fed by social media and the emergence of AI models.

Not wanting to be left out, the Israel Defense Forces on Sunday posted four images depicting different branches of its military in the Ghibli style on its social media accounts.

“We thought we’d also hop on the trend,” the post said.

What followed was a barrage of responses, many angry, many humorous, denouncing and mocking the post.

The images were shared as Israel intensified the bombing of Gaza where it has already killed more than 50,000 Palestinians and forced the population to flee their homes in an action it began in October 2023.

Many responded with AI-generated images in the Ghibli style on X that depicted Israeli brutality in the Palestinian territory.

The counter-images depicted Israeli soldiers mocking a blindfolded and handcuffed Palestinian child, and IDF troops pointing rifles at women and children against a backdrop of devastation.

“Colonizing art too,” read one reply in reference to Israel’s building of illegal settlements and its occupation of Palestinian land.

Other users pointed out that Hayao Miyazaki, the co-founder of Studio Ghibli, is a staunch pacifist and that many of his films contain strong anti-war messages.

He famously refused to travel to the US in 2003 to attend the Academy Awards where his work “Spirited Away” won an Oscar.

A video from 2016 appears to show Miyazaki’s disdain for AI-generated imagery. A clip from a documentary shows Miyazaki saying he was “utterly disgusted” after seeing an AI demo.


Trump convinced Netanyahu to take a Gaza ceasefire deal. Can he keep him onboard?

Trump convinced Netanyahu to take a Gaza ceasefire deal. Can he keep him onboard?
Updated 14 October 2025

Trump convinced Netanyahu to take a Gaza ceasefire deal. Can he keep him onboard?

Trump convinced Netanyahu to take a Gaza ceasefire deal. Can he keep him onboard?
  • Israel-Hamas deal a major achievement for Trump – but hard work remains
  • Netanyahu likely to face pressure to resume conflict from right flank as time goes on

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump, a self-proclaimed peacemaker who has campaigned for a Nobel Prize, finally got a camera-ready diplomatic victory on Monday as world leaders flew to Egypt for the signing of the ceasefire and hostage-release deal he brokered between Israel and Hamas.
But if lasting peace is to take root, analysts and diplomats say, Trump will have to maintain pressure on the man whose support he’ll need in the next phases of his plan: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
US presidents from Bill Clinton to Joe Biden have found the strong-willed Israeli leader difficult to work with, and even Trump administration officials have been frustrated by some Israeli military strikes they see as undermining US policy.
But this month Trump managed to push Netanyahu into accepting his framework for a broader peace deal while persuading other Middle Eastern countries to convince Hamas to return all the Israeli hostages, its key leverage in the war.
The work could get harder from here, however.
Israel and Hamas remain sharply divided over many aspects of Trump’s 20-point plan and, as Israel prepares for next year’s elections, Netanyahu’s approach may shift as he attempts to keep his right-wing coalition together.
“We’re entering a political year where everything is related to campaigns, and Netanyahu’s calculations may flip from caving to pressure to trying to ensure his political survival,” said Nimrod Goren, the president of Mitvim, an Israeli foreign policy think tank.
The strength of Trump’s peace plan, said the diplomats and analysts, is also its weakness.
The document at the heart of the deal leaves much undefined, and neither side actually agreed to the fine print of each term. That vagueness was key to getting both sides to sign on, but it also means some of the most difficult diplomatic work is just beginning.
Among the potential sticking points of Trump’s peace plan is an agreement that Hamas disarm and play no role in Gaza’s future administration. While Hamas agreed to Trump’s plan generally, the group’s official response made no mention of those specific terms, and Hamas leaders have indicated that they do in fact see a role for themselves in governing a post-war Gaza.
“There are any number of ways this could go sideways,” said Jon Alterman, a Middle East expert at Washington’s Center for Strategic and International Studies and a former State Department official.
“It’s hard to remember an international agreement that left so much to be worked out later.”
The Israeli embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
A senior US official suggested that Trump had gained influence with Netanyahu in part by strongly supporting Israel on other important matters.
Trump’s first administration formally recognized Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and the disputed Golan Heights as part of the country, two things long sought by the Israeli government.
“One thing President Trump’s done with Israel ... is that he’s not trying to be a middle-of-the-roader,” the US official said. “He’s basically stood shoulder to shoulder with Israel 100 percent. But because of that, he’s been able to help guide them in the right direction.”
A sterner Trump
Trump has a mixed record when it comes to applying political pressure on Netanyahu.
In July, Israel bombed the Syrian defense ministry in Damascus even as the US had made a point of expanding ties with the new Syrian government. The US president gave political cover in Gaza to Netanyahu for months amid mounting humanitarian concerns among European and Arab allies.
But in recent weeks, a sterner Trump has emerged. He forced Netanyahu to call the leader of Qatar to apologize after a failed bombing raid targeting Hamas negotiators in that country in September. Ultimately, he muscled Netanyahu into signing onto his 20-point plan despite the Israeli leader’s misgivings.
At the moment, said Alterman, the Middle East expert, Trump can likely exert leverage over Netanyahu given the US president’s significant popularity in Israel.
“Trump’s greatest leverage is he’s much more politically popular in Israel than Netanyahu,” Alterman said, “and he can either support Netanyahu’s political future or sabotage it.”
At the speech before the Israeli parliament on Monday, Trump playfully poked at the Israeli leader in ways that indicated he did not feel the need to treat Netanyahu with special deference.
“Well, see, now you can be a little bit nicer, Bibi, because you’re not at war anymore,” Trump said to laughs.
But next year’s elections could change Netanyahu’s political calculations in ways that are difficult to predict.
Supporters of right-wing politicians Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich could in theory threaten Netanyahu’s governing coalition if they are sufficiently angered by the decision to halt military operations against Hamas.
Analysts warn that foot-dragging by the Palestinian group over disarming could lead right-wing elements of the coalition to pressure Netanyahu to resume military operations in Gaza, effectively scuttling Trump’s deal.
“We are troubled with the fact that Hamas still, today, declares it will stay in power in Gaza,” Simcha Rothman, a member of the Religious Zionism party and of Netanyahu’s governing coalition, said on Monday.
“We are not happy with any deal that is not total surrender of Hamas ... We will not accept any partial victory.”
Another issue that could prove an irritant: a provision in the peace plan that admits the possibility of a future Palestinian state, which analysts say most Israelis would struggle to accept after Hamas’ cross-border attack of October 7, 2023.
Dan Shapiro, a former US ambassador to Israel, said that if government and opposition politicians’ campaign heavily against the creation of such a state, it could limit the willingness of Arab countries to push Hamas to fulfill its obligations under Trump’s deal.
“That was a very important inclusion to get the support of the Arab states to do their part,” Shapiro said.
“If the political discourse is a full-on rejection of a Palestinian state for all time, I think that could color the enthusiasm of the Arab parties to play the parts that they need to play.”


Can Egypt summit turn Gaza’s fragile truce into a foundation for regional peace?

Can Egypt summit turn Gaza’s fragile truce into a foundation for regional peace?
Updated 13 October 2025

Can Egypt summit turn Gaza’s fragile truce into a foundation for regional peace?

Can Egypt summit turn Gaza’s fragile truce into a foundation for regional peace?
  • In Jerusalem, Trump hails ceasefire and hostage exchange as a historic turning point before arrival in Sharm El-Sheikh
  • Analysts urge caution, as disarmament, unity, and reconstruction will decide if the ceasefire endures or collapses

LONDON: Standing before Israeli lawmakers in Jerusalem on Monday, US President Donald Trump declared an end to what he called “a long and painful nightmare.” Twenty surviving hostages had just been released from Gaza after more than two years in captivity.

In return, Israel has begun freeing almost 2,000 Palestinian prisoners as part of the first phase of a US-brokered ceasefire with Hamas.

“For so many families across this land, it has been years since you’ve known a single day of true peace,” Trump told the Knesset. “Not only for Israelis, but also for Palestinians and for many others, the long and painful nightmare is finally over.”

A crowd gathers around a bus carrying Palestinian prisoners who were released from an Israeli prison as part of a ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas as it arrives to Ramallah, Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. (AP)

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, meanwhile, hailed Trump as “the greatest friend of Israel.”

Yet beyond the theatrics, Trump’s whirlwind visit marked the opening act in a far larger drama.

Within hours he was back aboard Air Force One, bound for Egypt’s Sharm El-Sheikh, where more than two dozen heads of state, government and international organizations were gathering for the first high-level summit on Gaza since the ceasefire took hold.

INNUMBERS

20

Living hostages seized in Gaza two years ago released by Hamas.

1900+

Palestinian prisoners and detainees released by Israel.

The deal, announced last week, represents the most significant diplomatic breakthrough in the Gaza conflict since the war began with the Hamas-led attack of Oct. 7, 2023, which left 1,200 people dead, most of them civilians, and saw 251 taken hostage.

Israel’s military campaign in Gaza has since killed at least 67,869 people, according to the territory’s health ministry. More than half of the dead are women and children.

People react as a convoy carrying the hostages released from the Gaza Strip arrives at a military base near Reim, southern Israel, on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. (AP)

Under the terms of the ceasefire, Hamas agreed to release all living hostages and return the bodies of 27 who died in captivity.

Israel, for its part, agreed to free roughly 2,000 Palestinians — 250 of them convicted on security charges — while beginning a partial withdrawal from Gaza.

But as celebrations erupted across Tel Aviv’s Hostages Square and Ramallah’s main thoroughfares, analysts cautioned that the jubilation could prove short-lived. The peace, for now, is merely procedural — the beginning of a process rather than its conclusion.

US President Donald Trump (L) sits next to Amir Ohana (C), Speaker of the Israeli Knesset, and Israeli President Isaac Herzog during an address to the Israeli parliament, the Knesset, in Jerusalem on October 13, 2025. (AFP)

Hani Nasira, the Egyptian author and academic, said the Sharm El-Sheikh summit was “a high-level international conference convened … to sustain the Gaza ceasefire and finalize an agreement to end the war and start a new chapter for peace and stability in the region.”

He told Arab News: “The gathering follows the signing of the first phase of a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas on Oct. 9. Under the deal, several Israeli hostages and Palestinian prisoners are to be released and humanitarian measures will be implemented.”

Nasira described Egypt’s role as “central” — both as mediator since the war began and now as “regional coordinator” shaping Gaza’s postwar framework.

A freed Palestinian prisoner is greeted after he was released from an Israeli jail as part of a hostages-prisoners swap and a ceasefire deal in Gaza between Hamas and Israel, in Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, October 13, 2025. (REUTERS)

“Cairo has served as mediator since the crisis began and now leads efforts to shape the postwar framework for Gaza,” he added.

Trump’s partnership with President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi underscores Washington’s renewed reliance on Cairo, which has long acted as the Arab world’s bridge between Israel and the Palestinians.

Together, they are expected to unveil the second stage of Trump’s 20-point Gaza peace plan, announced in late September — a roadmap that envisions a multinational stabilization force and, eventually, a new governing body for Gaza “headed” by Trump himself.

Mohammed Ahmed Al Yamahi, President of the Arab Parliament. (WAM)

“The US participation is seen as a diplomatic push to secure international commitment to a peace road map that includes a declaration of long-term stability and expanded Arab and global engagement,” said Nasira.

“Trump’s presence and remarks are expected to give the process both political and practical momentum, boosting prospects for translating initial agreements into concrete action.”

Nasira also pointed to the “balanced and pragmatic approach” of , which has quietly emerged as one of the most influential players in the post-ceasefire landscape.

A Qassam Brigades militant watches from the side of the road as vehicles of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) leave with the second batch of released Israeli hostages released by Hamas in the south of Deir el-Balah in the central Gaza Strip, on October 13, 2025. (AFP)

“ has also emerged as a key Arab partner alongside Egypt, contributing financial and humanitarian support while facilitating diplomatic pathways toward regional stability,” he said.

“Over the past several years, the Kingdom has pursued a balanced and pragmatic approach to the Palestinian issue, guided by strategic vision rather than short-term reaction.”

He added: “While Israel’s actions in the region have often been marked by escalation and excessive force, Riyadh has maintained a measured and rational stance, working with partners such as France to build a regional safety net.”

A masked Palestinian militant fighter of the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of the Palestinian hamas movement, stands guard next to children before the arrival of vehicles of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in the south of Deir el-Balah in the central Gaza Strip before handing over the second batch of hostages expected to be released, on October 13, 2025. (AFP)

Those efforts, he said, “have helped shape a growing international consensus in favor of a two-state solution and paved the way for the current US-led initiative to end the Gaza conflict.”

At the Sharm El-Sheikh summit, Saudi diplomats are expected to push for regional cooperation and the revival of the 2002 Arab Peace Initiative, which conditions normalization with Israel on the establishment of a Palestinian state.

For Trump, the optics of his Israel visit were both personal and political. The rapturous reception in Jerusalem provided a rare moment of unity for a leader whose presidency has otherwise been defined by polarization.

People react as they gather to watch a live broadcast of Israeli hostages released from Gaza at a plaza known as hostages square in Tel Aviv, Israel, Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. (AP)

But the reaction from ordinary Israelis offered a subtler insight into shifting public sentiment. 

In a post on X, Saudi political analyst Salman Al-Ansari said: “The booing of Israeli citizens when (US special envoy to the Middle East) Mr. Steve Witkoff mentioned Netanyahu was remarkable.

“Moments later, the same crowd erupted in cheers when he mentioned Donald Trump, even chanting ‘Thank you, Trump!’ repeatedly.

Former Israeli hostage Omri Miran, who was held captive in Gaza since the 2023 October 7 attacks by Palestinian militants, waves an Israeli flag upon disembarking from an Israeli UH-60 Black Hawk military transport helicopter on the landing pad at Ichilov Sourasky Medical Centre in Tel Aviv on October 13, 2025. (AFP)

“This contrast should ring alarm bells in the White House. Supporting Netanyahu as an individual is antithetical to supporting Israelis.”

Al-Ansari argued that American policymakers must learn to distinguish between supporting Israel as a nation and aligning uncritically with Netanyahu’s leadership.

“Since AIPAC (American Israel Public Affairs Committee) operatives often label Americans who criticize Netanyahu as antisemitic, perhaps it is time to flip the script and say that supporting Netanyahu is antisemitic,” he said.

(COMBO) This combination of undated handout pictures created on October 13, 2025 and released the same day by the Israeli army identifies the twenty released Israeli hostages (L to R, top to bottom) Matan Angrest, Gali Berman, Ziv Berman, Elkana Bohbot, Rom Braslavski, Nimrod Cohen, Ariel Cunio, David Cunio, Evyatar David, Guy Gilboa Dalal, Maxim Herkin, Eitan Horn, Segev Kalfon, Bar Kuperstein, Omri Miran, Eitan Mor, Yosef Haim Ohana, Alon Ohel, Avinatan Or, and Matan Zangauker, who were formerly held captive in Gaza since the 2023 October 7 attacks by Palestinian militants and handed over in a prisoner-hostage swap and a ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)

The comment reflects a growing unease within parts of the US foreign policy establishment about Netanyahu’s domestic standing and the sustainability of his hard-line policies.

Trump, meanwhile, is determined to frame the ceasefire as a personal triumph — a vindication of his unorthodox diplomacy and a reminder of his ability to command the world stage.

Even some of his Democratic opponents have offered rare praise.

A freed Palestinian is hugged by a relative after he was released from an Israeli jail as part of a hostages-prisoners swap and a ceasefire deal in Gaza between Hamas and Israel, in Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, October 13, 2025. (REUTERS)

Senator Mark Kelly said the Gaza deal was “his deal,” while Jake Sullivan, President Joe Biden’s former national security adviser, told CNN: “I give credit to President Trump … The question is, can we make sure this sticks as we go forward?”

That question now dominates the Sharm El-Sheikh summit. The ceasefire has stopped the killing for now, but the next stage — disarmament, reconstruction, and governance — will determine whether the truce evolves into a durable peace.

Trump himself seemed aware of the stakes. Israel has “won all that they can through force of arms,” he told the Knesset. It is now time to “translate these victories… into the ultimate prize of peace and prosperity for the Middle East.”

Released Israeli hostage Guy Gilboa Dalal waves to well wishers upon arriving at Beilinson Hospital in the Rabin Medical Centre in Petah Tikva in central Israel on October 13, 2025. (AFP)

Hamas has so far resisted calls to disarm, demanding international guarantees that Israel will not reoccupy Gaza and that aid will flow freely to rebuild the shattered enclave.

Hamas urges Trump and the mediators of the Gaza deal to “continue monitoring Israel’s conduct and to ensure it does not resume its aggression against our people,” the group’s spokesperson Hazem Qassem said on Monday.

Israeli officials, meanwhile, have avoided committing to a complete withdrawal, citing ongoing security concerns and the risk of renewed rocket attacks.

Palestinian men gesture from inside a bus after being released from the Ofer military prison located between Ramallah and Beitunia in the occupied West Bank on October 13, 2025, in exchange for hostages held by Hamas in Gaza since the October 7 attacks. (AFP)

The Israeli army confirmed Monday that the Red Cross was “on its way to collect the remains of a number of dead hostages” from Gaza — a grim reminder that even as the living return home, the scars of war endure.

Nasira believes the next challenge will be “overcoming internal Palestinian divisions and restoring national consensus” — a prerequisite, he said, for “capitalizing on growing international recognition of the State of Palestine and turning that recognition into tangible progress on the ground.”

He warned that “renewed Arab dialogue is seen not as a political luxury but a necessity for rebuilding trust and restoring unity, particularly as developments surrounding the Palestinian issue accelerate.”

Family and friends of Israeli hostage Eitan Horn celebrate as they wait for his release at their house in the central Israeli city of Rosh Haayin on October 13, 2025. (AFP)

That dialogue, anchored by Egypt and , could prove decisive in transforming the current ceasefire into a wider regional settlement.

Al-Ansari sees in this moment both a moral and strategic opportunity for the US president. 

“President Trump has a genuine opportunity to make history by prioritizing America’s interests in a way that also benefits all US allies in the Middle East, including Israel, if he takes the lead in ending the cycle of violence once and for all and joins the world in pushing for a two-state solution,” he said.

Released Israeli hostage Guy Gilboa-Dalal (in black garment), one of the former captives in Gaza since the 2023 October 7 attacks by Palestinian militants, being embraced by a family member after being handed over in a prisoner-hostage swap and a ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas in Israel on October 13, 2025. (AFP)

“He would not only restore America’s global credibility but also unite his MAGA constituency, win praise from both the right and the left in the US, and earn admiration from nearly every nation around the world.

“At that point, history would remember him as the greatest US president of all time, and a Nobel Peace Prize would seem like a downgrade compared to his accomplishments.”

For now, Sharm El-Sheikh is where the momentum lies. Egypt’s Red Sea resort, more accustomed to summits on climate and tourism, has become the new front line of Middle East diplomacy.

Trump’s aides say the president intends to turn the page on decades of failed peace initiatives. But the balance of expectations is delicate. Netanyahu has skipped the summit to mark a religious holiday, leaving his foreign minister to represent Israel.

As Trump and El-Sisi prepare to open the summit, few doubt that the coming days will test whether the “painful nightmare” is truly ending — or merely pausing.

 


Four Gaza hostage bodies brought into Israel: army

Four Gaza hostage bodies brought into Israel: army
Updated 13 October 2025

Four Gaza hostage bodies brought into Israel: army

Four Gaza hostage bodies brought into Israel: army
  • Hamas still holds the remains of 24 deceased hostages, which it has agreed to return to Israel

JERUSALEM: The bodies of four hostages held in Gaza and handed over to the Red Cross by Hamas on Monday have been brought back to Israel, the military said.
The remains in four coffins were now being taken to the National Institute for Forensic Medicine, “where identification procedures will be carried out,” the military said in a statement.
The handover of the bodies was part of a ceasefire agreement brokered by US President Donald Trump between Israel and Hamas.
Earlier on Monday, Hamas freed all 20 surviving hostages it had been holding since October 7, 2023, as part of the agreement.
In return, Israel released 1,968 prisoners and detainees, mostly Palestinians, the prison service said.
Hamas still holds the remains of 24 deceased hostages, which it has agreed to return to Israel as part of the ceasefire deal.
“Hamas is required to uphold the agreement and take the necessary steps to return all the deceased hostages,” the military said.
During their unprecedented 2023 attack on Israel, which sparked the war in the Gaza Strip, Hamas-led militants abducted 251 people and took them to Gaza.
Most of them, including several who were later confirmed dead, were handed over during two previous truces over the past two years of war.
However, Hamas continued to hold 47 hostages until the latest ceasefire came into effect.
The remains of an Israeli soldier killed in a previous conflict in 2014 were also being held in Gaza.


Trump meets Palestinian president Abbas at Egypt summit

Trump meets Palestinian president Abbas at Egypt summit
Updated 28 min 46 sec ago

Trump meets Palestinian president Abbas at Egypt summit

Trump meets Palestinian president Abbas at Egypt summit
  • Brief chat at Gaza peace summit was first time the two leaders have met in eight years

SHARM EL-SHEIKH: US President Donald Trump met Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas at a summit on Gaza in Egypt on Monday, with the pair shaking hands in their first encounter in eight years.
Trump and Abbas spoke for several seconds, before the US leader held his hand and then gave a thumbs up to the cameras at the summit in Sharm El-Sheikh.
French President Emmanuel Macron escorted Abbas to the podium to meet Trump.


Hamas kills 32 ‘gang’ members in Gaza City

Hamas kills 32 ‘gang’ members in Gaza City
Updated 13 October 2025

Hamas kills 32 ‘gang’ members in Gaza City

Hamas kills 32 ‘gang’ members in Gaza City
  • On Monday, Hamas deployed members of its Qassam Brigades military wing as it freed the last living hostages seized two years ago

GAZA CITY: Hamas has sought to reassert itself in Gaza since a ceasefire took hold, killing dozens of people in a crackdown on groups that have tested its grip and appearing to get a US nod to police the shattered enclave temporarily.
Pummelled by Israel during the war ignited by the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks, Hamas has gradually sent its men back into the streets of Gaza since the ceasefire began on Friday, moving cautiously in case it suddenly collapses, according to two security sources in the territory.
On Monday, Hamas deployed members of its Qassam Brigades military wing as it freed the last living hostages seized two years ago. It was a reminder of one of the significant challenges facing US President Donald Trump’s effort to secure a lasting deal for Gaza, as the US, Israel, and many other nations demand that Hamas disarm.
Reuters footage showed dozens of Hamas fighters lined up at a hospital in southern Gaza, one wearing a shoulder patch identifying him as a member of the elite “Shadow Unit” that Hamas sources say was tasked with guarding hostages.
Trump’s plan foresees Hamas out of power in a demilitarized Gaza run by a Palestinian committee under international supervision. 
It calls for deploying an international stabilization mission to train and support a Palestinian police force.
But Trump, speaking on his way to the Middle East, suggested Hamas had been given a temporary green light to police Gaza.
“They do want to stop the problems, and they’ve been open about it, and we gave them approval for a period of time,” he said, responding to a journalist’s question about reports that Hamas was shooting rivals and instituting itself as a police force.
After the ceasefire took effect, Ismail Al-Thawabta, head of Hamas’ Gaza government media office, said the group would not allow a security vacuum and that it would maintain public safety and property.
Hamas has ruled out any discussion of its arsenal, saying it would be ready to surrender its arms to a future Palestinian state. The group has said it seeks no role in Gaza’s future governing body, but that Palestinians should agree upon this with no foreign control.

As the war dragged on, a diminished Hamas faced growing internal challenges to its control of Gaza from groups with which it has long been at odds, often affiliated with clans.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said earlier this year that Israel had been arming clans that oppose Hamas, without identifying them.
One of the Gaza sources, a security official, said that since the ceasefire, Hamas forces had killed 32 members of “a gang affiliated with a family in Gaza City,” while six of its personnel had also been killed.
The Gaza City clashes mostly pitted Hamas against members of the Doghmosh clan, residents and Hamas sources said.
The security official did not identify the group, nor say whether it was one of those suspected of receiving support from Israel.
The most prominent anti-Hamas clan leader is Yasser Abu Shabab, who is based in the Rafah area — an area from which Israel has yet to withdraw.
Offering attractive salaries, his group has recruited hundreds of fighters, a source close to Abu Shabab said earlier this year. Hamas calls him a collaborator with Israel, which he denies.
The Gaza security official said that, separate from the clashes in Gaza City, Hamas security forces had killed Abu Shabab’s “right-hand man” and efforts were underway to kill Abu Shabab himself.
Abu Shabab did not immediately respond to questions on the official’s comments. 
Hussam Al-Astal, another anti-Hamas figure based in Khan Younis in areas controlled by Israel, taunted the group in a video message on Sunday, saying that once it hands over the hostages, its role and rule in Gaza would be over.
Palestinian analyst Reham Owda said Hamas’s actions were aimed at deterring groups that had collaborated with Israel and contributed to insecurity during the war. Hamas also aimed to show that its security officers should be part of a new government, though this would be rejected by Israel, she said.