Anas Al-Sharif: journalist or Hamas militant? 
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When war wears a reporter's face

Israel must sift friend from foe in a fog where militants hide behind civilians.

Vernon Velasco

JERUSALEM—Anas Al-Sharif, a 28-year-old correspondent for Al Jazeera Arabic known for his fearless reporting from northern Gaza, had his final act caught on camera. Yet whether he was a journalist or a terrorist is a story only this war can tell.

An Israeli strike Sunday demolished the press tent outside the strip's al-Shifa Hospital, killing Al-Sharif alongside six colleagues.

Israel claims he was a Hamas operative disguised as a journalist; Al Jazeera argues he died because his lens caught the conflict Israel tried to hide.

The Israeli Defense Forces announced with cold certainty that Al-Sharif is head of a Hamas rocket platoon embedded in Gaza.

They released a dossier: personnel rosters, terror training lists, salary documents, phone directories offered as irrefutable proof of a double life: propaganda mingled with militancy.

Israel said the strike was surgical, calibrated to spare civilians and hit on a "terrorist cell" hiding behind the press ID.

But doubts linger amid the rubble. Al Jazeera and colleagues paint a different picture: a seasoned correspondent bearing unflinching witness to Gaza’s agony, whose last social-media posts chronicled the “intense bombardment” of the city.

His final message, prepared in case of death, mourned Gaza’s suffering and vowed to convey “the truth as it is, without distortion.”

Human-rights groups and press watchdogs have raised the alarm that Gaza’s journalists are trapped in a crossfire of bombs and narratives. According to these voices, military spokesmen blur “journalist” and “terrorist,” turning reporters into marked targets.

Since last fall, over 200 media workers have been killed, the Committee to Protect Journalists reports, warning that press freedom bleeds out amid the violence it covers.

Israel must sift friend from foe in a fog where militants hide behind civilians.

Al-Sharif’s death echoes a brutal truth: security demands a price, and in war’s cold calculus, no choice is free of consequence.