"First We Fight, Then We Investigate" Israel Defense Forces
"There clearly were warnings and indications that should have been picked up.""Or maybe they were picked up, but they didn't spark necessary preparations to prevent these horrific terrorist acts from happening."Bradley Bowman, senior director, Center on Military and Political Power, Foundation for Defense of Democracies, Washington"We knew about the drones, we knew about booby traps, we knew about cyberattacks and the marine forces.""The surprise was the coordination between all these systems."Michael Milshtein, retired Israeli colonel, military intelligence"I just was impressed with Hamas's ability to use basics and fundamentals to be able to penetrate the wall.""They seemed to be able to find those weak spots and penetrate quickly and then exploit that breach."U.S. army Lt.Col. Stephen Danner, combat engineer, retired
This image from video posted to social media by Hamas on Sept. 12, 2023 shows a live-fire exercise dubbed operation “Strong Pillar” outside Al-Mawasi, a Palestinian town on the southern coast of the Gaza Strip. (Hamas via AP) |
On
September 12 a two-minute propaganda video was posted by Hamas to
social media, showing fighters using explosives to blast through a
replica of Israel's high-tech "Iron Wall". The video then shows Hamas
terrorist fighters sweeping through on pickup trucks and finally moving
stealthily building by building through the streets of a full-scale
reconstruction of an Israeli village while firing automatic weapons at
paper targets of human silhouettes. A strategy rehearsed, documented and
flaunted in full view of any interested enough to view it.
The
live-fire exercise showed fighters wearing body armour and combat
fatigues with an operation including destruction of mock-upped concrete
towers on the wall along with a communications antenna. Deadly practise
for a deadly attack that was carried out on October 7-8 in Israel
itself. Practise, it is said, makes perfect, and the deadly invasion was
a perfect example of a rehearsal giving skills and confidence for a
planned operation through scene-by-scene strategic orchestration.
Israel's
security and intelligence services had no idea of an enactment
rehearsal being carried forward to the gruesome, lethal reality of last
weekend. Hamas, it seems, felt sufficiently emboldened to take some
precautions not to be detected, but hubris led to their exultantly
publishing a pre-operation preparation video. Which, if Israeli
intelligence picked it up, which would have been easy enough to do,
wasn't taken seriously. There were, in fact, it would appear, dozens of
similar videos released by Hamas in the space of the last year, through Telegram.
The Associated Press
matched the mocked-up town location to an area of desert outside
Al-Mawasi, a Palestinian town on the Gaza Strip's southern coast.
"Horesh Yaron" read a large sign printed in Hebrew and Arabic at the
town's entrance gate. It was, in fact, the name of an Israeli settlement
in what the legacy press persists in naming the Palestinian West Bank.
Which led one intelligence expert to come to the conclusion that this
was a deliberate effort to persuade Israeli intelligence that a Hamas
raid would be planned for the West Bank, not Israel itself.
Hamas
terrorist fighters are shown storming a mock-up Israeli military base
complete with full-size model of a tank with an Israeli flag on its
turret, in a separate video posted to Telegram last year. The modus
operandi is similar to that of the Israel town's rehearsal video;
terrorists moving through cinder-block buildings grappling with and
overwhelming others acting as Israeli soldiers before taking them
hostage.
The
barrier in question, considered to be so high-tech as to be
impregnable, is a "smart fence", six-metres in height, cameras able to
'see' in the dark, razor wire and seismic sensors able to detect tunnel
digging over 200 feet below. Guard posts that were formerly manned were
replaced with concrete towers topped with remote-controlled machine
guns.
Israel’s Iron Dome air defense system intercepts rockets launched from Gaza City on May 10, 2023. (Mohammed Abed/AFP) |
"In
our neighbourhood, we need to protect ourselves from wild beasts. At
the end of the day, as I see it, there will be a fence like this one
surrounding Israel in its entirety", stated Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu when the high-tech fence was being
contemplated before its installation. He was absolutely correct that
Israel needed protection from 'wild beasts' but the monstrous Hamas
beasts planned well and orchestrated even better to connive and
prosecute a horrendous butchery of human life beyond anyone's wildest
nightmares.
The
invaders used explosive charges to explode areas of the wall, then
followed up with bulldozers to flatten the breaches so their colleagues
could stream through on motorcycles and pickup trucks, to be followed by
civilian Palestinian men looking for action and loot. Some of the
deathly atrocities can be attributed to the enthusiasm of Palestinian
wannabes alongside the terrorists themselves. Seems the common
stock-in-trade among Palestinians.
Palestinians from the Gaza Strip enter Kibbutz Kfar Aza on Oct. 7, 2023 amid a massive assault by the Hamas terror group. (AP Photo/Hassan Eslaiah) |
Cameras
and communications gear bombarded by commercial off-the-shelf drones
adapted with hand grenades and mortar shells, copying strategic moves
from Ukraine's battlefields. The roboguns were targeted by snipers
hitting their exposed ammunition boxes which exploded. Armed with
assault rifles, terrorists sailed over the broken defences slung under
paragliders. Rockets, crude, but improved to the point of being able to
strike distances such as reaching Tel Aviv also came into play.
One
hole at the heavily fortified Erez border crossing was over 70 metres
wide. As the Hamas terrorists streamed through by their hundreds, a
single Israeli battle tank rushed to the attack site, was attacked and
destroyed in an eruption of fire. Radio towers and radar sites were
disabled by Hamas, so Israeli commanders were kept in the dark about the
extent of the unprecedented attack.
Palestinian terrorists take control of an Israeli tank after crossing the border fence with Israel from Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip on October 7, 2023. (SAID KHATIB / AFP) |
A
nearby army base was struck and an intense firefight ensued with
Israeli troops before the post was overrun, dozens of Israeli soldiers
killed. At that point the estimated thousand terrorists fanned out
across southern Israel's countryside to attack kibbutzim, towns and
villages and a music festival. During the invasion, a search of the
bodies of some of the dead Hamas terrorists revealed detailed maps in
their possession, showing planned zones and routes of attack.
Four
days later Israeli authorities announced that bodies of about 1,500
Hamas terror fighters had been recovered. A Beirut-based senior Hamas
official revealed that the group had received supplies, financial
support, military expertise and training from its allies, including Iran
and Hezbollah, insisting the recent operation breaching Israel's border
defences was attributable to Hamas's self-agency, and it alone knew of
the timing of the event, it alone wanted to take credit for disabling
the defences of Israel's border.
And
it alone wishes to take credit for slaughtering defenceless families in
their homes, for raping and mutilating Jewish women before killing
them, for murdering children along with their parents, for abducting
elderly women, young girls and infants. Ample evidence has been found of
grisly, brutal murders, including beheadings, incinerations, and
utterly devastating loss of human life. Women taken as sex slaves
paraded naked in Gaza streets to the acclaim of their residents.
An
entire society befouled by the devastatingly inhuman exploits of the
world's latest iteration of an Islamofascist ideology of death and
destruction. One, moreover, so inured to shame at its raw brutality that
it takes pride in taking videoed records of the atrocities it commits,
flaunts them on social media with the certain knowledge that while they
may inspire loathing by civilized members of society, they will elicit
admiration and joy from their many supporters who have infiltrated the
world of the West.
"The fence, no matter how many sensors ... no matter how deep the underground obstacles go, at the end of the day, its effectively a metal fence.""Explosives, bulldozers can eventually get through it.""What was remarkable was Hamas's capability to keep all the preparations under wraps."Victor Tricaud, senior analyst, Control Risks consulting firm, London
Labels: Breach of Border Wall, Hamas Terrorism, Intelligence Failure, Invasion of Israel, Israel Defense Forces, Mass Butchery
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