Report Details Hamas’s Planned Attack on Israeli Border Communities

By Yoni Weiss

Palestinians break into the Israeli side of the Israel-Gaza border fence after terrorists infiltrated areas of southern Israel, on Simchas Torah. (REUTERS/Mohammed Fayq Abu Mostafa)

Hamas’s plan to storm and attack Israeli border communities, as happened on Simchas Torah, was known only to 70 members of its elite Nukhba unit, London-based Arabic-language newspaper Al-Sharq Al-Awsat reported on Wednesday, citing sources close to the military wing of Hamas, the Al-Qassam Brigades.

The terrorists, who trained for years without knowing the specific purpose of their training, launched a surprise attack from several different areas along the Gaza-Israel border, crossing it using explosive devices prepared and tailored for “weak points” identified in the security fence. The sources revealed that the terrorists used drones and paragliders, enabling them to take down Israeli positions.

According to the report, preparations for the attack began in 2014, even prior to Operation Protective Edge, but the plan was put on hold with the outbreak of that operation. In 2021, it was decided to begin to prepare for the attack again.

The terrorists were trained over the years and underwent special tests to determine their capabilities and combat skills for the attack. Shortly thereafter, they were sworn to secrecy, pledging not to disclose secrets about their training and the specialized training plans.

The sources confirmed to the newspaper that many commanders of the military wing in Gaza were actually not aware of all the details.

The information compartmentalization, as claimed in the report, was intended to prevent leaks to Israeli intelligence. Ultimately, the decision to carry out the attack and its timing was made by five people: Hamas leader in the Gaza Strip Yahya Sinwar, the military wing’s leader Muhammad Deif, one of Deif’s assistants and Yahya Sinwar’s brother Muhammad Sinwar, Hamas politburo member Rawhi Mushtaha, and Hamas’s Central Brigade commander Ayman Nofal, who was assassinated by Israel in October.

The sources revealed that the attack’s planners subsequently briefed the Al-Qassam Brigades commanders on the prepared equipment and the attack strategy, but withheld details about its exact timing. They said that a final notice regarding the preparations was issued three days before the attack during a meeting between the brigade commanders and the regional battalion commanders of the terrorist organization.

In these meetings, each commander was assigned specific tasks without being given a complete overview of the operation. The brigade commanders diligently readied their chosen forces for the mission. Concurrently, Ayman Siam, the chief of the rocket division who was also killed in the war, was tasked with preparing to launch hundreds of missiles in coordination with the onset of the attack.

The sources further said that senior members of the terrorist organization, including politburo chief Ismail Haniyeh and his deputy Saleh al-Arouri, were informed of the existence of an extraordinary attack plan without being given specific details or timing. They, like the rest of the terrorists, were made aware of the attack’s timing only a few hours before it was launched.

According to the sources, Oct. 7 – Simchas Torah – was chosen following reports from surveillance units confirming “absolute quiet” at the border. The day before the actual attack, the five “partners in secrecy” decided that Shabbos morning was the most suitable time for the attack.

They waited until midnight and then issued orders to prepare. At this stage, field commanders and Nukhba terrorists received instructions and began moving until dawn.

The report also indicated that secrecy surrounding the attack extended to Hamas’s political figures. The sources said that the organization’s leaders in and outside Gaza were briefed hours before the attack and were asked “to completely disappear, in accordance with the security measures taken in times of emergency.”

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