From the Jewish Press
Hamas had been preparing a murderous massive assault on Israeli civilian
targets during the upcoming Jewish New Year holiday, Rosh Hashanah – according
to anonymous sources in the Israeli security services
Hamas had been planning a surprise attack where 200 fighters would have been dispatched through the dozens of tunnels dug by Hamas under the border from Gaza to Israel. The terror organization aimed to seize kibbutzim and other communities while killing and kidnapping Israeli civilians. In total, thousands of Hamas terrorists would have been swarming across Israel, wearing IDF uniforms, which would have further complicated an Israeli response. Reports further indicate that Hezbollah may have planned to join the attack as well, opening another front in the north. cited by the Israeli daily
Maariv.
The source stressed that the current unplanned war with Hamas inadvertently
thwarted a catastrophic event on an apocalyptic magnitude such as the Yom Kippur
War, which would have ‘brought the State of Israel to its knees.’ The
destruction of these tunnels takes away from Hamas a strategic weapon it has
been working on and investing in heavily for years according to the source.
Each tunnel has arteries, veins, offshoots as well as offshoots of offshoots
designed in intricate and complex arrangements. As one Israeli spokesman said,
“There are two Gazas, one above ground and one below ground: an underground
terrorist city.”
Speaking to the CBC, a senior Israeli defense official said the Israeli
military had considerable prior knowledge of Hamas weaponry and tunnels, but was
still “surprised” by the extent of both when the current ground operation began.
He added that the network had not been detected by aerial surveillance, because
Hamas had solved the most obvious problem: how to hide the piles of sand removed
from the tunnels. This, he said, was painstakingly taken away, a few bags at a
time, and stored out of sight in buildings and underneath greenhouses.
The official said Hamas had diverted huge quantities of cement, imported for
civilian construction, into the building of concrete-block walls and roofs for
the tunnels. As an example, he cited a 1.7-kilometer tunnel discovered in
February 2013 that Israeli engineers estimated would have required 500 tons of
concrete – “enough to build a three-story hospital.”
Israel has discovered 31 tunnels so far, and has destroyed several of them by
employing bulldozers, explosive and other methods. IDF excavation of the tunnels
has resulted in the seizure of tons of Hamas supplies, as well as the discovery
of plans for future operations.
Israeli soldiers have already frustrated several surprise assaults by Hamas
through tunnels from Gaza into southern Israel. On July 21, ten Hamas terrorists
emerged from a tunnel. They were immediately spotted and eliminated, but the
clash cost the lives of two IDF soldiers.
Writing for Gatestone, Lawrence Franklin says that the construction of
network of tunnels used hundreds of tons of concrete that might otherwise have
been used by the Palestinians for building homes, shopping malls, parks,
schools, hospitals and libraries.