REPORT: IDF Knew Weeks Before Oct. 7 of Hamas Plan to Take 200 Hostages

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    (JNS)  – Intelligence documents compiled by the Israel Defense Forces’ Gaza Division only three weeks before Oct. 7 warned that Hamas was preparing for a massive cross-border attack during which at least 200 hostages would be taken, according to Israeli media reports.

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    The memo, which was internally circulated on Sept. 19, was brought to the attention of at least some top intelligence officials in the military’s Southern Command, Israel’s Kan News reported on Monday night.

    The document detailed drills by the Gaza terrorist group’s Nukhba force, which practiced raids on Israeli towns and army bases, as well as how to hold soldiers and civilians hostage once back inside the Strip.

    “At 11 a.m., several companies were observed gathering for prayer and lunch before the start of training,” the memo read. “At noon, equipment and weapons are distributed to the combatants, after which a company headquarters drill takes place. At 2:00 p.m., the practice raid begins.”

    Hamas terrorists were told to execute hostages to prevent their escape and received orders to raid military outposts for intelligence before returning to Gaza, the IDF memo added.

    The junior intelligence officers who observed the exercise estimated the expected number of hostages at between 200 and 250 people. During the actual Oct. 7 attacks on the northwestern Negev, terrorists took roughly 250 people hostage, in addition to murdering 1,200.

    One of the soldiers involved in the Sept. 19 report wrote after the massacre, “I feel like crying, yelling and swearing,” per Kan.

    In a response to the broadcaster, the IDF did not comment on the alleged memo but said it was probing all failures that led up to Oct. 7 and vowed to present the findings “transparently to the public.”

    In April, the head of IDF Military Intelligence, Maj. Gen. Aharon Haliva, announced his resignation from the military, effective after the completion of operational investigations and an overlap process with a replacement. He added that under his command, the Intelligence Directorate “did not live up to the task it was entrusted with.”

    Last week, Brig. Gen. Avi Rosenfeld, commander of the Gaza Division, also announced his resignation. IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi has signaled he will step down after the war against Hamas ends.

    Earlier this year, Halevi announced an internal probe into the military’s failures, calling the investigation a “duty and not a privilege.”

    In January, Israel’s Walla news site cited military sources as claiming that while the IDF was aware of Hamas’s repeated attempts to blow up the security fence on the Gaza border in preparation for the Oct. 7 attacks, it opted to dismiss the rehearsals as a “provocation.”

    Hours before Hamas’s attack, IDF intelligence learned that hundreds of terrorists in Gaza had activated Israeli SIM cards in their phones, the military censor cleared for publication in February. The activations were reportedly detected around midnight on the night of Oct. 6.

    In October, The New York Times reported that Unit 8200, the IDF’s leading signals intelligence unit, stopped listening to Hamas’s handheld radios a year before the attacks, deciding it was a “waste of effort.”

    In addition, critical computer systems used by Unit 8200 broke down on Oct. 6 and were only repaired some 90 minutes before Hamas launched its cross-border massacre, Israel’s Channel 12 reported on Saturday.


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    16 Comments
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    Na Nach....
    Na Nach....
    8 days ago

    As Rebainu Nachman wrote: A person sees only what Hashem wants him to see. All the reports and intelligence are totally unimportant, if Hashem didn’t want the Israeli government and military to understand.
    אם ה לא ישמור עיר, שוא שקד שומר
    May Hashem have mercy on his people

    anonymous
    anonymous
    8 days ago

    Horrible news.

    Shortsighted
    Shortsighted
    8 days ago

    I live in Israel but was visiting chul last August. I remember reading an article on an English, Israeli website, about intelligence revealing that war would break out in October. They described how they could come over the border from gaza, kidnap and kill hundreds or thousands. In this same article, they described the rest of the story which included Jordanians coming over the border, the west Bank having an uprising where they would take over all the roads and make travel extremely dangerous. They described Hezbollah fighting with full force, and they described the cyber attacks which would make calling everything, including emergency services, impossible.
    I was very afraid to travel back to Israel, but I was comforted in the belief that if the information was available to me, it was also available to the government.
    I realize now that the government was completely unprepared but that Hashem prevented all the rest of it from happening.

    shmendrick
    shmendrick
    8 days ago

    Who are we supposed to believe now. First we are told by the terrorists and their supporters that only 2 people knew the date and time of the attack. Then we hear that Egypt warned Israel in advance, though they have still not told us how much advance notice. Now we should believe Israel and the IDF knew weeks in advance. The answer is, Hashem knew and didn’t allow humans to know anything.

    Leo
    Leo
    7 days ago

    Why did Hamas decide on 200-250 hostages, why noy 500, 1000. How would there teams coordinate this number, what happens if some teams get wiped out?
    Interesting that this number matches the amount of Hamas took.

    I think some people are plating information after the fact to cover up the truth.

    Seichel
    Seichel
    7 days ago

    Inside job. Or partial inside job.