Snipers, drones, bulldozers: Gaza border guards recount Hamas attack
Israel long thought its hi-tech security barrier
blockading the Gaza Strip was impenetrable, brimming with razor wire, cameras
and sensors and fortified with a concrete base against tunnels and
remote-controlled machine guns.
But in the aftermath of the surprise Hamas
onslaught, soldiers who were on guard duty have recounted the shocking moments
when the militants launched their complex operation to breach Israel's
"Iron Wall" around the enclave in multiple locations.
The massive attack at dawn Saturday came under
cover of a rocket barrage aimed at Israel and involved sniper fire, explosives
dropped from drones, and bulldozers that ripped through the six-metre (almost
20-foot) tall double fence barrier.
More than 1,500 militants quickly swarmed through
in pick-up trucks and on motorcycles, joined by others using gliders and
speedboats at sea, to unleash gun attacks that claimed hundreds of lives in
nearby communities.
"At 6:30 am (0330 GMT) the rockets
started," a lookout soldier who was stationed in Nahal Oz, across from
Gaza City, said in a televised interview from her hospital bed.
"About 30" militants quickly occupied the
army base and held it for seven hours, the soldier, identified only as Y., told
Israel's Channel 12.
"I sprinted barefoot to the bomb shelter, and
after an hour we started hearing voices in Arabic, and they started shooting at
the entrance," she recalled.
Until an elite Israeli army unit finally retook the
base, "for all those hours, it became their (Hamas's) camp", the
soldier said.
In the opening moments of the massive
attack, snipers "fired at the observation posts" dotted along
the 65-kilometre (40-mile) long barrier, an Israeli army spokesperson told
AFP.
A soldier stationed at an observation post also
said the Palestinian gunmen "started shooting at... observation cameras,
and it got to the point where we could no longer observe" the border.
In comments published by independent Israeli news
website Hamakom, the unnamed soldier said that, as her army base came under
attack, "we were told our only option was to... run for our lives into the
situation room."
Other soldiers shared similar accounts in social
media posts and media interviews, all pointing to a initial mass attack to
cripple the barrier's observation and communications systems.
The army spokesperson denied to AFP rumours of a
cyber attack targeting military systems as the cause of the blackout.
Video footage released by Hamas also shows
militants firing at observation posts, including their remotely operated
systems with firing capabilities.
Other footage online was taken by the cameras of
drones that hovered above watchtowers and dropped explosives onto them, while
militants are also seen using bulldozers or blasting gaping holes through the
border fence, allowing fighters to rush through.
The attack that followed was the worst in Israel's
75-year history, setting off retaliatory strikes on Gaza and sparking a war
that had claimed thousands of lives by Tuesday, with no quick end in sight.
"It's a huge failure of the intelligence
system and the military apparatus in the south," said retired military
general Yaakov Amidror, a former national security adviser.
Israeli soldiers who were posted along the border
recounted the terror of the initial attack, in which Hamas fighters killed or
captured their comrades and destroyed or commandeered tanks and other military
hardware.
In testimony posted on Instagram, a lookout soldier
said the early morning attack was "nothing I could have imagined in my
worst nightmares".
"I never thought I would ever see such thing
in a lookout. I did my best until a sniper hit" the observation system,
she said.
"They took us by surprise and we weren't ready
for it... and (there was) no intelligence at all."
Survivors of the attacks on nearby communities have
been shocked at the failure of the systems that were meant to ensure their
security.
Inbal Reich Alon, 58, from the hard-hit Beeri
kibbutz, recounted that, years ago, "after they set up the barrier, we'd
realised we were safe".
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