play videoplay video

Video duration 04 minutes 14 seconds 04:14

Activists on social media interacted with the report that the Israeli military censorship recently allowed to be published, which states that Hamas activated a thousand Israeli SIM cards prior to the Al-Aqsa Flood operation.

read more

Activists on social media interacted with the report that the Israeli military censorship recently allowed to be published, which states that the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) activated a thousand Israeli SIM cards prior to the Al-Aqsa Flood operation that took place on the seventh of last October.

Despite the enormous capabilities that Israel possesses, the new report reflects the extent of its intelligence failure and its miscalculation of what the resistance can do.

According to the published report, the SIM cards were played on phones in the Gaza Strip a few hours before the start of the October 7 attack.

urgent meeting

This activity raised Israeli fears and prompted its security institutions - including the Internal Security Agency (Shin Bet) and Military Intelligence - to hold an emergency meeting in the early hours of October 7, but they all concluded that the matter might not go beyond Hamas conducting training exercises, and that the situation It does not require a state of alert.

However, the Israeli army denied this report and said that it was far from reality, indicating that it was only dozens of slides - not a thousand slides - that were used that day.

The army said that the incident was not new, because it had recorded the activation of chips of this size in the past in Gaza, and nothing happened.

Immediately, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office quickly denied the report, saying that he was not aware of this digital claim, stressing that he had received a report about the "terrorists" (resistance) using dozens of Israeli SIM cards during the operation.

According to the Times of Israel newspaper, elite members of Hamas used these chips to communicate with each other inside the Israeli settlements during the operation.

Tweeters interacted with the report, which some of them considered a new Israeli attempt to justify its failure and defeat, and among them was Ibrahim, who said: “They cannot find an excuse for their defeat, their scandal, and their failure. All of Gaza and the West Bank have so-called Israeli SIM cards.”

Almost the same opinion was expressed by Ali, who said: “The Israeli army likes to show in every way that they were aware, and that their intelligence is the strongest intelligence, and by God, it will take you 100 years to know what happened on October 7.”

As for Bill Peterson, he went on to liken the Al-Aqsa flood to the operation of September 11, 2001, saying, “I think that 7/10 was similar to 9/11, where the authorities knew that something was imminent, but they were astonished by the audacity of the attack.”

Finally, Amr Al-Jarhi said: “They will sleep and get up, and the days and years will pass, and they will wake up terrified of October 7... and dream that they were guests in the land of Palestine, and the land was cleansed of them.”

For his part, Israeli army spokesman Daniel Hagari said that the events of the night before last October 7th will be investigated comprehensively, and stressed that the results will be presented transparently to the public.

The reports about the operation of the SIM cards are in addition to others that spoke of failures in dealing with similar signals, including messages that were sent from Israeli watchtowers near the separation fence in Gaza, which the Israeli high command did not take seriously.