The American Bloomberg website said that the Islamic Resistance Movement’s marches (agitationInexpensively equipped to carry explosives and destroy cameras, communications systems and remote-controlled guns, they have exposed gaps in Israel’s high-tech defences, posing a challenge to some of the world’s most technologically advanced powers.
The site explained – in a report written by Marissa Newman – that what disturbed the soldiers on the southern border of Israel on the seventh of last October was not the explosion of rockets coming from Gaza; Rather, it was an unusual buzz that they had never heard before, when a fleet of commercial drones available online for as little as $6,500 filled the sky above the Israeli border fence, which is worth a billion dollars.
vulnerabilities and warnings
Bentsion Levinson, CEO of Heven Drones, which supplies the Israeli army with heavy and hydrogen-powered drones, believes that the war with Hamas is a wake-up call for the first-class armies regarding their lethal potential. He said, “We have these huge drones, and we have planes and our technology is more “Much progress.”
Hamas’s use of commercial routes to launch attacks, such as against Ukraine in the early days of the Russian invasion, has exposed a major flaw in Israel’s vaunted air and ground defenses, as these tactics outperform a far more advanced adversary on a shoestring budget.
Penetrate and invade
With the penetration of high-tech surveillance systems, thousands of Hamas fighters swept across the border in trucks and gliders. An Israeli army spokesman declined to comment on how to confront the marches, or on the failure of the early warning systems, and said, “Questions of this kind will be studied at a later stage.” After the war.
Although Israel has updated the Iron Dome system, which uses interceptors to protect against incoming short-range missiles, in order to detect large marches – as the site says – many Hamas marches are still capable of infiltration, noting that the army is testing a laser-based system designed to intercept Smaller missiles and shorter-range missiles, but it will not be ready for at least another year.
Among the systems developed by this initiative, and now undergoing field testing at army bases, is an application that connects two mobile phone cameras and audio systems to scan the sky for marches, and uses a 3D-printed cover that can be installed on vehicles, and the group hopes to quickly roll out the cheap alert system.
Scary program
Hamas’s march attacks still pose a strong threat, according to Liran Entebbe, a researcher at the Institute for National Security Studies in Israel, who says, “It gives you the ability to use precise or guided munitions, something that only very developed countries could do until a few years ago. With a criminal mind and equipment.” “Small, you can do terrible things like the first Hamas attack.”
Hamas developed these tactics – according to the site – with its ally Iran and Tunisian engineer Muhammad Al-Zawari, who led the group’s efforts to develop marches before he was assassinated by Israeli intelligence in 2016, and whose name was given to a model of the marches.
The website noted that the effectiveness of Hamas’s marching program exacerbates growing concerns that non-state actors may develop lethal weapons using dual-use technology whose sales cannot be traced, and that “this accessible equipment could allow fringe players to coordinate devastating attacks.”
Many soldiers in Gaza have resorted to shooting at drones, and the Israeli army said that it has allocated a hand-held precision targeting system to a soldier in each infantry unit for the first time, a system that can be installed on assault rifles and improves the accuracy of moving targets such as marches, or fighters. Enemies.
Israel had a system on the Gaza border specifically designed to confront the marches, but its operation had not yet begun. It could detect and control the marches from several kilometers away, and redirect them away from their targets.