The street war tactics of Hamas guerrillas has made Israel desperate
reported by Mehr News Agency, the New York Times newspaper wrote in a report citing military analysts that the street war tactics of “Hamas guerrillas” in northern Gaza have made it difficult for Israel to defeat this group.
The New York Times wrote: Most of the senior commanders of Hamas have been killed (martyred). The organization of this group has been weakened and many of its hideouts and ammunition depots have been seized and destroyed, but the killing of an Israeli colonel in northern Gaza by Hamas revealed that the military branch of this group, despite its inability to act as a conventional army, is still a A powerful guerrilla force with enough fighters and ammunition to disrupt the Israeli army in a slow, exhausting, yet unwinnable war.
Ihsan Daqsa, a member of the Druze tribe in occupied Palestine, was killed after a bomb exploded near an Israeli army personnel carrier in northern Gaza. This was a surprise attack and by drawing the “diagram” of the flight of the Zionist colonel after the explosion, it showed how Hamas has resisted for about a year since the beginning of Israel’s attack on the Gaza Strip, and even despite the death (martyrdom) of Yahya Sanwar, its leader. The group is still able to resist.
The New York Times, quoting military analysts and Israeli forces, wrote that the remaining Hamas fighters in the group’s dilapidated buildings and extensive tunnel network, most of which despite Israel’s efforts to destroy They remain untouched and pristine, hidden from view and waiting for the right opportunity.
Hamas fighters occasionally appear in small groups with IEDs in destroyed buildings, roadside bombs, armor-piercing bombs and RPG fire at Israeli forces. They will be.
According to the New York Times, although Hamas is not able to defeat Israel in a direct conflict, the search-and-run attacks and the so-called “hit and run” tactics make them capable. built to continue to strike at Israel and avoid defeat at the same time.
Salahuddin al-Awadeh, a member of Hamas and one of the group’s former fighters in the military branch, who now lives as an analyst in Istanbul, told the New York Times: (Hamas) work very well and it is very difficult to defeat them and this is true not only in the short term but also in the long term. The Israelis may have destroyed Hamas’ stockpile of long-range rockets, but they still have an endless supply of explosive devices and small arms.