The report highlighted serious coordination and communication issues among Israeli occupation forces dispatched to the settlement, and hesitated to attract 250 Palestinian fighters involved in the attack.
Research findings showed that six members of the Alcasam Brigade were able to infiltrate the heart of the KFAR AZA village using undetected electric paragliders. Israeli occupation forces regained control of the reconciliation the next morning, the next morning, after Palestinian fighters had already withdrawn to Gaza.
Furthermore, Israeli airstrikes near Kfar Aza reportedly did not have a major impact on the outcome of the battle.
Israeli Channel 14 described the findings as nothing more than the “top of the iceberg,” known as an overwhelming military failure. The channel reported that only 10% of the complete list of obstacles are open to the public, while the rest are too shocking and too shocking to reveal.
The report further noted that the failure was not limited to the events of October 7th, but that it was built over the past decade and has become deeply entrenched within Israeli military facilities.
The Military Intelligence Information Bureau of the Occupation (Aman) acknowledged that even after extensive investigations there was still a lack of full knowledge of the armed factions in Gaza. Intelligence officials confirmed that the Army entered war in the South without comprehensive understanding of the enemy. This is an incredible reality that explains why Hamas operates.
The Zionist military investigation concluded with a harsh acknowledgment of a “complete failure” to prevent the October 7 attack on the settlement.
In an official summary shared with the media, the occupying forces acknowledged that they had failed their fundamental obligation to protect Israeli settlers. The report said the military’s Gaza division was overwhelmed by the early hours of the attack, allowing Palestinian resistance factions to establish control on the ground.
Senior Israeli military officials admitted that the Army was “overconfident” and severely underestimated Hamas’ capabilities before the attack.
The investigation details that the assault was carried out in three waves, including around 5,000 fighters. The first wave consisted of over 1,000 elite Hamas commanders who permeated under heavy artillery covers. The second wave included 2,000 fighters, followed by a third wave of hundreds of fighters accompanied by thousands of civilians.
Zionist settlers, particularly Kfar Aza settlers, have vehemently criticised the Army report, claiming they were unable to address basic security flaws.
“How can you trust a survey led by people who were directly involved in the October 7 event?” they argued.
Settlers expressed anger at the findings, saying the report not only detailed what happened on the morning of the attack, but also failed to explain how the situation had worsened to such a catastrophic level.
“The investigation does not address a collapse in security. It only exposes the Army’s rog arrogance and negligence,” they added. Their frustration boiled as they recalled the events of the day.
“When I hear the details, I can’t believe that the Israeli army is run like this. Without leadership, without control,” one settler said. “When we heard this, we felt sick. They died and left us. They died and left us.”
The settlers are now urging all military and political leaders in charge on that Black Saturday to take full responsibility and resign.
Source: Al-Manar Website