Israel dismissed advance warning of Hamas attack — report

A document obtained by Israeli authorities, as reported by NYT, detailed the attack, including a blueprint followed by Hamas involving a rocket barrage, surveillance disruption, and fighters entering Israel by land and air.

The Times said the document, which included sensitive security information about Israeli military capacity and locations, circulated widely among the country's military and intelligence leaders. / Photo: Reuters Archive
Reuters Archive

The Times said the document, which included sensitive security information about Israeli military capacity and locations, circulated widely among the country's military and intelligence leaders. / Photo: Reuters Archive

Israeli officials had intelligence that Palestinian resistance group Hamas was preparing a wide-ranging attack before its October 7 assault but dismissed the reports, The New York Times has reported.

The newspaper said on Thursday that a document obtained by Israeli authorities "outlined, point by point, exactly the kind of devastating invasion that led to the deaths of about 1,200 people."

The document, which was reviewed by the newspaper, did not specify when the attack might happen, but provided a blueprint that Hamas appears to have followed: an initial rocket barrage, efforts to knock out surveillance, and waves of fighters crossing into Israel by land and air.

The Times said the document, which included sensitive security information about Israeli military capacity and locations, circulated widely among the country's military and intelligence leaders, though it was not clear if it was reviewed by senior politicians.

But a military assessment last year determined it was too soon to say the plan had been approved by Hamas, and when an analyst with the country's signals intelligence warned the group had carried out a training exercise in line with the plan, she was dismissed.

'Plan designed to start a war'

She warned it was a "plan designed to start a war," the newspaper said, but a colonel reviewing her assessment suggested: "let's wait patiently."

The warnings did not suggest that Hamas was likely to carry out the plan imminently, likening the intelligence failure to those in the United States before the September 11, 2001 attacks.

The Hamas' cross-border attack on October 7 killed 1,200 Israelis and saw around 240 people taken hostage, according to Israeli officials.

Following the attack, Israel's ground and air offensive in Gaza has killed more than 15,000 people, mostly children, women and the elderly.

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