The National - News

AI provides Israeli army with tactical advantage in Gaza Strip

▶ Machine-learning algorithms can help to identify up to 100 Hamas targets a day

- THOMAS HARDING

Artificial intelligen­ce is in widespread use for the first time in warfare with Israel using it to seek and prioritise targets, military analysts have said.

A huge amount of intelligen­ce is fed into the secret AI systems from electronic surveillan­ce, aircraft, drones and satellites.

The systems are far beyond anything Hamas can rely on, but the advantage on the ground is not yet one-sided. Hamas fighters routinely stage counter-attacks with just two or three fighters.

Hamas is also capable of stand-up battles on its territory. As recently as Wednesday in Shujaiya, an area of Gaza city, the group attacked using co-ordinated small-arms fire and improvised explosive devices against a four-man Israeli team in a building.

When Israeli commanders lost communicat­ions with the team, they sent in their quick reaction force from north and south of the buildings.

Israeli press reports said the next stage was a bruising encounter for their forces. The troops were ambushed, with IEDs, hand grenades and gunfire killing a further five Israelis, including a battalion commander, another colonel and three majors.

“Hamas’s Shujaiya battalion remains capable of executing its defence mission in Shujaiya,” the Institute for the Study of War think tank reported.

This was despite Israeli military officials claiming earlier this month that the unit had been dismantled.

The “complex, multi-part nature” of the ambush required “significan­t co-ordination between multiple Hamas tactical units”, the ISW added.

The Israel command headquarte­rs believes the attrition it can impose on Hamas is being aided by two systems – known as Gospel and Alchemist – understood to have severely affected Hamas’s command structure.

The AI distils the mass of informatio­n that will include human movements, potential rocket launch sites and unusual activity, and comes up with at least 100 targets a day.

In addition, signals intercepti­on, local informants and open source intelligen­ce are also absorbed by Gospel. Before the system came in Israel could generate about 50 targets in Gaza a year. It can now do that in a matter of hours.

Gospel prioritise­s targets with the Israelis understood to now be conducting more precise attacks with the 110kg GBU-39 small diameter bombs rather than the 900kg devices that caused such devastatio­n at the start of the war.

Gospel combines with Alchemist, which monitors the Gaza border, and data is fed into an Israeli “knowledge factory” that sifts through the intelligen­ce.

Sam Cranny-Evans, a military analyst at a security company said, “Gospel fuses together all intelligen­ce that the entire Israeli services gather to provide targeting solutions.

It is playing a significan­t role in the way the Israelis conduct operations, because it enables them to hit rocket launch sites within minutes of being set up.

“In terms of the applicatio­n of a modern AI targeting system, this is the first time it has been done to this scale in warfare.”

“Gaza is ideal for AI as you’ve got such a small area and the Israelis have got so many assets focused on it so that every blade of grass is covered,” said former tank commander Hamish de Bretton-Gordon.

The co-ordinated attacks are thought to have had a significan­t effect on Hamas’s ability to conduct operations across Gaza.

“It appears that Hamas is quite shocked by the firepower that’s deployed against them because their resistance is quite fractured,” Mr CrannyEvan­s said.

Until the mass ambush on Wednesday that cost nine Israeli lives, the military had suffered 105 fatalities since the Gaza operation began.

This is considered low for the difficulti­es involved in urban warfare.

Brig Ben Barry, of the IISS think tank, said Hamas will exploit their tunnel system and terrain knowledge to find opportunit­ies to mount largescale ambushes. “But heavy targeting of Hamas’s military leadership will make that co-ordination more difficult,” he added. “However, Hamas can safely employ a very decentrali­sed style of leadership, which means if they have a battalion commander taken out, those companies under his command will probably continue to fight fairly effectivel­y.”

Hamas fighters have also used six explosivel­y formed penetrator­s against Israeli armour but to date it appears only a large armoured personnel carrier has been destroyed.

Ezzedine Al Qassam Brigades, Hamas’s military wing, are using several other tactics including firing a thermobari­c rocket at Israeli special forces.

Hamas snipers have also attacked Israeli soldiers behind the front line and conducted three mortar bombardmen­ts from the southern Gaza stronghold of Khan Younis. They also continue to rig buildings with explosives – what is called “house-borne IEDs”.

“It could be that Hamas fighters in Shejaiya are more determined and willing to accept risk when backed into a corner,” Mr Cranny-Evans said.

“They are also learning from the IDF as they’ve been in contact for a relatively long time now and should be adapting their tactics.”

Israel’s military is also devising new tactics. Merkava tanks are being used as “sniper” weapons to take out Hamas positions identified on the ground or by AI.

“They are using the tank’s suite of infrared and high-grade optics to fire its 120mm gun very accurately on to target,” said Col de Bretton-Gordon.

“There has been a lot of tank action, which is a bit surprising in an urban setting, but the Israelis are also operating mainly at night, because that’s where they have the advantage with night-vision capabiliti­es.”

The Israelis are using seawater to flood Hamas’s extensive tunnel system and drive its fighters above ground. They are also likely to be using special drones to fly in the tunnels to find people and armouries.

Most analysts expect the hard fighting to continue to mid-January as long as the US does not make a major political interventi­on beforehand.

It is expected the fighting will be grim until then. “There is a degree of sheer attrition in all this,” Brig Barry said.

Col de Bretton-Gordon suggested that the more “attrition Hamas suffers, then the harder it is to co-ordinate and mount attacks”.

“Urban warfare is notoriousl­y difficult but the Israelis had a lot of time to prepare for it and they’ve got an immense amount of firepower and smart intelligen­ce,” he added.

In terms of the applicatio­n of a modern AI targeting system, this is the first time it has been done to this scale SAM CRANNY-EVANS

Military analyst

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 ?? Getty Images, AFP ?? Top, a self-propelled field gun used by the Israeli army in Southern Israel; above, Palestinia­ns in a building destroyed by Israeli air strikes in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip
Getty Images, AFP Top, a self-propelled field gun used by the Israeli army in Southern Israel; above, Palestinia­ns in a building destroyed by Israeli air strikes in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip

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