Gulf News

Gaza village blows cover of secret operation by Israeli regime

Hamas security was suspicious of a van full of strangers in Abassan

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The small town of Abassan in the Gaza Strip is a tough place to infiltrate: Everyone knows everyone and outsiders passing through quickly attract attention. So when strangers drove through town, suspicious Hamas security men stopped the van and questioned those inside.

The answers didn’t add up. With their covers about to be blown, the Israeli regime’s undercover forces in the vehicle opened fire, setting off a fierce battle that left eight people dead and triggered a brief but intense round of cross-border fighting.

A month after the exchange, the raid remains clouded in mystery. The Israeli occupation army has kept mum, while Hamas officials have declined to comment publicly as they investigat­e. With each side protective of its secrets, and possibly keen to spread disinforma­tion, the full story may never be known. But based on interviews with Hamas officials, a picture is emerging of a carefully planned Israeli intelligen­ce operation in which agents posing as Palestinia­n aid workers may have gone undetected for up to two weeks before it went awry. All spoke on condition of anonymity, citing a Hamas gag order.

In the meantime, Hamas has tightened security in Gaza, is questionin­g foreign visitors such as journalist­s and aid workers, and has sentenced six alleged collaborat­ors to death.

Sending an undercover unit into Gaza would be complicate­d and risky. With Gaza fenced off, the border area is closely watched by Hamas. Only a handful of border posts operate. Parachutin­g in or bursting through the border would almost certainly be detected.

Hamas officials believe the Israeli team was disguised as aid workers and entered Gaza through the Israeli-controlled Erez border post, a fortress-like facility through which all civilian traffic passes.

Secret mission

The Associated Press spoke to eight Hamas figures, including some security officials.

It remains unclear what the Israeli team did inside Gaza. One official said they posed as aid workers, pretending to move disabled people to hospitals in a van. The team had a wheelchair, along with a member disguised as a disabled woman. They visited many houses and even rented an apartment in Gaza City, he said.

There are differing accounts on how long the team operated, from several hours to two weeks. One official said it appeared to have been a reconnaiss­ance mission to “breach the communicat­ions network of the resistance.”

According to some of the accounts, the scheme began to unravel when the team made its way to Abassan. Suspicious residents alerted Hamas security, which stopped their van.

One official said the leader of the Israeli group, reportedly a member of Israel’s Arab Druze minority, spoke the local dialect fluently and remained calm.

But several things did not appear right. He said a woman was sitting between two men, even though their IDs showed them to be members of different families. Under local customs, it is frowned upon for a woman to sit alongside men who are not her relatives.

“That was the major reason for the suspicions,” he said. Under further questionin­g, the team told Hamas that they were going to visit a woman who does not live in the area.

Hamas security men asked them to wait while their commander, Nour Baraka, was summoned. According to various accounts, the situation deteriorat­ed when Baraka arrived and began asking more questions. When Baraka ordered their detention for further questionin­g, the Israeli team opened fire and killed him. As the team fled, Hamas security men fired back, apparently killing the Israeli commander.

Hamas officials say the team was over two kilometres from the Israeli border, and Israeli military aircraft, including two helicopter­s and a warplane, carried out over 40 air strikes to give the men cover to flee. An air strike destroyed the Israeli van, apparently to get rid of incriminat­ing evidence. Six more Hamas men died in the fighting.

 ?? AP ?? Palestinia­ns inspect a vehicle that was destroyed in an Israeli regime raid that killed seven Palestinia­n fighters, east of Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, on November 12.
AP Palestinia­ns inspect a vehicle that was destroyed in an Israeli regime raid that killed seven Palestinia­n fighters, east of Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, on November 12.

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