Peloni: This probe demonstrates the inability of the Shin Bet to address the underlying issues honestly. This is a face saving distortion of a story half told due to self interest, which is not unrelated to the causes of the October 7 failures.
Security agency’s report largely shifts blame to other bodies, cites unclear division of responsibilities with IDF, government’s overly defensive Gaza policies
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The Shin Bet security agency on Tuesday published a summary of its investigations into its failures during the lead-up to the Hamas terror group’s October 7, 2023, onslaught, with agency chief Ronen Bar acknowledging that if the agency had acted differently “the massacre would have been avoided.”
While the probe found serious internal failures, however, it mostly pointed to external elements.
The larger political and security failures noted by the report included an unclear division of responsibilities with the IDF, an overly defensive government policy regarding Gaza over the years, and the Shin Bet being unsuited to counter an army-like foe such as Hamas.
The investigations — coming on the heels of the Israel Defense Forces’ probes into its own failures surrounding the attack — were carried out internally by each of the Shin Bet’s units and by an external team of former senior agency employees and other experts, who provided a series of findings, conclusions and recommendations.
Many of the findings remain classified, as they would reveal the Shin Bet’s intelligence secret tools and methods, the agency said.
The investigation found that the Shin Bet failed to provide an alert for Hamas’s October 7 wide-scale onslaught, with warning signs received by the Shin Bet on the night of October 6 not resulting in major actions being taken.
Among the signs was the overnight activation of 45 Israeli SIM cards by Hamas operatives in Gaza, a story widely reported on, but without an exact number confirmed until this report.
On the morning of October 7, some 5,000 Hamas-led terrorists invaded southern Israel from the Gaza Strip, killing some 1,200 people and taking 251 hostages, amid acts of brutality and sexual assault.
While a small team of elite officers from the Shin Bet and police that were deployed to the Gaza border before the onslaught managed to contribute to the fighting, they were unable to prevent the massive Hamas attack.
The investigation pointed to several reasons, both related to professionalism and management, which contributed to the failures.
“The organizational failures were thoroughly examined and the lessons were learned and continue to be learned,” the Shin Bet said.
Additionally, the investigation found that the Shin Bet did not underestimate Hamas, but rather the opposite, that the agency had “a deep understanding of the threat, and had initiatives and a desire to thwart the threat and especially the leaders of Hamas.”
Why the Shin Bet didn’t warn of the attack
Several reasons were given as to why the Shin Bet provided no alert for Hamas’s wide-scale attack:
- Hamas’s ground invasion plans, which were obtained by the IDF in a document known as Jericho’s Walls, were not handled correctly over several years, and the plans were not turned into a scenario that the military and Shin Bet would train for.
- An unclear division of responsibility between the IDF and Shin Bet on which organization should provide a warning for war, amid a change of Hamas from a terror group to a full military force.
- The Shin Bet’s focus was on foiling terror attacks, and its methods were not applicable to an enemy that acted like an army.
- During the night between October 6 and 7, there were gaps in the “handling of information and integration of intelligence,” as well as operations that did not follow the usual protocol, and a lack of “fusion” with the IDF’s intelligence.
- There were gaps in the work of intelligence supervision mechanisms.
- The assessment was that Hamas was trying to heat up the West Bank and was not interested in doing so in the Gaza Strip.
- The Shin Bet had an “incorrect understanding” of the strength of the Israeli border barrier with Gaza and the IDF’s ability to respond.
- Hamas’s believed intentions were not challenged enough during assessments.
- Relatively little intelligence, including as a result of limited freedom of action in the Gaza Strip, especially independently by the Shin Bet. The Shin Bet said that the IDF’s botched 2018 intelligence operation in Khan Younis made it more difficult to recruit human intelligence sources in Gaza.
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