Reservists: Hamas fights like an army

By Amos Harel
Ha'aretz
9 November 2007

Reserve-duty paratroopers who completed a month of duty in the Gaza Strip last 
week say that facing militant groups such as Hamas was like taking part in a 
"mini-war." 

During the patrol company's operations deep in Palestinian territory, four 
Hamas militants and one Israel Defense Forces soldier, Sergeant-Major (Res.) 
Ehud Efrati, were killed. "The people we killed weren't terrorists, they were 
soldiers," an officer in the company told Haaretz. 

"In a direct confrontation, the IDF has superiority over them, but in all 
parameters - training, equipment quality, operational discipline - we are 
facing an army, not gangs," he said. 

"On the professional level, Hamas in the Gaza Strip is nothing like the 
terrorists we dealt with before. We saw the bodies of their men after the 
incidents. They had elastic bands on their pant legs. How many reservists do 
you know in the IDF who are that well kitted out, with elastics on their 
pants?" 

In a move fairly rare for reservists, the paratroopers were part of the 
offensive operations in the strip. For the past several months the IDF has been 
carrying out raids a few kilometers into Gaza on a regular basis. Within the 
space of about two weeks, the company had three live-fire incidents with Hamas 
- a lot for a reserve force that ostensibly was called up for ongoing security 
operations. 

Efrati joined the next operation, too. This time they encountered a Hamas cell 
on the edge of Absan, a village west of Khan Yunis. Two Hamas men died in the 
brief, close-range battle. The paratroopers were impressed by their 
adversaries' discipline and good equipment. "The fingerprints of Iran and 
Hezbollah are all over it," a veteran intelligence officer said. "The 
Palestinians never looked like this." 

On the bodies of the Hamas fighters the reservists found, in addition to their 
weapons, night-vision equipment identical to the IDF's. And it was not from 
Israel. "It's available on the Internet, you can order it from eBay and have it 
sent to an Arab country and then smuggle it to Gaza," the intelligence officer 
said. 

The Palestinian cell managed to get very close to the border fence, near Kerem 
Shalom, and plant a large explosive device which exploded without causing 
injuries. The reserve company's next operation, on October 29, was to hit the 
Hamas cells that were firing mortar shells regularly on Kibbutz Kerem Shalom. 

Two and a half kilometers from the fence, into the strip, suspicious movement 
was detected. A secondary force readied a makeshift ambush. The two armed 
Palestinians apparently heard something. One let off a burst of gunfire from 
about 90 meters away, without aiming. One bullet hid a grenade on Efrati's 
vest. It exploded. He was killed instantly. 

The reservists say, however, that the incident did not end in defeat. They 
recovered quickly, killing one of the gunmen and wounding the other, who fled 
toward Rafah. "When we returned to the fence we counted off. Forty-one men went 
out; 40 returned. I don't wish that feeling on any commander," an officer in 
the company said. 

Fighting on the fence 

The skirmishes between the IDF and Hamas in recent months are in a predefined 
theater, a situation that is expected to continue at least until the Annapolis 
summit due later this month. 

The IDF operates within a band about three kilometers beyond the perimeter 
fence, reaching the outskirts of Gaza City, Khan Yunis and Rafah. The 
ground-force raids are aimed at hitting the units launching Qassams and mortar 
shells into Israel, keeping Hamas from establishing permanent positions near 
the border and gathering intelligence on the terror networks by making arrests 
in residential areas. 

Hamas, which provides a support "umbrella" for the smaller organizations 
launching the rockets, dispatches cells to harass the IDF. It also deploys 
defensive forces at the entrances to settled areas based on its analysis of the 
IDF's routes. 

The result, say the reservists, is that every penetration into the strip of 
more than one kilometer faces coordinated resistance from Hamas. "Shooting, 
sharpshooters, mortar shells. Pass the one-kilometer mark, the war is on. 
They're not suckers," a company officer says. 

In the absence of approval for a major operation in Gaza, the IDF has opted for 
an intensive series of small operations. The driving force behind them is the 
commander of the Gaza Division, Brigadier-General Moshe Tamir. Probably the 
leading IDF expert on these types of tactics, Tamir learned his craft a decade 
ago in Lebanon from then Northern Command head Amiram Levine. The weak spot of 
the method is the relatively high risk to soldiers' lives. 

The reserve officers accept both the method and their role of being in the 
advance force. "If these missions were left to the regular soldiers, like 
before the withdrawal from Lebanon, no one on the home front would understand 
what's happening in Gaza. Every reserve soldier who returns home from a month 
in Gaza says exactly what's going on there to the civilians around him," the 
officer says. 

They also know they'll be called back to Gaza within a few months for a major 
offensive assault. Their commanders are already readying them with cliches 
about "two trains heading full force at each other." 

In contrast, perhaps, to what the public has heard, they don't blame anyone. 
They were equipped and trained properly and feel ready for their appointed 
missions. "We didn't come to whine. The state must see to two things: To 
compensate properly the few who bear the burden of reserve duty and to [budget] 
sufficient reserve days for training so the failure of the Second Lebanon War 
isn't repeated." 

And it is very important to them to speak about Ehud Efrati, their friend for 
over 20 years. "At Ehud's funeral his father, Avishai, said the state must 
protect the people of Sderot," an officer in the company says. 

"That was true nobility, and it is typical of his family. Ehud was a hero, pure 
and simple. To go forward, at his age, with a wife and three children, one just 
a few months old - that is true heroism. Ehud knew he was doing something 
important. His children, when they grow up, need to know that."

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