It is surprising if all the infrastructure wasn't connected by unjammable wired comms?
Also, I wondered if anyone paraglides over the US borders where another hi-tech fence is under construction. I couldn't find any, but found that it had happened in 2022 between Morocco and Spain's North African enclave of Melilla https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/migrant-paraglides-over...
I wonder what the resistance of underground wiring is to rocket attacks. If the space in between is repeatedly getting hit by explosions, it seems likely the blasts would cut wiring at some point.
On the one hand, underground comms conduits are difficult to target with rockets or even laser guided bombs. This is one reason why special forces on the ground were tasked with popping access hatches along iraqi highways during Desert Storm.
On the other, Israel is an acknowledged world leader in electronic warfare and jamming etc, so they have a very deep understanding of the technical vulnerabilities of wireless comms.
The border fence project did a lot of digging up of the ground so it surprises me if everything wasn't wired together with a mesh and lots of redundancy. And also that cutting the wire would itself trigger alerts and things.
So the part of the story where Hamas blinded everything by targeting cell towers doesn't seem likely. I wouldn't imagine Israel to be vulnerable like that. The bigger picture where Israel was caught off guard resource-wise and response-wise is very plausible though.
actually this article incorrect. hamas blew up from drones observation towers with cameras and remotely controlled machine gun turrets. after this they bombed some local communication hub
Also, I wondered if anyone paraglides over the US borders where another hi-tech fence is under construction. I couldn't find any, but found that it had happened in 2022 between Morocco and Spain's North African enclave of Melilla https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/migrant-paraglides-over...