Current:Home > NewsHamas' tunnels: Piercing a battleground beneath Gaza -Stellar Financial Insights
Hamas' tunnels: Piercing a battleground beneath Gaza
View
Date:2025-04-19 19:58:48
Israel controls the skies over the Gaza Strip, and from air or ground can flatten any building it considers a legitimate target. Its troops, backed up by tanks, are moving into Gaza City. As they advance through the rubble, they are uncovering another battleground: the vast network of concrete, reinforced tunnels built by Hamas.
"They face a city underneath that city," said John Spencer of West Point's Modern War Institute, "from 15 feet underground to 200 feet, 20-30 stories underground."
If Israel truly intends to destroy Hamas, said Spencer, it will have to go into those tunnels. "Nothing that was created for fighting on the surface works," he said. "You can't see down there. You can't navigate, you can't shoot. It's literally the worst place any soldier would ever want to go."
It is in this underworld terrain that Israel's final battle with Hamas could be fought.
American special operations forces train in Colorado at a two-mile-long tunnel complex. The Hamas tunnel network under Gaza is believed to stretch for 300 miles.
"These are the dirty, dark and dangerous things that we don't want humans to do," said Sean Humbert, of the University of Colorado at Boulder. He headed a team of grad students in the DARPA Subterranean Challenge, a Pentagon competition to develop technologies for operating in this alien battleground.
"You don't have GPS," Humbert said. "Also, communications is very difficult in these sorts of environments, so the communications signals don't propagate through the rock down here."
Before humans go in, an autonomous robot scouts the terrain, using lasers to navigate (even if it's pitch black), and operating on its own without orders from base camp. "The robot's building the map, figuring out where it is within the map, and then trying its best to expand the map and explore the places we haven't been," Humbert said.
Over ground like this, the robot can cover about a kilometer in an hour, stopping when it locates obstacles. "It'll temporarily stop, plan a new path around those obstacles, and then execute that path," Humbert said.
The robot is a marvel of technology, but when it comes to underground war it has one glaring weakness: it's a sitting duck for anyone with a weapon. "It would be," said Humbert, "but the whole point of deploying these systems instead of humans is that these are expendable."
Hamas fighters use the tunnels to ride out the bombing, and to spring ambushes. The tunnels are their best chance of survival against the overwhelming firepower of the Israel Defense Force.
Spencer said, "Hamas has built the tunnel systems to give Hamas time to slow the IDF down, and for the international community to say the damage happening on the surface is too much for the world to bear and to stop. And Hamas lives to fight another day."
In the past Israel has simply sealed off the tunnels it discovered, but that won't work this time, because there are almost certainly hostages being held there. Eighty-five-year-old Yocheved Lifshitz was one of them. After her release, she described being forced through a huge network of tunnels under Gaza: "It looks like a spider web."
Martin asked Spencer, "How does the likelihood that there are hostages being held in those tunnels change how Israel would go about attacking them?"
"It takes away the ability to say, 'Any tunnel I find, I can destroy all of them,'" he replied.
"Do the Israelis have no choice but to go into at least some of these tunnels?"
"There will be many situations which require an IDF system or soldiers to enter the tunnels, yes," Spencer said.
"How does the fight change when you crawl down into that tunnel?"
"It's a game-changer," said Spencer. "All your normal tactics, options, all that changes. The environment can be more of a challenge that the actual enemy."
When asked which side has the advantage in the war because of the tunnels, Spencer replied, "Hamas has the advantage, because they've built such an expanse of tunnels, and they're going to use them to attack, to defend, to preserve, to buy time."
The Israelis have robots, and specially-trained tunnel units. But it may be more than any robot can do.
For more info:
- John Spencer, chair of Urban Warfare Studies, Modern War Institute at West Point
- J. Sean Humbert, Aerospace and Defense faculty director, University of Colorado, Boulder
Story produced by Mary Walsh. Editor: Steven Tyler.
See also:
- Israel scrambles to respond to brazen Hamas assault that killed hundreds ("Sunday Morning")
- Gaza citizens flee from expected Israeli ground offensive ("Sunday Morning")
- Gen. David Petraeus: Hamas' attack on Israel was "far worse than 9/11"
- Prospects of Mideast peace in the midst of horrifying violence ("Sunday Morning")
- Truckloads of humanitarian aid finally enter Gaza ("Sunday Morning")
- Israel's military intensifies shelling of Northern Gaza Strip ("Sunday Morning")
- In:
- War
- Hamas
- Israel
- Robot
- Gaza Strip
David Martin is CBS News' National Security Correspondent.
veryGood! (42571)
Related
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Zac Efron Reacts To Taylor Swift & Travis Kelce High School Musical Comparisons
- Eagles’ Don Henley takes the stand at ‘Hotel California’ lyrics trial
- This Toddler's Viral Golden Girls Hairstyle Is, Well, Pure Gold
- 'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
- Explosive device detonated outside Alabama attorney general’s office
- Grenada police say a US couple whose catamaran was hijacked were likely thrown overboard and died
- Supreme Court takes up regulation of social media platforms in cases from Florida and Texas
- Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
- Most-Shopped Celeb-Recommended Items This Month: Olivia Culpo, Kyle Richards, Zayn Malik, and More
Ranking
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- A smuggling arrest is made, 2 years after family froze to death on the Canadian border
- Reddit's public Wall Street bet
- Peter Anthony Morgan, lead singer of reggae band Morgan Heritage, dies at age 46
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- NASCAR Atlanta race ends in wild photo finish; Daniel Suarez tops Ryan Blaney, Kyle Busch
- Mother of missing Wisconsin boy, man her son was staying with charged with child neglect
- Duke coach Jon Scheyer calls on ACC to address court storming after Kyle Filipowski injury
Recommendation
Small twin
Gérard Depardieu faces new complaint amid more than a dozen sexual assault allegations
Attorneys argue over whether Mississippi legislative maps dilute Black voting power
Surge in syphilis cases drives some doctors to ration penicillin
Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
Supreme Court to hear challenges to Texas, Florida social media laws
Priest accused of selling Viagra and aphrodisiacs suspended by Roman Catholic Church in Spain
Volkswagen pickup truck ideas officially shelved for North America