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Hamas Rebuilding Capabilities From Air and Sea, Security Assessment Warns

Brief: New intelligence indicates the terror organization is reconstituting operational assets despite IDF pressure in Gaza.

Hamas is actively working to rebuild its military capabilities through both aerial and maritime means, according to a new security assessment reported by Israel Hayom, raising concerns among defense officials about the terrorist organization's resilience despite sustained IDF operations.

The assessment indicates that Hamas has been attempting to reconstitute its operational infrastructure even as Israeli forces maintain pressure throughout Gaza. The terror group's efforts to restore capabilities from multiple domains suggest a coordinated strategy to recover from losses sustained during the war.

Security sources have identified renewed activity in both drone operations and sea-based assets, two areas where Hamas invested heavily before October 7th. The organization's naval commando unit, known as the Nukhba forces, played a role in the massacre of Israeli civilians on that day, while the group has previously demonstrated rudimentary drone capabilities.

The findings underscore ongoing concerns within Israel's defense establishment about Hamas's ability to regenerate military strength even under sustained combat pressure. Defense officials have long warned that the terror organization maintains extensive underground infrastructure and weapons caches that allow it to preserve core capabilities.

The IDF has conducted operations throughout Gaza aimed at dismantling Hamas's military infrastructure, including tunnel networks, weapons production facilities, and command centers. However, the organization's decentralized structure and pre-positioned assets have enabled continued resistance.

Israel's security cabinet has emphasized that achieving lasting quiet will require not only military pressure but also preventing Hamas from rearming through smuggling routes and domestic production. The challenge of rebuilding Gaza while preventing weapons proliferation remains a central strategic concern.

Hamas has governed Gaza since violently seizing control from the Palestinian Authority in 2007, using the coastal territory as a base for attacks against Israeli civilians. The organization is designated as a terrorist entity by Israel, the United States, the European Union, and other Western nations.

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