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Users can explore more than 37 miles of documented tunnels, less than 10% of the infrastructure Hamas is believed to have built underground.
Ben-Tzion Macales, an open-source intelligence analyst who worked on the project, speaks to Arutz Sheva about the process and the importance of mapping out Hamas's tunnel network.
Since breaking the ceasefire, Israeli forces have declared about 70 percent of Gaza either as a military “red zone” or under ...
After Israel introduced the blockade, smuggling became Gaza’s alternative. Through the tunnels under Rafah came everything from building materials and food to medicine and clothing, from fuel ...
Israel's military is expanding buffer zones inside the Gaza Strip and taking over more areas of the territory, shrinking land Palestinians can access by more than half.
Tunnels have run under Gaza for decades. But when Hamas took over, the underground network expanded into what Israel calls its biggest military threat. We decoded the long history of the Gaza ...
Soldiers exit a tunnel in northern ... complacent or complicit. Gaza’s metro shows the tremendous lengths to which antisemites will go to murder Jews, burrowing under and subverting their ...
In southern Gaza, much of Rafah governorate has been declared a no-go zone, placed under forced displacement ... The animated map below shows how Israel’s military has expanded its forced ...
A 2015 report indicated that Hamas had spent more than $3 million on tunnels throughout the Gaza Strip, and many of them were built under civilian infrastructure, the report said. The situation in ...