ALBAWABA - According to information obtained by Haaretz, Hamas has comprehensive records on over 2,000 Israeli troops, including private and sensitive information. This information was made public as a result of the Palestinian organization allegedly leaking the information as "revenge for Gaza's children."
The article claims that Hamas has amassed extensive dossiers on a number of Israeli troops. Complete names, military affiliations, ID numbers, phone numbers, email addresses, social media accounts, family names, passwords, credit card numbers, bank account information, and license plate information are all included in these files.
Examples in the paper include "Y," who is the head technician in an air force squadron; "A," who is a significant player in Israeli air defense; "S," who has access to cutting-edge equipment; and "K," an officer in the air force. These people are all included in the comprehensive intelligence files that Hamas has created.
These papers have been circulating online for some months; they vary in length from a few pages to over 200 pages. They were shared by a group of global investigative journalists under the direction of Paper Trail Media, in cooperation with Die Zeit and ZDF in Germany, Der Standard in Austria, and Haaretz itself.
Utilizing an automated program called "Profiler," which combined and examined data from public sources to produce comprehensive intelligence profiles, the data was assembled.
This data leak—dubbed a "cyber nightmare" by Haaretz—shows how cybersecurity measures at several Israeli organizations were lax, giving Hamas access to vital information. Thousands of Israeli individuals may have been vulnerable to dangers from this breach, such as targeted retaliation, harassment, and sophisticated intelligence monitoring, in addition to possible legal issues outside.
Prior to October 7 (Operation Al-Aqsa Flood), according to earlier claims by Israel Hayom, Hamas had access to a number of surveillance cameras, including those located within kibbutzim close to the Gaza border. The Israeli military allegedly took notice of these security concerns but took a while to respond.
Furthermore, Israel Hayom pointed out that information from Hamas' subterranean servers and linked computers was only discovered after the Israeli military invaded Gaza and took control of the organization's intelligence assets. Israeli intelligence personnel were allegedly astounded by the information they discovered.