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Friday, 10 November 2023

How Hamas innovated with drones to operate like an army

Hamas’ recent attacks on Israel have shocked many with their brutality and disregard for the norms and laws of armed conflict. They have also surprised experts with their complexity and coordination, involving simultaneous linked and layered operations on land, air, and sea. While Hamas is a terrorist organization—and behaving like one—it is fighting more like a state military force.

Small, tactical drones are a central factor in its proficiency, which the group deployed in sophisticated and multifaceted ways during the invasion. Unmanned aerial systems (UAS) constituted the first wave of attacks to eliminate Israeli observation towers, cameras, and communications. This initial challenge was meant to blind, deafen, and confuse the Israeli defense.

The group also dropped munitions from UAS on tanks, apparently well aware of how to target them for disabling, as well as soldiers and emergency responders. Swarms of drones were also deployed to attack naval vessels and energy infrastructure.

Alongside thousands of rockets, the group launched volleys of a new loitering munition—also known as a suicide drone—called the Zouari, named after the late Hamas engineer and drone pilot, Mohammed Zouari. Tactical armed drones were captured from felled raiding units that stormed across the border. Palestinian Islamic Jihad, one of Hamas’ key partners in the region, even seems to be running a devoted drone operations room. Since the attacks began, from near and far, drones have been crucial for achieving strategic and tactical objectives.

None of these individual tactics with small drones are new. While many are citing lessons learned from combat in the Russia-Ukraine War—and they should—there are ample, earlier precedents from violent non-state actors. The list includes the Islamic State, Hezbollah, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, Ansar Allah (the official name for the Houthi movement in Yemen), al-Qaeda, the Taliban, the Haqqani network, many Syrian rebel factions, several Iran-sponsored terrorist organizations in Iraq, and more. In other words, Hamas didn’t learn how to use drones from the Russians and Ukrainians; the Russians and Ukrainians learned how to use small drones from violent non-state actors.

One way attack: How loitering munitions are shaping conflicts

Imitators and innovators. Terrorists imitate—they watch what works, study demonstration points in other conflicts, and diffuse knowledge through their dark networks. For those who study terrorists, none of the tactics in this fresh war are surprising.

But terrorists also innovate. Hamas has done just that with drones in two ways: with quantity and with quality. First, the group is simulating mass with small, off-the-shelf drones that can be deployed in multiple ways, including being equipped with bombs and repurposed into weapons of war. Like the thousands of rockets that were able to overcome Iron Dome by their sheer quantity, commercial UAS provide a cheap, crude air force at scale to monitor, harass, and attack enemies.

Second and more substantively, Hamas is pioneering a new combined arms model with commercial drones that is unusual for terrorist organizations. In combined arms approaches, multiple units with different capabilities work in concert, amplifying the impact of their attack. Drones are a key component of this approach and are, thus, a force multiplier. By using UAS in tandem with, and in support of, conventional forces and platforms, Hamas is demonstrating a capacity to field a multidomain force against a stronger adversary.


Some of this capacity stems from Iran’s sponsorship, which provides resources, doctrine, and training. This support is further bolstered by lateral ties with Palestinian Islamic Jihad in Gaza, Hezbollah in neighboring Lebanon, and other Iranian-affiliated or anti-Israeli groups. Nonetheless, drones are a critical part of the picture of how Hamas has leveled up in capacity—and it will not go unnoticed


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