The IDF Arabic spokesperson posted images of the civilians evacuating and announced an additional humanitarian corridor, supplementing the one recently established, which will be open for Gazans wishing to relocate southward until 2pm local time.

“Use this opportunity to go south to the other side of Wadi Gaza,” he said, referring to the body of water that delineates the southern and northern parts of the Palestinian territory. “Many are doing so at this time. If you care for yourselves and your loved ones, move south according to our instructions. You can be sure Hamas leaders have already taken care of their own needs.”

  • mwguy
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    8 months ago

    Turning off the water at the start was horrible - it was purely motivated by vengeance and spite rather than any legitimate military or political objective

    So you have an underground weapons cache that has just been collapsed by a bomb. You know roughly where to dig and how far down to dig to recover the weapons from your cache. However you have a problem. Even if you could use traditional heavy machinery (excavators, skid steer etc) without getting detected or could gather enough men with shovels to get there quick, you can’t risk using metal implements to dig down there once you get close. One “ting” and you could trigger a chain of explosions that kills your men and collapses the still functional parts of the tunnel near it. Heck depending on the size of the cache and the design of the tunnel networks in that section, it might even set the next cache of weapons off (an actual problem. Hamas has been having).

    So how do you dig? With pressurized water!. Add a common sump pump a hose and an outlet once you’ve got close and use the power if water to blast the dirt and rock away. Recover your ammunition safely to be used against the infidels!

    Common access to water in sufficient pressure is a key building tool for tunnelling.

    • steventhedev@lemmy.worldOP
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      8 months ago

      That’s a good point, but from what I understood it was primarily used as a source of potable water to supplement locally treated water.

      As for using it to tunnel, I would imagine it’s easier and simpler to just use a compressor powered by the tunnel power grid rather than deal with piping and water distribution down to the deep tunnel depths (>50m).

      But this wasn’t the justification provided - none was. Which is part of the problem - it leads to people speculating the reasons. It also makes it possible for someone to automatically assume the worst reason possible.

      • mwguy
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        8 months ago

        As for using it to tunnel, I would imagine it’s easier and simpler to just use a compressor powered by the tunnel power grid rather than deal with piping and water distribution down to the deep tunnel depths (>50m).

        A compressor can be ran off a garden hose.