Nov 14, 2023. Posted by Balkan Periscope - Hellas
The Israeli Army reportedly lost 88 armoured vehicles in five days of
hostilities in the Gaza Strip, according to assessments using satellite images
of northwest Gaza, with this representing 23 percent of 383 vehicles visible by
satellite in the area.
Although Israeli forces have made significant territorial gains, dividing Gaza into northern and southern areas, footage has repeatedly shown Hamas and other Palestinian militia groups successfully neutralising Israeli tanks and armoured personnel carriers.
Militia units have at times used
complex tactics such as planting explosives on vehicles to neutralise tanks’
active protection systems before firing on them with rocket propelled grenades.
From early October footage also showed successful attacks on
Israeli armour outside the Gaza Strip using drones.
The losses faced in Gaza are particularly significant when considering that
Israeli armour has taken further losses on the country’s northern border with
Lebanon, where Hezbollah anti tank units have specifically targeted vehicles
with much more sophisticated anti tank weapons than those available to
Palestinian militias as part of ongoing lower level hostilities.
Reports of high attrition rates among Israeli armoured
vehicles coincides with reports from regional media outlets that a tank
brigade commander, Colonel Sheldag Zior, was killed in action, meaning the
highest ranking reported loss among Israeli forces has been a tank officer. Reported
attrition rates corroborate with growing sightings of older generations of
tanks, namely Merkava IIIs, in combat in Gaza.
Israeli armour losses were particularly high in the second week of October,
when Hamas forces made major gains and captured multiple military
facilities and arms depots outside Gaza which placed dozens of newer Merkava
tanks and hundreds of other armoured vehicles under their control.
These are reported to have been destroyed en masse. With Israel having
begun phasing the Merkava III out of frontline service in 2005, and planing to
begin wide introductions of the Merkava V from late 2023 to replace
many of the Merkava III units remaining, the unusually large number of Merkava
IIIs observed has increasingly been cited by analysts as an indicator that
newer vehicles are not widely available.
The ongoing nature of hostilities, however, makes more certain estimates of
losses from either side difficult to make.
Military
Watch Magazine
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