Israeli media revealed today, Wednesday, that the Israeli army found official documents in Khan Younis in the Gaza Strip, confirming that Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar received a commitment from Hezbollah to open a front in the north. According to the Israeli newspaper "Ynet," in a situational assessment document, Sinwar wrote to his men: "We have obtained a commitment that the axis will participate in the great liberation project due to the nature of the relationship we are working on."
The report stated: "The Ayatollah in Tehran and Nasrallah in Beirut disappointed Sinwar. Hezbollah had already dispatched 15 brigades of the Radwan forces along the border, from Ras al-Naqura in the west to Mount Dov (Shebaa Farms) in the east, and was on alert for an immediate invasion. However, he did not know the precise timing of Hamas's operation, and even then, the order was not given as quickly as Sinwar desired. Subsequently, for several critical hours, Israeli army forces, mostly reservists, arrived and held their ground."
The newspaper added that "Hezbollah is content to fire at positions in Mount Dov and attempt to exhaust the Israeli army," noting that "in one way or another, Hezbollah achieved an accomplishment by evacuating the settlements along the contact line, turning more than 100,000 Israeli men and women into refugees in their own country."