Who is to blame for the failure of the Doha operation: Mossad or the Air Force?
The Zionist regime, which continued its belligerent actions in the Doha region on Tuesday, September 9, targeted the leaders of the Hamas political office in the city to assassinate them.
The Zionist regime carried out this attack on Qatar while claiming, during a deception operation 24 hours before the attack, that it agreed with Trump’s peace plan. According to Tel Aviv’s estimates, Hamas leaders had entered a meeting after learning that the regime had agreed with Trump’s proposal for Gaza when they were targeted by the Zionist regime.
However, the Zionist regime did not succeed in assassinating the top Hamas cadre during this costly political operation, and only succeeded in assassinating the secretary and son of Khalil al-Hayyah, head of the political office, and a number of the office’s executive forces.
Two narratives have been put forward in the regional media regarding the failure of this operation, each of which leads to a different assessment of the reasons for the failure of the attack. The Qatari newspaper Al-Sharq reported that Israel attacked when Hamas leaders left the office in the middle of a meeting to perform afternoon prayers, and that is why they survived the attack.
According to this narrative, because Hamas political leaders did not have mobile phones with them and the mobile phones were at the meeting location, the missiles locked on the mobile phones did not hit the prayer room, which was in an adjacent building.
Therefore, some criticize the Israeli Air Force at the right time to attack and emphasize that the failure of the so-called “Day of Judgment” operation in Doha was due to the operational department’s delay and lack of timeliness.