“Abu Ubaidah’s” voice sparks terror in Tel Aviv/Zionists after cyberattack.
News sources reported that an unprecedented cyber attack on bus station screens in occupied Palestine, with the broadcast of Takbir, Quranic verses, and a voice resembling Abu Ubaidah, the spokesman for the military wing of Hamas, caused panic among Israeli settlers and the entry of security agencies into the incident.
According to the report, the incident, which lasted only a few minutes, caused panic and confusion among Israeli settlers, and some social media users described it as “unprecedented.”
At the same time, the Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper wrote that this cyber attack was not limited to one city, and that Ashdod, Ramat Gan, and several other stations were also targeted.
This attack comes at a time when Hebrew media reports indicate that Hamas has not only collected detailed information from the Israeli army by creating a complex “information puzzle,” but has also been engaged in a widespread cyber war with Tel Aviv for years before Operation Al-Aqsa Storm.
The movement had prepared for a major attack by monitoring thousands of Israeli soldiers and officers through social media and developing advanced combat simulation systems.
The Shehab news agency reported that Hamas’ intelligence unit had spent about five years collecting detailed information from the Israeli army. Since 2018, the unit, which consisted of about 2,500 people, had been monitoring nearly 100,000 soldiers and officers. They had infiltrated closed groups on WhatsApp and other social platforms, including those of soldiers in combat units, using real and fake accounts.

