PNN – In the wake of the persistent atmosphere of terror on the home front of the Zionist regime following the 12-day war between Tel Aviv and Iran and the severe damage inflicted upon this regime, the Zionists have begun considering how to secure their shelters.
According to the report of Pakistan News Network, while an atmosphere of intimidation and terror continues to dominate Zionist society months after the 12-day war between Iran and the Zionist regime, Israeli Army Radio announced that the Home Front Command will publish new standards for building shelters based on lessons learned from the missile attacks carried out from Iran.
According to this report, the changes the Zionists intend to implement in their shelters are as follows:
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- Shelter doors must clearly indicate, using a red/green color scheme, whether the door is securely closed or not. This is based on lessons learned from incidents where people tried to close shelter doors, but the door was not fully closed and was torn off its hinges by the force of a missile explosion.
- The new standard includes the possibility of reinforcing the internal walls of shelters. Investigations into the sites of Iranian missile attacks revealed that when a missile hits a building, the internal wall behaves like an external wall, and therefore these walls must also be reinforced.
- As one of the lessons learned from Hamas’s attack on settlements surrounding the Gaza Strip, it was also determined that standards are needed to strengthen shelter doors against fire from light weapons; because the current shelter doors are not bulletproof, and several people were wounded by gunfire.
- Therefore, the new standards provide the option to install a bulletproof door or add an attachment to the existing door to make it bulletproof.
The Zionists’ efforts to secure their shelters come as the psychological and social consequences and effects of Iran’s intense missile attacks deep within occupied Palestine during the 12-day war continue to persist on the home front of the occupying regime.

