Hebrew media sources revealed today, Friday, the content of a lengthy and highly confidential message sent by the leaders of the Al-Qassam Brigades on the morning of October 7, 2023, to the former Secretary-General of Hezbollah, Hassan Nasrallah. The message, signed by Yahya Sinwar, Mohammed Deif, and Marwan Issa, was found, according to reports, inside one of Hamas's strategic tunnels in the Gaza Strip after thorough inspections conducted by the occupation army.
The message began by informing Hezbollah's leadership that thousands of fighters had already launched a large-scale operation targeting settlements, military sites, and airports in the Gaza envelope and the southern region. The document clarified that the purpose of this move was to deliver an unprecedented blow to the Zionist entity in response to the increasing violations in the blessed Al-Aqsa Mosque, which had reached the point of performing Talmudic rituals and attempts at temporal and spatial division.
Al-Qassam's leadership emphasized in its message that preparations for the operation took place amidst strict security measures, with details withheld even from prominent leaders within the movement to ensure the element of surprise. The message indicated that maintaining the secrecy of the timing was of utmost necessity to prevent the occupation from carrying out any preemptive strike that might thwart the attack before its launch, asserting that success depended on surprising the Israeli security system.
The message reviewed a series of motives that led to the escalation of the situation, foremost among them the brutal attacks, arrests, and abuses suffered by worshippers and steadfast residents in Jerusalem. The leaders who signed the message considered that the occupation was diligently seeking to demolish Al-Aqsa Mosque and build the alleged Temple, citing the bringing of "red heifers" as evidence of the seriousness of Zionist plans to Judaize the first Qibla of Muslims.
The message did not overlook the situation in the West Bank, where it noted the escalation of assassinations and home demolitions in Jenin, Nablus, and Hebron, considering that silence on these crimes was no longer possible. The resistance leadership affirmed that the battle under the title "Jerusalem" is the only one capable of uniting the nation and mobilizing popular and official energies behind the option of comprehensive confrontation with the Zionist project.
In a striking strategic analysis, the message warned against an Israeli policy aimed at "fragmenting the conflict" by isolating each arena of resistance individually to avoid regional confrontation. It clarified that the occupation seeks to create internal crises in the 1948 territories, pursue resistance in the West Bank, and bomb airports in Syria, in order to reduce the chances of coordination among axis parties and weaken the motives for collective participation.
The message directed a clear and direct call to Hezbollah and the rest of the axis forces to immediately engage in fighting, emphasizing that concentrated missile bombardment on the vital arteries of the occupation would lead to decisive results. The plan proposed carrying out intensive drone attacks in parallel with missile barrages to deplete air defense systems and paralyze the Israeli air force's ability to operate effectively.
Al-Qassam's leadership affirmed in its document that expanding the circle of engagement to include several fronts for only two or three days would be sufficient to achieve a rapid collapse of the occupation's defensive system. The message saw that this participation would put Israel in a state of existential shock, paving the way for broader ground operations aimed at controlling the land and radically and permanently changing the geopolitical reality in the region.
The message warned in a firm tone that "the price of hesitation will be high," not only for the Palestinian cause but for the entire axis project, including Iran and Syria. It considered that any delay in supporting Gaza would give the occupation an opportunity to restore deterrence and carry out widespread retaliatory strikes, emphasizing that the historical moment requires courage in making the decision for direct confrontation.
On the political front, the message suggested adopting smart media discourse focusing on obliging the occupation to international resolutions and international law instead of using slogans of total destruction. This approach, according to the document, aims to neutralize Western powers and reduce the possibilities of their direct military intervention alongside Israel, by presenting the battle as a legitimate defense of rights and holy sites.
The document also touched upon the dangers of the regional normalization path, especially the efforts that were being made to integrate Israel into the Arab region, considering it a strategic threat to the axis of resistance. Hamas's leadership believed that the success of the October 7 attack would break these paths and bring the Palestinian issue back to the forefront of the global scene, thus thwarting plans to liquidate the cause.
The message described the Zionist entity as "weaker than a spider's web," citing the state of internal division and political crises that plagued Israeli society before the war. The leaders expressed their confidence that a coordinated strike from all fronts would lead to the disintegration of this entity, which suffers from deep cracks in its military and social structure, and that this moment must be exploited.
The message concluded by emphasizing that this battle will change the equations and rules that have prevailed for decades, and will end the phase of security coordination and the Oslo Accords that shackled the Palestinian people. The signatories stressed that the ultimate goal is to achieve a historical transformation that melts sectarian differences and unites the nation under one banner to confront the common enemy and liberate the holy sites from the defilement of occupation.
These leaks come at a sensitive time, as they redraw the picture of coordination among resistance forces before the outbreak of the war, and reveal the extent of expectations Hamas had for its allies. This document, according to observers, remains evidence of the complex strategic planning that preceded the operation, and a serious attempt by Al-Qassam's leadership to impose the reality of "unity of fronts" from the very first moments of fighting.
When you read these words of ours, thousands of Mujahideen from the Al-Qassam Brigades will have launched to attack the targets of the criminal Zionist occupation.





Share your opinion
Secret document reveals details of Sinwar and Deif's message to Nasrallah on the morning of 'Al-Aqsa Flood'