Nahal Oz attack


The Nahal Oz attack was an assault on the kibbutz of Nahal Oz and the adjacent military base near the northern Gaza Strip as part of the October 7 attacks. In the attack, more than 60 Israeli soldiers and 15 civilians were killed. Some soldiers and eight civilians were kidnapped and taken to the Gaza Strip. According to the IDF, several bodies were also taken to the Gaza Strip after being killed.

Background

Nahal Oz is a kibbutz situated in southern Israel, in the northwestern part of the Negev desert near the Gaza border. As of 2021, it had a population of 471 residents. Founded in 1951, it was the first Nahal settlement in the country. By 1953, it transitioned into a civilian community. A significant event in its history occurred in 1956 when the kibbutz's security officer, Ro'i Rothberg, was killed by infiltrators from Gaza. His funeral witnessed a powerful eulogy by Moshe Dayan, then Chief of Staff, which emphasized the challenges faced by Israel and the constant threat from its neighbors.
Following the 2006 Lebanon War, a eulogy by novelist David Grossman for his son drew comparisons to Dayan's earlier eulogy. In 2014, a young resident, Daniel Tregerman, was killed by mortar fire from Gaza.
Close to the kibbutz was the Nahal Oz military outpost of the Israel Defense Forces, which was located 850 meters from the Gaza border. At the time, it housed troops from the 13th Battalion of the Golani Brigade, two tank teams from the 7th Armored Brigade, an intelligence collection platoon from Unit 414 of the Combat Intelligence Collection Corps, and additional support personnel. In spite of its location close to the Gaza border, it was not designed to defend against a ground attack. The perimeter wall had gaps and holes, and the shelters as well as the command center were designed to withstand rocket fire only. In 2025, IDF Chief of Staff Herzi Halevi later remarked that he had known for years that the base was positioned in a problematic area, but that it was not moved for budgetary reasons.
The attack on the base was preceded by meticulous intelligence gathering by Hamas, which in large part relied on social media posts by soldiers which included pictures of various areas in the base. The IDF investigation concluded that social media posts provided such a level of intelligence that Hamas would not have needed a single spy to effect its plan. Hamas also used drones and IDF media publications. In 2023, IDF troops in Gaza captured a Hamas document detailing the plans for the attack, revealing that Hamas had managed to map out an exact layout of the base and knew how many soldiers were normally stationed there, as well as the fact that on weekends the number would be reduced by half. Hamas reportedly also built a mock-up of the base in Gaza to train its militants in capturing it.
Hamas' plan for the conquest of the kibbutz, which it codenamed "Operation 402", was also meticulously planned. Hamas possessed three aerial photographs of the area which identified routes of movement, IDF communication antennas, cameras, motion radars, guard posts, barbed wire fences, and dirt mounds. Hamas planned for its militants to conquer the kibbutz and fortify themselves there after taking hostages. The plan called for breaching holes in the fence with explosive charges, after which the raiding force would split into two groups. One group would raid the eastern part of the kibbutz, during which it would take over the clubhouse, dining hall, and kibbutz secretariat. Another would focus on the western part, where they would take over the visitors' center and kindergartens and blow up the kibbutz's communication antennas. Hostages taken by the first group were to be gathered in the kindergartens or dining hall, and the kibbutz grocery store was identified as a potential source of supplies.
Under international law, non-state-actors are not prohibited from attacking military targets belonging to state actors; "terrorist" attacks on military and military attacks on "terrorist" targets are equally permissible under international law. However, a UN investigation suggested that certain aspects of the attack on the Nahal Oz military outpost violated the laws of war, finding reasonable grounds that Hamas militants killed soldiers who were hors de combat. The attack on the kibbutz was illegal under international law, as is any attack on civilian homes by any party to a conflict.

Military base

Attack

At the Nahal Oz base Hamas' Al-Qassam Brigades were joined by Palestinian Islamic Jihad's Saraya Al-Quds, a more extreme group, who allegedly have closer ties to Iran. At the time of the attack, only one soldier was stationed at the entrance of the outpost, which was operating at reduced capacity due to Simchat Torah. Only 81 of the 162 soldiers at the outpost, were trained for combat, while nine others were armed but untrained. According to Channel 12, Israeli officials were warned about unusual activity by Hamas in the area hours before the attack, but dismissed the threat posed.
On 7 October 2023, at 6:31a.m., Israeli field surveillance soldiers from Nahal Oz spotted two Hamas squads planting explosives at the Gaza–Israel barrier while on patrol. The bombs were detonated at two areas on a newly constructed barbed wire fence. Two soldiers from the Golani Brigade's 13th Battalion rushed to provide backup for the lone soldier guarding the base. At 6:38 and 6:41, two breaches were created in the Gaza–Israel barrier near the base, and dozens of militants on motorbikes, pickup trucks, and on foot stormed into Israel. Militants reached the base's perimeter wall at 6:45, while the Golani soldiers, who were under-equipped, began deploying to guard posts on the western side of the base. An officer in the base's command center activated a remotely-operated gun system to shoot at the militants as they headed towards the base, but as militants shot the surveillance cameras the monitoring screens in the command center began to go dark.
A tank stationed in the base attempted to position itself to overlook the border, but by then a wave of 65 militants had arrived. While battling soldiers inside the base, militants fired into holes in the base's walls, critically injuring the 13th Battalion's deputy commander. Between 6:48 and 6:56, the militants exchanged fire with soldiers in the base. RPGs were launched at the perimeter wall and the guard posts came under massive fire. At 7:05, the first militants entered the base. At 7:09, the surveillance soldiers left their stations and went to hide in the command center.
At 7:30, militants who were on the eastern side flanked around it and reached the entrance, where they engaged in a lengthy exchange of fire with the three soldiers guarding it, killing them after losing several of their own. They then went inside, and soon destroyed a large part of the post and equipment within it. The soldiers at the post were surprised, and most of them were killed. Meanwhile, Israeli Air Force drones and attack helicopters began arriving at the base at 7:30 and circled over it as the pilots and drone operators struggled to differentiate between IDF soldiers and Hamas militants, with the first drone strike carried out at 7:50. Throughout the rest of the battle numerous air and artillery strikes would subsequently be carried out inside or near the Nahal Oz outpost. The base was the site of the largest number of airstrikes in the battles of October 7th due to the presence of numerous soldiers directing them. Ultimately, 14 drone strikes and 6 helicopter strikes were carried out inside the base, and 150 helicopter cannon rounds were fired into the base. Another 77 drone strikes, 36 helicopter strikes, and 10 airstrikes by fighter jets were carried out near the base, with 1,600 artillery shells also fired at the vicinity of the base. A team of six Golani Brigade soldiers commanded by Major Shilo Har-Even arrived at the base in a Namer armoured personnel carrier at 7:41. At 7:46, Har-Even was wounded in the hand but continued to fight.
Five IDF surveillance balloon operators fought an extended battle against the attackers when they reached their position and managed to kill several of them before they were killed at 7:49. At around the time militants attacked a concrete bomb shelter holding 31 female soldiers who were not on shift at the time, only six of whom were armed. The militants threw a smoke grenade and two fragmentation grenades into the shelter. Fourteen of the soldiers, all of whom were injured to various degrees and four of whom were armed, fled the shelter. One was killed while running away and two took shelter in the base's clinic, where they were later killed when militants threw grenades into it. The remaining eleven barricaded themselves inside a room which militants then tried to enter before being dispersed by a drone strike. The drone operator was not sure of the identities of the militants and carried out the strike near them, causing them to flee. Militants also continued to try to break into the shelter with the rest of the soldiers remaining inside. One of the armed soldiers remaining in the shelter, Captain Eden Nimri, positioned herself at one of the two entrances to the shelter. She opened fire on the first militant to enter but more followed and Nimri was killed after running out of ammunition. Another of the armed soldiers, Sergeant Shai Biton, also managed to kill a militant before she was also killed.
Three tanks arrived at the base at 8:09a.m. Har-Even's group of six Golani soldiers launched an assault to retake the base at 8:18, but came under fire from four locations. By 8:26 the assault had failed. All but one of the soldiers were killed, with Har-Even among the dead. One of the tanks inside the base was struck by an RPG, disabling it, while the second tank blocked the western side of the base to prevent kidnappings. Shortly before 9:00, the third tank spotted a wave of 50 Hamas militants crossing the border and moved to intercept them, firing at the militants and running some of them over before being disabled by RPG fire. A third wave of 100 militants arrived at 10:00, and at 10:20 seven surveillance troops were captured from the bomb shelter earlier attacked.
In the command center, staff officers and observers entrenched themselves and tried to communicate with the forces and direct combat helicopters to the militant squads. When the militants arrived at the command center, four soldiers fought to defend it: one Bedouin tracker and three Golani Brigade soldiers. They killed at least eight militants in a long engagement. At one point, a Golani soldier killed a militant with a knife in close combat. The armed staff officers in the command center did not fight. At around 11:58, after having failed to breach the entrance to the command center, the militants set it on fire, throwing grenades as well as a flammable substance which also released toxic gases that caused suffocation within minutes. As of 13 December 2023, the IDF investigation could not yet pinpoint the exact type of chemicals used. Of the 22 troops taking shelter in the command center, six managed to exit through a small bathroom window and a seventh escaped through another window to survive the fumes. The remaining 15 died in the command center. Among the dead were the four combat soldiers who had fought to defend the command center, and seven female observers.
Soldiers of the Paratroopers Brigade's 890th Battalion, who had been fighting at Be'eri and Kfar Aza, headed towards the base after being called in as reinforcements. They were joined by other paratroopers, a number of Golani Brigade officers, and members of the Israel Police's Yamam counter-terrorism unit. The reinforcements arrived at the base at 1:36p.m. and began clearing it of militants. By 5:00, the base was completely cleared.