Great work Anon. I wonder if any other country's in the area build underground military Hq,bunkers,command under Civilians???? Asking for a fren. ....edit... I asked Grok If Israel uses underground bases under popolation centers. [GROKS TAKE]==== Israel has built military facilities, including major command centers and underground bunkers, in or beneath densely populated civilian areas.Key ExamplesHaKirya (Camp Rabin / The Kirya) in central Tel Aviv: This is the IDF's main headquarters complex, including the General Staff headquarters, Ministry of Defense, and other key command functions. It sits in a highly urban area surrounded by residential towers, offices, shopping areas, public transport, and civilian infrastructure.
en.wikipedia.org
Fortress of Zion ("Matzod Zion"): A major underground command bunker complex located deep beneath the HaKirya headquarters in central Tel Aviv. It served as a wartime nerve center (e.g., during operations in Gaza) for intelligence, air operations, and command. This bunker is explicitly under a dense urban/population center.
nytimes.com
Other military sites are embedded in or adjacent to civilian zones:Facilities near or associated with hospitals (e.g., references to bunkers or operations linked to Ichilov Hospital in Tel Aviv or Sheba Medical Center near Tel Hashomer base). Air bases, intelligence sites, and other installations in or near populated metropolitan areas (e.g., Haifa naval headquarters near residential and hospital zones).
facebook.com
These placements date back decades in some cases (e.g., the core of HaKirya since 1948), with modern underground expansions for protection against attacks. Israel argues this is practical for command functions in a small country, that bases are often distinct/secured zones, and that civilians have widespread shelter/bunker access (e.g., safe rooms in homes). Critics (including some Israeli voices and international outlets) call it embedding military assets among civilians, creating risks similar to those Israel accuses groups like Hamas of in Gaza.
truthlytics.com
Context and ComparisonThis is often raised in debates about "human shielding" tactics. Unlike Hamas's extensive tunnel network deliberately built under civilian infrastructure (hospitals, schools, homes) in Gaza for hiding weapons/command, Israel's approach is more about siting surface headquarters and protected underground bunkers within or under its own urban areas. Israel does not typically hide active combat units or rocket launchers inside civilian buildings in the same way, but the proximity of high-value military targets to population centers is documented.
theintercept.com
In short: Yes, significant Israeli military infrastructure (especially command bunkers) exists under or amid population centers, primarily for operational resilience in a dense, threatened country. This is publicly acknowledged and visible in Tel Aviv.
Seems like everyone does it in that area.Maybe because of limited area. Like Israel. Tiny area,might be why they build military bunkers under Civilian populations..Just limited in space.
You are confusing Israel with Hamas and Hezbollah.... Gaza has very limited space. Israel typically has military bases a distance away from major population centers...
That doesn't make sense because I just asked grok...
Yes, Israel has built military facilities, including major command centers and underground bunkers, in or beneath densely populated civilian areas.Key ExamplesHaKirya (Camp Rabin / The Kirya) in central Tel Aviv: This is the IDF's main headquarters complex, including the General Staff headquarters, Ministry of Defense, and other key command functions. It sits in a highly urban area surrounded by residential towers, offices, shopping areas, public transport, and civilian infrastructure.
en.wikipedia.org
Fortress of Zion ("Matzod Zion"): A major underground command bunker complex located deep beneath the HaKirya headquarters in central Tel Aviv. It served as a wartime nerve center (e.g., during operations in Gaza) for intelligence, air operations, and command. This bunker is explicitly under a dense urban/population center.
nytimes.com
Other military sites are embedded in or adjacent to civilian zones:Facilities near or associated with hospitals (e.g., references to bunkers or operations linked to Ichilov Hospital in Tel Aviv or Sheba Medical Center near Tel Hashomer base).
Air bases, intelligence sites, and other installations in or near populated metropolitan areas (e.g., Haifa naval headquarters near residential and hospital zones).
facebook.com
These placements date back decades in some cases (e.g., the core of HaKirya since 1948), with modern underground expansions for protection against attacks. Israel argues this is practical for command functions in a small country, that bases are often distinct/secured zones, and that civilians have widespread shelter/bunker access (e.g., safe rooms in homes). Critics (including some Israeli voices and international outlets) call it embedding military assets among civilians, creating risks similar to those Israel accuses groups like Hamas of in Gaza.
truthlytics.com
Context and ComparisonThis is often raised in debates about "human shielding" tactics. Unlike Hamas's extensive tunnel network deliberately built under civilian infrastructure (hospitals, schools, homes) in Gaza for hiding weapons/command, Israel's approach is more about siting surface headquarters and protected underground bunkers within or under its own urban areas. Israel does not typically hide active combat units or rocket launchers inside civilian buildings in the same way, but the proximity of high-value military targets to population centers is documented.
theintercept.com
In short: Yes, significant Israeli military infrastructure (especially command bunkers) exists under or amid population centers, primarily for operational resilience in a dense, threatened country. This is publicly acknowledged and visible in Tel Aviv.
Great work Anon. I wonder if any other country's in the area build underground military Hq,bunkers,command under Civilians???? Asking for a fren. ....edit... I asked Grok If Israel uses underground bases under popolation centers. [GROKS TAKE]==== Israel has built military facilities, including major command centers and underground bunkers, in or beneath densely populated civilian areas.Key ExamplesHaKirya (Camp Rabin / The Kirya) in central Tel Aviv: This is the IDF's main headquarters complex, including the General Staff headquarters, Ministry of Defense, and other key command functions. It sits in a highly urban area surrounded by residential towers, offices, shopping areas, public transport, and civilian infrastructure.
en.wikipedia.org
Fortress of Zion ("Matzod Zion"): A major underground command bunker complex located deep beneath the HaKirya headquarters in central Tel Aviv. It served as a wartime nerve center (e.g., during operations in Gaza) for intelligence, air operations, and command. This bunker is explicitly under a dense urban/population center.
nytimes.com
Other military sites are embedded in or adjacent to civilian zones:Facilities near or associated with hospitals (e.g., references to bunkers or operations linked to Ichilov Hospital in Tel Aviv or Sheba Medical Center near Tel Hashomer base). Air bases, intelligence sites, and other installations in or near populated metropolitan areas (e.g., Haifa naval headquarters near residential and hospital zones).
facebook.com
These placements date back decades in some cases (e.g., the core of HaKirya since 1948), with modern underground expansions for protection against attacks. Israel argues this is practical for command functions in a small country, that bases are often distinct/secured zones, and that civilians have widespread shelter/bunker access (e.g., safe rooms in homes). Critics (including some Israeli voices and international outlets) call it embedding military assets among civilians, creating risks similar to those Israel accuses groups like Hamas of in Gaza.
truthlytics.com
Context and ComparisonThis is often raised in debates about "human shielding" tactics. Unlike Hamas's extensive tunnel network deliberately built under civilian infrastructure (hospitals, schools, homes) in Gaza for hiding weapons/command, Israel's approach is more about siting surface headquarters and protected underground bunkers within or under its own urban areas. Israel does not typically hide active combat units or rocket launchers inside civilian buildings in the same way, but the proximity of high-value military targets to population centers is documented.
theintercept.com
In short: Yes, significant Israeli military infrastructure (especially command bunkers) exists under or amid population centers, primarily for operational resilience in a dense, threatened country. This is publicly acknowledged and visible in Tel Aviv.
I do my best work when madder than a hornet... oddly enough.
See my final two salvos for the real fireworks, especially the last one.
As a bonus, I'll leave you Lockdown Queen, which I wrote after hearing one too many stories from Michigan under Gretchen Whitmer:
https://greatawakening.win/search?params=Lockdown+Queen&community=GreatAwakening
(So this is how I channel my anger...
Seems like everyone does it in that area.Maybe because of limited area. Like Israel. Tiny area,might be why they build military bunkers under Civilian populations..Just limited in space.
You are confusing Israel with Hamas and Hezbollah.... Gaza has very limited space. Israel typically has military bases a distance away from major population centers...
That doesn't make sense because I just asked grok...
Yes, Israel has built military facilities, including major command centers and underground bunkers, in or beneath densely populated civilian areas.Key ExamplesHaKirya (Camp Rabin / The Kirya) in central Tel Aviv: This is the IDF's main headquarters complex, including the General Staff headquarters, Ministry of Defense, and other key command functions. It sits in a highly urban area surrounded by residential towers, offices, shopping areas, public transport, and civilian infrastructure.
en.wikipedia.org
Fortress of Zion ("Matzod Zion"): A major underground command bunker complex located deep beneath the HaKirya headquarters in central Tel Aviv. It served as a wartime nerve center (e.g., during operations in Gaza) for intelligence, air operations, and command. This bunker is explicitly under a dense urban/population center.
nytimes.com
Other military sites are embedded in or adjacent to civilian zones:Facilities near or associated with hospitals (e.g., references to bunkers or operations linked to Ichilov Hospital in Tel Aviv or Sheba Medical Center near Tel Hashomer base). Air bases, intelligence sites, and other installations in or near populated metropolitan areas (e.g., Haifa naval headquarters near residential and hospital zones).
facebook.com
These placements date back decades in some cases (e.g., the core of HaKirya since 1948), with modern underground expansions for protection against attacks. Israel argues this is practical for command functions in a small country, that bases are often distinct/secured zones, and that civilians have widespread shelter/bunker access (e.g., safe rooms in homes). Critics (including some Israeli voices and international outlets) call it embedding military assets among civilians, creating risks similar to those Israel accuses groups like Hamas of in Gaza.
truthlytics.com
Context and ComparisonThis is often raised in debates about "human shielding" tactics. Unlike Hamas's extensive tunnel network deliberately built under civilian infrastructure (hospitals, schools, homes) in Gaza for hiding weapons/command, Israel's approach is more about siting surface headquarters and protected underground bunkers within or under its own urban areas. Israel does not typically hide active combat units or rocket launchers inside civilian buildings in the same way, but the proximity of high-value military targets to population centers is documented.
theintercept.com
In short: Yes, significant Israeli military infrastructure (especially command bunkers) exists under or amid population centers, primarily for operational resilience in a dense, threatened country. This is publicly acknowledged and visible in Tel Aviv.