Amos Harel, military correspondent for the Israeli daily
Haaretz, wrote that the decision to strike in Sudan apparently originated in a belief that Iran was about to inject a significant quantity of arms into Gaza, possibly 70-kilometer-range
Fajr-3 rockets. A story in
The Sunday Times also reported that the trucks were transporting Fajr-3 rockets, which had been brought by
Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps to the
Port Sudan and given to local smugglers. The article also stated that the strike was conducted by unmanned
Elbit Hermes 450s. However,
Time magazine reported that the strike was
F-16s escorted by
F-15s and
UAVs. On April 8,
Yediot Aharonot, quoting an American source, reported that Israeli naval commando (
Shayetet 13) forces were involved in the operation, which included an attack on an Iranian arms ship docking in Sudan. Former IAF commander
Eitan Ben-Eliyahu said the main difficulty in such an attack is precise intelligence. Getting to the target requires a flight of about two and a half hours, presumably on a southerly flight path along the
Red Sea coast, under the
Saudi and
Egyptian radar and with aerial refueling. The incident was first mentioned in mass media by
CBS News on March 25. On May 26, Sudanese defense minister
Abdel Rahim Mohammed Hussein claimed that the convoy was made up of 1,000 civilians and was involved in "a smuggling process at the
border with Egypt". The minister alleged that 119 people were killed; among them were 56 smugglers and 63 smuggled persons from
Ethiopian,
Somali and other nationalities. ==Reactions==