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Israeli Defense Forces Chief: IDF Could Collapse Due to Lack of Manpower

IDF Chief Eyal Zamir via Wikimedia Commons

Israel’s military leadership has issued one of its starkest warnings in years, raising serious questions about the sustainability of the country’s defense posture amid growing internal strain and mounting operational demands.

At the center of the alarm is Eyal Zamir—the highest-ranking military officer in Israel and the commander of the entire IDF—who told ministers behind closed doors that the army is approaching a breaking point.

According to reports from multiple Israeli outlets, Zamir warned the cabinet that the Israel Defense Forces could “collapse in on itself” if urgent reforms are not implemented. His remarks, delivered during a high-level security meeting, were described as a direct and unusually blunt appeal to political leadership.

“I am raising 10 red flags in front of you,” Zamir reportedly told ministers. He stressed that without immediate legislative action on conscription, reserve duty, and service length, the military’s ability to function will deteriorate rapidly.

The warning comes as Israel faces a complex security environment, with operations spanning multiple fronts. From Gaza to Lebanon, Syria to the West Bank, the demands placed on the military have expanded significantly in recent years.

Military officials say the strain is no longer theoretical. Reserve units are being stretched thin, with repeated deployments placing growing pressure on soldiers and their families.

“The reserves will not hold,” Zamir warned, emphasizing that the current system is reaching its limits. Without reinforcement, he suggested, even routine missions could soon become difficult to sustain. At the heart of the crisis is a manpower shortage that has been building for years. Estimates suggest the IDF is short tens of thousands of troops, particularly in combat roles.

Even in peacetime, officials argue, the current force structure would be insufficient. In a multi-front environment, the gap becomes even more pronounced.

A key factor in this shortage is the ongoing controversy over conscription. Large segments of Israel’s ultra-Orthodox population have long been exempt from military service, a policy that critics say is no longer viable under current conditions.

Zamir has called for new laws to address the issue directly. These include measures to increase enlistment, extend mandatory service, and reform reserve duty obligations. Yet political hesitation has slowed progress. Governments reliant on coalition partners have struggled to push through reforms that would likely provoke public backlash.

This tension highlights a broader challenge facing many Western-aligned societies: how to balance internal political considerations with hard security realities. In an time of seemingly ever-increasing global instability, such trade-offs are becoming increasingly difficult to manage.

During the same cabinet meeting, Avi Bluth reportedly warned that government policies in the West Bank are adding further strain. The expansion of settlements, he said, requires additional security resources that the army does not currently have.

“This is your policy,” Bluth told ministers, “but it requires security and a full protection package.” His comments underscored the gap between political decisions and military capacity. The situation on the ground has also become more volatile. Reports indicate a rise in violence in the West Bank, forcing the military to divert units originally assigned to other fronts.

In one recent case, an infantry battalion intended for deployment elsewhere was reassigned to the West Bank to manage escalating tensions. Commanders have warned that further reinforcements may soon be necessary.

Opposition figures have seized on Zamir’s warning as evidence of deeper systemic failures. Yair Lapid accused the government of pushing the army into a “multi-front war without a strategy, without sufficient resources, and with too few soldiers.”

Lapid added that the government would no longer be able to claim ignorance. “This time, they will not be able to say, ‘I didn’t know,’” he said, pointing directly to the chief of staff’s warnings.

Other political leaders echoed similar concerns. Former prime minister Naftali Bennett argued that the solution lies in expanding the pool of eligible recruits. “The IDF is 20,000 soldiers short,” Bennett said. “There are 100,000 young Haredim of military age… if they recruited even a fifth, there would be no problem.”

Former military leaders entering politics have also weighed in. Gadi Eisenkot described universal service as a “moral imperative,” warning that continued exemptions undermine both readiness and fairness.

At the same time, some members of the governing coalition have pushed back against the criticism. Allies of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu argue that legislative delays are due to legal obstacles rather than political inaction.

The Prime Minister’s Office has stated that efforts are underway to pass the necessary laws. Officials have also accused opponents of distorting the military’s warnings for political gain.

Within the ruling party itself, however, divisions are emerging. Some lawmakers have acknowledged the seriousness of the manpower crisis and called for immediate action.

“Being right-wing means, first and foremost, security,” said Likud lawmaker Dan Illouz. “You can’t demand victory and expansion, and then let the army collapse due to lack of soldiers.”

Others have taken a different tone, criticizing Zamir’s remarks as overly alarmist. Some coalition figures have described his warnings as “irresponsible” and potentially damaging to national morale.

From a strategic perspective, the situation underscores the risks of overextension. Expanding commitments—whether territorial, political, or military—require corresponding resources to sustain them.

Without those resources, even the most well-intentioned policies can create vulnerabilities. Zamir’s warning, in that sense, is not just about manpower, but about the limits of capacity.

The episode serves as a reminder that national security cannot be separated from internal cohesion. A strong state requires both external readiness and internal alignment. As the government weighs its next steps, the stakes are clear. Failure to address the manpower shortage could have long-term consequences for Israel’s ability to defend itself in an increasingly unstable region.

Whether Israel’s leadership can translate warnings into action remains to be seen. What is certain is that the current trajectory, as described by its own military chief, is not sustainable.

In that sense, the crisis is not just a military issue—it is a test of political will. And as the pressure builds, the decisions made now will shape the country’s security for years to come.

The post Israeli Defense Forces Chief: IDF Could Collapse Due to Lack of Manpower appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

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