
According to the Moj news agency , the Zionist newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth announced in a report: 50,632 soldiers in the Israeli army have at least one other citizenship in addition to Israeli citizenship, with American citizenship at the top of this statistic.
12,135 Zionist soldiers have American citizenship, 6,127 have French citizenship, and 5,067 have Russian citizenship.
Also, more than 3,000 soldiers in the Israeli army have German citizenship and the same number have Ukrainian citizenship.
Meanwhile, the number of soldiers with British, Romanian, Polish, Ethiopian, and Canadian citizenship exceeds a thousand for each of these countries.
According to this report, the number of soldiers who hold citizenship of two other countries in addition to Israeli citizenship is 4,440, and the number of soldiers who hold citizenship of three other countries in addition to Israeli citizenship is 162.
The Israeli army is now facing an unprecedented internal crisis. A vast collection of data, security reports, and confessions from senior Israeli officials show that the army is facing the deepest manpower crisis in its history, a crisis that combines a shortage of commanders, officer attrition, low motivation, psychological fatigue, a reserve force crisis, and a social divide over military service.
This situation is no longer just an administrative problem or a temporary challenge, but rather a sign of the gradual erosion of the structure on which the Israeli army was built; a gap that was previously concealed by security narratives has now become so deep that even Israeli officials warn that continuing this trend could push the army’s operational capacity to a point of no return in the near future.
This crisis not only has military dimensions, but also reflects social, economic, political, and psychological issues that have affected all layers of Israeli society and its power structure, causing the Zionist regime’s army to face a crisis at the domestic and international levels.




