PNN – Brigadier General Jill Benhas, former financial advisor to the Chief of Staff of the Israeli Army, revealed in an interview with Hebrew media the Zionist regime’s staggering costs and military defeats in recent wars.
Operation Pager against Hezbollah in Lebanon: $320 million cost for a failure
Rai Al-Youm newspaper, quoting Binhas, wrote: The pager operation against Hezbollah in Lebanon cost the Zionist regime more than one billion shekels (equivalent to $320 million), while Lebanese security sources have also announced that only 6 grams of explosives were used in each pager.
The Gaza War, costing 350 billion shekels, was a catastrophic failure.
The financial advisor to the Israeli army announced the cost of the Gaza war at 350 billion shekels and emphasized that the regime’s army faced a major defeat in maintaining the security of the regime and the settlers in the October 7 war.
He added that despite the heavy costs, the Zionist military now controls only 50 percent of Gaza’s territory.
The war with Iran created new financial, social, and cultural crises for the Zionists.
Benhas announced the cost of the 12-day war against the Islamic Republic of Iran at 20 billion shekels and said that this war has caused new crises to emerge within the Zionist regime, including the extension of the period of caution and compulsory service, and the recruitment of religious extremists, etc.
Acknowledging that the Zionist regime has suffered deep crises at the financial, social, family, and cultural levels in the past two years due to successive wars, he emphasized that these crises have become structural and institutional and have presented the future of this regime with serious challenges.
It is worth noting that Brigadier General Jill Benhas’s confessions show that the Israeli regime is not only facing successive defeats on the battlefield, but is also struggling with structural and financial crises at home.
And this is while the billions in war costs, failure to achieve development goals, and social collapse have made the future of this regime even more uncertain.

