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Lives on hold, economy in check: Gaza war tests Israel’s stamina

As the campaign against Hamas grinds on in Gaza, Israel is digging in for a long war – militarily, economically, and socially. It’s an effort both to achieve its ambitious objectives and to make the battle sustainable for its citizenry.

“The year 2024 will be challenging,” Israel’s military chief, Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi, said Sunday. “We will be fighting in Gaza all year, that’s for sure.”

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War brings clear costs: lives lost or forever changed, homes destroyed. As Israel girds for a long war in Gaza, and tensions rise in Lebanon, it is trying to balance, too, the human and economic costs of mass mobilization.

On the ground in Gaza, the Israeli military has shifted to a “lower-intensity” phase of its offensive, at least in the northern part of the territory, reducing the need for the same level of massed army divisions – and reservists.

Ori Barzilay, who works for a Tel Aviv tech investment firm, just recently returned home after three months in uniform, though it was made clear to him to be ready to meet the army’s needs for the entirety of the coming year.

His wedding plans, meanwhile, are on hold: The uncertainty of the current moment is the only certainty. His fiancée, a medical student, who was also called up, has yet to be demobilized.

“We were looking at this coming spring … but it’s an open question whether it’ll be possible,” Mr. Barzilay says. “It’s the first time our generation has experienced a war of this magnitude.”

Ori Barzilay was planning his wedding when Hamas launched its devastating Oct. 7 attack on Israel.

Like more than 300,000 other Israeli civilians, he immediately left his regular life and went off to war, in his case as a reservist in an elite intelligence unit.

After nearly three straight months in uniform, he only recently returned home, part of a wider demobilization – for now – of Israeli forces.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

War brings clear costs: lives lost or forever changed, homes destroyed. As Israel girds for a long war in Gaza, and tensions rise in Lebanon, it is trying to balance, too, the human and economic costs of mass mobilization.

As the campaign against Hamas grinds on in Gaza, and the threat of a wider escalation with the Iran-backed Hezbollah grows in Lebanon, Israel is digging in for a long war – militarily, economically, and socially. It’s an effort both to achieve its ambitious objectives and to make the battle sustainable for its citizenry.

“The year 2024 will be challenging,” Israel’s military chief, Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi, said Sunday. “We will be fighting in Gaza all year, that’s for sure, and this will also hold [for] the other arenas.”

Mr. Barzilay, a principal at Team8, a Tel Aviv-based tech investment firm, was told by his commanders not to get too comfortable back in civilian life.

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