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Home Publications Surveys - Data Analytics Center Swords of Iron Survey Results - July 2025

Swords of Iron Survey Results - July 2025

Survey, August 4, 2025

עברית
Mora Deitch
Idit Shafran Gittleman
Abir Gitlin

Table of Contents:

Since the outbreak of the war in Gaza, the Institute for National Security Studies has been regularly conducting public opinion surveys to assess attitudes toward key national security issues, national resilience, and public trust.[1]

Click here to download the complete survey data |  To the survey results in Arabic - نتائج الاستطلاع باللغة العربية | Click here to view the trends among the Jewish public  | Click here to view the trends among the Arab public

Trust in Persons and Institutions

Key Findings:

Return to pre-Iran-operation trust levels: Following a sharp increase in public trust toward the security and political leadership during Operation Rising Lion against Iran, trust levels have now steadily declined across nearly all indicators. In most cases, public sentiment has returned to levels observed in May, prior to the operation.

  • Trust in military institutions: Public trust in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has dropped from 83% at the end of June to 77% in the current survey. This marks a sharp decline and a return to trust levels seen in May. Trust in the Chief of Staff, Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir, also declined from 69% to 62%, again nearing pre-operation levels. Trust in the reports by the IDF spokesperson has also weakened: 56.5% now express high trust, compared to 63%–67% in June, similar to figures from May.
  • Trust in political leadership: Trust in the government, which temporarily rose to 30%–32% during the Iran operation, has now fallen to 23%. In contrast, 76% report having little or no trust in the government. Trust in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also decreased from 35% to 30%.
  • Trust in the Attorney General: 38% of respondents report high trust in Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara, having declined from 44% in March but remaining consistent with the 39% reported in January.

Gaza Front

Key Findings:

Belief in victory but less confidence in achieving objectives:

  • 62% of the respondents believe the IDF will win the war in Gaza—31% are certain, and another 31% think it is the likely scenario. Conversely, 28% do not believe in victory—21% think the IDF will not win, and 8% are certain it will not.
  • In contrast, only 53% of those surveyed think the war’s goals will be fully or mostly achieved, compared to 42% who believe the goals will not be achieved at all or only to a limited extent—a clear gap between a sense of victory and an assessment of goal attainment.

Lack of confidence in current tactics in Gaza—especially regarding the release of the hostages:

  • A majority of 61% of the public believes the IDF’s current approach is not advancing the return of hostages—20.5% of the public thinks the IDF is advancing only the collapse of Hamas rule, and 40.5% believes t is not advancing either goal. Only 25.5% of the public thinks the military action is promoting both the return of the hostages and Hamas’s collapse.
  • Regarding delays in securing a hostage release deal, the public is divided—52% of the public places all or partial responsibility on Israel: 21% sees Israel as having sole responsibility, and 31% thinks that Israel shares responsibility with Hamas. Another 45% places all responsibility on Hamas.

The day after the war in Gaza—skepticism over dismantling Hamas, support for the Egyptian initiative:

  • The Israeli public is split on whether Hamas can be disarmed—52% is confident or thinks it is possible, while 41.5% is sure or believes it is not possible.
  • Half the public (50%) supports the Egyptian initiative for an international technocratic government (not affiliated with Fatah or Hamas). Another 27% favors Israeli military rule in Gaza, and only 12% wants the Palestinian Authority to govern Gaza.

Humanitarian situation in Gaza—sharp divides between Jews and Arabs:

  • A clear majority (80%) believes the IDF is a moral army. However, the Jewish–Arab gap is stark—92.5% of Jews see the IDF as moral, while only 29% of Arabs do. In contrast, 63% of Arabs disagree that the IDF is a moral army (43% strongly disagree, 20% somewhat disagree).
  • The public is skeptical about the proposed “humanitarian city” in Gaza—47.5% of the public opposes the move, versus 30.5% supporting it.
  • Concern over Gaza’s humanitarian state remains low: only 35.5% of the public is troubled by the situation (18% very concerned, 17.5% somewhat), while a majority of 61.5% is not at all or only slightly concerned. Again, the sectoral gap is notable—just 24% of the Jewish public expresses concern, compared to 82% of the Arab public.

Shared Life with Equality—Public is Mostly Skeptical

  • Of those surveyed, 71% believe Israelis and Palestinians cannot live together with full civil equality, while only 24% think they can. Among Jews—81% say it is impossible, versus only 16% who believe in the possibility. Among Arabs—57.5% believe it is possible, while only 29.5% reject it.

 

Iran Front

Key Findings:

Satisfaction with achievements—alongside expectations of renewed escalation:

  • A majority of 62% of the Israeli public is satisfied with Israel’s military achievements against Iran—38% significantly, and 24% very significantly. Only 11% of the public feels dissatisfied. However, only 28% of the Arab public is satisfied, compared to 70.5% of the Jewish public.
  • Despite being satisfied, the public expects further conflict: 61% believes Israel will have to resume fighting Iran within the next year, compared to just 22% who think it will not. Again, sectoral gaps appear—69% of the Jewish public foresees renewed escalation, versus 29% of the Arab public.

Syria Front

Key Findings:

The public supports a pragmatic approach but is divided over involvement:

  • Given recent developments in Syria, the Israeli public does not support an immediate IDF withdrawal—most favor a cautious or tougher stance. Only 13% of the public supports immediate withdrawal and honoring the 1974 ceasefire agreement, while 38% favors a gradual withdrawal under international supervision, and another 38% supports continued military control in southern Syria. The Jewish–Arab divide is stark: 56% of the Arab public favors immediate IDF withdrawal, versus just 2.5% of the Jewish public. In contrast, 44.5% of the Jewish public supports continued IDF presence, compared to only 12% of the Arab public.
  • Regarding Israel’s involvement in clashes between Syria’s new regime and the Druze population, there is relatively strong support for direct military involvement: 53% of the public supports it, versus 34% who is opposed. Compared to the May survey when only 21.5% supported military intervention, this is a sharp increase—and a clear shift in public opinion. In May, 41% preferred diplomatic pressure, and 26% opposed any involvement. Now, the public appears to favor a more forceful approach. Sectoral gaps are also evident: 61% of the Jewish public supports military involvement, versus just 22.5% of the Arab public. Conversely, 66% of the Arab public opposes intervention, versus only 25.5% of the Jewish public.
  • A majority of the public (54%) supports establishing direct relations with Syria’s new regime, 26% is opposed, and 20% is unsure. This is a slight drop from May, when 60% supported such relations. Current support is relatively high among both Jews (56%) and Arabs (45%).

 

IDF Service

Key Findings:

Force exhaustion—An overwhelming majority opposes punishing fatigued soldiers:

  • 90% of Jewish respondents believe soldiers who refuse another combat round due to psychological fatigue should not be punished. Only 5% support punishment. This reflects broad public legitimacy for combat stress, especially amid prolonged warfare and security tensions.

 

Israel–China Relations

Key Findings:

China is seen as unfriendly—but most of the public is indifferent:

  • Only a minority of the public sees China as a partner: 22% views it as an ally or friendly state, compared to 52% who sees it as unfriendly (42%) or hostile (10%). Another 26% of the public does not know—up slightly from April (23%).
  • Compared to April, negative views of China remain stagnant: then, 39% viewed China as unfriendly and 7% as hostile—similar to now. However, positive views declined slightly: in April, 29% saw China as friendly; now, just 20%. The proportion seeing it as an ally remains negligible (2% in April and now).
  • Sectoral gaps are notable: Among the Jewish public, 59% views China as unfriendly or hostile, and only 19.5% sees it as friendly or allied. Among the Arab public, a third (33%) sees China as friendly or allied, while 24% views it as hostile or unfriendly. However, a large proportion of the Arab public (43%) is unsure how to assess the relationship.
  • Most of the public views its stance on China as stable nearly two years into the war: When asked if their view of China had changed since the war began, 61% said it had not. 23% said their view had worsened, and only 1% said it had improved.

The Resilience of Israeli Society

Key Findings:

Optimism about the recovery of Israeli society:

  • Optimism regarding Israeli society’s ability to recover from crisis remains static: 68% of the public expressed a sense of optimism (23% very optimistic, 46% somewhat), and 28% reported a sense of pessimism—almost identical to May’s results.
  • Optimism among the Jewish public has remained high and stable over time: In the current survey, 75% of the Jewish public was optimistic (27% very optimistic, 49% somewhat), similar to May. In contrast, only 42% of the Arab public reported feeling optimistic—also unchanged from May—while 48% were pessimistic.

Relative resilience among the Jewish public, persistent fragility among the Arab public:

  • A slight improvement has occurred in the level of personal security: 32% of the public reports having a high or very high level of personal security—a modest rise from 27% in June (during the Iran conflict). However, this figure has declined since May, when 39% reported having a high level of security. Negative feelings (low or very low security) now stand at 24%—a drop from 32% in June. A majority of 43% of the public reports a “moderate” level of security.
  • The sectoral gap remains wide: among the Jewish public, 37% reports a high or very high level of security, compared to 33.5% in June and 42% in May—a modest but consistent decline. Within the Arab public, only 11% now reports a high level of security—a marked rise from 3% in June, yet still very low relative to the general sample. Another 54% of the Arab public reports feeling low or very low levels of personal security—a significant decrease compared to 68% in June.

________________________

[1] The survey was conducted between July 24–28, 2025, by the Data Analytics Center at INSS. The fieldwork was carried out by iPanel, during which 803 Hebrew-speaking and 155 Arabic-speaking individuals were interviewed online. The participants constitute a representative sample of the adult population in Israel aged 18 and over. The maximum sampling error for the entire sample is ±3.2% at a 95% confidence level.

Nitsan Prayzler assisted in the preparation and management of this survey.

The opinions expressed in INSS publications are the authors’ alone.
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