Published: 27th Dhul Hijjah 1446

 

In one of the most turbulent episodes of confusion experienced by the Zionist entity, Tel Aviv now finds itself entangled in a deepening financial crisis, one that worsens with every Yemeni missile hitting its vital infrastructure. The precision strikes on energy facilities and strategic installations have aggravated an already fragile economy, driving the entity’s leaders into open pleas for financial support, not only from traditional Western allies, but also from Gulf states, as urged by the Zionist entity’s so-called “Finance Minister.”

 

The fallout became apparent within the first week of attacks. The Zionist so-called "Ministry of Finance” revealed it had received over 30,000 compensation requests from settlers whose properties were directly damaged. As the strikes continued, fears of a total breakdown mounted, with on-the-ground realities proving far harsher than any early projections.

 


The Numbers Speak Loudly

According to "The Wall Street Journal", the Zionist entity is losing an estimated $725 million per day due to ongoing military operations. These losses extend far beyond the cost of ammunition or Iron Dome maintenance, encompassing the full cost of air defense, interceptor missiles, and retaliatory strikes, now deemed largely ineffective against the relentless attacks from resistance forces.

"The Economic Times" further reported that the daily cost of launching interceptor missiles alone ranges between $200 million and $285 million, an alarming figure considering the undefined length of the war—just one month of combat amounts to a staggering $21 billion in direct financial attrition.

Early estimates, now surfacing through Zionist media, indicate that direct losses from strikes have already neared 2 billion shekels (approximately $540 million), including damage to military infrastructure, energy plants, and vital facilities. Reports from “Kan” and "Yedioth Ahronoth" confirm that sensitive military sites and key infrastructure across central and southern parts of the entity have been severely hit.

Meanwhile, the financial markets are on a steep downward spiral. The Tel Aviv Stock Index lost over 6% of its value within a single week, while the shekel plunged more than 8% since early June, prompting Israel’s central bank to inject over 30 billion shekels in a desperate bid to prevent the currency’s collapse.

The economic core is crumbling. Construction projects have come to a halt. According to the Zionist newspaper "The Times of Israel", over 70,000 workers have abandoned job sites, leaving nearly 1,500 ongoing projects in complete paralysis. Tourism — once a top income source — has all but vanished. The so-called “Israeli Ministry of Tourism” reported a drop of over 90% in tourist numbers. Hotels and resorts have turned into empty shells awaiting an unknown future.

Amid this economic storm, credit rating agencies like Fitch and S&P Global have warned of a possible downgrade to the entity’s credit status in the coming months, citing rising risk and falling investor confidence. More critically, international reports suggest that this war of attrition — originally intended by Netanyahu as a “deterrence message” to resistance forces — has instead struck a crippling blow to the heart of the Zionist economy, revealing the vulnerability of a system long romanticized by the Zionist regime as indomitable.

 


The Enemy Appeals for Help

In the midst of collapse, the enemy’s “government” launched a diplomatic SOS campaign, reaching out to key Western capitals — specifically Germany, France, the UK, and the United States. But the real shock came from the entity’s inclusion of Gulf countries as supposed financial sponsors for the war — a move that exposes the colonialist mindset still entrenched in the Zionist approach.

According to Zionist news outlet "Channel 14", extremist “Israeli Finance Minister” Bezalel Smotrich declared:

“The Gulf states, which are earning trillions, along with Germany, Britain, and France, should share the financial burden of this war.”

He echoed the words of German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who said:

“Israel is doing the dirty work on behalf of the world — including the Gulf states.”

Smotrich added:

“The great powers are incapable of what our army has achieved. We’re not asking for their soldiers or lives — just financial contributions, given the billions they’re making.”

He further claimed that “Israel is paving the way for broader alliances like the Abraham Accords.”

While some Arab countries condemned the Zionist aggression against Iran, none of the Gulf states have taken tangible action to translate statements into real policy: no severing of ties, no ambassador withdrawals, not even a pause in active agreements. Normalization efforts remain ongoing, unshaken by the attacks on Gaza or even the latest strikes that should, in theory, constitute a direct threat to regional security.

From the import of Israeli agricultural products, to publicly signed security and tech agreements (as seen with Abu Dhabi and Manama), and even joint investments in digital and energy infrastructure, the trajectory of normalization has continued upward, undeterred by the bloodshed and violations.

Thus, Smotrich’s statements were not just a display of “media arrogance,” but a clear indication that the Zionist regime now regards Gulf funding as a political and economic obligation — a natural consequence of the normalization regimes’ ongoing silence, concessions, and cooperation. In Tel Aviv’s eyes, those who normalize must also fund its wars — even those waged against the very region to which they belong. For the Zionist mentality, normalization is not a political deal — it is total submission: starting with diplomatic pictures and ending at the payment counter.

 


Psychological Collapse

The shadow of chaos and fear now looms over the Zionist entity. Evacuation orders are being issued, bustling streets of occupied Yaffa have turned into ghost towns, and under the rain of rockets, the situation seems spiraling beyond control. The recent The Truthful Promise 3 strike laid bare the vulnerability of a structure long celebrated by the usurpers as unbreakable.

Within the fortified shelters of occupied Yaffa (Tel Aviv), in the midst of a war whose outcomes are poorly calculated, an unseen catastrophe is unfolding — one that news bulletins miss, and radars fail to detect. It wasn’t merely the Iranian missiles or Yemeni drones that pierced the myth of “deep Israeli security,” but the internal unraveling of the Zionist society itself, now buckling under a humanitarian and health crisis that strips bare the myth of the “secure state” so proudly championed by Zionist propaganda.

 


A Scene of Panic and Breakdown

Reports emerging from the Zionist entity confirm that shelters can no longer accommodate the growing waves of Zionist settlers rushing to safety. Panic is spreading. People are shoving their way in, desperately seeking space — a reflection of widespread societal hysteria. Occupied Yaffa is completely paralyzed. Its streets are empty. Its people are breathless.

Zionist "Knesset member and Likud member" Tali Gotliv described the scene:

“The army no longer controls the situation. Police are trying to impose order, but fear has taken over. Everyone just wants to survive.”

One Zionist soldier inside a shelter summed it up bleakly:

“We’re not in a shelter… we’re in a slaughterhouse!”

The words capture the essence of psychological collapse, as what were once seen as safe havens now feel like suffocating prisons.

Criminal Netanyahu, delivering a speech from one of the sites struck by missiles, appeared visibly shaken — a man grasping at the last straw. He spoke of “hope born from crisis,” and the “strength” of the “people” in times of hardship. But behind the polished rhetoric, the stench rising from Tel Aviv’s overcrowded shelters exposed what the media could no longer conceal: a disoriented army, a government in crisis, and an internal reality crumbling at its first real test.