Israel’s early sense of wartime unity is showing signs of strain as the conflict with Iran stretches on, with public confidence weakening and political divisions beginning to reappear. A CNN report published on April 4 said support inside Israel for the war’s goals has started to slip as the fighting grows longer and more costly.
The pressure comes as Israeli leaders signal the campaign could continue for some time. Reuters reported on March 31 that Israel was prepared to keep striking Iran for “weeks to come,” with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu saying the war was already beyond the halfway point.
That longer timeline appears to be affecting public mood. A summary of the CNN report says polling by Israel’s Institute for National Security Studies found support for weakening Iran had fallen to 43.5%, down from nearly 70% earlier in the war. The same report said criticism is growing over the government’s priorities, including arguments that too many resources are being directed toward broader ambitions in Iran rather than more limited military aims.
The strain is also unfolding against a wider backdrop of regional escalation. Reuters and other outlets have reported continued Iranian missile attacks on Israel, along with expanding military action across Lebanon and the Gulf, keeping Israeli society under prolonged security pressure.
Taken together, the latest reporting suggests that while support for confronting Iran remains significant in Israel, the long duration of the war is making national solidarity harder to sustain. This last point is an inference based on the reported polling decline, the prospect of weeks more fighting, and renewed domestic criticism.

