The Cracks Are Showing: Israel’s Coming Collapse and the Zionist Flight to Australia

By Andrew Klein

March 26, 2026

To my wife, whose guidance keeps me focused.

Introduction: The Viral Post That Spoke the Truth

On March 26, 2026, a post went viral on X. An Israeli mayor was quoted saying:

“We are destroyed… we’re living in shelters for weeks. Why are we the ones suffering right now? We are the chosen people!”

The post was not fake. It captured a reality that the official censorship machine is desperate to suppress: the home front is cracking, the economy is straining, the political divisions are widening, and the myth of Israeli invincibility is crumbling.

We have predicted this. We have traced the patterns. And now the evidence is mounting that the collapse we foresaw is not coming—it is already here.

This article presents that evidence: the military strain, the economic bleeding, the demographic flight, the political fragmentation, and the desperate preparations for a future that no longer includes a Jewish state in its current form. It names the architects of this disaster—the politicians, the bankers, the opportunists who sold the myth of Greater Israel and are now preparing their escape.

The blood spilled is on their hands. And the world will not forget.

Part One: The Military Strain – Running on Empty

The most immediate evidence of impending collapse comes from within Israel’s own defence establishment.

Israeli analyst Shlomo Mizrahi warned in March 2026 that if the war continues for more than a month, Israel could begin to collapse piece by piece. Writing on social media, Mizrahi identified multiple warning signs already visible:

· Reports circulating in Israeli and US media that Israel has run out of interceptor missiles

· The Israeli army appears confused about its progress and unable to carry out a large-scale ground offensive

· Growing criticism of Israeli leadership in television debates over the failure to fulfil earlier promises

· A deep distrust of the country’s political leadership

· Economic disruptions and mobilization fatigue

· A faultline opening between secular and religious-Zionist reservists over the exemption of ultra-Orthodox from military service

Mizrahi’s assessment was echoed by retired Israeli Major General Yitzhak Brik, who previously warned in Haaretz that prolonged wars against groups like Hezbollah could push Israel toward collapse within a year due to military overstretch and internal divisions. His words: “The country really is galloping towards the edge of an abyss.”

The multi-front war has exposed the limits of Israeli military power. As Mizrahi noted, Israel is facing a much stronger enemy in Iran and Hezbollah together. The regional balance of power is changing. US dominance is ending. And Israel is being left to face its enemies alone.

Part Two: The Economic Bleeding – Deficits, Debt, and Destruction

The economic indicators are equally stark. On March 11, 2026, the Israeli cabinet was forced to raise the deficit target and cut growth forecasts due to the war in Iran.

The defence budget will increase from NIS 111 billion planned in the 2026 budget to approximately NIS 140 billion—a 26 percent increase. An additional “coffer” of NIS 7 billion has been set aside for extra security needs, with the assessment that these funds will also be used up soon.

The spending limit in the state budget has been breached. The fiscal deficit target has risen to 5.1 percent of GDP—higher than the 4.7 percent deficit with which Israel ended 2025. This will prevent the debt-to-GDP ratio from continuing to decline.

At the same time, due to the disruption to the economy created by the war, the chief economist at the Ministry of Finance has reduced the growth forecast for 2026, from 5.2 percent to 4.7 percent.

This is not a war economy that can be sustained. It is an economy being hollowed out from within.

The cost is already being felt by ordinary Israelis. According to Latet, Israel’s leading anti-poverty NGO, 2.8 million people in Israel are now living with food insecurity—a 27 percent increase in a single year. This includes roughly 867,000 households who cannot reliably afford food.

Part Three: The Demographic Flight – Who Is Leaving, Who Is Coming?

The migration numbers tell a story that the official narrative cannot hide.

According to Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics, approximately 21,900 people moved to Israel in 2025—only about one-third of the previous year’s total.

But the composition of that immigration is revealing. Russian and Ukrainian immigration fell by half. Arrivals from the United States, United Kingdom, and France increased—but these are not the mass aliyah of Zionist mythology. They are a trickle, driven by rising Western antisemitism, not ideological commitment to the Zionist project.

The first immigrant family of 2026 came from Australia. Minister of Immigration and Absorption Ofir Sofer was photographed greeting them, declaring that “we are working for the aliyah of Australian Jews to Israel and have already taken and will continue to take significant steps to that end.”

The numbers do not match the rhetoric. The 22,000 immigrants of 2025 are a fraction of what Israel needs to sustain its population. And the Israelis who are leaving—the 69,300 who departed in 2025, the 82,774 who left in 2024—are not being replaced.

The demographic project that was supposed to secure a Jewish majority is failing. And those who can leave are leaving.

Part Four: The Political Fractures – A Government at War with Itself

The Israeli government is not unified. It is fractured, and the fractures are widening.

As the Jerusalem Post editorialized on March 17, 2026, the government is advancing divisive legislation while the country is at war. Among the measures being pushed forward:

· A bill to establish a politically appointed committee to investigate the failures surrounding October 7

· The communications reform bill

· A bill to split the role of the attorney-general into three positions

· A bill to grant the Chief Rabbinate authority to determine prayer arrangements at the Western Wall

· The death penalty for terrorist’s bill

These are not wartime necessities. They are coalition management—Netanyahu’s desperate attempt to keep his coalition together by rewarding his far-right allies while the country burns.

The ultra-Orthodox draft exemption is perhaps the most explosive issue. The government has approved an updated 2026 state budget that adds roughly NIS 30 billion to defence spending while also approving over NIS 5 billion in coalition funds, including hundreds of millions of shekels for haredi institutions. Ordinary Israelis, who have been called up for extended reserve duty, watch as their tax dollars are diverted to those who will not serve.

As the Jerusalem Post editorial put it: “A country at war needs discipline. It needs priorities. It needs leaders who understand that even when a coalition has the votes to push something forward, timing still matters.”

The government is ignoring that counsel. It is reopening some of the deepest fault lines in Israeli life. It is draining public trust. It is sending the message that coalition management still outranks national cohesion.

Part Five: The Home Front – Censorship and the Silence of the Cracks

The cracks in Israeli society are being actively suppressed. The censorship apparatus has tightened, and the public is being kept in the dark about the true cost of the war.

New wartime restrictions introduced on March 5, 2026, limit what can be broadcast about Iranian missile strikes—where they land, what damage they have done. Journalists are permitted to report on debris that hit a civilian building but cannot mention that an Iranian missile struck its intended target nearby. They are not allowed to examine impact sites.

As Meron Rapoport, an editor at +972’s Hebrew-language Local Call, told Al Jazeera: “We don’t really know what is being hit or with what explosives. The IDF announcements always refer to strikes being on ‘uninhabited areas,’ which is peculiar, because there aren’t that many uninhabited areas in Tel Aviv. It’s a very compact city.”

The irony is bitter. Israeli commentators are always saying how the Iranian public has no real idea how badly they’re being hit. But as Rapoport notes, “The irony is that they probably have a better idea of how hard Israel is being hit than most Israelis.”

The suppression of dissent is not limited to the media. Those who object openly to the war are shunned. Itamar Greenberg, a 19-year-old who opposes the war on Iran, told Al Jazeera that people spit at him in the street. “Sometimes they follow me, shouting ‘traitor’ or ‘terrorist,'” he said. At his university, he was told that opposing the war on Iran was crossing a “red line.”

But the suppression cannot hold forever. As Raluca Ganea, co-founder of the Israeli-Arab activist group Zazim, told Al Jazeera: “We’re enduring multiple missile attacks daily, which means people aren’t sleeping. It’s like a manual for tyrants. It’s how you suppress protest or opposition, and it’s working so far.”

It is working so far. But the cracks are showing. And the viral post you saw is one of them.

Part Six: The UN Warning – “Permanent Demographic Change”

The United Nations has documented the policy that underpins the collapse. On February 26, 2026, UN rights chief Volker Turk told the Human Rights Council:

“Taken together, Israel’s actions appear aimed at making a permanent demographic change in Gaza and the West Bank, raising concerns about ethnic cleansing.”

Turk pointed to an ongoing, year-long Israeli military assault in the West Bank’s north that has caused the displacement of 32,000 Palestinians. He noted that entire Bedouin herder communities have been displaced by increasing harassment and violence from Israeli settlers.

In the Gaza Strip, most of the territory’s 2.2 million Palestinians have been displaced at least once since the start of the war. Turk’s office noted that “intensified attacks, the methodical destruction of entire neighbourhoods and the denial of humanitarian assistance appeared to aim at a permanent demographic shift in Gaza.”

Israeli far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich has been explicit about the goal. In February 2026, he vowed to encourage “emigration” from the Palestinian territories, declaring: “We will finally, formally and in practical terms nullify the cursed Oslo Accords and embark on a path toward sovereignty, while encouraging emigration from both Gaza and Judea and Samaria.”

As Fathi Nimer, a researcher with Palestinian think tank Al-Shabaka, told AFP: “They want maximum land and minimum Arabs.”

But the policy is failing. The land is not being settled. The Arabs are not leaving. And the international community is turning away.

Part Seven: The South Africa Comparison – How Fast It Can Collapse

I am reminded of South Africa. The comparison is apt—and the timeline is instructive.

Apartheid South Africa was a Western ally. It had a powerful military. It had a sophisticated security apparatus. It had the support of the United States and its allies. And it collapsed—not in decades, but in years.

The parallels are striking, as documented by TRT Afrika:

· Both regimes were structured as settler-colonial projects built on land seizure, territorial control, and the exclusion of the native population

· Both groups of settlers saw themselves as carrying out a “civilizing mission” supported by Western powers

· Both regimes enshrined discrimination through law

· Both fragmented the population into isolated zones—Bantustans in South Africa, Zones A, B, and C in the West Bank

· Both served as Western outposts during their respective eras

The crucial difference is that Israel’s apartheid is even harsher. South Africa’s Bantustans were at least designed to look like coherent territories; Palestinian lands are far more fragmented. South Africa relied on Black labour for its economy; Israel has sought to exclude Palestinians altogether.

South Africa collapsed because the internal contradictions became unsustainable. The same is happening in Israel.

Part Eight: The Architects of Disaster – Who Is Responsible?

The collapse is not inevitable. It is the result of choices made by specific people, who must be named.

Name – Role – Responsibility

Benjamin Netanyahu – Prime Minister – Waged war for political survival; promoted Greater Israel; divided Israeli society

Name- Role – Responsibility

Bezalel Smotrich – Finance Minister- Advanced settlement expansion; promoted “maximum land, minimum Arabs”; pushed budget priorities that bankrupt the state

Name – Role – Responsibility

Itamar Ben-Gvir – National Security Minister – Stoked settler violence; promoted policies that alienated the international community

Name – Role- Responsibility

Donald Trump US President- Launched the war on Iran; provided diplomatic cover for Israeli expansion; recognized Jerusalem as capital and Golan Heights as Israeli territory

Name- Role – Responsibility

Miriam Adelson- Billionaire donor-  Funnelled over $100 million to pro-Trump political groups; championed the US embassy move to Jerusalem

Name – Role – Responsibility

Australian political class – Various Provided diplomatic cover for Israeli actions; refused to hold Israel accountable for genocide; allowed Zionist lobby to shape policy

These are the people who have blood on their hands. They sold the myth of Greater Israel. They promised security and delivered war. They built a state on displacement and called it democracy.

And now, they are preparing their escape.

Part Nine: The Plan B – Australia as the New Promised Land

What about the Zionists next option. The evidence is mounting.

The Australian Zionist lobby is not just defending Israel—it is preparing. The arrival of the Sachs family from Sydney as the first immigrants of 2026 is not a random event. It is part of a pattern.

Minister Ofir Sofer was explicit: “We are working for the aliyah of Australian Jews to Israel and have already taken and will continue to take significant steps to that end.”

The flow is not one-way. Those who have funds are preparing to leave when Israel becomes untenable. Australia is a natural destination. The networks are already in place. Jillian Segal, the South African-born antisemitism envoy, is perfectly positioned to manage the transition.

The victims will be the many dead—the Palestinians who were displaced, the Israelis who bought the myth and died for it, the Lebanese and Iranians who were bombed in wars they did not start.

The West will wash its hands. It always does. It enabled the Zionist experiment. It benefited from the alliance. And when the collapse comes, it will distance itself, claiming that it did not know, that it was misled, that the leaders were rogue actors.

But we know. We have documented it. And we will not forget.

Conclusion: The Cracks Are Showing

The viral post was not fake. It was a window into a reality that the Israeli government is desperate to hide.

The shelters are inadequate. The economy is bleeding. The demographics are shifting. The political fractures are widening. The censorship is tightening. The home front is cracking.

And the collapse that we predicted is not coming—it is already here.

The question is not whether Israel will fall. The question is who will fall with it. The Palestinians, who have already paid the highest price. The ordinary Israelis, who bought the myth and are now being abandoned. The Australian public, whose tax dollars and superannuation funds have been used to fund the war machine, and who will now be expected to welcome the refugees of a failed state.

We have traced the lines. We have named the architects. We have documented the evidence.

The blood spilled is on their hands. And history will not forgive them.

Sources

1. WION, “Why Israeli analysts fear a multi-front war could overwhelm Israel?” March 14, 2026 

2. Zee News, “Israel’s First Immigrant Family Of 2026 Comes From Australia,” January 1, 2026 

3. Globes, “Cabinet raises deficit target, Treasury cuts growth forecast,” March 11, 2026 

4. Al Jazeera, “Missiles overhead, silence below: Israel’s home front holds firm,” March 25, 2026 

5. The Jerusalem Post, “Israel’s government risks unity by advancing divisive laws,” March 16, 2026 

6. Ahram Online, “Israel aims to bring ‘permanent demographic change’ to West Bank, Gaza: UN,” February 26, 2026 

7. TRT Afrika, “Apartheid in South Africa and Israel: Striking Parallels, Crucial Differences,” October 2025 

8. The Tribune, “Israel’s first Immigrants of 2026 from Australia amid shifts in Jewish migration,” January 2, 2026 

9. Xinhua, “UN chief urges U.S., Israel to end war against Iran,” March 26, 2026 

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