DayofPal—Israel carried out at least 10,631 military attacks across six countries in 2025, marking one of the widest geographic offensives conducted by a single state in a single year.
The new data was conducted and released by the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project (ACLED).
The overwhelming majority of the Israeli attacks were concentrated in Palestine, where Israel launched more than 8,332 strikes across Gaza and the occupied West Bank, an average of roughly 25 attacks per day throughout the year.
ACLED data showed that at least 7,024 of these attacks targeted Gaza, while 1,308 were carried out across the West Bank.
Beyond Palestine, Israel expanded its military activity across the region. ACLED recorded 1,653 Israeli attacks in Lebanon, 379 in Iran, 207 in Syria, and 48 in Yemen.
The data also documented a rare attack on Qatar when it targeted Hamas negotiators, as well as operations in international waters, including two incidents in Tunisian waters and one each in Maltese and Greek waters.
However, Gaza remained the deadliest theater of Israel’s military operations in 2025. According to ACLED figures, more than 25,000 Palestinians were killed during the year, with at least 62,000 others injured.
The data further indicated that Israel violated ceasefire arrangements, killing more than 400 Palestinians and injuring at least 1,100 during periods that were supposed to see a halt in assaults.
In the occupied West Bank, settlers and army’s onslaught also reached unprecedented levels.
The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) documented a record 1,680 settler attacks across more than 270 Palestinian communities in 2025, an average of nearly five attacks per day.
These incidents included assaults on civilians, destruction of property, and attacks on farmland and infrastructure.
ACLED’s findings underscored the scale and intensity of Israel’s military activity in 2025, highlighting not only the concentration of attacks in Gaza and the West Bank, but also the widening regional footprint of the war.
Human rights groups warn that the growing number of attacks, combined with high civilian casualties, has deepened the humanitarian crisis and further destabilized an already volatile region.
Shortlink for this post: https://daysofpalestine.ps/?p=70886






