A string of suicides among Israeli soldiers over less than two 
weeks this July has reignited concerns over the military’s mental health
 system, with experts warning that the war’s prolonged psychological 
toll is pushing troops past their limits.
The first case to draw national attention this month was that of Daniel Edri,
 a reservist who died by suicide on July 5 after struggling with 
post-traumatic stress disorder stemming from his combat service in Gaza 
and Lebanon.
His mother, Sigal Edri, told the Ynet news site that Daniel would 
describe vivid flashbacks — seeing flames, smelling bodies — and often 
awoke in the middle of the night in a panic, convinced he was back on 
the battlefield. In his final days, he spoke openly about ending his 
life, fearing that living with PTSD would be unbearable.
In the days that followed, two additional IDF soldiers were found 
dead in separate incidents of suspected suicide — one on July 9 at a 
base in southern Israel, and another on July 14 at a base in the north.
On July 15, Cpl. Dan Phillipson,
 a paratrooper in training, was seriously wounded in an apparent attempt
 to end his life at a training base in southern Israel. Phillipson, a 
lone soldier from Norway who had moved to Israel a year ago to enlist, 
was hospitalized but ultimately succumbed to his injuries on Sunday.
		
Dr. Leah Shelef, who served as a mental health officer in the IDF for
 20 years and researches the field of suicide among soldiers and 
reservists, told The Times of Israel that this isn’t the first time the 
military has faced a sudden spike in suicides.
	 
		Family, friends, and fellow soldiers 
attend the funeral of Cpl. Dan Phillipson, a lone soldier from Norway, 
at Mount Herzl Military Cemetery in Jerusalem, July 20, 2025.
 
	“Suicides have a contagious effect,” she said. “There have been 
months in the past in which three soldiers died by suicide in close 
succession.”
Suicide data sparks debate
The most recent wave of tragedies prompted nine members of the 
Knesset’s Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee to issue a formal 
letter, demanding an urgent discussion on the issue and warning that the
 IDF’s current approach risks eroding public trust and failing 
vulnerable soldiers in their time of need.
 
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https://www.timesofisrael.com/concerns-deepen-over-militarys-mental-health-system-after-series-of-soldier-suicides/?