Most of the 88 operational fatalities occurred in Gaza, where troops continued to face ambushes, explosive devices, and booby‑trapped structures long after the major phases of the war had ended.By Hezy LaingIDF combat deaths fell sharply in 2025, dropping by more than 70 percent compared to the previous year, with the military reporting that 88 soldiers were killed during operational activity.The dramatic decline reflects a shift away from large‑scale maneuver warfare in Gaza and toward more precise, intelligence‑driven raids that reduced the exposure of ground forces to direct combat.According to the annual casualty summary, the IDF recorded 151 total soldier deaths in 2025, including 88 in operational activity, three in terror attacks, 15 from illness, and 21 cases ruled or suspected as suicide.Most of the 88 operational fatalities occurred in Gaza, where troops continued to face ambushes, explosive devices, and booby‑trapped structures long after the major phases of the war had ended.A significant number of soldiers were killed when entering buildings rigged with large explosive charges, including multi‑story residential blocks in Khan Younis and Gaza City that collapsed after hidden bombs detonated.Several deadly incidents involved tunnel shafts wired with explosives, stairwells packed with charges, and rooms designed to detonate when troops crossed the threshold, making booby traps the single deadliest threat of the year.Despite the decline in overall fatalities, the IDF has faced growing criticism from bereaved families, reservists, and retired officers who argue that too many soldiers were sent into buildings that could have been neutralized remotely.Critics contend that engineering units and air assets were available in multiple cases but were not used, resulting in avoidable deaths when infantry units were ordered to clear structures already flagged as suspicious by intelligence.Calls for a formal review intensified after several late‑2025 incidents in which entire squads were hit by structural collapses triggered by concealed explosives, prompting renewed debate over urban‑combat doctrine.IDF officials maintain that improved intelligence, better protective equipment, and a transition to precision operations were responsible for the sharp reduction in combat deaths, even as they acknowledge the need to refine procedures for entering buildings in dense urban terrain.The loss of 88 soldiers in operational activity underscores both the ongoing dangers of Gaza combat and the urgency, critics say, of implementing stricter guidelines to prevent unnecessary casualties in future operations.The post IDF combat deaths drop by over 70% in 2025 appeared first on World Israel News.