The remaining two dozen are used for pilot training. But some of these have crashed, as the A-4 isn't a great trainer aircraft. The elderly A-4s are also expensive to maintain. So Israel is shopping for a new trainer, and will scrap the remaining A-4s when that is done.
When Israel bought the second-hand U.S. A-4s, it did so because the aircraft cost a quarter what an F-4 fighter-bomber did, and could carry as many weapons. Thus the heavy losses in the 1973 war (because Israel underestimated the capabilities of new Russian surface-to-air missile systems, and numerous anti-aircraft gun systems, the Arabs now had).
The 11 ton A-4 could carry about four tons of bombs, along with two 20mm autocannon. Smart bombs make it unnecessary to have a lot of fighter-bombers, much less lower cost light bombers like the A-4. Thus the use of A-4s as pilot training aircraft, a job they were not really designed for.
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