Ezekiel 17:21
And all his fugitives with all his bands shall fall by the sword, and they that remain shall be scattered toward all winds: and ye shall know that I the Lord have spoken it.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 5:12 also uses 'scatter to every wind' for Jerusalem's judgment, connecting the same prophetic language.
In Ezekiel 6:7, the same 'you shall know that I am the LORD' formula follows a judgment on Israel, reinforcing that God's judgments reveal His identity.
Ezekiel 6:10 adds that God's word is not in vain, echoing the 'I have spoken' declaration in the main verse.
Ezekiel 12:14 similarly predicts scattering of the king's troops, echoing the same fate.
2 Kings 25:5 records the historical fulfillment: the army scattered as prophesied.
2 Kings 25:11 describes the exile of survivors, fulfilling the scattering to every wind.
Jeremiah 52:8 gives another historical account of the army's dispersal, confirming the event.
2 Kings 25:6 records the capture of Zedekiah, fulfilling the prophecy of judgment on the king and his troops in Ezekiel 17.
Jeremiah 13:24 uses the same scattering-to-the-wind imagery as the main verse for Judah's judgment.
Jeremiah 21:7 describes survivors of Judah given to the sword, matching the 'fall by the sword' in the main verse against Zedekiah's troops.
Zechariah 2:6 echoes 'scattered as four winds'—same exile imagery, reinforcing this divine scattering.
Amos 9:10 declares sinners die by the sword, paralleling the fate of the fallen troops here.