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Not necessarily. I would shut the system down completely and check the drive connectors. If it's on a backplane, try swapping slots, or if it's breakout connector, swap it with another drive (and clear the zpool errors). If the errors start happening on the other drive, it's a cable problem. If they continue on the same drive, it's a drive problem. If they stop happening, it was a bad connection and it ought to be fine now.
That's kind of a short output from smartctl -a, though. Shouldn't it include the attribute data? I'd run a smart test (after doing the swap above) and see what it says.
On a raidz2, I wouldn't be too concerned about losing a drive, but you should always be prepared to order a replacement if you value your data.
I second this. SATA cables are cheaply made and can present issues that seem to indicate drive failure.
Had this issue once, 2 drives kept not initializing during boot, rebooting a few times got them to register but showed drive errors. I thought either the drives or my SAS card was dying. Fully reseating the connectors fixed it and haven't had an issue since.