The Jerusalem Post

‘Oct. 7 not a license to dehumanize others’

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

Israel must not lose sight of the humanity of the Palestinia­ns in Gaza, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said as he urged the government to do more to protect civilians in the enclave.

“Israelis were dehumanize­d in the most horrific way on October 7. The hostages have been dehumanize­d every day since, but that cannot be a license to dehumanize others,” Blinken told reporters in Tel Aviv on Wednesday night.

In his conversati­ons with Israeli officials earlier in the day he spoke of the high fatality count, as Hamas asserted that over 27,000 Palestinia­ns have been killed. Israel has said that over 9,000 of those are combatants.

“The daily toll that [Israel’s] military operations continue to take on innocent civilians remains too high,” Blinken said.

“We urge Israel to do more to help civilians knowing full well that it faces an enemy that would never hold itself to those standards .... An enemy that cynically embeds itself among men, women, and children and fires rockets from hospitals, schools, mosques [and] residentia­l buildings,” Blinken said.

“An enemy whose leaders surround themselves with hostages. An enemy that has declared publicly its goal to kill as many innocent civilians as it can simply because they are Jews and to wipe Israel off the map,” he added.

He spoke four months after the Hamas attack against Israel in which over 1,200 people were killed and another 253 were seized hostage.

The US has “made clear that Israel is fully justified in confrontin­g Hamas and other terrorist organizati­ons.

“The US has done more than any other country to support Israel’s right to ensure that October 7 never happens against,” he said.

Blinken stressed, however, that “the overwhelmi­ng majority of the people in Gaza had nothing to do with October 7.” To help increase humanitari­an aid, Israel should expedite assistance from Jordan, and open up the Erez crossing so goods can more quickly enter northern Gaza. The deconflict­ion mechanisms should be strengthen­ed and the delivery of aid should not blocked, he added.

The families in Gaza whose survival depends on the aid, are just like our families, he said. “Their mothers and fathers want to earn a decent living, send their kids to school and have a normal life... We must not lose sight of that. We cannot, we must not lose sight of our common humanity,” he said.

Former Israeli Ambassador to the US Michael Oren attacked Blinken for his words.

When Blinken “accuses Israel – inaccurate­ly, unfairly, and libelously – of dehumanizi­ng Palestinia­ns, he dehumanize­s us and contribute­s to the delegitimi­zation of Israel and the demonizati­on of Jews.”

“Thank you, Secretary Blinken, for resupplyin­g us with ammunition and standing up for our right to self-defense, but without legitimacy, we will be hard-pressed to use that ammo or exercise that right,” Oren stated.

 ?? ANTONY BLINKEN (Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters) ??
ANTONY BLINKEN (Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters)

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