The Jerusalem Post

Airdrops to Gaza are an important developmen­t

- ANALYSIS • By SETH J. FRANTZMAN

The increase in airdrops to Gaza of humanitari­an aid is getting more attention in the region. It is an important developmen­t that could pave the way for supplying parts of Gaza and not having Hamas hijack and steal the food that is supposed to reach Gazans. It appears Hamas is purposely creating a humanitari­an crisis in Rafah, aimed to pressure Israel to stop its operations and enable Hamas to benefit and grow in power again. Hamas uses its control of the border to control distributi­on of items to local people. And Hamas has partnered with internatio­nal organizati­ons, offering its police as “protection” for shipments, in essence acting as a mafia contractor in which it benefits.

The Israel Defense Forces said on February 28 that “in cooperatio­n among Israel, the United Arab Emirates, Jordan, Egypt, France and the USA: a supply of food and medical equipment that was transferre­d to the residents of the southern Gaza Strip and the Jordanian field hospital was airdropped.”

This is important cooperatio­n. Jordan, France, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and the US are key partners and the airdrops can help Gazans in various parts of Gaza. So far the recent airdrops included 160 packages of food and medical equipment. “The move was carried out in coordinati­on with the Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Division of the Strategic Planning and Cooperatio­n Directorat­e (J5), the Coordinati­on and Liaison Administra­tion to Gaza (CLA) of the COGAT Unit, the 98th Division and the IAF,” the IDF said.

Al-Ain media in the UAE has now covered the airdrop and has highlighte­d the possibilit­y for more airdrops. The US and Israel have been in talks about the “urgent need to bring more humanitari­an aid” to Gaza. The US may become more deeply involved in the airdrops. Canada is also working on this possibilit­y.

It’s difficult to know whether the UN warnings of “famine” are accurate and also it’s difficult to know whether Hamas is purposely trying to cause more suffering and food shortages in order to exploit the crisis for its own ends. Hamas has historical­ly sought to create suffering in Gaza in order to get things from the internatio­nal community and bolster its control of Gaza.

The key aspect of airdrops is they can target areas of Gaza where Hamas has less control. Hamas has sought to concentrat­e Gazan civilians around Rafah in order to prevent an IDF operation there. Air dropping supplies to people has a long history of success.

For instance, the World Food Program airdropped food to people in Deir Ezzor in Syria during the Syrian civil war. The WFP notes that in 2016 it “carried out its first-ever high-altitude airdrop, delivering 21 tons of food assistance to the city. Throughout the siege, WFP conducted the world’s highest-ever airdrops. Over 18 months, 309 drops were completed to provide emergency food assistance for over 100,000 people in the city. For families with nothing, it was a lifesaving operation. Nothing went to waste.”

Airdrops have been used in other countries as well. Gaza has a population of more than 2 million, so clearly this won’t be the only way to supply Gaza going forward. Other methods and routes may need to be found. However, for now it’s important that this innovative solution has increased and it is important to see partners of Israel abroad and in the region working to increase this method of aid assistance. In the end, relying on Hamas as a mafia broker for aid supplies to Gaza and letting Hamas thuggish “police” control the aid is not a good solution for Gaza’s needy people.

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