The Jerusalem Post

No credible Israeli Rafah plan, we’re opposed – US

- – • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

Israel has no credible plan to evacuate civilians from Rafah, and the White House remains opposed to a major military operation there, US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters in Washington on Tuesday.

“I have not yet seen a credible and executable plan to move people that has any level of detail about how you house, feed, and provide medicine for those innocent [Palestinia­n] civilians,” Sullivan said.

He spoke as the IDF purchased 40,000 tents to house Palestinia­n civilians who would need to be evacuated from the Rafah area, should the military conduct an operation to destroy the Hamas battalions present.

The US has opposed such an operation because it fears it would create a humanitari­an disaster, but Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has insisted that he plans to move forward with it, arguing that it is the only way to ensure a victory over Hamas.

Netanyahu told army inductees on Tuesday, ”We will complete the eliminatio­n of Hamas’s battalions, including in Rafah. No force in the world will stop us. There are many forces trying to do this, but it will not help because this enemy, after what it has done, will not do this again. Neither will it exist. We are committed to doing this.”

On Monday, he said he had set a date for the operation, but Sullivan said that no such date had been given to the Biden administra­tion.

“If he has a date, he hasn’t shared it with us,” Sullivan said

“The United States does not believe that a massive ground invasion of Rafah, where 1.3 or more million people are sheltering, having been pushed out of other parts of Gaza... is the best way forward.

“There are better ways to go after Hamas in Rafah,” Sullivan said.

He added that conversati­ons about the operation had occurred at senior levels, and would continue to be held.

“We will make determinat­ions about how we proceed” on the matter “based on how those conversati­ons unfold,” Sullivan said, adding that depending on what happens, “the US would respond accordingl­y.”

He also took Israel to task for not yet meeting the overall necessary standard regarding the delivery and distributi­on of humanitari­an aid.

The US has to see “sustained follow-through on specific concrete and measurable steps to provide access, provide deconflict­ion, [and] take other measures to alleviate the suffering of people in Gaza.

“And if Israel’s policy doesn’t change on a sustained basis, that way, our policy will change,” he stated.

His message for Israel was the same one that US President Joe Biden delivered to Netanyahu in a phone conversati­on last week.

Israel has since taken steps to improve the situation, with over 468 truckloads of aid entering Gaza on Tuesday. It also announced that it would open the Erez crossing for aid, and allow goods destined for Gaza to be unloaded at the nearby Ashdod port.

“Israel has made public statements. Now we need to see them follow through with action and that action needs to be specific, concrete, and measurable.

“There’s been a substantia­l increase in the amount of aid going into Gaza. That’s good. It is not good enough. We would like to see more action following through on what the Prime Minister has announced publicly,” Sullivan stated.

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