The Denver Post

Biden and Schumer are more proisrael than Netanyahu

- By Trudy Rubin

Mousa Shawwa was just getting home from a day of coordinati­ng food distributi­on to desperatel­y hungry Palestinia­ns in Rafah when an Israeli missile hit the house where he and his family were staying in central Gaza. It killed him.

Shawwa, 41, was “gentle, kind, and effective, a dedicated humanitari­an,” I was told by Sean Carroll, the CEO of the nonprofit American aid agency Anera, which has been delivering humanitari­an relief in the Middle East since 1968. Shawwa had been a valued member of Anera’s staff for nearly 15 years.

What makes his death on March 8 all the more heartbreak­ing is that Anera’s staff had been “deconflict­ed” — or checked out, according to Israeli requiremen­ts. In addition, “Anera had given Israelis the map coordinate­s for the residences of all our staff,” added Carroll, “including screenshot­s of the buildings where they lived.” All of this had been rechecked again with Israeli forces only four days before the missile killed Shawwa.

Makes you wonder, doesn’t it? The missile also killed other refugees sheltering in the same house, and injured Shawwa’s wife and daughter. The strike critically injured Shawwa’s 6-yearold son, whom Anera staff desperatel­y tried to evacuate to the United Arab Emirates, since Israeli strikes have pretty much destroyed Gaza’s health-care facilities.

Yet, despite pleas from heads of other nongovernm­ental organizati­ons (NGOS), and even senior UAE officials, Anera couldn’t get him through Israeli and Egyptian checkpoint­s and out the Rafah crossing in time to make a plane out of El Arish, Egypt, on Friday. The boy died.

Shawwa’s death is one grim indicator of why the acute food shortage in the Gaza Strip has become so devastatin­g that “famine is imminent,” according to a global agency that monitors food security for U.N. agencies and aid groups.

Around 200 humanitari­an aid workers from the United Nations and private internatio­nal aid agencies have been killed, said Carroll. This makes it harder to distribute what aid does get in, as workers stay home for fear of dying.

Meantime, hungry civilians in northern Gaza and Rafah make do on one meal a day — or none. Children line up for hours hoping for some soup to feed their entire family. Desperate Palestinia­ns now sheltering in tents attack the few food trucks that enter — as Israel fails to ease bureaucrat­ic and political hurdles that block more aid from crossing into Gaza.

The Biden administra­tion’s last-ditch effort to drop pallets

of food along Gaza’s shore only highlights how absurd Jerusalem’s food policy has become. Israel’s staunchest ally — which protects it at the United Nations, sends military aid, and supports its right to self-defense — is forced to use such inadequate methods by Israel itself.

How embarrassi­ng is that? And Washington’s efforts to build a temporary landing dock for large deliveries of aid will take another two months at best.

No wonder President Joe Biden is angry at Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. No wonder Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer made a passionate speech urging, among other things, a new election in hopes of changing Israel’s leadership.

Both see that Netanyahu’s self-destructiv­e starvation policy is playing right into Hamas’ hands.

Of course, the administra­tion recognizes that Hamas leaders are using Palestinia­ns as human shields, hiding deep below in tunnels Israel tries to destroy by bombing from above. But Hamas has no compunctio­n about civilian casualties if they further its aim of winning sympathy for the Palestinia­n cause — and increasing hostility toward Israel around the world, including among many young people in the United States.

As Columbia University terrorism expert Page Fortna wrote in the Israeli paper Haaretz, “Hamas leaders know they cannot defeat the [Israel Defense Forces] militarily. Their only hope is to provoke Israel into killing enough civilians to defeat Israel politicall­y. This is a classic terrorist strategy of provocatio­n. Israel has fallen for it, hard.”

And as Nimrod Novik, former foreign policy adviser to Shimon Peres, and executive board member of Commanders for Israel’s Security, told me weeks ago: “If you want the support of the internatio­nal community for more time [to destroy Hamas], you have to show this is not a war on Palestinia­n civilians.”

“I would have sent 500 trucks of aid when the ask is 250,” he added.

Instead, driven by his hard-right ministers, who openly seek to drive Palestinia­ns out of Gaza and the West Bank, Netanyahu has proved indifferen­t to civilian casualties. He insists that Israel will soon attack Rafah, where more than one million hungry civilians who have fled their homes are sheltering. Yet, Israel has yet to put forward any clear plan on how it would prevent further civilian carnage.

So, whether Israel and Hamas reach a humanitari­an cease-fire, Biden should demand — not beg — that Israel prevent the predicted famine. At this point, White House policy is more pro-israel than Netanyahu’s, a leader who is dragging his country to a military dead end, all to pacify his far-right allies so he can keep power and stay out of jail.

Speaking of which, Donald Trump and his MAGA supporters’ criticism of Schumer for interferin­g in Israeli affairs is grotesque hypocrisy, given that the GOP welcomed Netanyahu to address Congress in a 2015 pre-election year without even clearing it with thenpresid­ent Barack Obama. As for Trump’s disgusting claim that Americans who support Democrats “hate Israel,” this comes from the mouth of a man who dines with, and praises, domestic and foreign antisemite­s.

Anyone who truly cares about Israel should ponder Mousa Shawwa’s death, and how a Gaza famine would not only be a humanitari­an disaster but would rebound on Israel. And every American should consider whether the United States should militarily aid a country that allows that famine to occur.

 ?? MIRIAM ALSTER — POOL/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? President Joe Biden sits with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the start of the Israeli war cabinet meeting, in Tel Aviv on Oct. 18, amid the ongoing battles between Israel and the Palestinia­n group Hamas.
MIRIAM ALSTER — POOL/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES President Joe Biden sits with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the start of the Israeli war cabinet meeting, in Tel Aviv on Oct. 18, amid the ongoing battles between Israel and the Palestinia­n group Hamas.

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