The Boston Globe

US tells Israel fighting style must be more surgical

Warns of building humanitari­an crisis in Gaza

- By Erica L. Green

WASHINGTON — The United States has warned Israel that it must fight more surgically and avoid further mass displaceme­nt of Palestinia­ns in its war against Hamas to avoid a humanitari­an crisis that overwhelms the world’s ability to respond, according to senior Biden administra­tion officials.

The White House has told Israel that replicatin­g the scale of its bombardmen­t in northern Gaza as it makes an expected push into southern Gaza once the recent pause in fighting ends would produce a crisis beyond the capacity of any humanitari­an support network, the officials said Monday night. The United Nations has said the fighting has already displaced most of the Gaza Strip’s population of 2.2 million.

The statements are the Biden administra­tion’s strongest warning to Israeli officials to date about the next phase of their military operation. For weeks, the White House has been careful to say it does not dictate how Israel conducts its military operations, but President Biden and senior members of his staff have grown more vocal as the humanitari­an crisis has unfolded.

They also come as the administra­tion officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive diplomatic issues, said they were ramping up humanitari­an aid during the cease-fire that took effect last week, and expressed optimism that aid could continue even when fighting resumed.

Among other things, US officials have told the Israelis that any coming military operations should not hamper the flow of power and water or impede the work of humanitari­an sites such as hospitals and UN-supported shelters in south and central Gaza.

The Israeli government was receptive to the requests, one official said.

The cease-fire, to allow for the exchange of hostages held by Hamas and Palestinia­ns taken prisoner by Israel, has allowed for the first extended break in the violence since the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas gunmen and other militant groups killed an estimated 1,200 people in Israel. Health officials in Gaza say at least 13,000 people were killed during the nearly 50-day Israeli bombardmen­t and ground invasion that followed.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has made clear that he intends for Israel to continue fighting after the truce ends, though it was extended by two more days Monday. On Tuesday, Hamas released 12 more hostages, including 10 Israelis

and two Thai nationals, the Israeli military said.

Biden administra­tion officials said the United States was taking advantage of the extra time. On Tuesday, a US Air Force C-17 aircraft delivered more than 54,000 pounds of humanitari­an supplies, including medicine and food, to neighborin­g Egypt for distributi­on to civilians in Gaza. The United States is planning additional flights in the coming days, officials said.

“The United States will continue to lead the humanitari­an response in Gaza to further support those in desperate need,” the US Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t said in a statement Tuesday. It called on other nations to join what it described as a “woefully underfunde­d” global humanitari­an effort.

Administra­tion officials emphasized the extraordin­ary progress that has been made in aid delivery, though they acknowledg­ed that the level of assistance was still not enough to support normal life in Gaza. The officials also said that the increase in aid, including much-needed fuel, was not contingent on hostage releases, offering hope that the shipments could continue when fighting resumed.

John Kirby, a spokespers­on for the National Security Council, said Monday that since the pause in fighting had taken effect, Gaza had received its largest humanitari­an convoy since the war began.

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