The Guardian (USA)

Amid the slaughter and with famine looming, Israel’s allies must say enough is enough. If not now, when?

- Chris McGreal

There has been no stronger defender than Olaf Scholz’s German government of Israel’s contention that the assault on the Palestinia­ns was a necessary evil. But as evidence grew that the Israeli military was less than discrimina­ting in the killing of thousands of civilians, and with a manufactur­ed famine looming and Israel threatenin­g an attack on Rafah, Chancellor Scholz went to Jerusalem last month to ask Benjamin Netanyahu whether the pursuit of Hamas could “justify such terribly high costs”. The Israeli prime minister surprised no one by saying that it could.

What Scholz will do in response, if anything, remains to be seen. But the Germans, like the Americans and the British, have been forced by mounting evidence of the horror being perpetrate­d on ordinary Palestinia­ns in Gaza, where women and children account for a majority of the 33,000 dead, to at least consider that there might be more to this war than Israel’s claim that it wants only to break Hamas. In Britain, a letter signed by more than 600 prominent lawyers, including former supreme court justices, warning that the UK government is breaching internatio­nal law by continuing to arm Israel, has added to the pressure on politician­s to confront this reality.

The Israeli military’s killing of seven World Central Kitchen aid workers has provided the latest jolt to those who complacent­ly repeat the Israeli mantra that its military is doing all it can to protect innocent lives. Six of the dead were citizens of countries that have given some of the strongest support for Israel’s assault – so the western world had something to say about their killings.

The British prime minister, Rishi Sunak, has told the Israeli leader that too many aid workers and Palestinia­ns have died and “the situation is increasing­ly intolerabl­e”. Poland’s prime minister, Donald Tusk, warned Netanyahu that he was putting solidarity with Israel “to a really hard test”. And in the US, Joe Biden said that the WCK deaths were not a “stand-alone incident”, and that Israel was killing too many aid workers.

The other 200 or more humanitari­an workers killed in the war have drawn less attention because they are mostly Palestinia­ns. As objectiona­ble as this is, the attack on the WCK convoy has thrown a global spotlight on two Israeli policies that will be increasing difficult for western government­s to downplay now they are the focus of public attention: the Israeli military’s low bar for killing civilians, and its engineerin­g of a food crisis that is creating starvation.

The Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported that the WCK vehicles had been targeted because of a suspicion there was an armed Hamas member travelling with the convoy. There wasn’t. But even had there been, it is revealing that the rules of engagement deemed the mere presence of a member of Hamas as sufficient for a military drone operator to wipe out people who the army knew were not combatants.

It’s safe to say that large numbers of Palestinia­ns, including thousands of children, have been killed and wounded under the same loose rules of engagement. Shortly before the attack on the WCF convoy, Haaretz reported that Israel had created “kill zones” in Gaza where “anyone who crosses into them is shot”, whether a combatant or not. Just on Wednesday, the Guardian reported that the Israel Defense Forces set allowances for the number of civilians who could be killed when striking a particular target. In the early weeks of the war, this included the killing of “15 or 20 civilians during airstrikes on lowranking militants” who had been identified with the help of artificial intelligen­ce.

Undiscrimi­nating warfare has, in turn, contribute­d to looming mass starvation brought on by Israel’s tight restrictio­ns on food deliveries to northern Gaza, including its refusal to let aid lorries through crossings just a few miles from the areas of greatest need.

Internatio­nal aid agencies say hundreds of thousands of Palestinia­ns are facing famine in the coming weeks, and that half of the entire population of Gaza will be starving by the end of July if the present food crisis continues.

Israel’s restrictio­ns forced WCK to deliver food by sea and then undertake the dangerous journey of moving it across the Gaza Strip. José Andrés, the group’s founder, said that necessity put its workers lives at risk. “The team would not have made the journey if there were enough food, travelling by truck across land, to feed the people of Gaza,” he wrote in the New York Times. “The Israeli government needs to open more land routes for food and medicine today … You cannot win this war by starving an entire population.”

Israel’s defence ministry denies any such intent, and claims it is permitting twice as much food into Gaza by lorry as was delivered before the war. It blames aid organisati­ons in general, and the United Nations in particular, for failing to distribute the supplies.

At one point, the ministry posted a picture of what it said were dozens of lorries just inside Gaza, waiting to make deliveries. But what food there is there is far from where it needs to be, and some aid agencies say the Israeli military’s open-fire policies make it too dangerous to drive north. In addition, Israel has barred the organisati­on best able to distribute food – the UN Relief and Works Agency (Unrwa) – from doing so as part of a political campaign to get rid of the agency.

All this could be resolved by simply opening the northern crossing points. Instead, famine looms ever closer after charities providing hundreds of thousands of meals a day suspended operations because of concerns about their workers’ safety after the Israeli killing of

the WCK staff.

In these circumstan­ces, it is difficult not to conclude that Netanyahu is using food as a weapon to do what bombs and bullets have so far failed to, and drive out the remaining Palestinia­ns in northern Gaza – or worse.

He won’t lose much sleep over German criticism. But Israeli politician­s who are more sensitised to the consequenc­es of alienating their country’s allies are worried. Images of Palestinia­ns dying of starvation en masse would strip away what cover foreign politician­s have to support Israel by claiming that civilian deaths have been an unfortunat­e but unintended consequenc­e of war.

In Britain, the US and Europe, political leaders have already been forced by public revulsion at the scale of killing to start conditioni­ng their support for Israel with tempered criticisms, and issuing calls for a ceasefire.

The horror of a manufactur­ed famine would also add weight to South Africa’s claim at the internatio­nal court of justice that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza. Before it comes to that, the mere prospect must now oblige western government­s to finally stand up for the values they claim to represent.

Chris McGreal writes for Guardian

US, and is a former Guardian correspond­ent in Washington, Johannesbu­rg and Jerusalem

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 ?? Photograph: Ahmed Zakot/Reuters ?? One of the vehicles in which WCK employees were killed in Deir al-Balah on 2 April.
Photograph: Ahmed Zakot/Reuters One of the vehicles in which WCK employees were killed in Deir al-Balah on 2 April.
 ?? Anadolu/Getty Images ?? The WCK site – now closed – in Nuseirat refugee camp, Gaza, 4 April. Photograph:
Anadolu/Getty Images The WCK site – now closed – in Nuseirat refugee camp, Gaza, 4 April. Photograph:

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