The Guardian (USA)

Chef José Andrés says Israel engaging in ‘war against humanity itself’ in Gaza

- Edward Helmore and agencies

The White House has pushed back on comments by World Central Kitchen founder José Andrés that Israel is engaged in “war against humanity itself” following the Israeli drone strike attack that killed seven of his aid workers on 1 April, but ruled out putting US monitors on the ground in Gaza.

“There’s going to have to be some changes to the way Israeli defense forces are prosecutin­g these operations in Gaza to make sure this doesn’t happen again,” White House national security communicat­ions adviser John Kirby told ABC’s This Week said on Sunday.

“There have to got to be changes in the deconflict­ion process, between aid workers on the ground and the IDF headquarte­rs so that this kind of targeting can’t happen again,” Kirby said Sunday, but would not be drawn on claims that Israeli drone operators would have been able see the insignia three WCK vehicles carrying the workers that identified them as part of an aid convoy.

In an earlier interview on This Week, Andrés had said that the IDF attack on his workers “is not anymore about the seven men and women of World Central Kitchen that perished on this unfortunat­e event. This is happening for way too long. It’s been six months of targeting anything that seems – moves,” Andrés said.

“This doesn’t seem a war against terror,” Andrés added. “This doesn’t seem anymore a war about defending Israel. This really, at this point, seems it’s a war against humanity itself.”

The IDF said Friday that there had been three strikes against the convoy, and confirmed that World Central Kitchen had coordinate­d their movements correctly with them in advance.

It said that Israeli officials had failed to update commanders on the convoy and that they were“convinced that they were targeting armed Hamas operatives and not WCK employees.” The strikes, the IDF added, had been “a grave mistake”.

But Andrés refuted those findings, telling ABC News: “Every time something happens, we cannot just be bringing Hamas into the equation.”

Asked if destroying three vehicles was following legitimate rules of engagement, Kirby said that the US knew from its own experience that “the intelligen­ce you get, analyze and process may not always be accurate and you act on that intelligen­ce…”

But the White House adviser refused to say what consequenc­es the US would impose if the Israel does not act on commitment­s to allow more humanitari­an aid in and reduce violence against civilians in Gaza.

“We have to judge it over time, and see if there’s a sustained and verifiable way so that confidence can be restored,” Kirby said. But against increasing calls for the US to suspend or reduce weapons transfers to Israel, Kirby echoed president Biden’s comments to Israe

li prime minster Benjamin Netanyahu last week.

“We’ve got to see changes in the way they are prosecutin­g these operations and we’re going to have to think about making changes in our own policy toward Gaza.” But, he said: “We have to remember that Israel has a right to defend itself and its important to remember they live in a tough neighborho­od.”

Kirby downplayed reports on Sunday that the IDF was withdrawin­g forces from southern Gaza, saying he would let the Israelis speak to their operations.

“It’s hard to know exactly what that tells us,” he said. “This is really just about rest and refit for these troops that have been on the ground for four months – and not indicative, so far as we can tell, or some coming new operation.”

“The word we’re getting is that they’re tired and need to be refit,” he added.

But Kirby rejected calls for there to be US personnel on the ground in Gaza to monitor Israeli accountabi­lity to the rules of law are followed. “What we will do is make sure they have the tools and capabiliti­es they need to defend themselves, and hold Israel accountabl­e for the way they are conducting these operations.”

Kirby said that Chef Andrés was not wrong when he said you can be a “good friend of Israel in helping them to defend themselves and at the same time holding them to an appropriat­e standard of accountabi­lity”.

Meanwhile, one of the late aid workers’ father told Secretary of State Antony Blinken the killings by Israel in the Hamas-run territory must end, and that the United States needs to use its power and leverage over its closest Mideast ally to make that happen.

John Flickinger’s 33-year-old son, Jacob Flickinger, a dual US and Canadian citizen, was among the seven humanitari­an workers killed in the 1 April drone strikes.

“If the United States threatened to suspend aid to Israel, maybe my son would be alive today,” John Flickinger told the Associated Press in describing his 30-minute conversati­on Saturday with Blinken.

 ?? Photograph: Abdel Kareem Hana/AP ?? People inspect the site where World Central Kitchen workers were killed in Deir al-Balah, Gaza Strip, on 2 April.
Photograph: Abdel Kareem Hana/AP People inspect the site where World Central Kitchen workers were killed in Deir al-Balah, Gaza Strip, on 2 April.

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