The Mercury News Weekend

Small military gains won't stop a famine

- By Nicholas Kristof Nicholas Kristof is a New York Times columnist.

There's much we don't understand about Israel's recent raid on the Gaza Strip's Shifa Hospital with tanks and bulldozers.

But the hospital assault raises further questions about Israel's stated aim of eradicatin­g Hamas in Gaza as a whole. After all, if Israeli forces — having already invaded the hospital four months ago — cannot keep Hamas from reconstitu­ting in one of the most watched institutio­ns in the area, how will it keep Hamas or some extremist successor from reconstitu­ting somewhere else in Gaza?

Israeli forces may have achieved military gains in the latest attack on Shifa: They said they killed 20 militants, including one senior official. On the other hand, an unknown number of Palestinia­ns were also reported killed, some possibly suffocatin­g from smoke. Medical services were further disrupted in an area where children are already dying of malnutriti­on.

Reports from Gaza say that Israel may plan to move people sheltering at the hospital to a “safe zone,” the Muwasi area, but that seems not to have happened before the raid. If Israel cannot manage to evacuate the 30,000 people in and around the hospital and get them housed and fed, how does it propose to move, house and feed some 1.4 million people sheltering in the city of Rafah, which Israel also plans to invade so that it can defeat Hamas militants there?

The news of the Israeli assault on Shifa Hospital coincided with a report from an internatio­nal authority that “famine is imminent” in northern Gaza. This is enormously important: This authority has not declared a famine anywhere in the world since one in South Sudan in 2017.

The assault on Shifa Hospital underscore­s the challenges faced by Israeli authoritie­s when Hamas hides among civilians. Hamas deserves condemnati­on for that and for its failure to pursue a desperatel­y needed cease-fire. But Israel, too, has a role and must decide which targets to attack, what humanitari­an costs are acceptable and whether to focus on moving tanks or moving relief trucks.

The juxtaposit­ion of an aggressive military move by Israel on a hospital and the lack of a more substantia­l effort to ease the movement of food trucks into northern Gaza suggests that Israeli leaders are more focused on marginal military gains than on easing starvation among civilians.

I hope President Joe Biden will apply his considerab­le leverage on Israel so that its priority becomes averting famine.

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