By Seth Mandel
Thursday, April 17, 2025
Sometimes an assertion goes from hotly contested to
widely accepted without ever really stopping along the way. So there has been
no eureka moment regarding confirmation that Hamas controls humanitarian aid
shipments into Gaza. There is just no denying it anymore.
Israel’s decision to cut off aid to the enclave tested
the hypothesis that humanitarian aid shipments were, perversely, keeping Hamas
alive and keeping Gazans squeezed for cash. The Wall Street Journal reports
that the aid cutoff is making it impossible for Hamas to keep its terrorist
foot soldiers paid. Since this comes at a moment when anti-Hamas protests are
increasing, Hamas may have a recruitment crisis on its hands. Considering the
extent to which its forces have already been depleted, Hamas surely cannot
afford this setback—literally or figuratively:
“Hamas used the flow of humanitarian and commercial goods
to build new income streams, according to Arab, Israeli and Western officials.
This has included charging taxes on merchants, collecting customs on trucks at
checkpoints, and commandeering goods for resale. Hamas also has used overseas
cash to buy humanitarian goods that are then sold in Gaza and turned back into
cash, the officials said.
“Even with these workarounds, Hamas was nearing a
liquidity crisis before the January cease-fire brought an influx of aid into
Gaza, giving the group a chance to refill its coffers, the Israeli and Western
officials said. Those pathways closed when Israel sealed Gaza’s borders to
humanitarian supplies in March.”
This follows a familiar pattern: Israeli and American
officials say something that is grounded in experience and rationality and thus
is likely correct. The world bellows a collective How dare you? and
rolls on. Eventually what the Israeli and American officials said is proved
true. No one says “sorry.”
It has long been apparent that if there is hunger in Gaza
it is because of Hamas, and if there is poverty in Gaza it is because—primarily
at least—of Hamas. The terror group hijacked food aid and then impoverished
civilians by raising prices of the very food they were supposed to be given.
Unlike humanitarian aid, which is physical, some aid
groups have been able to get money to Gazan civilians through digital cash
apps. But to buy their own “free” food back, Gazans then have to use a
money-changer to turn that digital currency into cash, and the money-changer
probably works for Hamas and charges, according to the Journal, a
commission of 20 percent. If the Gazans are able to make it that far into the
process, they must then use the “free” money to buy the “free” food at
exorbitant prices. Which means in the end, they have paid dearly for less food
than they probably should’ve gotten for free.
This is the miracle of “humanitarian aid.”
Now that the aid has been suspended, the Journal reports,
“Salary payments to many Gaza government employees have ceased, while many
senior Hamas fighters and political staff began receiving only about half of
their pay midway through last month’s Ramadan holy period, the intelligence
officials said.”
Plus, “the Israeli military has said it killed a money
changer who was key to what it called terrorist financing for Hamas.”
This is how you defeat a terrorist army. Hamas isn’t an
idea; it’s a human organization surviving on physical goods and paper money.
Deprive it of those things and watch it disintegrate.
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