By Noah Rothman
Friday, August 01, 2025
Maybe you have never heard the name Anthony Aguilar before.
Perhaps you enjoyed a blessed ignorance about his work and political outlook. Well,
your luck is about to run out. Aguilar may soon become a mainstream media sensation.
Among those who devote themselves to broadcasting calumnious allegations against
Israel, he already is.
Aguilar is “a retired Special Forces Green Beret” and a Purple
Heart awardee, Senator Bernie
Sanders observed. “He took a contract helping to distribute aid in Gaza. There,
he witnessed atrocities committed using American taxpayer dollars.”
Sanders’s similarly, if not equally, anti-Israel colleague,
Senator Chris Van Hollen, also promoted Aguilar as a vehicle to retail
the notion that Benjamin Netanyahu’s government “has been using food as a weapon
of war — with complicity from Trump [and] U.S. taxpayer dollars.”
The hosts of the Breaking Points podcast, Krystal
Ball and Saagar Enjeti, lent their platform to Aguilar, who described what he
alleged were Israeli war crimes and the U.S.-Israel charity group Gaza Humanitarian
Foundation’s complicity in them.
And, of course, Aguilar found a perch for himself on Tucker Carlson’s show. There, the host who just cannot stand talking about Israel, and would rather discuss
anything other than the perfidious Jews, devoted yet another episode to the notion
that Jerusalem and its American allies are complicit in a strategically incoherent,
one-dimensionally wicked plot to starve the Gazan people into submission.
What motivates the Netanyahu government to act in ways that
substantiate the allegation that Hamas and its abettors in the United Nations have
consistently (and falsely) promoted from almost the outset of the war that began on October 7 — that Israel
is engineering a famine in Gaza? Few dare to speculate. Aguilar certainly won’t.
All he can do is bear witness to Israel’s crimes and those of the GHF, which he
is uniquely positioned to elaborate on having once served as a security contractor
for the organization.
In one of his many interviews, this time with Israeli activists
and Netanyahu-skeptical journalists, Aguilar alleged that the Israel Defense Forces
may have fired into civilian crowds around the GHF aid distribution sites. He didn’t
see the fire, but he heard it. “They’re shooting to control the population that’s
along the Morag Corridor. And as they’re doing that, they’re shooting into this
crowd,” he told his interlocutors, “and Palestinians, civilians, human
beings, are dropping to the ground, getting shot.” One of the victims was a young
boy he had just come to know, and who “got nothing but scraps” from the GHF’s meager
offerings. The charity group, its former employee alleged, is, thus, “complicit in war crimes.”
“In my entire career, I have never witnessed the level of
brutality and use of indiscriminate and unnecessary force against a civilian population,
an unarmed, starving population,” Aguilar told the BBC.
That’s Aguilar’s side of the story. The GHF tells quite another
about their disgruntled former contractor.
In a document that consists almost entirely of Aguilar’s communications
with the organization’s leadership, the self-styled whistleblower concedes that
his relationship with GHF was discontinued by his contractor, and he begged for
his position back and threatened the outfit when its leaders declined. It also shows
that Aguilar, just days prior to his contract’s termination, evinced none of the
convictions he is now promulgating on anti-Israel platforms.
In addition, the GHF accuses its former contractor of falsifying
documents and presenting “misleading videos to push a false narrative” about his
onetime employer. Aguilar insists he circulated a document within the organization
accusing it of failing to observe best humanitarian practices on May 29, before
his termination. But GHF spokesperson Chapin Fay showed rather conclusively that,
as indicated by the document’s metadata, it was circulated nearly one month later,
despite its backdating — well after Aguilar was dismissed “for poor performance,
volatile conflicts with staff, and erratic behavior.”
Aguilar, while working for GHF’s security contractor, UG Solutions,
spent “more than half of that time . . . in a hotel in Israel instead of on the
ground at the distribution sites,” Fay added. “Not only did the events that he recounted
never happen, but he wasn’t even in the right place or at the right time to have
seen the things that he claims to have seen.”
That’s not character assassination — it’s evidence. And yet
some will dismiss the ample indications that Aguilar is prosecuting a professional
grievance because the evidence does not directly contradict the allegations against
Israel, the GHF, and its security contractors. The appearance of motive and the
indications of fabricated evidence would impugn this witness’s testimony were this
a court of law. But it’s not.
Still, those who retain the capacity for rationality when
it comes to Israel might consider the eagerness of Hamas and its allies in international
institutions like the United Nations to discredit the GHF not long after its inception.
U.N. officials accused Israel and the GHF of “exposing people
to death and injury” while seeking to access aid from the moment the initiative
began. Israel and its American partners were accused of “engineered scarcity” from
the jump. Those who are somehow less responsible communicators than even U.N. bureaucrats
alleged that the IDF and UG Solutions used the GHF’s aid sites as traps — lures
into which the Palestinian people were drawn, as a matter of policy, only so they could be massacred.
The outcry just happened to coincide with Israel’s decision
to block the U.N. from the Strip following the collapse of a spring cease-fire.
The Netanyahu government’s goal was to sever Hamas’s control over its people, the
source of which springs from the U.N.’s distribution of aid to the terror group.
Hamas controls what it does not steal outright, and uses the aid to extort the Gazan
people — sometimes occasioning riotous displays of dissent. But when Israel attempted to relax
this understandable but poorly executed tactic, the U.N. balked. The U.N. claims
it would not distribute aid through Israeli-guaranteed security corridors. The IDF suggests that the U.N. held aid hostage to force Israel
to shift its tactical posture in ways the U.N. wanted.
Maybe the timing of Aguilar’s decision — to promulgate the
very narrative for which anti-Israel audiences have hungered only after his termination,
and even though, by all indications, he was a supporter of GHF’s work — is pure
coincidence. But like the ubiquitous claim that Israel is engineering a famine in
Gaza, the assertion that the GHF’s shortcomings (such as they are, having distributed
100 million meals to Gaza’s 2 million people in just eight weeks) are the result
of willful malice is an extraordinary claim. It should be supported with equally
extraordinary evidence. Aguilar’s suspect testimony doesn’t rise to that level.
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