By Ahmed Fouad Alkhatib
Thursday July 31, 2025
This week, the world seems to be finally paying attention
to the magnitude of the suffering in Gaza. The futile policies pursued by the
Israeli government—prodded by the far-right cabinet ministers Bezalel Smotrich
and Itamar Ben-Gvir—have reduced the supply of humanitarian aid, food, and
supplies in Gaza. Israel has unnecessarily reengineered the distribution of
aid, failing to achieve its goal of separating the civilian population from
Hamas while further constricting its supply. And for these decisions, it has
attracted the justified condemnation of the international community.
Despite the surge of hundreds of trucks into Gaza over
the past four days, very few supplies have made it into warehouses to be
distributed to the population. Aid shipments are being seized by a combination
of desperate civilians, lawless gangs, clan-affiliated thugs, and merchants of
death. Chaos and apocalyptic scenery are the norm, not the exception. There is
no denying the reality of the widespread malnutrition and hunger in the Gaza
Strip.
In recent days, I’ve spoken with dozens of Gazans who are
furious about what is unfolding around them. They are angry, one told me, at
the “hordes of selfish people who are attacking aid convoys to steal and
collect aid in a horrific manner without caring for Gazans who chose not to
participate in these humiliating and demeaning displays of inhumanity, no
matter the level of hunger.” But their anger is directed primarily at Hamas,
which they hold responsible for putting the people of Gaza in this position, and
for its continued refusal to end the war that it started. “Hitler fought in his
bunker until he killed himself in World War II in the Battle of Berlin,”
another person said, complaining that Hamas is hunkered down in its tunnels,
willing to see Gaza destroyed to the very last child.
Hamas actually wants a famine in Gaza. Producing mass
death from hunger is the group’s final play, its last hope for ending the war
in a way that advances its goals. Hamas has benefited from Israel’s decision to
use food as a lever against the terror group, because the catastrophic
conditions for civilians have generated an international outcry, which is
worsening Israel’s global standing and forcing it to reverse course.
Online supporters of the terror group have consistently
attacked any efforts to alleviate the crisis. In posts and videos, they have
dismissed efforts to send in food by convoys of trucks from Egypt and Jordan,
pointing to the chaotic scenes as desperate Gazans scramble for aid. They have
likewise attacked the airdrops that are now under way and called for them to be
stopped immediately.
Hamas’s evident desire to extend and deepen the crisis of
hunger helps explain the recent breakdown of cease-fire negotiations, even as
Gazans are needlessly dying. The group’s intransigence led both Israel and
Trump’s envoy, Steve Witkoff, to walk away from the talks. If the hunger crisis
and humanitarian issues are addressed, Hamas can no longer use the suffering of
Gazans to generate an international outcry or use the resultant leverage to end
the war on its own terms.
But the two-state-solution conference convened by France
and Saudi Arabia at the United Nations shows the way forward. In a remarkable
statement, endorsed by the European Union and the Arab League, the participants
condemned the October 7 attacks and the taking of hostages, and declared that
“Hamas must end its rule in Gaza and hand over its weapons to the Palestinian
Authority.” The conference envisions the end of hostilities, the establishment
of an international mission in Gaza, and the ultimate return of the Palestinian
Authority to govern the Strip.
Many Arab states have been reluctant to call out Hamas
publicly, even though they do so privately on a regular basis, for fear of
upsetting their own populations. But now they have recognized the importance of
openly and transparently calling for Hamas to give up control of Gaza and
disarm. Both Israel and the international community should capitalize on this
shift, to isolate the terrorist organization and give hope for a better
trajectory for Gaza’s future.
If Hamas believes that the suffering of Gazans bolsters
its cause, Israeli decision makers should take that to heart. They should
abandon their misguided and inhumane policies and cease their efforts to
pressure the population as a means of pressuring the terror group. The best way
to undermine Hamas’s position is to instead flood Gaza with food, and to
alleviate the suffering of its people.
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